Abstract

Temporal genomic profiling and whole-cell proteomic analyses were performed to characterize the dynamic molecular response of the metal-reducing bacterium Shewanella oneidensis MR-1 to an acute chromate shock. The complex dynamics of cellular processes demand the integration of methodologies that describe biological systems at the levels of regulation, gene and protein expression, and metabolite production. Genomic microarray analysis of the transcriptome dynamics of midexponential phase cells subjected to 1 mm potassium chromate (K(2)CrO(4)) at exposure time intervals of 5, 30, 60, and 90 min revealed 910 genes that were differentially expressed at one or more time points. Strongly induced genes included those encoding components of a TonB1 iron transport system (tonB1-exbB1-exbD1), hemin ATP-binding cassette transporters (hmuTUV), TonB-dependent receptors as well as sulfate transporters (cysP, cysW-2, and cysA-2), and enzymes involved in assimilative sulfur metabolism (cysC, cysN, cysD, cysH, cysI, and cysJ). Transcript levels for genes with annotated functions in DNA repair (lexA, recX, recA, recN, dinP, and umuD), cellular detoxification (so1756, so3585, and so3586), and two-component signal transduction systems (so2426) were also significantly up-regulated (p < 0.05) in Cr(VI)-exposed cells relative to untreated cells. By contrast, genes with functions linked to energy metabolism, particularly electron transport (e.g. so0902-03-04, mtrA, omcA, and omcB), showed dramatic temporal alterations in expression with the majority exhibiting repression. Differential proteomics based on multidimensional HPLC-MS/MS was used to complement the transcriptome data, resulting in comparable induction and repression patterns for a subset of corresponding proteins. In total, expression of 2,370 proteins were confidently verified with 624 (26%) of these annotated as hypothetical or conserved hypothetical proteins. The initial response of S. oneidensis to chromate shock appears to require a combination of different regulatory networks that involve genes with annotated functions in oxidative stress protection, detoxification, protein stress protection, iron and sulfur acquisition, and SOS-controlled DNA repair mechanisms.

Highlights

  • Temporal genomic profiling and whole-cell proteomic analyses were performed to characterize the dynamic molecular response of the metal-reducing bacterium Shewanella oneidensis MR-1 to an acute chromate shock

  • Studies investigating the effect of nitrite on hexavalent chromium reduction indicated that S. oneidensis MR-1 might possess multiple nonspecific Cr(VI) reduction mechanisms, as well as metal resistance mechanisms, that are dependent on physiological growth conditions [13]

  • Physiological Effect of Chromate during Aerobic Growth of S. oneidensis—Initially we investigated the effects of chromate-induced stress on the growth of aerobically growing cultures of S. oneidensis MR-1 to identify adequate concentrations for transcriptome and proteome analyses

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Summary

EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES

For large scale proteomic characterization, 500-ml cultures of S. oneidensis MR-1 in 4-liter flasks (a total of 1 liter of culture for treatment and control) were grown to midexponential phase (A600, 0.5) under the same conditions as described above for the microarray studies and either exposed to a final K2CrO4 concentration of 1 mM or allowed to continue growing in the absence of added chromate. LC/LC-MS/MS Analysis—The proteome fractions (soluble and membrane) prepared from control and chromate-treated samples were analyzed in duplicate via two-dimensional (2-D) LC-MS/MS experiments using an Ultimate HPLC system (LC Packings, a division of Dionex, San Francisco, CA) coupled to a linear trapping quadrupole (LTQ) mass spectrometer (ThermoFinnigan, San Jose, CA). (compares duplicate runs on same sample) as well as fractionation comparisons (compares replicate runs of the same proteome broken down by fraction)

RESULTS
Conserved hypothetical proteind
DISCUSSION
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