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1.
Nature ; 611(7936): 548-553, 2022 11.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36323787

RESUMO

Real-time chemical sensing is crucial for applications in environmental and health monitoring1. Biosensors can detect a variety of molecules through genetic circuits that use these chemicals to trigger the synthesis of a coloured protein, thereby producing an optical signal2-4. However, the process of protein expression limits the speed of this sensing to approximately half an hour, and optical signals are often difficult to detect in situ5-8. Here we combine synthetic biology and materials engineering to develop biosensors that produce electrical readouts and have detection times of minutes. We programmed Escherichia coli to produce an electrical current in response to specific chemicals using a modular, eight-component, synthetic electron transport chain. As designed, this strain produced current following exposure to thiosulfate, an anion that causes microbial blooms, within 2 min. This amperometric sensor was then modified to detect an endocrine disruptor. The incorporation of a protein switch into the synthetic pathway and encapsulation of the bacteria with conductive nanomaterials enabled the detection of the endocrine disruptor in urban waterway samples within 3 min. Our results provide design rules to sense various chemicals with mass-transport-limited detection times and a new platform for miniature, low-power bioelectronic sensors that safeguard ecological and human health.


Assuntos
Técnicas Biossensoriais , Condutividade Elétrica , Poluentes Ambientais , Escherichia coli , Humanos , Técnicas Biossensoriais/métodos , Disruptores Endócrinos/análise , Escherichia coli/química , Escherichia coli/metabolismo , Nanoestruturas/química , Fatores de Tempo , Poluentes Ambientais/análise , Biologia Sintética , Transporte de Elétrons , Tiossulfatos/análise , Poluentes da Água/análise
2.
Biochemistry ; 63(5): 599-609, 2024 Mar 05.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38357768

RESUMO

Adenylate kinases (AKs) have evolved AMP-binding and lid domains that are encoded as continuous polypeptides embedded at different locations within the discontinuous polypeptide encoding the core domain. A prior study showed that AK homologues of different stabilities consistently retain cellular activity following circular permutation that splits a region with high energetic frustration within the AMP-binding domain into discontinuous fragments. Herein, we show that mesophilic and thermophilic AKs having this topological restructuring retain activity and substrate-binding characteristics of the parental AK. While permutation decreased the activity of both AK homologues at physiological temperatures, the catalytic activity of the thermophilic AK increased upon permutation when assayed >30 °C below the melting temperature of the native AK. The thermostabilities of the permuted AKs were uniformly lower than those of native AKs, and they exhibited multiphasic unfolding transitions, unlike the native AKs, which presented cooperative thermal unfolding. In addition, proteolytic digestion revealed that permutation destabilized each AK in differing manners, and mass spectrometry suggested that the new termini within the AMP-binding domain were responsible for the increased proteolysis sensitivity. These findings illustrate how changes in contact order can be used to tune enzyme activity and alter folding dynamics in multidomain enzymes.


Assuntos
Adenilato Quinase , Peptídeos , Adenilato Quinase/química , Sequência de Aminoácidos , Temperatura
3.
Proteins ; 92(1): 52-59, 2024 Jan.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37596815

RESUMO

The core metabolic reactions of life drive electrons through a class of redox protein enzymes, the oxidoreductases. The energetics of electron flow is determined by the redox potentials of organic and inorganic cofactors as tuned by the protein environment. Understanding how protein structure affects oxidation-reduction energetics is crucial for studying metabolism, creating bioelectronic systems, and tracing the history of biological energy utilization on Earth. We constructed ProtReDox (https://protein-redox-potential.web.app), a manually curated database of experimentally determined redox potentials. With over 500 measurements, we can begin to identify how proteins modulate oxidation-reduction energetics across the tree of life. By mapping redox potentials onto networks of oxidoreductase fold evolution, we can infer the evolution of electron transfer energetics over deep time. ProtReDox is designed to include user-contributed submissions with the intention of making it a valuable resource for researchers in this field.


