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1.
Microbiol Spectr ; 11(6): e0210023, 2023 Dec 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37823660

ABSTRACT

IMPORTANCE: Aromatic compounds are globally abundant organic molecules with a multitude of natural and anthropogenic sources, underpinning the relevance of their biodegradation. A. aromaticum EbN1T is a well-studied environmental betaproteobacterium specialized on the anaerobic degradation of aromatic compounds. The here studied responsiveness toward phenol in conjunction with the apparent high ligand selectivity (non-promiscuity) of its PheR sensor and those of the related p-cresol (PcrS) and p-ethylphenol (EtpR) sensors are in accord with the substrate-specificity and biochemical distinctiveness of the associated degradation pathways. Furthermore, the present findings advance our general understanding of the substrate-specific regulation of the strain's remarkable degradation network and of the concentration thresholds below which phenolic compounds become essentially undetectable and as a consequence should escape substantial biodegradation. Furthermore, the findings may inspire biomimetic sensor designs for detecting and quantifying phenolic contaminants in wastewater or environments.


Subject(s)
Phenol , Phenols , Phenol/metabolism , Phenols/metabolism , Rhodocyclaceae/metabolism , Biodegradation, Environmental , Anaerobiosis
2.
mSystems ; 7(6): e0068522, 2022 12 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36445109

ABSTRACT

Members of the genus Aromatoleum thrive in diverse habitats and use a broad range of recalcitrant organic molecules coupled to denitrification or O2 respiration. To gain a holistic understanding of the model organism A. aromaticum EbN1T, we studied its catabolic network dynamics in response to 3-(4-hydroxyphenyl)propanoate, phenylalanine, 3-hydroxybenzoate, benzoate, and acetate utilized under nitrate-reducing versus oxic conditions. Integrated multi-omics (transcriptome, proteome, and metabolome) covered most of the catabolic network (199 genes) and allowed for the refining of knowledge of the degradation modules studied. Their substrate-dependent regulation showed differing degrees of specificity, ranging from high with 3-(4-hydroxyphenyl)propanoate to mostly relaxed with benzoate. For benzoate, the transcript and protein formation were essentially constitutive, contrasted by that of anoxia-specific versus oxia-specific metabolite profiles. The matrix factorization of transcriptomic data revealed that the anaerobic modules accounted for most of the variance across the degradation network. The respiration network appeared to be constitutive, both on the transcript and protein levels, except for nitrate reductase (with narGHI expression occurring only under nitrate-reducing conditions). The anoxia/nitrate-dependent transcription of denitrification genes is apparently controlled by three FNR-type regulators as well as by NarXL (all constitutively formed). The resequencing and functional reannotation of the genome fostered a genome-scale metabolic model, which is comprised of 655 enzyme-catalyzed reactions and 731 distinct metabolites. The model predictions for growth rates and biomass yields agreed well with experimental stoichiometric data, except for 3-(4-hydroxyphenyl)propanoate, with which 4-hydroxybenzoate was exported. Taken together, the combination of multi-omics, growth physiology, and a metabolic model advanced our knowledge of an environmentally relevant microorganism that differs significantly from other bacterial model strains. IMPORTANCE Aromatic compounds are abundant constituents not only of natural organic matter but also of bulk industrial chemicals and fuel components of environmental concern. Considering the widespread occurrence of redox gradients in the biosphere, facultative anaerobic degradation specialists can be assumed to play a prominent role in the natural mineralization of organic matter and in bioremediation at contaminated sites. Surprisingly, differential multi-omics profiling of the A. aromaticum EbN1T studied here revealed relaxed regulatory stringency across its four main physiological modi operandi (i.e., O2-independent and O2-dependent degradation reactions versus denitrification and O2 respiration). Combining multi-omics analyses with a genome-scale metabolic model aligned with measured growth performances establishes A. aromaticum EbN1T as a systems-biology model organism and provides unprecedented insights into how this bacterium functions on a holistic level. Moreover, this experimental platform invites future studies on eco-systems and synthetic biology of the environmentally relevant betaproteobacterial Aromatoleum/Azoarcus/Thauera cluster.


Subject(s)
Propionates , Systems Biology , Anaerobiosis , Nitrates , Benzoates
3.
Environ Microbiol ; 24(7): 3195-3211, 2022 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35590445

ABSTRACT

Large quantities of organic matter are continuously deposited, and (a)biotic gradients intersect in the soil-rhizosphere, where biodegradation contributes to the global cycles of elements. The betaproteobacterial genus Aromatoleum comprises cosmopolitan, facultative denitrifying degradation specialists. Aromatoleum aromaticum. pCyN1 stands out for anaerobically decomposing plant-derived monoterpenes in addition to monoaromatic hydrocarbons, polar aromatics and aliphatics. The catabolic network's structure and flexibility in A. aromaticum pCyN1 were studied across 34 growth conditions by superimposing proteome profiles onto the manually annotated 4.37 Mbp genome. Strain pCyN1 employs three fundamentally different enzymes for C-H-bond cleavage at the methyl groups of p-cymene/4-ethyltoluene, toluene and p-cresol respectively. Regulation of degradation modules displayed substrate specificities ranging from narrow (toluene and cyclohexane carboxylate) via medium-wide (one module shared by p-cymene, 4-ethyltoluene, α-phellandrene, α-terpinene, γ-terpinene and limonene) to broad (central benzoyl-CoA pathway serving 16 aromatic substrates). Remarkably, three variants of ATP-dependent (class I) benzoyl-CoA reductase and four different ß-oxidation routes establish a degradation hub that accommodates the substrate diversity. The respiratory system displayed several conspicuous profiles, e.g. the presence of nitrous oxide reductase under oxic and of low-affinity oxidase under anoxic conditions. Overall, nutritional versatility in conjunction with network regulation endow A. aromaticum pCyN1 with broad adaptability.


