The genome ofSyntrophus aciditrophicus: Life at the thermodynamic limit of microbial growth

Author:

McInerney Michael J.,Rohlin Lars,Mouttaki Housna,Kim UnMi,Krupp Rebecca S.,Rios-Hernandez Luis,Sieber Jessica,Struchtemeyer Christopher G.,Bhattacharyya Anamitra,Campbell John W.,Gunsalus Robert P.

Abstract

Biochemically, the syntrophic bacteria constitute the missing link in our understanding of anaerobic flow of carbon in the biosphere. The completed genome sequence ofSyntrophus aciditrophicusSB, a model fatty acid- and aromatic acid-degrading syntrophic bacterium, provides a glimpse of the composition and architecture of the electron transfer and energy-transducing systems needed to exist on marginal energy economies of a syntrophic lifestyle. The genome contains 3,179,300 base pairs and 3,169 genes where 1,618 genes were assigned putative functions. Metabolic reconstruction of the gene inventory revealed that most biosynthetic pathways of a typical Gram-negative microbe were present. A distinctive feature of syntrophic metabolism is the need for reverse electron transport; the presence of a unique Rnf-type ion-translocating electron transfer complex, menaquinone, and membrane-bound Fe-S proteins with associated heterodisulfide reductase domains suggests mechanisms to accomplish this task. Previously undescribed approaches to degrade fatty and aromatic acids, including multiple AMP-forming CoA ligases and acyl-CoA synthetases seem to be present as ways to form and dissipate ion gradients by using a sodium-based energy strategy. Thus,S. aciditrophicus, although nutritionally self-sufficient, seems to be a syntrophic specialist with limited fermentative and respiratory metabolism. Genomic analysis confirms theS. aciditrophicusmetabolic and regulatory commitment to a nonconventional mode of life compared with our prevailing understanding of microbiology.

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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