Assuntos
Oxirredutases , Oxirredutases/química , Oxirredução , Transporte de Elétrons
4.
Appl Environ Microbiol ; 90(4): e0236323, 2024 Apr 17.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38551351

RESUMO

Microbial biosensors that convert environmental information into real-time visual outputs are limited in their sensing abilities in complex environments, such as soil and wastewater, due to optical inaccessibility. Biosensors that could record transient exposure to analytes within a large time window for later retrieval represent a promising approach to solve the accessibility problem. Here, we test the performance of recombinase-memory biosensors that sense a sugar (arabinose) and a microbial communication molecule (3-oxo-C12-L-homoserine lactone) over 8 days (~70 generations) following analyte exposure. These biosensors sense the analyte and trigger the expression of a recombinase enzyme which flips a segment of DNA, creating a genetic memory, and initiates fluorescent protein expression. The initial designs failed over time due to unintended DNA flipping in the absence of the analyte and loss of the flipped state after exposure to the analyte. Biosensor performance was improved by decreasing recombinase expression, removing the fluorescent protein output, and using quantitative PCR to read out stored information. Application of memory biosensors in wastewater isolates achieved memory of analyte exposure in an uncharacterized Pseudomonas isolate. By returning these engineered isolates to their native environments, recombinase-memory systems are expected to enable longer duration and in situ investigation of microbial signaling, cross-feeding, community shifts, and gene transfer beyond the reach of traditional environmental biosensors.IMPORTANCEMicrobes mediate ecological processes over timescales that can far exceed the half-lives of transient metabolites and signals that drive their collective behaviors. We investigated strategies for engineering microbes to stably record their transient exposure to a chemical over many generations through DNA rearrangements. We identify genetic architectures that improve memory biosensor performance and characterize these in wastewater isolates. Memory biosensors are expected to be useful for monitoring cell-cell signals in biofilms, detecting transient exposure to chemical pollutants, and observing microbial cross-feeding through short-lived metabolites within cryptic methane, nitrogen, and sulfur cycling processes. They will also enable in situ studies of microbial responses to ephemeral environmental changes, or other ecological processes that are currently challenging to monitor non-destructively using real-time biosensors and analytical instruments.


Assuntos
Técnicas Biossensoriais , Águas Residuárias , Recombinases , DNA , Pseudomonas , Corantes
5.
Biochemistry ; 61(13): 1337-1350, 2022 07 05.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35687533

RESUMO

The multiheme cytochrome MtrA enables microbial respiration by transferring electrons across the outer membrane to extracellular electron acceptors. While structural studies have identified residues that mediate the binding of MtrA to hemes and to other cytochromes that facilitate extracellular electron transfer (EET), the relative importance of these interactions for EET is not known. To better understand EET, we evaluated how insertion of an octapeptide across all MtrA backbone locations affects Shewanella oneidensis MR-1 respiration on Fe(III). The EET efficiency was found to be inversely correlated with the proximity of the insertion to the heme prosthetic groups. Mutants with decreased EET efficiencies also arose from insertions in a subset of the regions that make residue-residue contacts with the porin MtrB, while all sites contacting the extracellular cytochrome MtrC presented high peptide insertion tolerance. MtrA variants having peptide insertions within the CXXCH motifs that coordinate heme cofactors retained some ability to support respiration on Fe(III), although these variants presented significantly decreased EET efficiencies. Furthermore, the fitness of cells expressing different MtrA variants under Fe(III) respiration conditions correlated with anode reduction. The peptide insertion profile, which represents the first comprehensive sequence-structure-function map for a multiheme cytochrome, implicates MtrA as a strategic protein engineering target for the regulation of EET.