Subject(s)
Rhodocyclaceae , Toluene , Anaerobiosis , Biodegradation, Environmental , Rhodocyclaceae/metabolism , Toluene/metabolism
4.
Microb Physiol ; 32(3-4): 108-121, 2022.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35468615

ABSTRACT

Phaeobacter inhibens DSM 17395 is a heterotrophic member of the ubiquitous, marine Roseobacter group and specializes in the aerobic utilization of carbohydrates and amino acids via pathways widespread among roseobacters. The in vivo responsiveness of P. inhibens DSM 17395 was studied with nonadapted cells (succinate-grown), which were exposed to a single pulse (100-0.01 µM) each of N-acetylglucosamine, mannitol, xylose, leucine, phenylalanine, or tryptophan (effectors). Responsiveness was then determined by time-resolved transcript analyses (quantitative reverse transcription-PCR) of "degradation" and "uptake" genes selected based on previously reported substrate-specific proteome profiles. The transcriptional response thresholds were: 50-100 nM for nagK (N-acetylglucosamine kinase), paaA (ring 1,2-phenylacetyl-CoA epoxidase), and kynA (tryptophan 2,3-dioxygenase), 10-50 nM for xylA (xylose isomerase), and around 10 nM for mtlK (mannitol 2-dehydrogenase). A threshold for leucine could not be determined due to the elevated intrinsic presence of leucine in the exometabolome of succinate-grown cells (no effector addition). Notably, the response thresholds for presumptive carbohydrate-binding proteins of ABC-transporters were in the same range or even lower: 0.1-1 µM for c27930 (N-acetylglucosamine) and even below 10 nM for c13210 (mannitol) and xylF (xylose). These results shed new light on the sensory/regulatory sensitivity of a well-studied roseobacter for recognizing potential substrates at low ambient concentrations and on the concentration threshold below which these might escape biodegradation ("emergent recalcitrance" concept of dissolved organic matter persistence).


Subject(s)
Amino Acids , Roseobacter , Acetylglucosamine/metabolism , Amino Acids/metabolism , Hexoses/metabolism , Mannitol/metabolism , Rhodobacteraceae , Roseobacter/genetics , Succinates/metabolism , Xylose/metabolism
5.
Appl Environ Microbiol ; 87(11)2021 05 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33741621

ABSTRACT

The betaproteobacterial degradation specialist Aromatoleum aromaticum EbN1T utilizes several plant-derived 3-phenylpropanoids coupled to denitrification. In vivo responsiveness of A. aromaticum EbN1T was studied by exposing nonadapted cells to distinct pulses (spanning 100 µM to 0.1 nM) of 3-phenylpropanoate, cinnamate, 3-(4-hydroxyphenyl)propanoate, or p-coumarate. Time-resolved, targeted transcript analyses via quantitative reverse transcription-PCR of four selected 3-phenylpropanoid genes revealed a response threshold of 30 to 50 nM for p-coumarate and 1 to 10 nM for the other three tested 3-phenylpropanoids. At these concentrations, transmembrane effector equilibration is attained by passive diffusion rather than active uptake via the ABC transporter, presumably serving the studied 3-phenylpropanoids as well as benzoate. Highly substrate-specific enzyme formation (EbA5316 to EbA5321 [EbA5316-21]) for the shared peripheral degradation pathway putatively involves the predicted TetR-type transcriptional repressor PprR. Accordingly, relative transcript abundances of ebA5316-21 are lower in succinate- and benzoate-grown wild-type cells than in an unmarked in-frame ΔpprR mutant. In trans-complementation of pprR into the ΔpprR background restored wild-type-like transcript levels. When adapted to p-coumarate, the three genotypes had relative transcript abundances similar to those of ebA5316-21 despite a significantly longer lag phase of the pprR-complemented mutant (∼100-fold higher pprR transcript level than the wild type). Notably, transcript levels of ebA5316-21 were ∼10- to 100-fold higher in p-coumarate- than succinate- or benzoate-adapted cells across all three genotypes. This indicates the additional involvement of an unknown transcriptional regulator. Furthermore, physiological, transcriptional, and (aromatic) acyl-coenzyme A ester intermediate analyses of the wild type and ΔpprR mutant grown with binary substrate mixtures suggest a mode of catabolite repression of superior order to PprR.IMPORTANCE Lignin is a ubiquitous heterobiopolymer built from a suite of 3-phenylpropanoid subunits. It accounts for more than 30% of the global plant dry material, and lignin-related compounds are increasingly released into the environment from anthropogenic sources, i.e., by wastewater effluents from the paper and pulp industry. Hence, following biological or industrial decomplexation of lignin, vast amounts of structurally diverse 3-phenylpropanoids enter terrestrial and aquatic habitats, where they serve as substrates for microbial degradation. This raises the question of what signaling systems environmental bacteria employ to detect these nutritionally attractive compounds and to adjust their catabolism accordingly. Moreover, determining in vivo response thresholds of an anaerobic degradation specialist such as A. aromaticum EbN1T for these aromatic compounds provides insights into the environmental fate of the latter, i.e., when they could escape biodegradation due to too low ambient concentrations.


Subject(s)
Cinnamates/metabolism , Coumaric Acids/metabolism , Lignin/metabolism , Phenylpropionates/metabolism , Rhodocyclaceae/metabolism , Biodegradation, Environmental
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