methylotrophic growth
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2022 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
pp. 184
Author(s):  
Izumi Orita ◽  
Gento Unno ◽  
Risa Kato ◽  
Toshiaki Fukui

Methylorubrum extorquens AM1 is the attractive platform for the production of value-added products from methanol. We previously demonstrated that M. extorquens equipped with PHA synthase with broad substrate specificity synthesized polyhydroxyalkanoates (PHAs) composed of (R)-3-hydroxybutyrate and small fraction of (R)-3-hydroxyvalerate (3HV) and (R)-3-hydroxyhexanoate (3HHx) units on methanol. This study further engineered M. extorquens for biosynthesis of PHAs with higher 3HV and 3HHx composition focusing on the EMC pathway involved in C1 assimilation. The introduction of ethylmalonyl-CoA decarboxylase, catalyzing a backward reaction in the EMC pathway, aiming to increase intracellular propionyl/butyryl-CoA precursors did not affect PHA composition. Reverse b-oxidation pathway and subsequent (R)-specific hydration of 2-enoyl-CoA were then enhanced by heterologous expression of four genes derived from Ralstonia eutropha for the conversion of propionyl/butyryl-CoAs to the corresponding (R)-3-hydroxyacyl-CoA monomers. The resulting strains produced PHAs with higher 3HV and 3HHx compositions, while the methylotrophic growth was severely impaired. This growth impairment was interestingly restored by the addition of La3+ without a negative impact on PHA biosynthesis, suggesting the activation of the EMC pathway by La3+. The engineered M. extorquens synthesized PHA terpolymer composed of 5.4 mol% 3HV and 0.9% of 3HHx with 41% content from methanol as a sole carbon source in the presence of La3+.


2010 ◽  
Vol 192 (19) ◽  
pp. 4859-4867 ◽  
Author(s):  
Erik L. Hendrickson ◽  
David A. C. Beck ◽  
Tiansong Wang ◽  
Mary E. Lidstrom ◽  
Murray Hackett ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT In recent years, techniques have been developed and perfected for high-throughput identification of proteins and their accurate partial sequencing by shotgun nano-liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (nano-LC-MS/MS), making it feasible to assess global protein expression profiles in organisms with sequenced genomes. We implemented comprehensive proteomics to assess the expressed portion of the genome of Methylobacillus flagellatus during methylotrophic growth. We detected a total of 1,671 proteins (64% of the inferred proteome), including all the predicted essential proteins. Nonrandom patterns observed with the nondetectable proteins appeared to correspond to silent genomic islands, as inferred through functional profiling and genome localization. The protein contents in methylamine- and methanol-grown cells showed a significant overlap, confirming the commonality of methylotrophic metabolism downstream of the primary oxidation reactions. The new insights into methylotrophy include detection of proteins for the N-methylglutamate methylamine oxidation pathway that appears to be auxiliary and detection of two alternative enzymes for both the 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase reaction (GndA and GndB) and the formate dehydrogenase reaction (FDH1 and FDH4). Mutant analysis revealed that GndA and FDH4 are crucial for the organism's fitness, while GndB and FDH1 are auxiliary.


2010 ◽  
Vol 76 (6) ◽  
pp. 1861-1869 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lukasz Dziewit ◽  
Michal Dmowski ◽  
Jadwiga Baj ◽  
Dariusz Bartosik

ABSTRACT N,N-Dimethylformamide (DMF), a toxic solvent used in the chemical industry, is frequently present in industrial wastes. Plasmid pAMI2 (18.6 kb) of Paracoccus aminophilus JCM 7686 carries genetic information which is crucial for methylotrophic growth of this bacterium, using DMF as the sole source of carbon and energy. Besides a conserved backbone related to pAgK84 of Agrobacterium radiobacter K84, pAMI2 carries a three-gene cluster coding for the protein DmfR, which has sequence similarities to members of the LuxR family of transcription regulators, and two subunits (DmfA1 and DmfA2) of N,N-dimethylformamidase, an enzyme of high substrate specificity that catalyzes the first step in the degradation of DMF. Genetic analysis revealed that these genes, which are all placed in the same orientation, constitute an inducible operon whose expression is activated in the presence of DMF by the positive transcription regulator DmfR. This operon was used to construct a strain able to degrade DMF at high concentrations that might be used in the biotreatment of DMF-containing industrial wastewaters. To our knowledge, this is the first study to provide insights into the genetic organization and regulation as well as the dissemination in bacteria of genes involved in the enzymatic breakdown of DMF.


