Butyrate as a growth factor of Clostridium acetobutylicum

IF 6.8 1区 生物学 Q1 BIOTECHNOLOGY & APPLIED MICROBIOLOGY
Hyeongmin Seo, Sofia H. Capece, John D. Hill, Jonathan K. Otten, Eleftherios T. Papoutsakis
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

The butyrate biosynthetic pathway not only contributes to electron management and energy generation in butyrate forming bacteria, but also confers evolutionary advantages to the host by inhibiting the growth of surrounding butyrate-sensitive microbes. While high butyrate levels induce toxic stress, effects of non-toxic levels on cell growth, health, metabolism, and sporulation remain unclear. Here, we show that butyrate stimulates cellular processes of Clostridium acetobutylicum, a model butyrate forming Firmicute. First, we deleted the 3-hydroxybutyryl-CoA dehydrogenase gene (hbd) from the C. acetobutylicum chromosome to eliminate the butyrate synthetic pathway and thus butyrate formation. A xylose inducible Cas9 cassette was chromosomally integrated and utilized for the one-step markerless gene deletions. Non-toxic butyrate levels significantly affected growth, health, and sporulation of C. acetobutylicum. After deleting spo0A, the gene encoding the master regulator of sporulation, Spo0A, and conducting butyrate addition experiments, we conclude that butyrate affects cellular metabolism through both Spo0A-dependent and independent mechanisms. We also deleted the hbd gene from the chromosome of the asporogenous C. acetobutylicum M5 strain lacking the pSOL1 plasmid to examine the potential involvement of pSOL1 genes on the observed butyrate effects. Addition of crotonate, the precursor of butyrate biosynthesis, to the hbd deficient M5 strain was used to probe the role of butyrate biosynthesis pathway in electron and metabolic fluxes. Finally, we found that butyrate addition can enhance the growth of the non-butyrate forming Clostridium saccharolyticum. Our data suggest that butyrate functions as a stimulator of cellular processes, like a growth factor, in C. acetobutylicum and potentially evolutionarily related Clostridium organisms.
作为乙酰丁酸梭菌生长因子的丁酸盐。
丁酸盐生物合成途径不仅有助于丁酸盐形成细菌的电子管理和能量生成,还能抑制周围对丁酸盐敏感的微生物的生长,从而为宿主带来进化优势。虽然高水平的丁酸盐会引起毒性应激,但无毒水平的丁酸盐对细胞生长、健康、新陈代谢和孢子的影响仍不清楚。在这里,我们发现丁酸盐能刺激乙酰丁酸梭菌(一种典型的丁酸盐形成固缩菌)的细胞过程。首先,我们从乙酰丁酸梭菌染色体中删除了 3-hydroxybutyryl-CoA dehydrogenase 基因(hbd),以消除丁酸合成途径,从而消除丁酸的形成。在染色体上整合了木糖诱导型 Cas9 基因盒,并利用该基因盒进行一步无标记基因删除。无毒的丁酸盐浓度明显影响了乙酰丁酸杆菌的生长、健康和孢子发育。在删除 spo0A(编码孢子形成主调节因子 Spo0A 的基因)并进行丁酸盐添加实验后,我们得出结论:丁酸盐通过依赖 Spo0A 和独立机制影响细胞代谢。我们还从缺乏 pSOL1 质粒的无孢子 C. acetobutylicum M5 菌株的染色体中删除了 hbd 基因,以研究 pSOL1 基因对所观察到的丁酸盐效应的潜在参与。在缺乏 hbd 的 M5 菌株中添加巴豆酸盐(丁酸盐生物合成的前体),以探究丁酸盐生物合成途径在电子和代谢通量中的作用。最后,我们发现丁酸盐的添加可以促进不形成丁酸盐的糖化梭菌的生长。我们的数据表明,丁酸盐在乙酰丁酸梭菌和可能与之有进化关系的梭菌中起着刺激细胞过程的作用,就像生长因子一样。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Metabolic engineering
Metabolic engineering 工程技术-生物工程与应用微生物
CiteScore
15.60
自引率
6.00%
发文量
140
审稿时长
44 days
期刊介绍: Metabolic Engineering (MBE) is a journal that focuses on publishing original research papers on the directed modulation of metabolic pathways for metabolite overproduction or the enhancement of cellular properties. It welcomes papers that describe the engineering of native pathways and the synthesis of heterologous pathways to convert microorganisms into microbial cell factories. The journal covers experimental, computational, and modeling approaches for understanding metabolic pathways and manipulating them through genetic, media, or environmental means. Effective exploration of metabolic pathways necessitates the use of molecular biology and biochemistry methods, as well as engineering techniques for modeling and data analysis. MBE serves as a platform for interdisciplinary research in fields such as biochemistry, molecular biology, applied microbiology, cellular physiology, cellular nutrition in health and disease, and biochemical engineering. The journal publishes various types of papers, including original research papers and review papers. It is indexed and abstracted in databases such as Scopus, Embase, EMBiology, Current Contents - Life Sciences and Clinical Medicine, Science Citation Index, PubMed/Medline, CAS and Biotechnology Citation Index.
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