Assuntos
Elétrons , Shewanella , Citocromos/genética , Citocromos/metabolismo , Transporte de Elétrons , Compostos Férricos/metabolismo , Heme/química , Oxirredução , Peptídeos/genética , Peptídeos/metabolismo , Shewanella/genética , Shewanella/metabolismo
6.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 116(29): 14557-14562, 2019 07 16.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31262814

RESUMO

A symmetric origin for bacterial ferredoxins was first proposed over 50 y ago, yet, to date, no functional symmetric molecule has been constructed. It is hypothesized that extant proteins have drifted from their symmetric roots via gene duplication followed by mutations. Phylogenetic analyses of extant ferredoxins support the independent evolution of N- and C-terminal sequences, thereby allowing consensus-based design of symmetric 4Fe-4S molecules. All designs bind two [4Fe-4S] clusters and exhibit strongly reducing midpoint potentials ranging from -405 to -515 mV. One of these constructs efficiently shuttles electrons through a designed metabolic pathway in Escherichia coli These finding establish that ferredoxins consisting of a symmetric core can be used as a platform to design novel electron transfer carriers for in vivo applications. Outer-shell asymmetry increases sequence space without compromising electron transfer functionality.


Assuntos
Proteínas de Escherichia coli/genética , Escherichia coli/metabolismo , Ferredoxinas/genética , Engenharia Metabólica , Sequência Consenso/genética , Transporte de Elétrons/genética , Escherichia coli/genética , Proteínas de Escherichia coli/metabolismo , Evolução Molecular , Ferredoxinas/metabolismo , Duplicação Gênica , Redes e Vias Metabólicas/genética , Filogenia
7.
J Biol Chem ; 295(31): 10610-10623, 2020 07 31.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32434930

RESUMO

Marine cyanobacteria are infected by phages whose genomes encode ferredoxin (Fd) electron carriers. These Fds are thought to redirect the energy harvested from light to phage-encoded oxidoreductases that enhance viral fitness, but it is unclear how the biophysical properties and partner specificities of phage Fds relate to those of photosynthetic organisms. Here, results of a bioinformatics analysis using a sequence similarity network revealed that phage Fds are most closely related to cyanobacterial Fds that transfer electrons from photosystems to oxidoreductases involved in nutrient assimilation. Structural analysis of myovirus P-SSM2 Fd (pssm2-Fd), which infects the cyanobacterium Prochlorococcus marinus, revealed high levels of similarity to cyanobacterial Fds (root mean square deviations of ≤0.5 Å). Additionally, pssm2-Fd exhibited a low midpoint reduction potential (-336 mV versus a standard hydrogen electrode), similar to other photosynthetic Fds, although it had lower thermostability (Tm = 28 °C) than did many other Fds. When expressed in an Escherichia coli strain deficient in sulfite assimilation, pssm2-Fd complemented bacterial growth when coexpressed with a P. marinus sulfite reductase, revealing that pssm2-Fd can transfer electrons to a host protein involved in nutrient assimilation. The high levels of structural similarity with cyanobacterial Fds and reactivity with a host sulfite reductase suggest that phage Fds evolved to transfer electrons to cyanobacterially encoded oxidoreductases.


Assuntos
Proteínas de Bactérias , Bacteriófagos/enzimologia , Ferredoxinas , Oxirredutases atuantes sobre Doadores de Grupo Enxofre , Prochlorococcus , Proteínas Virais , Proteínas de Bactérias/química , Proteínas de Bactérias/metabolismo , Ferredoxinas/química , Ferredoxinas/metabolismo , Oxirredutases atuantes sobre Doadores de Grupo Enxofre/química , Oxirredutases atuantes sobre Doadores de Grupo Enxofre/metabolismo , Prochlorococcus/enzimologia , Prochlorococcus/virologia , Proteínas Virais/química , Proteínas Virais/metabolismo
8.
Nat Chem Biol ; 15(2): 189-195, 2019 02.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30559426

RESUMO

Biological electron transfer is challenging to directly regulate using environmental conditions. To enable dynamic, protein-level control over energy flow in metabolic systems for synthetic biology and bioelectronics, we created ferredoxin logic gates that utilize transcriptional and post-translational inputs to control energy flow through a synthetic electron transfer pathway that is required for bacterial growth. These logic gates were created by subjecting a thermostable, plant-type ferredoxin to backbone fission and fusing the resulting fragments to a pair of proteins that self-associate, a pair of proteins whose association is stabilized by a small molecule, and to the termini of a ligand-binding domain. We show that the latter domain insertion design strategy yields an allosteric ferredoxin switch that acquires an oxygen-tolerant [2Fe-2S] cluster and can use different chemicals, including a therapeutic drug and an environmental pollutant, to control the production of a reduced metabolite in Escherichia coli and cell lysates.


