Abstract

Ruminants may suffer from rumen acidosis when fed with high-concentrate diets due to the higher proliferation and overproduction of lactate by Streptococcus bovis. The catabolite control protein A (CcpA) regulates the transcription of lactate dehydrogenase (ldh) and pyruvate formate-lyase (pfl) in S. bovis, but its role in response to different carbon concentrations remains unclear. To characterize the regulatory mechanisms of CcpA in S. bovis S1 at different levels of carbon, herein, we analyzed the transcriptomic and physiological characteristics of S. bovis S1 and its ccpA mutant strain grown in glucose-excess and glucose-limited conditions. A reduced growth rate and a shift in fermentation pattern from homofermentation to heterofermentation were observed under glucose-limited condition as compared to glucose-excess condition, in S. bovis S1. Additionally, the inactivation of ccpA significantly affected the growth and end metabolites in both conditions. For the glycolytic intermediate, fructose 1,6-bisphosphate (FBP), the concentration significantly reduced at lower glucose conditions; its concentration decreased significantly in the ccpA mutant strain. Transcriptomic results showed that about 46% of the total genes were differentially transcribed between the wild-type strain and ccpA mutant strain grown in glucose-excess conditions; while only 12% genes were differentially transcribed in glucose-limited conditions. Different glucose concentrations led to the differential expression of 38% genes in the wild-type strain, while only half of these were differentially expressed in the ccpA-knockout strain. Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes (KEGG) enrichment analyses showed that the substrate glucose concentration significantly affected the gene expression in histidine metabolism, nitrogen metabolism, and some carbohydrate metabolism pathways. The deletion of ccpA affected several genes involved in carbohydrate metabolism, such as glycolysis, pyruvate metabolism, fructose and mannose metabolism, as well as in fatty acid biosynthesis pathways in bacteria grown in glucose-excess conditions; this effect was attenuated under glucose-limited conditions. Overall, these findings provide new information on gene transcription and metabolic mechanisms associated with substrate glucose concentration and validate the important role of CcpA in the regulation of carbon metabolism in S. bovis S1 at differential glucose availability.

Highlights

  • In ruminants, undesirable lactate accumulation in the rumen due to high-concentrate diets can cause rumen acidosis

  • Deletion of ccpA resulted in a decreased growth rate of S. bovis S1, which implied that the overgrowth of S. bovis could be inhibited by controlling catabolite control protein A (CcpA) synthesis, relieving rumen acidosis

  • High glucose concentration in the media led to the rapid growth of S. bovis S1 and a shift to produce more lactate

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Summary

Introduction

Undesirable lactate accumulation in the rumen due to high-concentrate diets can cause rumen acidosis. Previous studies show that Streptococcus bovis, in presence of sufficient highly digestible carbohydrates, proliferates rapidly, and predominates over a short period in the rumen with the accumulation of lactate as the major fermentation product (Marounek and Bartos, 1987; Nocek, 1997). This causes a large drop in ruminal pH (Kenney et al, 2015). Streptococcus bovis, an amylolytic and lactate-producing bacterium in the rumen, can rapidly break down starch into glucose and produce lactate, formate, acetate, and ethanol as the end metabolites (McAllister et al, 1990; Asanuma and Hino, 2002b). When the pH is low and the glucose is sufficiently available, the specific activity and amount of LDH increase, while the PFL synthesis and activity decrease (Asanuma et al, 1999), causing higher lactate production and lesser production of acetate, ethanol, and formate

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