PLoS ONE ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 4 (11) ◽  
pp. e7831 ◽  
Author(s):  
Patrick Kiefer ◽  
Markus Buchhaupt ◽  
Philipp Christen ◽  
Björn Kaup ◽  
Jens Schrader ◽  
...  

2008 ◽  
Vol 190 (14) ◽  
pp. 5057-5062 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gregory J. Crowther ◽  
George Kosály ◽  
Mary E. Lidstrom

ABSTRACT In serine cycle methylotrophs, methylene tetrahydrofolate (H4F) is the entry point of reduced one-carbon compounds into the serine cycle for carbon assimilation during methylotrophic metabolism. In these bacteria, two routes are possible for generating methylene H4F from formaldehyde during methylotrophic growth: one involving the reaction of formaldehyde with H4F to generate methylene H4F and the other involving conversion of formaldehyde to formate via methylene tetrahydromethanopterin-dependent enzymes and conversion of formate to methylene H4F via H4F-dependent enzymes. Evidence has suggested that the direct condensation reaction is the main source of methylene H4F during methylotrophic metabolism. However, mutants lacking enzymes that interconvert methylene H4F and formate are unable to grow on methanol, suggesting that this route for methylene H4F synthesis should have a significant role in biomass production during methylotrophic metabolism. This problem was investigated in Methylobacterium extorquens AM1. Evidence was obtained suggesting that the existing deuterium assay might overestimate the flux through the direct condensation reaction. To test this possibility, it was shown that only minor assimilation into biomass occurred in mutants lacking the methylene H4F synthesis pathway through formate. These results suggested that the methylene H4F synthesis pathway through formate dominates assimilatory flux. A revised kinetic model was used to validate this possibility, showing that physiologically plausible parameters in this model can account for the metabolic fluxes observed in vivo. These results all support the suggestion that formate, not formaldehyde, is the main branch point for methylotrophic metabolism in M. extorquens AM1.


2006 ◽  
Vol 70 (8) ◽  
pp. 2007-2009 ◽  
Author(s):  
Osao ADACHI ◽  
Yoshihiko AKAKABE ◽  
Hirohide TOYAMA ◽  
Kazunobu MATSUSHITA

FEBS Letters ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 580 (2) ◽  
pp. 561-567 ◽  
Author(s):  
Carlos G. Nieto Penalver ◽  
Danièle Morin ◽  
Franck Cantet ◽  
Olivier Saurel ◽  
Alain Milon ◽  
...  

Microbiology ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 151 (8) ◽  
pp. 2615-2622 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rotsaman Chongcharoen ◽  
Thomas J. Smith ◽  
Kenneth P. Flint ◽  
Howard Dalton

Formaldehyde is a highly toxic chemical common in industrial effluents, and it is also an intermediate in bacterial metabolism of one-carbon growth substrates, although its role as a bacterial growth substrate per se has not been extensively reported. This study investigated two highly formaldehyde-resistant formaldehyde utilizers, strains BIP and ROS1; the former strain has been used for industrial remediation of formaldehyde-containing effluents. The two strains were shown by means of 16S rRNA characterization to be closely related members of the genus Methylobacterium. Both strains were able to use formaldehyde, methanol and a range of multicarbon compounds as their principal growth substrate. Growth on formaldehyde was possible up to a concentration of at least 58 mM, and survival at up to 100 mM was possible after stepwise acclimatization by growth at increasing concentrations of formaldehyde. At such high concentrations of formaldehyde, the cultures underwent a period of formaldehyde removal without growth before the formaldehyde concentration fell below 60 mM, and growth could resume. Two-dimensional electrophoresis and MS characterization of formaldehyde-induced proteins in strain BIP revealed that the pathways of formaldehyde metabolism, and adaptations to methylotrophic growth, were very similar to those seen in the well-characterized methanol-utilizing methylotroph Methylobacterium extorquens AM1. Thus, it appears that many of the changes in protein expression that allow strain BIP to grow using high formaldehyde concentrations are associated with expression of the same enzymes used by M. extorquens AM1 to process formaldehyde as a metabolic intermediate during growth on methanol.


2003 ◽  
Vol 4 (2) ◽  
pp. 141-147 ◽  
Author(s):  
O STASYK ◽  
V NAZARKO ◽  
O POCHAPINSKY ◽  
T NAZARKO ◽  
M VEENHUIS ◽  
...  

Yeast ◽  
2002 ◽  
Vol 19 (12) ◽  
pp. 1067-1073 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tomoyuki Nakagawa ◽  
Tasuku Mizumura ◽  
Hiroyuki Mukaiyama ◽  
Tatsuro Miyaji ◽  
Hiroya Yurimoto ◽  
...  

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