Abstract

Dinoroseobacter shibae living in the photic zone of marine ecosystems is frequently exposed to oxygen that forms highly reactive species. Here, we analysed the adaptation of D. shibae to different kinds of oxidative stress using a GeLC-MS/MS approach. D. shibae was grown in artificial seawater medium in the dark with succinate as sole carbon source and exposed to hydrogen peroxide, paraquat or diamide. We quantified 2580 D. shibae proteins. 75 proteins changed significantly in response to peroxide stress, while 220 and 207 proteins were differently regulated by superoxide stress and thiol stress. As expected, proteins like thioredoxin and peroxiredoxin were among these proteins. In addition, proteins involved in bacteriochlophyll biosynthesis were repressed under disulfide and superoxide stress but not under peroxide stress. In contrast, proteins associated with iron transport accumulated in response to peroxide and superoxide stress. Interestingly, the iron-responsive regulator RirA in D. shibae was downregulated by all stressors. A rirA deletion mutant showed an improved adaptation to peroxide stress suggesting that RirA dependent proteins are associated with oxidative stress resistance. Altogether, 139 proteins were upregulated in the mutant strain. Among them are proteins associated with protection and repair of DNA and proteins (e. g. ClpB, Hsp20, RecA, and a thioredoxin like protein). Strikingly, most of the proteins involved in iron metabolism such as iron binding proteins and transporters were not part of the upregulated proteins. In fact, rirA deficient cells were lacking a peroxide dependent induction of these proteins that may also contribute to a higher cell viability under these conditions.

Highlights

  • Aerobic organisms are frequently confronted with reactive oxygen species such as superoxide anion, hydrogen peroxide and the highly reactive hydroxyl radical, which are generated as byproducts of electron transfer reactions such as oxidative phosphorylation

  • We investigated D. shibaes adaptation to different kinds of oxidative stress to identify proteins that are generally induced by oxidative stress and proteins

  • Exposure to hydrogen peroxide and diamide resulted in a significant growth rate reduction during the first 30–60 minutes followed by a resumption of growth depending on the applied concentration

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Summary

Introduction

Aerobic organisms are frequently confronted with reactive oxygen species such as superoxide anion, hydrogen peroxide and the highly reactive hydroxyl radical, which are generated as byproducts of electron transfer reactions such as oxidative phosphorylation. Photosynthetic organisms are exposed to singlet oxygen produced by photophosphorylation under aerobic conditions. Oxidative stress response in D. shibae (http://proteomecentral.proteomexchange.org) via the PRIDE partner repository with the dataset identifier PXD013791

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