An Integrated Proteomics/Transcriptomics Approach Points to Oxygen as the Main Electron Sink for Methanol Metabolism in Methylotenera mobilis

Author:

Beck David A. C.12,Hendrickson Erik L.1,Vorobev Alexey1,Wang Tiansong3,Lim Sujung3,Kalyuzhnaya Marina G.3,Lidstrom Mary E.13,Hackett Murray1,Chistoserdova Ludmila1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Chemical Engineering, University of Washington, Box 355014, Seattle, Washington 98195

2. The eScience Institute, University of Washington, Box 355014, Seattle, Washington 98195

3. Department of Microbiology, University of Washington, Box 355014, Seattle, Washington 98195

Abstract

ABSTRACT Methylotenera species, unlike their close relatives in the genera Methylophilus , Methylobacillus , and Methylovorus , neither exhibit the activity of methanol dehydrogenase nor possess mxaFI genes encoding this enzyme, yet they are able to grow on methanol. In this work, we integrated a genome-wide proteomics approach, shotgun proteomics, and a genome-wide transcriptomics approach, shotgun transcriptome sequencing (RNA-seq), of Methylotenera mobilis JLW8 to identify genes and enzymes potentially involved in methanol oxidation, with special attention to alternative nitrogen sources, to address the question of whether nitrate could play a role as an electron acceptor in place of oxygen. Both proteomics and transcriptomics identified a limited number of genes and enzymes specifically responding to methanol. This set includes genes involved in oxidative stress response systems, a number of oxidoreductases, including XoxF-type alcohol dehydrogenases, a type II secretion system, and proteins without a predicted function. Nitrate stimulated expression of some genes in assimilatory nitrate reduction and denitrification pathways, while ammonium downregulated some of the nitrogen metabolism genes. However, none of these genes appeared to respond to methanol, which suggests that oxygen may be the main electron sink during growth on methanol. This study identifies initial targets for future focused physiological studies, including mutant analysis, which will provide further details into this novel process.

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Molecular Biology,Microbiology

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