Assuntos
Transporte de Elétrons/fisiologia , Metaloproteínas/fisiologia , Sequência de Aminoácidos , Espectroscopia de Ressonância de Spin Eletrônica/métodos , Transporte de Elétrons/efeitos dos fármacos , Elétrons , Escherichia coli/metabolismo , Ferredoxinas/fisiologia , Metaloproteínas/genética , Mutagênese Sítio-Dirigida/métodos , Processamento de Proteína Pós-Traducional/fisiologia
9.
Nucleic Acids Res ; 46(13): e76, 2018 07 27.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29912470

RESUMO

Deep mutational scanning has been used to create high-resolution DNA sequence maps that illustrate the functional consequences of large numbers of point mutations. However, this approach has not yet been applied to libraries of genes created by random circular permutation, an engineering strategy that is used to create open reading frames that express proteins with altered contact order. We describe a new method, termed circular permutation profiling with DNA sequencing (CPP-seq), which combines a one-step transposon mutagenesis protocol for creating libraries with a functional selection, deep sequencing and computational analysis to obtain unbiased insight into a protein's tolerance to circular permutation. Application of this method to an adenylate kinase revealed that CPP-seq creates two types of vectors encoding each circularly permuted gene, which differ in their ability to express proteins. Functional selection of this library revealed that >65% of the sampled vectors that express proteins are enriched relative to those that cannot translate proteins. Mapping enriched sequences onto structure revealed that the mobile AMP binding and rigid core domains display greater tolerance to backbone fragmentation than the mobile lid domain, illustrating how CPP-seq can be used to relate a protein's biophysical characteristics to the retention of activity upon permutation.


Assuntos
Biblioteca Gênica , Sequenciamento de Nucleotídeos em Larga Escala/métodos , Mutagênese , Análise de Sequência de DNA/métodos , Adenilato Quinase/genética , Elementos de DNA Transponíveis , Variação Genética
10.
Biochemistry ; 55(51): 7047-7064, 2016 Dec 27.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27966889

RESUMO

The ferredoxin (Fd) protein family is a structurally diverse group of iron-sulfur proteins that function as electron carriers, linking biochemical pathways important for energy transduction, nutrient assimilation, and primary metabolism. While considerable biochemical information about individual Fd protein electron carriers and their reactions has been acquired, we cannot yet anticipate the proportion of electrons shuttled between different Fd-partner proteins within cells using biochemical parameters that govern electron flow, such as holo-Fd concentration, midpoint potential (driving force), molecular interactions (affinity and kinetics), conformational changes (allostery), and off-pathway electron leakage (chemical oxidation). Herein, we describe functional and structural gaps in our Fd knowledge within the context of a sequence similarity network and phylogenetic tree, and we propose a strategy for improving our understanding of Fd sequence-function relationships. We suggest comparing the functions of divergent Fds within cells whose growth, or other measurable output, requires electron transfer between defined electron donor and acceptor proteins. By comparing Fd-mediated electron transfer with biochemical parameters that govern electron flow, we posit that models that anticipate energy flow across Fd interactomes can be built. This approach is expected to transform our ability to anticipate Fd control over electron flow in cellular settings, an obstacle to the construction of synthetic electron transfer pathways and rational optimization of existing energy-conserving pathways.


