Physiological Effect of XoxG(4) on Lanthanide-Dependent Methanotrophy
A recent surprising discovery of the activity of rare earth metals (lanthanides) as enzyme cofactors as well as transcriptional regulators has overturned the traditional assumption of biological inertia of these metals. However, so far, examples of such activities have been limited to alcohol dehydr...
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American Society for Microbiology
2018-03-01
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doaj-861416975def4e038381ae1c508d68ba2021-07-02T04:32:42ZengAmerican Society for MicrobiologymBio2150-75112018-03-0192e02430-1710.1128/mBio.02430-17Physiological Effect of XoxG(4) on Lanthanide-Dependent MethanotrophyYue ZhengJing HuangFeng ZhaoLudmila ChistoserdovaStephen GiovannoniA recent surprising discovery of the activity of rare earth metals (lanthanides) as enzyme cofactors as well as transcriptional regulators has overturned the traditional assumption of biological inertia of these metals. However, so far, examples of such activities have been limited to alcohol dehydrogenases. Here we describe the physiological effects of a mutation in xoxG, a gene encoding a novel cytochrome, XoxG(4), and compare these to the effects of mutation in XoxF, a lanthanide-dependent methanol dehydrogenase, at the enzyme activity level and also at the community function level, using Methylomonas sp. strain LW13 as a model organism. Through comparative phenotypic characterization, we establish XoxG as the second protein directly involved in lanthanide-dependent metabolism, likely as a dedicated electron acceptor from XoxF. However, mutation in XoxG caused a phenotype that was dramatically different from the phenotype of the mutant in XoxF, suggesting a secondary function for this cytochrome, in metabolism of methane. We also purify XoxG(4) and demonstrate that this protein is a true cytochrome c, based on the typical absorption spectra, and we demonstrate that XoxG can be directly reduced by a purified XoxF, supporting one of its proposed physiological functions. Overall, our data continue to suggest the complex nature of the interplay between the calcium-dependent and lanthanide-dependent alcohol oxidation systems, while they also suggest that addressing the roles of these alternative systems is essential at the enzyme and community function level, in addition to the gene transcription level.http://mbio.asm.org/cgi/content/full/9/2/e02430-17 |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Yue Zheng Jing Huang Feng Zhao Ludmila Chistoserdova Stephen Giovannoni |
spellingShingle |
Yue Zheng Jing Huang Feng Zhao Ludmila Chistoserdova Stephen Giovannoni Physiological Effect of XoxG(4) on Lanthanide-Dependent Methanotrophy mBio |
author_facet |
Yue Zheng Jing Huang Feng Zhao Ludmila Chistoserdova Stephen Giovannoni |
author_sort |
Yue Zheng |
title |
Physiological Effect of XoxG(4) on Lanthanide-Dependent Methanotrophy |
title_short |
Physiological Effect of XoxG(4) on Lanthanide-Dependent Methanotrophy |
title_full |
Physiological Effect of XoxG(4) on Lanthanide-Dependent Methanotrophy |
title_fullStr |
Physiological Effect of XoxG(4) on Lanthanide-Dependent Methanotrophy |
title_full_unstemmed |
Physiological Effect of XoxG(4) on Lanthanide-Dependent Methanotrophy |
title_sort |
physiological effect of xoxg(4) on lanthanide-dependent methanotrophy |
publisher |
American Society for Microbiology |
series |
mBio |
issn |
2150-7511 |
publishDate |
2018-03-01 |
description |
A recent surprising discovery of the activity of rare earth metals (lanthanides) as enzyme cofactors as well as transcriptional regulators has overturned the traditional assumption of biological inertia of these metals. However, so far, examples of such activities have been limited to alcohol dehydrogenases. Here we describe the physiological effects of a mutation in xoxG, a gene encoding a novel cytochrome, XoxG(4), and compare these to the effects of mutation in XoxF, a lanthanide-dependent methanol dehydrogenase, at the enzyme activity level and also at the community function level, using Methylomonas sp. strain LW13 as a model organism. Through comparative phenotypic characterization, we establish XoxG as the second protein directly involved in lanthanide-dependent metabolism, likely as a dedicated electron acceptor from XoxF. However, mutation in XoxG caused a phenotype that was dramatically different from the phenotype of the mutant in XoxF, suggesting a secondary function for this cytochrome, in metabolism of methane. We also purify XoxG(4) and demonstrate that this protein is a true cytochrome c, based on the typical absorption spectra, and we demonstrate that XoxG can be directly reduced by a purified XoxF, supporting one of its proposed physiological functions. Overall, our data continue to suggest the complex nature of the interplay between the calcium-dependent and lanthanide-dependent alcohol oxidation systems, while they also suggest that addressing the roles of these alternative systems is essential at the enzyme and community function level, in addition to the gene transcription level. |
url |
http://mbio.asm.org/cgi/content/full/9/2/e02430-17 |
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