Affiliation:
1. BioTechnology Institute and Department of Plant and Microbial Biology, University of Minnesota—Twin Cities, St. Paul, Minnesota, USA
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Shewanella oneidensis
strain MR-1 is a versatile bacterium capable of respiring extracellular, insoluble ferric oxide minerals under anaerobic conditions. The respiration of iron minerals results in the production of soluble ferrous ions, which at high concentrations are toxic to living organisms. It is not fully understood how Fe
2+
is toxic to cells anaerobically, nor is it fully understood how
S. oneidensis
is able to resist high levels of Fe
2+
. Here we describe the results of a transposon mutant screen and subsequent deletion of the genes
clpX
and
clpP
in
S. oneidensis
, which demonstrate that the protease ClpXP is required for anaerobic Fe
2+
resistance. Many cellular processes are known to be regulated by ClpXP, including entry into stationary phase, envelope stress response, and turnover of stalled ribosomes. However, none of these processes appears to be responsible for mediating anaerobic Fe
2+
resistance in
S. oneidensis
. Protein trapping studies were performed to identify ClpXP targets in
S. oneidensis
under Fe
2+
stress, implicating a wide variety of protein targets.
Escherichia coli
strains lacking
clpX
or
clpP
also display increased sensitivity to Fe
2+
anaerobically, indicating Fe
2+
resistance may be a conserved role for the ClpXP protease system. Hypotheses regarding the potential role(s) of ClpXP during periods of high Fe
2+
are discussed. We speculate that metal-containing proteins are misfolded under conditions of high Fe
2+
and that the ClpXP protease system is necessary for their turnover.
IMPORTANCE
Prior to the evolution of cyanobacteria and oxygenic photosynthesis, life arose and flourished in iron-rich oceans. Today, aqueous iron-rich environments are less common, constrained to low-pH conditions and anaerobic systems such as stratified lakes and seas, digestive tracts, subsurface environments, and sediments. The latter two ecosystems often favor dissimilatory metal reduction, a process that produces soluble Fe
2+
from iron oxide minerals. Dissimilatory metal-reducing bacteria must therefore have mechanisms to tolerate anaerobic Fe
2+
stress, and studying resistance in these organisms may help elucidate the basis of toxicity.
Shewanella oneidensis
is a model dissimilatory metal-reducing bacterium isolated from metal-rich sediments. Here we demonstrate a role for ClpXP, a protease system widely conserved in bacteria, in anaerobic Fe
2+
resistance in both
S. oneidensis
and
Escherichia coli
.
Funder
DOD | United States Navy | Office of Naval Research
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
13 articles.
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