Assuntos
Bactérias/metabolismo , Elétrons , Ferredoxinas/metabolismo , Redes e Vias Metabólicas , Sequência de Aminoácidos , Bactérias/citologia , Transporte de Elétrons , Ferredoxinas/química , Ferredoxinas/genética , Proteínas Ferro-Enxofre/classificação , Proteínas Ferro-Enxofre/genética , Proteínas Ferro-Enxofre/metabolismo , Cinética , Modelos Moleculares , Mutação , Oxirredução , Filogenia , Conformação Proteica , Homologia de Sequência de Aminoácidos
11.
Biochemistry ; 55(27): 3763-73, 2016 07 12.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27304983

RESUMO

Bacteriophytochrome photoreceptors (BphP) are knotted proteins that have been developed as near-infrared fluorescent protein (iRFP) reporters of gene expression. To explore how rearrangements in the peptides that interlace into the knot within the BphP photosensory core affect folding, we subjected iRFPs to random circular permutation using an improved transposase mutagenesis strategy and screened for variants that fluoresce. We identified 27 circularly permuted iRFPs that display biliverdin-dependent fluorescence in Escherichia coli. The variants with the brightest whole cell fluorescence initiated translation at residues near the domain linker and knot tails, although fluorescent variants that initiated translation within the PAS and GAF domains were discovered. Circularly permuted iRFPs retained sufficient cofactor affinity to fluoresce in tissue culture without the addition of biliverdin, and one variant displayed enhanced fluorescence when expressed in bacteria and tissue culture. This variant displayed a quantum yield similar to that of iRFPs but exhibited increased resistance to chemical denaturation, suggesting that the observed increase in the magnitude of the signal arose from more efficient protein maturation. These results show how the contact order of a knotted BphP can be altered without disrupting chromophore binding and fluorescence, an important step toward the creation of near-infrared biosensors with expanded chemical sensing functions for in vivo imaging.


Assuntos
Proteínas de Bactérias/química , Escherichia coli/metabolismo , Proteínas Luminescentes/química , Fragmentos de Peptídeos/química , Fitocromo/química , Dobramento de Proteína , Espectroscopia de Luz Próxima ao Infravermelho , Proteínas de Bactérias/metabolismo , Western Blotting , Citometria de Fluxo , Fluorescência , Células HeLa , Humanos , Proteínas Luminescentes/metabolismo , Modelos Moleculares , Conformação Proteica
12.
Environ Sci Technol ; 50(16): 8750-9, 2016 08 16.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27415416

RESUMO

Traditional visual reporters of gene expression have only very limited use in soils because their outputs are challenging to detect through the soil matrix. This severely restricts our ability to study time-dependent microbial gene expression in one of the Earth's largest, most complex habitats. Here we describe an approach to report on dynamic gene expression within a microbial population in a soil under natural water levels (at and below water holding capacity) via production of methyl halides using a methyl halide transferase. As a proof-of-concept application, we couple the expression of this gas reporter to the conjugative transfer of a bacterial plasmid in a soil matrix and show that gas released from the matrix displays a strong correlation with the number of transconjugant bacteria that formed. Gas reporting of gene expression will make possible dynamic studies of natural and engineered microbes within many hard-to-image environmental matrices (soils, sediments, sludge, and biomass) at sample scales exceeding those used for traditional visual reporting.


Assuntos
Solo , Transferases , Biomassa , Genes Microbianos , Microbiologia do Solo
13.
Nucleic Acids Res ; 40(9): e71, 2012 May.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22319214

RESUMO

A simple approach for creating libraries of circularly permuted proteins is described that is called PERMutation Using Transposase Engineering (PERMUTE). In PERMUTE, the transposase MuA is used to randomly insert a minitransposon that can function as a protein expression vector into a plasmid that contains the open reading frame (ORF) being permuted. A library of vectors that express different permuted variants of the ORF-encoded protein is created by: (i) using bacteria to select for target vectors that acquire an integrated minitransposon; (ii) excising the ensemble of ORFs that contain an integrated minitransposon from the selected vectors; and (iii) circularizing the ensemble of ORFs containing integrated minitransposons using intramolecular ligation. Construction of a Thermotoga neapolitana adenylate kinase (AK) library using PERMUTE revealed that this approach produces vectors that express circularly permuted proteins with distinct sequence diversity from existing methods. In addition, selection of this library for variants that complement the growth of Escherichia coli with a temperature-sensitive AK identified functional proteins with novel architectures, suggesting that PERMUTE will be useful for the directed evolution of proteins with new functions.


