Affiliation:
1. Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, University of California, Berkeley, California, USA
2. Department of Plant and Microbial Biology, University of California, Berkeley, California, USA
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The genes for chlorate reduction in six bacterial strains were analyzed in order to gain insight into the metabolism. A newly isolated chlorate-reducing bacterium (
Shewanella alga
e
ACDC) and three previously isolated strains (
Ideonella dechloratans
,
Pseudomonas
sp. strain PK, and
Dechloromarinus chlorophilus
NSS) were genome sequenced and compared to published sequences (
Alicycliphilus denitrificans
BC plasmid pALIDE01 and
Pseudomonas chloritidismutans
AW-1).
De novo
assembly of genomes failed to join regions adjacent to genes involved in chlorate reduction, suggesting the presence of repeat regions. Using a bioinformatics approach and finishing PCRs to connect fragmented contigs, we discovered that chlorate reduction genes are flanked by insertion sequences, forming composite transposons in all four newly sequenced strains. These insertion sequences delineate regions with the potential to move horizontally and define a set of genes that may be important for chlorate reduction. In addition to core metabolic components, we have highlighted several such genes through comparative analysis and visualization. Phylogenetic analysis places chlorate reductase within a functionally diverse clade of type II dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) reductases, part of a larger family of enzymes with reactivity toward chlorate. Nucleotide-level forensics of regions surrounding chlorite dismutase (
cld
), as well as its phylogenetic clustering in a betaproteobacterial Cld clade, indicate that
cld
has been mobilized at least once from a perchlorate reducer to build chlorate respiration.
IMPORTANCE
Genome sequencing has identified, for the first time, chlorate reduction composite transposons. These transposons are constructed with flanking insertion sequences that differ in type and orientation between organisms, indicating that this mobile element has formed multiple times and is important for dissemination. Apart from core metabolic enzymes, very little is known about the genetic factors involved in chlorate reduction. Comparative analysis has identified several genes that may also be important, but the relative absence of accessory genes suggests that this mobile metabolism relies on host systems for electron transport, regulation, and cofactor synthesis. Phylogenetic analysis of Cld and ClrA provides support for the hypothesis that chlorate reduction was built multiple times from type II dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) reductases and
cld
. In at least one case,
cld
has been coopted from a perchlorate reduction island for this purpose. This work is a significant step toward understanding the genetics and evolution of chlorate reduction.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Cited by
58 articles.
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