Affiliation:
1. Department of Biology, University of Mississippi, University, Mississippi, USA
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Rubrivivax gelatinosus
is a betaproteobacterium with impressive metabolic diversity. It is capable of phototrophy, chemotrophy, two different mechanisms of sugar metabolism, fermentation, and H
2
gas production. To identify core essential genes,
R. gelatinosus
was subjected to saturating transposon mutagenesis and high-throughput sequencing (TnSeq) analysis using nutrient-rich, aerobic conditions. Results revealed that virtually no primary metabolic genes are essential to the organism and that genomic redundancy only explains a portion of the nonessentiality, but some biosynthetic pathways are still essential under nutrient-rich conditions. Different essentialities of different portions of the Pho regulatory pathway suggest that overexpression of the regulon is toxic and hint at a larger connection between phosphate regulation and cellular health. Lastly, various essentialities of different tRNAs hint at a more complex situation than would be expected for such a core process. These results expand upon research regarding cross-organism gene essentiality and further enrich the study of purple nonsulfur bacteria.
IMPORTANCE
Microbial genomic data are increasing at a tremendous rate, but physiological characterization of those data lags far behind. One mechanism of high-throughput physiological characterization is TnSeq, which uses high-volume transposon mutagenesis and high-throughput sequencing to identify all of the essential genes in a given organism's genome. Here TnSeq was used to identify essential genes in the metabolically versatile betaproteobacterium
Rubrivivax gelatinosus
. The results presented here add to the growing TnSeq field and also reveal important aspects of
R. gelatinosus
physiology, which are applicable to researchers working on metabolically flexible organisms.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
6 articles.
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