Assuntos
Variação Genética , Mutagênese Insercional/métodos , Transposases , Adenilato Quinase/química , Adenilato Quinase/genética , Escherichia coli/genética , Vetores Genéticos , Thermotoga neapolitana/enzimologia
14.
mSystems ; 9(1): e0096623, 2024 Jan 23.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38059636

RESUMO

Microbes can be found in abundance many kilometers underground. While microbial metabolic capabilities have been examined across different geochemical settings, it remains unclear how changes in subsurface niches affect microbial needs to sense and respond to their environment. To address this question, we examined how microbial extracellular sensor systems vary with environmental conditions across metagenomes at different Deep Mine Microbial Observatory (DeMMO) subsurface sites. Because two-component systems (TCSs) directly sense extracellular conditions and convert this information into intracellular biochemical responses, we expected that this sensor family would vary across isolated oligotrophic subterranean environments that differ in abiotic and biotic conditions. TCSs were found at all six subsurface sites, the service water control, and the surface site, with an average of 0.88 sensor histidine kinases (HKs) per 100 genes across all sites. Abundance was greater in subsurface fracture fluids compared with surface-derived fluids, and candidate phyla radiation (CPR) bacteria presented the lowest HK frequencies. Measures of microbial diversity, such as the Shannon diversity index, revealed that HK abundance is inversely correlated with microbial diversity (r2 = 0.81). Among the geochemical parameters measured, HK frequency correlated most strongly with variance in dissolved organic carbon (r2 = 0.82). Taken together, these results implicate the abiotic and biotic properties of an ecological niche as drivers of sensor needs, and they suggest that microbes in environments with large fluctuations in organic nutrients (e.g., lacustrine, terrestrial, and coastal ecosystems) may require greater TCS diversity than ecosystems with low nutrients (e.g., open ocean).IMPORTANCEThe ability to detect extracellular environmental conditions is a fundamental property of all life forms. Because microbial two-component sensor systems convert information about extracellular conditions into biochemical information that controls their behaviors, we evaluated how two-component sensor systems evolved within the deep Earth across multiple sites where abiotic and biotic properties vary. We show that these sensor systems remain abundant in microbial consortia at all subterranean sampling sites and observe correlations between sensor system abundances and abiotic (dissolved organic carbon variation) and biotic (consortia diversity) properties. These results suggest that multiple environmental properties may drive sensor protein evolution and highlight the need for further studies of metagenomic and geochemical data in parallel to understand the drivers of microbial sensor evolution.


Assuntos
Matéria Orgânica Dissolvida , Ecossistema , Bactérias/genética , Metagenoma , Meio Ambiente
15.
J Am Chem Soc ; 135(8): 2979-82, 2013 Feb 27.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23406315

RESUMO

We describe a genetic AND gate for cell-targeted metabolic labeling and proteomic analysis in complex cellular systems. The centerpiece of the AND gate is a bisected methionyl-tRNA synthetase (MetRS) that charges the Met surrogate azidonorleucine (Anl) to tRNA(Met). Cellular protein labeling occurs only upon activation of two different promoters that drive expression of the N- and C-terminal fragments of the bisected MetRS. Anl-labeled proteins can be tagged with fluorescent dyes or affinity reagents via either copper-catalyzed or strain-promoted azide-alkyne cycloaddition. Protein labeling is apparent within 5 min after addition of Anl to bacterial cells in which the AND gate has been activated. This method allows spatial and temporal control of proteomic labeling and identification of proteins made in specific cellular subpopulations. The approach is demonstrated by selective labeling of proteins in bacterial cells immobilized in the center of a laminar-flow microfluidic channel, where they are exposed to overlapping, opposed gradients of inducers of the N- and C-terminal MetRS fragments. The observed labeling profile is predicted accurately from the strengths of the individual input signals.


