Profiling sorghum-microbe interactions with a specialized photoaffinity probe identifies key sorgoleone binders in Acinetobacter pittii

Author:

Van Fossen Elise M.1ORCID,Kroll Jared O.2,Anderson Lindsey N.1ORCID,McNaughton Andrew D.1,Herrera Daisy3,Oda Yasuhiro4,Wilson Andrew J.1,Nelson William C.1,Kumar Neeraj5,Frank Andrew R.1,Elmore Joshua R.1,Handakumbura Pubudu3ORCID,Lin Vivian S.1ORCID,Egbert Robert G.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Biological Sciences Division, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, Richland, Washington, USA

2. Energy Processes and Materials Division, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, Richland, Washington, USA

3. Environmental and Molecular Sciences Division, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, Richland, Washington, USA

4. Department of Microbiology, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington, USA

5. Advanced Computing, Mathematics, and Data Division, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, Richland, Washington, USA

Abstract

ABSTRACT Interactions between plants and soil microbial communities that benefit plant growth and enhance nutrient acquisition are driven by the selective release of metabolites from plant roots, or root exudation. To investigate these plant-microbe interactions, we developed a photoaffinity probe based on sorgoleone ( so rgoleone d iazirine a lkyne for p hoto a ffinity l abeling, SoDA-PAL), a hydrophobic secondary metabolite and allelochemical produced in Sorghum bicolor root exudates. We applied SoDA-PAL to the identification of sorgoleone-binding proteins in Acinetobacter pittii SO1, a potential plant growth-promoting microbe isolated from sorghum rhizosphere soil. Competitive photoaffinity labeling of A. pittii whole cell lysates with SoDA-PAL identified 137 statistically enriched proteins, including putative transporters, transcriptional regulators, and a subset of proteins with predicted enzymatic functions. We performed computational protein modeling and docking with sorgoleone to prioritize candidates for experimental validation and then confirmed binding of sorgoleone to four of these proteins in vitro : the α/β fold hydrolase SrgB (OH685_09420), a fumarylacetoacetase (OH685_02300), a lysophospholipase (OH685_14215), and an unannotated hypothetical protein (OH685_18625). Our application of this specialized sorgoleone-based probe coupled with structural bioinformatics streamlines the identification of microbial proteins involved in metabolite recognition, metabolism, and toxicity, widening our understanding of the range of cellular pathways that can be affected by a plant secondary metabolite. IMPORTANCE Here, we demonstrate that a photoaffinity-based chemical probe modeled after sorgoleone, an important secondary metabolite released by sorghum roots, can be used to identify microbial proteins that directly interact with sorgoleone. We applied this probe to the sorghum-associated bacterium Acinetobacter pittii and showed that probe labeling is dose-dependent and sensitive to competition with purified sorgoleone. Coupling the probe with proteomics and computational analysis facilitated the identification of putative sorgoleone binders, including a protein implicated in a conserved pathway essential for sorgoleone catabolism. We anticipate that discoveries seeded by this workflow will expand our understanding of the molecular mechanisms by which specific metabolites in root exudates shape the sorghum rhizosphere microbiome.

Funder

U.S. Department of Energy

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

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