Abstract
Microbial communities of fermented food microbiomes typically exhibit predictable patterns of microbial succession. However, the biochemical mechanisms that control the diversity and dynamics of these communities are not well described. Interactions between bacteria and fungi may be one mechanism controlling the development of cheese rind microbiomes. This study characterizes a specific bacterium-fungus interaction previously discovered on cheese rinds between the bacterium Glutamicibacter arilaitensis (formerly Arthrobacter arilaitensis) and fungi of the genus Penicillium and identifies the specialized metabolites produced during cocultures. G.arilaitensis was previously shown to produce an unknown pink pigment in response to the presence of Penicillium. Using a combination of mass spectrometry, nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR), and transcriptome sequencing (RNA-seq), we determined that this pigment production is associated with production of coproporphyrin III. The discovery that coproporphyrin III preferentially bound zinc over other trace metals found in cheese curds highlights the value of using analytical chemistry to confirm identity of predicted chemical species. IMPORTANCE Bacterium-fungus interactions play key roles in the assembly of cheese rind microbial communities, but the molecular mechanisms underlying these interactions are poorly characterized. Moreover, millions of people around the world enjoy eating cheeses and cheese rinds, but our understanding of the diversity of microbial metabolites ingested during cheese consumption is limited. The discovery of zinc coproporphyrin III as the cause of pink pigment production by Glutamicibacter arilaitensis suggests that secretion of this molecule is important for microbial acquisition of trace metals.
Highlights
Cheese rinds form on the surfaces of naturally aged cheeses and provide distinct esthetics and sensory qualities
We have identified coproporphyrin III as a metabolite produced by G. arilaitensis in response to Penicillium and exogenous siderophores, such as desferrioxamine B
By looking for signals that increase in intensity when G. arilaitensis and Penicillium sp. 12 were grown in close proximity, we rapidly identified mass-to-charge (m/z) ratios of interest that could potentially represent compounds associated with this interaction
Summary
Cheese rinds form on the surfaces of naturally aged cheeses and provide distinct esthetics and sensory qualities. We have identified coproporphyrin III as a metabolite produced by G. arilaitensis in response to Penicillium and exogenous siderophores, such as desferrioxamine B. Extracted and purified coproporphyrin III was found to be bound to zinc in excess over other metals, including iron, which suggests an important and previously unrecognized role of zinc in microbial interactions in cheese rinds.
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