Assuntos
Engenharia Genética , Proteínas/metabolismo , Catálise , Ciclização , Metionina tRNA Ligase/metabolismo , Proteínas/genética
16.
Environ Sci Technol ; 47(20): 11496-503, 2013 Oct 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24066613

RESUMO

Charcoal has a long soil residence time, which has resulted in its production and use as a carbon sequestration technique (biochar). A range of biological effects can be triggered by soil biochar that can positively and negatively influence carbon storage, such as changing the decomposition rate of organic matter and altering plant biomass production. Sorption of cellular signals has been hypothesized to underlie some of these effects, but it remains unknown whether the binding of biochemical signals occurs, and if so, on time scales relevant to microbial growth and communication. We examined biochar sorption of N-3-oxo-dodecanoyl-L-homoserine lactone, an acyl-homoserine lactone (AHL) intercellular signaling molecule used by many gram-negative soil microbes to regulate gene expression. We show that wood biochars disrupt communication within a growing multicellular system that is made up of sender cells that synthesize AHL and receiver cells that express green fluorescent protein in response to an AHL signal. However, biochar inhibition of AHL-mediated cell-cell communication varied, with the biochar prepared at 700 °C (surface area of 301 m(2)/g) inhibiting cellular communication 10-fold more than an equivalent mass of biochar prepared at 300 °C (surface area of 3 m(2)/g). These findings provide the first direct evidence that biochars elicit a range of effects on gene expression dependent on intercellular signaling, implicating the method of biochar preparation as a parameter that could be tuned to regulate microbial-dependent soil processes, like nitrogen fixation and pest attack of root crops.


Assuntos
Bactérias/metabolismo , Carvão Vegetal/metabolismo , Transdução de Sinais , Acil-Butirolactonas/isolamento & purificação , Adsorção , Genes Reporter , Proteínas de Fluorescência Verde/metabolismo , Temperatura
17.
Protein Sci ; 32(10): e4746, 2023 Oct.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37551563

RESUMO

Flavodoxins (Flds) mediate the flux of electrons between oxidoreductases in diverse metabolic pathways. To investigate whether Flds can support electron transfer to a sulfite reductase (SIR) that evolved to couple with a ferredoxin, we evaluated the ability of Flds to transfer electrons from a ferredoxin-NADP reductase (FNR) to a ferredoxin-dependent SIR using growth complementation of an Escherichia coli strain with a sulfur metabolism defect. We show that Flds from cyanobacteria complement this growth defect when coexpressed with an FNR and an SIR that evolved to couple with a plant ferredoxin. When we evaluated the effect of peptide insertion on Fld-mediated electron transfer, we observed a sensitivity to insertions within regions predicted to be proximal to the cofactor and partner binding sites, while a high insertion tolerance was detected within loops distal from the cofactor and within regions of helices and sheets that are proximal to those loops. Bioinformatic analysis showed that natural Fld sequence variability predicts a large fraction of the motifs that tolerate insertion of the octapeptide SGRPGSLS. These results represent the first evidence that Flds can support electron transfer to assimilatory SIRs, and they suggest that the pattern of insertion tolerance is influenced by interactions with oxidoreductase partners.

18.
ACS Synth Biol ; 12(12): 3743-3753, 2023 Dec 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37991716

RESUMO

Soil microbial communities with reduced complexity are emerging as model systems for studying consortia-scale phenotypes. To establish synthetic biology tools for studying these communities in hard-to-image environmental materials, we evaluated whether a single member of a model soil consortium (MSC) can be programmed to report on gene expression without requiring matrix disruption. For these studies, we targeted a five-membered MSC that includes Dyadobacter fermentans, Ensifer adhaerens, Rhodococcus sp003130705, Streptomyces sp001905665, and Variovorax beijingensis. By coupling the expression of a methyl halide transferase to a constitutive promoter, we show that V. beijingensis can be programmed to synthesize methyl halides that accumulate in the soil headspace at levels that are ≥24-fold higher than all other MSC members across a range of environmentally relevant hydration conditions. We find that methyl halide production can report on an MSC promoter that is activated by changes in water potential, and we demonstrate that a synthetic gas signal can be read out directly using gas chromatography and indirectly using a soil-derived Methylorubrum that is programmed to produce a visual output in response to methyl halides. These tools will be useful for future studies that investigate how MSC responds to dynamic hydration conditions, such as drought and flood events induced by climate change, which can alter soil water potential and induce the release of stored carbon.


