Abstract

Pseudomonas aeruginosa is an ubiquitous and opportunistic bacteria found in water, soil, plants, and immunocompromised humans. Cystic fibrosis (CF) patients are the most vulnerable population to lung colonization by these bacteria. Upon infection, choline and succinate are released from the CF lungs and are catabolized by P. aeruginosa. The bacteria accumulate inorganic polyphosphates, rather than succinate, when choline is catabolized, producing physiological and morphological changes leading to ineradicable infection. Thus, we sought to quantify the enzymes responsible for polyphosphate accumulation and to determine how choline catabolism affects energy flow and storage. Subcellular fractions showed that exo-polyphosphate phosphatase (PPX) activity resides mainly in the periplasm, and three isoenzymes of 24, 70, and 200 KD were found. The PPX activity in the periplasm of bacteria grown with choline was inhibited in an anti-competitive manner from Km 0.5 to 1 μM, and their Vmax increased from 50 to 100 nmol PO4≡/min/g of protein in succinate medium. Since PPX inhibition by choline did not explain the 3.8-fold increase in polyphosphates, we quantified the polyphosphate kinase activity, and its significant 2.4-fold increase was consistent with the accumulation. Furthermore, intracellular ATP concentration directly correlated with the energetic yield of the carbon source and was significantly higher for succinate, suggesting that the restriction of energy caused by choline catabolism may induce morphological and physiological changes to the swarm form thus facilitating their migration and tissue colonization

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