Affiliation:
1. Department of Biological Sciences, University of Maryland, Baltimore County , Baltimore, Maryland, USA
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Bacterial utilization of starch is increasingly of interest as the importance and contributions of animal gut microbiomes become more defined. Consequently, identifying and characterizing the bacterial enzymes responsible for the degradation, transport, and metabolism of starch will enable developments in pharmaceutical, biotechnological, and culinary industries searching for novel prebiotics, carrier molecules, and low glycemic index sweeteners. The current challenge is that bacteria proficient at starch utilization often have hundreds of carbohydrate active enzymes, and it is unclear which are essential for starch utilization using only homology-based bioinformatics or computational methods. Complementary experimental data are also needed, especially to understand the regulation of bacterial starch utilization. We have completed an RNAseq analysis of the Gram-negative bacterium
Cellvibrio japonicus
and found that it has sophisticated regulation that includes substrate sensing and growth rate components for genes that encode starch-degrading enzymes. Among the 22 genes predicted to encode starch-active enzymes,
C. japonicus
has 10 alpha-amylases, 4 alpha-glucosidases, 2 pullulnases, and 2 cyclomaltodextrin glucanotransferases, 15 of which were up-regulated during exponential growth on starch and 8 up-regulated in stationary phase. Growth analyses with an enzyme secretion deficient mutant of
C. japonicus
suggested that secreted amylases are essential for this bacterium to degrade starch. Our approach of coupling a physiological growth assay with transcriptomic data provides a platform to identify targets for further genetic or biochemical analysis that can be broadly applied to other starch-utilizing bacteria.
IMPORTANCE
Understanding the bacterial metabolism of starch is important as this polysaccharide is a ubiquitous ingredient in foods, supplements, and medicines, all of which influence gut microbiome composition and health. Our RNAseq and growth data set provides a valuable resource to those who want to better understand the regulation of starch utilization in Gram-negative bacteria. These data are also useful as they provide an example of how to approach studying a starch-utilizing bacterium that has many putative amylases by coupling transcriptomic data with growth assays to overcome the potential challenges of functional redundancy. The RNAseq data can also be used as a part of larger meta-analyses to compare how
C. japonicus
regulates carbohydrate active enzymes, or how this bacterium compares to gut microbiome constituents in terms of starch utilization potential.
Funder
U.S. Department of Energy
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Cell Biology,Microbiology (medical),Genetics,General Immunology and Microbiology,Ecology,Physiology