Assuntos
Hidrocarbonetos Bromados , Solo , Solo/química , Água , Transdução de Sinais
19.
mSystems ; 7(4): e0030122, 2022 08 30.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35880897

RESUMO

Soil matrix properties influence microbial behaviors that underlie nutrient cycling, greenhouse gas production, and soil formation. However, the dynamic and heterogeneous nature of soils makes it challenging to untangle the effects of different matrix properties on microbial behaviors. To address this challenge, we developed a tunable artificial soil recipe and used these materials to study the abiotic mechanisms driving soil microbial growth and communication. When we used standardized matrices with varying textures to culture gas-reporting biosensors, we found that a Gram-negative bacterium (Escherichia coli) grew best in synthetic silt soils, remaining active over a wide range of soil matric potentials, while a Gram-positive bacterium (Bacillus subtilis) preferred sandy soils, sporulating at low water potentials. Soil texture, mineralogy, and alkalinity all attenuated the bioavailability of an acyl-homoserine lactone (AHL) signaling molecule that controls community-level microbial behaviors. Texture controlled the timing of AHL sensing, while AHL bioavailability was decreased ~105-fold by mineralogy and ~103-fold by alkalinity. Finally, we built artificial soils with a range of complexities that converge on the properties of one Mollisol. As artificial soil complexity increased to more closely resemble the Mollisol, microbial behaviors approached those occurring in the natural soil, with the notable exception of organic matter. IMPORTANCE Understanding environmental controls on soil microbes is difficult because many abiotic parameters vary simultaneously and uncontrollably when different natural soils are compared, preventing mechanistic determination of any individual soil parameter's effect on microbial behaviors. We describe how soil texture, mineralogy, pH, and organic matter content can be varied individually within artificial soils to study their effects on soil microbes. Using microbial biosensors that report by producing a rare indicator gas, we identify soil properties that control microbial growth and attenuate the bioavailability of a diffusible chemical used to control community-level behaviors. We find that artificial soils differentially affect signal bioavailability and the growth of Gram-negative (Escherichia coli) and Gram-positive (Bacillus subtilis) microbes. These artificial soils are useful for studying the mechanisms that underlie soil controls on microbial fitness, signaling, and gene transfer.


Assuntos
Acil-Butirolactonas , Solo , Solo/química , Escherichia coli/genética , Areia , Microbiologia do Solo
20.
ACS Synth Biol ; 11(7): 2372-2383, 2022 07 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35715210

RESUMO

Gene expression can be monitored in hard-to-image environmental materials using gas-reporting biosensors, but these outputs have only been applied in autoclaved matrices that are hydrated with rich medium. To better understand the compatibility of indicator gas reporting with environmental samples, we evaluated how matrix hydration affects the gas signal of an engineered microbe added to a sieved soil. A gas-reporting microbe presented a gas signal in a forest soil (Alfisol) when hydrated to an environmentally relevant osmotic pressure. When the gas signal was concentrated prior to analysis, a biosensor titer of 103 cells/gram of soil produced a significant signal when soil was supplemented with halides. A signal was also observed without halide amendment, but a higher cell titer (106 cells/gram of soil) was required. A sugar-regulated gas biosensor was able to report with a similar level of sensitivity when added to an unsterilized soil matrix, illustrating how gas concentration enables biosensing within a soil containing environmental microbes. These results establish conditions where engineered microbes can report on gene expression in living environmental matrices with decreased perturbation of the soil environment compared to previously reported approaches, using biosensor titers that are orders of magnitude lower than the number of cells typically observed in a gram of soil.


Assuntos
Técnicas Biossensoriais , Solo
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