Abstract

Phenazines are redox-active secondary metabolites produced by diverse bacteria including the opportunistic pathogen Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Extracellular electron transfer via phenazines enhances anaerobic survival by serving as an electron sink for glucose catabolism. However, the specific phenazine reductase(s) used to support this catabolism are unknown. Because electron transport chain components have been previously implicated in phenazine reduction, we sought to determine which of them possess phenazine reductase activity. We show that phenazine-1-carboxamide (PCN) and pyocyanin (PYO) are reduced at the highest rate by cells and are localized to the cell envelope while reduced. Using a coupled genetic and biochemical approach, we show that phenazine reductase activity in membrane fractions is attributable to the three NADH dehydrogenases present in P. aeruginosa and that their order of phenazine reductase activity is Nqr > Nuo > Ndh. In mutants possessing only one functional NADH dehydrogenase, whole cell reduction rates of PCN, but not PYO, recapitulate the pattern of biochemical results, implying that PYO reduction is predominantly occurring in the cytosol. Lastly, we show that ubiquinone rapidly and non-enzymatically oxidizes reduced phenazines, demonstrating that phenazines have the capability to serve in a redox loop between the NADH and ubiquinone pools, a finding that carries bioenergetic implications.

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