Profiling sorghum-microbe interactions with a specialized photoaffinity probe identifies key sorgoleone binders in Acinetobacter pittii.

IF 3.9 2区 生物学 Q2 BIOTECHNOLOGY & APPLIED MICROBIOLOGY
Applied and Environmental Microbiology Pub Date : 2024-10-23 Epub Date: 2024-09-09 DOI:10.1128/aem.01026-24
Elise M Van Fossen, Jared O Kroll, Lindsey N Anderson, Andrew D McNaughton, Daisy Herrera, Yasuhiro Oda, Andrew J Wilson, William C Nelson, Neeraj Kumar, Andrew R Frank, Joshua R Elmore, Pubudu Handakumbura, Vivian S Lin, Robert G Egbert
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Interactions between plants and soil microbial communities that benefit plant growth and enhance nutrient acquisition are driven by the selective release of metabolites from plant roots, or root exudation. To investigate these plant-microbe interactions, we developed a photoaffinity probe based on sorgoleone (sorgoleone diazirine alkyne for photoaffinity labeling, SoDA-PAL), a hydrophobic secondary metabolite and allelochemical produced in Sorghum bicolor root exudates. We applied SoDA-PAL to the identification of sorgoleone-binding proteins in Acinetobacter pittii SO1, a potential plant growth-promoting microbe isolated from sorghum rhizosphere soil. Competitive photoaffinity labeling of A. pittii whole cell lysates with SoDA-PAL identified 137 statistically enriched proteins, including putative transporters, transcriptional regulators, and a subset of proteins with predicted enzymatic functions. We performed computational protein modeling and docking with sorgoleone to prioritize candidates for experimental validation and then confirmed binding of sorgoleone to four of these proteins in vitro: the α/β fold hydrolase SrgB (OH685_09420), a fumarylacetoacetase (OH685_02300), a lysophospholipase (OH685_14215), and an unannotated hypothetical protein (OH685_18625). Our application of this specialized sorgoleone-based probe coupled with structural bioinformatics streamlines the identification of microbial proteins involved in metabolite recognition, metabolism, and toxicity, widening our understanding of the range of cellular pathways that can be affected by a plant secondary metabolite.IMPORTANCEHere, we demonstrate that a photoaffinity-based chemical probe modeled after sorgoleone, an important secondary metabolite released by sorghum roots, can be used to identify microbial proteins that directly interact with sorgoleone. We applied this probe to the sorghum-associated bacterium Acinetobacter pittii and showed that probe labeling is dose-dependent and sensitive to competition with purified sorgoleone. Coupling the probe with proteomics and computational analysis facilitated the identification of putative sorgoleone binders, including a protein implicated in a conserved pathway essential for sorgoleone catabolism. We anticipate that discoveries seeded by this workflow will expand our understanding of the molecular mechanisms by which specific metabolites in root exudates shape the sorghum rhizosphere microbiome.

利用专门的光亲和探针分析高粱与微生物之间的相互作用,确定了皮氏不动杆菌中关键的高粱烯酮结合剂。
植物根部代谢产物的选择性释放或根部渗出推动了植物与土壤微生物群落之间的相互作用,这种相互作用有利于植物生长并提高养分获取能力。为了研究这些植物与微生物之间的相互作用,我们开发了一种基于高粱双色根渗出物中产生的疏水性次生代谢物和等位化学物质--高粱酮的光亲和探针(用于光亲和标记的高粱酮重氮烷基炔,SoDA-PAL)。我们将 SoDA-PAL 用于鉴定从高粱根瘤土壤中分离出的潜在植物生长促进微生物--皮氏不动杆菌 SO1 中的龙脑酮结合蛋白。用 SoDA-PAL 对 A. pittii 全细胞裂解物进行竞争性光亲和标记,发现了 137 个统计富集的蛋白质,包括推测的转运体、转录调节因子和具有预测酶功能的蛋白质子集。我们对蛋白质进行了计算建模并与龙胆酮进行了对接,以确定实验验证的优先候选蛋白质,然后在体外证实了龙胆酮与其中四个蛋白质的结合:α/β折叠水解酶 SrgB (OH685_09420)、富马酸乙酰乙酰酶 (OH685_02300)、溶血磷脂酶 (OH685_14215) 和一个未注释的假定蛋白 (OH685_18625)。我们应用这种基于高尔基烯酮的特异探针并结合结构生物信息学方法,简化了参与代谢物识别、代谢和毒性的微生物蛋白的鉴定过程,拓宽了我们对植物次生代谢物可能影响的细胞通路范围的理解。 重要意义在这里,我们证明了一种基于光亲和的化学探针可以用来鉴定与高尔基烯酮直接相互作用的微生物蛋白。我们将这种探针应用于高粱相关细菌皮氏不动杆菌(Acinetobacter pittii),结果表明探针标记具有剂量依赖性,并对与纯化的高梁烯酮的竞争敏感。将探针与蛋白质组学和计算分析相结合,有助于鉴定假定的龙脑酮结合体,包括一种与龙脑酮分解代谢所必需的保守途径有关的蛋白质。我们预计,这一工作流程的发现将拓展我们对根部渗出物中特定代谢物形成高粱根瘤微生物群的分子机制的理解。
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来源期刊
Applied and Environmental Microbiology
Applied and Environmental Microbiology 生物-生物工程与应用微生物
CiteScore
7.70
自引率
2.30%
发文量
730
审稿时长
1.9 months
期刊介绍: Applied and Environmental Microbiology (AEM) publishes papers that make significant contributions to (a) applied microbiology, including biotechnology, protein engineering, bioremediation, and food microbiology, (b) microbial ecology, including environmental, organismic, and genomic microbiology, and (c) interdisciplinary microbiology, including invertebrate microbiology, plant microbiology, aquatic microbiology, and geomicrobiology.
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