Abstract

This review tries to illuminate how the bacterium Cupriavidus metallidurans CH34 is able to allocate essential transition metal cations to their target proteins although these metals have similar charge-to-surface ratios and chemical features, exert toxic effects, compete with each other, and occur in the bacterial environment over a huge range of concentrations and speciations. Central to this ability is the "transportome", the totality of all interacting metal import and export systems, which, as an emergent feature, transforms the environmental metal content and speciation into the cellular metal mélange. In a kinetic flow equilibrium resulting from controlled uptake and efflux reactions, the periplasmic and cytoplasmic metal content is adjusted in a way that minimizes toxic effects. A central core function of the transportome is to shape the metal ion composition using high-rate and low-specificity reactions to avoid time and/or energy-requiring metal discrimination reactions. This core is augmented by metal-specific channels that may even deliver metals all the way from outside of the cell to the cytoplasm. This review begins with a description of the basic chemical features of transition metal cations and the biochemical consequences of these attributes, and which transition metals are available to C. metallidurans. It then illustrates how the environment influences the metal content and speciation, and how the transportome adjusts this metal content. It concludes with an outlook on the fate of metals in the cytoplasm. By generalization, insights coming from C. metallidurans shed light on multiple transition metal homoeostatic mechanisms in all kinds of bacteria including pathogenic species, where the "battle" for metals is an important part of the host-pathogen interaction.

Highlights

  • View Article OnlineThis review tries to illuminate how the bacterium Cupriavidus metallidurans CH34 is able to allocate essential transition metal cations to their target proteins these metals have similar charge-to-surface ratios and chemical features, exert toxic effects, compete with each other, and occur in the bacterial environment over a huge range of concentrations and speciations

  • Cupriavidus metallidurans CH34C. metallidurans CH34 was isolated from a zinc decantation tank as a metal-resistant, hydrogen-oxidizing ‘‘Pseudomonas’’Dietrich H

  • Surplus cations are removed by efficient efflux systems to adjust and fulfill the cytoplasmic metal cation requirement

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Summary

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This review tries to illuminate how the bacterium Cupriavidus metallidurans CH34 is able to allocate essential transition metal cations to their target proteins these metals have similar charge-to-surface ratios and chemical features, exert toxic effects, compete with each other, and occur in the bacterial environment over a huge range of concentrations and speciations. Central to this ability is the ‘‘transportome’’, the totality of all interacting metal import and export systems, which, as an emergent feature, transforms the environmental metal content and speciation into the cellular metal melange. Insights coming from C. metallidurans shed light on multiple transition metal homoeostatic mechanisms in all kinds of bacteria including pathogenic species, where the ‘‘battle’’ for metals is an important part of the host–pathogen interaction

Introduction
Tutorial Review
Transition metals and heavy metals
Metal complexes
General considerations
Mineral salts media
Complex media
Amino acid
Selectivity and affinity versus import rate
Task of the transition metal transportome
The transition metal transportome for the periplasm
Number per cell
Part of the cobalamin biosynthesis and uptake cluster
Redox reactions in the periplasm
Sequestration in the periplasm counterbalances the transportome
Import across the inner membrane
Family TC number Substrates
Protein Family TC number Substrates
Efflux back into the periplasm
Conclusion
Full Text
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