Imbalanced metabolism induced NH4+ accumulation and its effect on the central metabolism of Methylomonas sp. ZR1 / El metabolismo desequilibrado indujo la acumulación de NH4+ y su efecto sobre el metabolismo central de Methylomonas sp. ZR1
Int. microbiol
; 27(1): 49-66, Feb. 2024. graf
Article
en En
| IBECS
| ID: ibc-230243
Biblioteca responsable:
ES1.1
Ubicación: ES15.1 - BNCS
ABSTRACT
Nitrogen and carbon are the two most essential nutrient elements, and their metabolism is tightly coupled in single carbon metabolic microorganisms. However, the nitrogen metabolism and the nitrogen/carbon (N/C) metabolic balance in single-carbon metabolism is poorly studied. In this study, the nitrogen metabolism pattern of the fast growing methanotrophs Methylomonas sp. ZR1 grown in methane and methanol was studied. Effect study of different nitrogen sources on the cell growth of ZR1 indicates that nitrate salts are the best nitrogen source supporting the growth of ZR1 using methane and methanol as carbon source. However, its metabolic intermediate ammonium was found to accumulate with high N/C ratio in the medium and consequently inhibit the growth of ZR1. Studies of carbon and nitrogen metabolic kinetic under different N/C ratio conditions indicate that the accumulation of NH4+ is caused by the imbalanced nitrogen and carbon metabolism in ZR1. Feeding carbon skeleton α-ketoglutaric acid could effectively relieve the inhibition effect of NH4+ on the growth of ZR1, which further confirms this assumption. qPCR analysis of the expression level of the central metabolic key enzyme gene indicates that the nitrogen metabolic intermediate ammonium has strong regulation effect on the central nitrogen and carbon metabolism in ZR1. qPCR-combined genomic analysis confirms that a third ammonium assimilation pathway glycine synthesis system is operated in ZR1 to balance the nitrogen and carbon metabolism. Based on the qPCR result, it was also found that ZR1 employs two strategies to relieve ammonium stress in the presence of ammonium: assimilating excess ammonium or cutting off the nitrogen reduction reactions according to the available C1 substrate. Validating the connections between single-carbon and nitrogen metabolism and studying the accumulation and assimilation mechanism of ammonium will contribute to understand how nitrogen regulates cellular growth in single-carbon metabolic microorganisms.(AU)
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Colección:
06-national
/
ES
Base de datos:
IBECS
Asunto principal:
Carbono
/
Methylomonas
/
Metanol
/
Metabolismo
/
Nitrógeno
Límite:
Humans
Idioma:
En
Revista:
Int. microbiol
Año:
2024
Tipo del documento:
Article