Abstract

Clostridium autoethanogenum and Clostridium ljungdahlii are physiologically and genetically very similar strict anaerobic acetogens capable of growth on carbon monoxide as sole carbon source. While exact nutritional requirements have not been reported, we observed that for growth, the addition of vitamins to media already containing yeast extract was required, an indication that these are fastidious microorganisms. Elimination of complex components and individual vitamins from the medium revealed that the only organic compounds required for growth were pantothenate, biotin and thiamine. Analysis of the genome sequences revealed that three genes were missing from pantothenate and thiamine biosynthetic pathways, and five genes were absent from the pathway for biotin biosynthesis. Prototrophy in C. autoethanogenum and C. ljungdahlii for pantothenate was obtained by the introduction of plasmids carrying the heterologous gene clusters panBCD from Clostridium acetobutylicum, and for thiamine by the introduction of the thiC-purF operon from Clostridium ragsdalei. Integration of panBCD into the chromosome through allele-coupled exchange also conveyed prototrophy. C. autoethanogenum was converted to biotin prototrophy with gene sets bioBDF and bioHCA from Desulfotomaculum nigrificans strain CO-1-SRB, on plasmid and integrated in the chromosome. The genes could be used as auxotrophic selection markers in recombinant DNA technology. Additionally, transformation with a subset of the genes for pantothenate biosynthesis extended selection options with the pantothenate precursors pantolactone and/or beta-alanine. Similarly, growth was obtained with the biotin precursor pimelate combined with genes bioYDA from C. acetobutylicum. The work raises questions whether alternative steps exist in biotin and thiamine biosynthesis pathways in these acetogens.

Highlights

  • Carboxydotrophic acetogenic Clostridium spp. are well placed to play important roles in carbon capture and production of fuels and platform chemicals from various wastes and renewable resources by synthesis gas fermentation (MarcellinElectronic supplementary material The online version of this article contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.et al 2016; Liew et al 2016; Dürre 2017; Humphreys and Minton 2018)

  • In further experiments in MBM medium with sodium sulfide, growth was only obtained if pantothenate, biotin and thiamine were present (Table 1)

  • Growth experiments indicated that C. autoethanogenum and C. ljungdahlii are auxotrophic for pantothenate, biotin and thiamine

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Summary

Introduction

The best studied members of this group are the closely related Clostridium autoethanogenum and Clostridium ljungdahlii, and genome scale metabolic models are available for these strains (Bruno-Barcena et al 2013; Marcellin et al 2016; Nagarajan et al 2013). Many Clostridium spp. are fastidious microorganisms and are by default grown in complex media. This is true for C. autoethanogenum and C. ljungdahlii. Fastidious microorganisms require the addition of organic molecules for which they are auxotrophic to support their growth. These are often specific amino acids or vitamins, for which their biosynthesis pathway is incomplete. Heterologous genes for absent metabolic steps can be used as selectable

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