Metabolite profiling to characterize disease-related bacteria: gluconate excretion by Pseudomonas aeruginosa mutants and clinical isolates from cystic fibrosis patients

Behrends, Volker, Bell, Thomas J, Liebeke, Manuel, Cordes-Blauert, Anne, Ashraf, Syedah N, Nair, Chandrika, Zlosnik, James EA, Williams, Huw D and Bundy, Jacob G (2012) Metabolite profiling to characterize disease-related bacteria: gluconate excretion by Pseudomonas aeruginosa mutants and clinical isolates from cystic fibrosis patients. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 288 (21). pp. 15098-15109. ISSN 0021-9258

[thumbnail of PDF/A]
Preview
PDF (PDF/A)
1-s2.0-S0021925820460466-main.pdf - Published Version
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution.

Download (3MB) | Preview

Abstract

Metabolic footprinting of supernatants has been proposed as a tool for assigning gene function. We used NMR spectroscopy to measure the exometabolome of 86 single-gene transposon insertion mutant strains (mutants from central carbon metabolism and regulatory mutants) of the opportunistic pathogen Pseudomonas aeruginosa, grown on a medium designed to represent the nutritional content of cystic fibrosis sputum. Functionally related genes had similar metabolic profiles. E.g. for two-component system mutants, the cognate response regulator and sensor kinase genes clustered tightly together. Some strains had metabolic phenotypes (metabotypes) that could be related to the known gene function. E.g. pyruvate dehydrogenase mutants accumulated large amounts of pyruvate in the medium. In other cases, the metabolic phenotypes were not easily interpretable. The rpoN mutant, which lacks the alternative σ factor RpoN (σ54), accumulated high levels of gluconate in the medium. In addition, endometabolome profiling of intracellular metabolites identified a number of systemic metabolic changes. We linked this to indirect regulation of the catabolite repression protein Crc via the non-coding RNA crcZ and found that a crcZ (but not crc) mutant also shared the high-gluconate phenotype. We profiled an additional set of relevant metabolic enzymes and transporters, including Crc targets, and showed that the Crc-regulated edd mutant (gluconate-6-phosphate dehydratase) had similar gluconate levels as the rpoN mutant. Finally, a set of clinical isolates showed patient- and random amplification of polymorphic DNA (RAPD) type-specific differences in gluconate production, which were associated significantly with resistance across four antibiotics (tobramycin, ciprofloxacin, aztreonam, and imipenem), indicating that this has potential clinical relevance.

Item Type: Article
Identifier: 10.1074/jbc.M112.442814
Subjects: Natural sciences > Cell and molecular biology
Natural sciences
Depositing User: Volker Behrends
Date Deposited: 29 Apr 2024 11:14
Last Modified: 29 Apr 2024 11:14
URI: https://repository.uwl.ac.uk/id/eprint/11459

Downloads

Downloads per month over past year

Actions (login required)

View Item View Item

Menu