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      Responsiveness of Aromatoleum aromaticum EbN1T to Lignin-Derived Phenylpropanoids.

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          Abstract

          The betaproteobacterial degradation specialist Aromatoleum aromaticum EbN1T utilizes several plant-derived 3-phenylpropanoids coupled to denitrification. In vivo responsiveness of A. aromaticum EbN1T was studied by exposing nonadapted cells to distinct pulses (spanning 100 µM to 0.1 nM) of 3-phenylpropanoate, cinnamate, 3-(4-hydroxyphenyl)propanoate, or p-coumarate. Time-resolved, targeted transcript analyses via quantitative reverse transcription-PCR of four selected 3-phenylpropanoid genes revealed a response threshold of 30 to 50 nM for p-coumarate and 1 to 10 nM for the other three tested 3-phenylpropanoids. At these concentrations, transmembrane effector equilibration is attained by passive diffusion rather than active uptake via the ABC transporter, presumably serving the studied 3-phenylpropanoids as well as benzoate. Highly substrate-specific enzyme formation (EbA5316 to EbA5321 [EbA5316-21]) for the shared peripheral degradation pathway putatively involves the predicted TetR-type transcriptional repressor PprR. Accordingly, relative transcript abundances of ebA5316-21 are lower in succinate- and benzoate-grown wild-type cells than in an unmarked in-frame ΔpprR mutant. In trans-complementation of pprR into the ΔpprR background restored wild-type-like transcript levels. When adapted to p-coumarate, the three genotypes had relative transcript abundances similar to those of ebA5316-21 despite a significantly longer lag phase of the pprR-complemented mutant (∼100-fold higher pprR transcript level than the wild type). Notably, transcript levels of ebA5316-21 were ∼10- to 100-fold higher in p-coumarate- than succinate- or benzoate-adapted cells across all three genotypes. This indicates the additional involvement of an unknown transcriptional regulator. Furthermore, physiological, transcriptional, and (aromatic) acyl-coenzyme A ester intermediate analyses of the wild type and ΔpprR mutant grown with binary substrate mixtures suggest a mode of catabolite repression of superior order to PprR.IMPORTANCE Lignin is a ubiquitous heterobiopolymer built from a suite of 3-phenylpropanoid subunits. It accounts for more than 30% of the global plant dry material, and lignin-related compounds are increasingly released into the environment from anthropogenic sources, i.e., by wastewater effluents from the paper and pulp industry. Hence, following biological or industrial decomplexation of lignin, vast amounts of structurally diverse 3-phenylpropanoids enter terrestrial and aquatic habitats, where they serve as substrates for microbial degradation. This raises the question of what signaling systems environmental bacteria employ to detect these nutritionally attractive compounds and to adjust their catabolism accordingly. Moreover, determining in vivo response thresholds of an anaerobic degradation specialist such as A. aromaticum EbN1T for these aromatic compounds provides insights into the environmental fate of the latter, i.e., when they could escape biodegradation due to too low ambient concentrations.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Appl Environ Microbiol
          Applied and environmental microbiology
          American Society for Microbiology
          1098-5336
          0099-2240
          May 11 2021
          : 87
          : 11
          Affiliations
          [1 ] General and Molecular Microbiology, Institute for Chemistry and Biology of the Marine Environment (ICBM), Carl von Ossietzky University of Oldenburg, Oldenburg, Germany.
          [2 ] Organic Geochemistry, Institute for Chemistry and Biology of the Marine Environment (ICBM), Carl von Ossietzky University of Oldenburg, Oldenburg, Germany.
          [3 ] Research Center Neurosensory Science, Carl von Ossietzky University of Oldenburg, Oldenburg, Germany.
          [4 ] Sensory Biology of Animals, Institute of Biology and Environmental Sciences (IBU), Carl von Ossietzky University of Oldenburg, Oldenburg, Germany.
          [5 ] General and Molecular Microbiology, Institute for Chemistry and Biology of the Marine Environment (ICBM), Carl von Ossietzky University of Oldenburg, Oldenburg, Germany rabus@icbm.de.
          Article
          AEM.03140-20
          10.1128/AEM.03140-20
          8208140
          33741621
          c48b948f-cb70-4f2f-bd82-ec512b0cd6ba
          History

          transcript profiling,(aromatic) acyl-CoA ester,Aromatoleum aromaticum EbN1T,anaerobic degradation,deletion mutation,diauxie,phenylpropanoids,physiology,regulation,responsiveness,sensory system

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