Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Show: 20 | 50 | 100
Results 1 - 2 de 2
Filter
Add more filters

Database
Language
Affiliation country
Publication year range
1.
Microb Physiol ; 34(1): 88-107, 2024.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38262373

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: Phocaeicola vulgatus (formerly Bacteroides vulgatus) is a prevalent member of human and animal guts, where it influences by its dietary-fiber-fueled, fermentative metabolism the microbial community as well as the host health. Moreover, the fermentative metabolism of P. vulgatus bears potential for a sustainable production of bulk chemicals. The aim of the present study was to refine the current understanding of the P. vulgatus physiology. METHODS: P. vulgatus was adapted to anaerobic growth with 14 different carbohydrates, ranging from hexoses, pentoses, hemicellulose, via an uronic acid to deoxy sugars. These substrate-adapted cells formed the basis to define the growth stoichiometries by quantifying growth/fermentation parameters and to reconstruct the catabolic network by applying differential proteomics. RESULTS: The determination of growth performance revealed, e.g., doubling times (h) from 1.39 (arabinose) to 14.26 (glucuronate), biomass yields (gCDW/mmolS) from 0.01 (fucose) to 0.27 (α-cyclodextrin), and ATP yields (mMATP/mMC) from 0.21 (rhamnose) to 0.60 (glucuronate/xylan). Furthermore, fermentation product spectra were determined, ranging from broad and balanced (with xylan: acetate, succinate, formate, and propanoate) to rather one sided (with rhamnose or fucose: mainly propane-1,2-diol). The fermentation network serving all tested compounds is composed of 56 proteins (all identified), with several peripheral reaction sequences formed with high substrate specificity (e.g., conversion of arabinose to d-xylulose-3-phosphate) implicating a fine-tuned regulation. By contrast, central modules (e.g., glycolysis or the reaction sequence from PEP to succinate) were constitutively formed. Extensive formation of propane-1,2-diol from rhamnose and fucose involves rhamnulokinase (RhaB), rhamnulose-1-phosphate kinase (RhaD), and lactaldehyde reductase (FucO). Furthermore, Sus-like systems are apparently the most relevant uptake systems and a complex array of transmembrane electron-transfer systems (e.g., Na+-pumping Rnf and Nqr complexes, fumarate reductase) as well as F- and V-type ATP-synthases were detected. CONCLUSIONS: The present study provides insights into the potential contribution of P. vulgatus to the gut metabolome and into the strain's biotechnological potential for sustainable production of short-chain fatty acids and alcohols.


Subject(s)
Fermentation , Proteomics , Fermentation/physiology , Bacterial Proteins/metabolism , Gastrointestinal Microbiome/physiology , Anaerobiosis/physiology , Dietary Fiber/metabolism , Humans , Bacteroidetes/metabolism , Metabolic Networks and Pathways
2.
Microb Physiol ; 34(1): 153-169, 2024.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38621362

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: Phocaeicola vulgatus (basonym Bacteroides vulgatus) belongs to the intestinal microbiome of healthy humans and animals, where it participates in the fermentative breakdown of biopolymers ingested with food. In doing so, P. vulgatus contributes to the shaping of the gut metabolome, which benefits the host health. Moreover, considering the fermentation product range (short chain fatty acids), P. vulgatus suggests itself as a potential nonstandard platform organism for a sustainable production of basic organic chemicals. Complementing a recent physiologic-proteomic report deciphering the strain's versatile fermentation network, the present study focusses on the global growth phase-dependent response of P. vulgatus. METHODS: P. vulgatus was anaerobically cultivated with glucose as sole source of carbon and energy in process-controlled bioreactors operated in parallel. Close sampling was conducted to measure growth parameters (OD, CDW, ATP-content, substrate/product profiles) as basis for determining growth stoichiometry in detail. A coarser sampling (½ODmax, ODmax, and ODstat) served the molecular analysis of the global growth phase-dependent response, studied by means of differential proteomics (soluble and membrane fractions, nanoLC-ESI-MS/MS) as well as targeted metabolite (GC-MS and LC-MS/MS) and untargeted exometabolome (FT-ICR-MS) analyses. RESULTS: The determined growth performance of P. vulgatus features 1.74 h doubling time, 0.06 gCDW/mmolGlc biomass yield, 0.36 (succinate) and 0.61 (acetate) mmolP/mmolGlc as predominant fermentation product yields, and 0.43 mmolATP/mmolC as theoretically calculated ATP yield. The fermentation pathway displayed distinct growth phase-dependent dynamics: the levels of proteins and their accompanying metabolites constituting the upper part of glycolysis peaked at ½ODmax, whereas those of the lower part of glycolysis and of the fermentation routes in particular toward the predominant products acetate and succinate were highest at ODmax and ODstat. While identified proteins of monomer biosynthesis displayed rather unspecific profiles, most of the intracellular amino acids peaked at ODmax. By contrast, proteins and metabolites related to stress response and quorum sensing showed increased abundances at ODmax and ODstat. Finally, the composition of the exometabolome expanded from 2,317 molecular formulas at ½ODmax via 4,258 at ODmax to 4,501 at ODstat, with growth phase-specific subsets increasing in parallel. CONCLUSIONS: The present study provides insights into the distinct growth phase-dependent behavior of P. vulgatus during cultivation in bioreactors on the physiological and molecular levels. This could serve as a valuable knowledge-base for further developing P. vulgatus as a nonconventional platform organism for biotechnological applications. In addition, the findings shed new light on the potential growth phase-dependent imprints of P. vulgatus on the gut microbiome environment, e.g., by indicating interactions via quorum sensing and by unraveling the complex exometabolic background against which fermentation products and secondary metabolites are formed.


Subject(s)
Bioreactors , Fermentation , Gastrointestinal Microbiome , Glucose , Gastrointestinal Microbiome/physiology , Fermentation/physiology , Glucose/metabolism , Bioreactors/microbiology , Proteomics , Bacterial Proteins/metabolism , Humans , Bacteroides/metabolism , Bacteroides/growth & development , Anaerobiosis/physiology , Metabolome/physiology
SELECTION OF CITATIONS
SEARCH DETAIL