Journal
BMC MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 20, Issue 1, Pages -Publisher
BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12866-020-01814-7
Keywords
Photoheterotrophy; Butyrate assimilation; Ethylmalonyl-CoA; Polyhydroxybutyrate; Anaplerosis
Categories
Funding
- European Space Agency
- BELSPO
- F.N.R.S. [2877824]
- European Regional Development Fund
- Walloon Region, Belgium
- FNRS through the FRIA grant of GB-V (F.R.S.-FRNS)
- Concerted Research Action (ARC) project PHASyn
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Background The great metabolic versatility of the purple non-sulfur bacteria is of particular interest in green technology. Rhodospirillum rubrum S1H is an alpha-proteobacterium that is capable of photoheterotrophic assimilation of volatile fatty acids (VFAs). Butyrate is one of the most abundant VFAs produced during fermentative biodegradation of crude organic wastes in various applications. While there is a growing understanding of the photoassimilation of acetate, another abundantly produced VFA, the mechanisms involved in the photoheterotrophic metabolism of butyrate remain poorly studied. Results In this work, we used proteomic and functional genomic analyses to determine potential metabolic pathways involved in the photoassimilation of butyrate. We propose that a fraction of butyrate is converted to acetyl-CoA, a reaction shared with polyhydroxybutyrate metabolism, while the other fraction supplies the ethylmalonyl-CoA (EMC) pathway used as an anaplerotic pathway to replenish the TCA cycle. Surprisingly, we also highlighted a potential assimilation pathway, through isoleucine synthesis and degradation, allowing the conversion of acetyl-CoA to propionyl-CoA. We tentatively named this pathway the methylbutanoyl-CoA pathway (MBC). An increase in isoleucine abundance was observed during the early growth phase under butyrate condition. Nevertheless, while the EMC and MBC pathways appeared to be concomitantly used, a genome-wide mutant fitness assay highlighted the EMC pathway as the only pathway strictly required for the assimilation of butyrate. Conclusion Photoheterotrophic growth of Rs. rubrum with butyrate as sole carbon source requires a functional EMC pathway. In addition, a new assimilation pathway involving isoleucine synthesis and degradation, named the methylbutanoyl-CoA (MBC) pathway, could also be involved in the assimilation of this volatile fatty acid by Rs. rubrum.
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