Abstract

Bacterial fermentation of carbohydrates from sustainable lignocellulosic biomass into commodity chemicals by the anaerobic bacterium Clostridium acetobutylicum is a promising alternative source to fossil fuel-derived chemicals. Recently, it was demonstrated that xylose is not appreciably fermented in the presence of arabinose, revealing a hierarchy of pentose utilization in this organism (L. Aristilde, I. A. Lewis, J. O. Park, and J. D. Rabinowitz, Appl Environ Microbiol 81:1452-1462, 2015, https://doi.org/10.1128/AEM.03199-14). The goal of the current study is to characterize the transcriptional regulation that occurs and perhaps drives this pentose hierarchy. Carbohydrate consumption rates showed that arabinose, like glucose, actively represses xylose utilization in cultures fermenting xylose. Further, arabinose addition to xylose cultures led to increased acetate-to-butyrate ratios, which indicated a transition of pentose catabolism from the pentose phosphate pathway to the phosphoketolase pathway. Transcriptome sequencing (RNA-Seq) confirmed that arabinose addition to cells actively growing on xylose resulted in increased phosphoketolase (CA_C1343) mRNA levels, providing additional evidence that arabinose induces this metabolic switch. A significant overlap in differentially regulated genes after addition of arabinose or glucose suggested a common regulation mechanism. A putative open reading frame (ORF) encoding a potential catabolite repression phosphocarrier histidine protein (Crh) was identified that likely participates in the observed transcriptional regulation. These results substantiate the claim that arabinose is utilized preferentially over xylose in C. acetobutylicum and suggest that arabinose can activate carbon catabolite repression via Crh. Furthermore, they provide valuable insights into potential mechanisms for altering pentose utilization to modulate fermentation products for chemical production. IMPORTANCE Clostridium acetobutylicum can ferment a wide variety of carbohydrates to the commodity chemicals acetone, butanol, and ethanol. Recent advances in genetic engineering have expanded the chemical production repertoire of C. acetobutylicum using synthetic biology. Due to its natural properties and genetic engineering potential, this organism is a promising candidate for converting biomass-derived feedstocks containing carbohydrate mixtures to commodity chemicals via natural or engineered pathways. Understanding how this organism regulates its metabolism during growth on carbohydrate mixtures is imperative to enable control of synthetic gene circuits in order to optimize chemical production. The work presented here unveils a novel mechanism via transcriptional regulation by a predicted Crh that controls the hierarchy of carbohydrate utilization and is essential for guiding robust genetic engineering strategies for chemical production.

Highlights

  • IMPORTANCE Clostridium acetobutylicum can ferment a wide variety of carbohydrates to the commodity chemicals acetone, butanol, and ethanol

  • Microarray analysis revealed significantly higher levels of phosphoketolase (CA_C1343) mRNA in cells grown on arabinose compared with glucose (19.4-fold) or xylose (6.7-fold), suggesting that flow through the phosphoketolase pathway (PKP) increases when cells are grown with arabinose as the carbon source compared to glucose or xylose [15, 19]

  • It has been demonstrated that C. acetobutylicum has a hierarchy of pentose utilization, with arabinose being utilized preferentially to xylose when both sugars are present at the beginning of the fermentation [17]

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Summary

Introduction

IMPORTANCE Clostridium acetobutylicum can ferment a wide variety of carbohydrates to the commodity chemicals acetone, butanol, and ethanol. Due to its natural properties and genetic engineering potential, this organism is a promising candidate for converting biomassderived feedstocks containing carbohydrate mixtures to commodity chemicals via natural or engineered pathways. Understanding how this organism regulates its metabolism during growth on carbohydrate mixtures is imperative to enable control of synthetic gene circuits in order to optimize chemical production. Due to the sugar composition of lignocellulosic biomass and the historical use of clostridia in ABE fermentations, there has been great interest in investigating how the organism utilizes xylose and arabinose in the presence of glucose [7, 8]. Phosphorylation of phosphocarrier histidine protein (HPr) at a C-terminal serine by HPr kinase results in HPr-S-P, which msystems.asm.org 2

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