TY - JOUR
T1 - Protein costs do not explain evolution of metabolic strategies and regulation of ribosomal content
T2 - does protein investment explain an anaerobic bacterial Crabtree effect?
AU - Goel, Anisha
AU - Eckhardt, Thomas H.
AU - Puri, Pranav
AU - de Jong, Anne
AU - Branco dos Santos, Filipe
AU - Giera, Martin
AU - Fusetti, Fabrizia
AU - de Vos, Willem M.
AU - Kok, Jan
AU - Poolman, Bert
AU - Molenaar, Douwe
AU - Kuipers, Oscar P.
AU - Teusink, Bas
N1 - This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
PY - 2015/7
Y1 - 2015/7
N2 - Protein investment costs are considered a major driver for the choice of alternative metabolic strategies. We tested this premise in Lactococcus lactis, a bacterium that exhibits a distinct, anaerobic version of the bacterial Crabtree/Warburg effect; with increasing growth rates it shifts from a high yield metabolic mode [mixed-acid fermentation; 3 adenosine triphosphate (ATP) per glucose] to a low yield metabolic mode (homolactic fermentation; 2 ATP per glucose). We studied growth rate-dependent relative transcription and protein ratios, enzyme activities, and fluxes of L.lactis in glucose-limited chemostats, providing a high-quality and comprehensive data set. A three- to fourfold higher growth rate rerouted metabolism from acetate to lactate as the main fermentation product. However, we observed hardly any changes in transcription, protein levels and enzyme activities. Even levels of ribosomal proteins, constituting a major investment in cellular machinery, changed only slightly. Thus, contrary to the original hypothesis, central metabolism in this organism appears to be hardly regulated at the level of gene expression, but rather at the metabolic level. We conclude that L.lactis is either poorly adapted to growth at low and constant glucose concentrations, or that protein costs play a less important role in fitness than hitherto assumed.
AB - Protein investment costs are considered a major driver for the choice of alternative metabolic strategies. We tested this premise in Lactococcus lactis, a bacterium that exhibits a distinct, anaerobic version of the bacterial Crabtree/Warburg effect; with increasing growth rates it shifts from a high yield metabolic mode [mixed-acid fermentation; 3 adenosine triphosphate (ATP) per glucose] to a low yield metabolic mode (homolactic fermentation; 2 ATP per glucose). We studied growth rate-dependent relative transcription and protein ratios, enzyme activities, and fluxes of L.lactis in glucose-limited chemostats, providing a high-quality and comprehensive data set. A three- to fourfold higher growth rate rerouted metabolism from acetate to lactate as the main fermentation product. However, we observed hardly any changes in transcription, protein levels and enzyme activities. Even levels of ribosomal proteins, constituting a major investment in cellular machinery, changed only slightly. Thus, contrary to the original hypothesis, central metabolism in this organism appears to be hardly regulated at the level of gene expression, but rather at the metabolic level. We conclude that L.lactis is either poorly adapted to growth at low and constant glucose concentrations, or that protein costs play a less important role in fitness than hitherto assumed.
KW - LACTOCOCCUS-LACTIS IL1403
KW - PYRUVATE-FORMATE-LYASE
KW - ESCHERICHIA-COLI
KW - STREPTOCOCCUS-LACTIS
KW - SACCHAROMYCES-CEREVISIAE
KW - TRANSCRIPTOME ANALYSIS
KW - OVERFLOW METABOLISM
KW - CHEMOSTAT CULTURES
KW - GENE-EXPRESSION
KW - FLUX ANALYSIS
U2 - 10.1111/mmi.13012
DO - 10.1111/mmi.13012
M3 - Article
C2 - 25828364
SN - 0950-382X
VL - 97
SP - 77
EP - 92
JO - Molecular Microbiology
JF - Molecular Microbiology
IS - 1
ER -