Abstract
Characterizing proteins recovered from natural microbial communities affords the opportunity to correlate protein expression and modification with environmental factors, including species composition and successional stage. Proteogenomic and biochemical studies of pellicle biofilms from subsurface acid mine drainage streams have shown abundant cytochromes from the dominant organism, Leptospirillum Group II. These cytochromes are proposed to be key proteins in aerobic Fe(II) oxidation, the dominant mode of cellular energy generation by the biofilms. In this study, we determined that posttranslational modification and expression of amino-acid sequence variants change as a function of biofilm maturation. For Cytochrome 579 (Cyt 579), the most abundant cytochrome in the biofilms, late developmental-stage biofilms differed from early-stage biofilms in N-terminal truncations and decreased redox potentials. Expression of sequence variants of two monoheme c-type cytochromes also depended on biofilm development. For Cyt 572, an abundant membrane-bound cytochrome, the expression of multiple sequence variants was observed in both early and late developmental-stage biofilms; however, redox potentials of Cyt 572 from these different sources did not vary significantly. These cytochrome analyses show a complex response of the Leptospirillum Group II electron transport chain to growth within a microbial community and illustrate the power of multiple proteomics techniques to define biochemistry in natural systems.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 1398-1409 |
Number of pages | 12 |
Journal | ISME Journal |
Volume | 4 |
Issue number | 11 |
DOIs | |
State | Published - Nov 2010 |
Funding
We are grateful to the Banfield laboratory members at the University of California, Berkeley, for obtaining biofilm samples, and to TW Arman, President, Iron Mountain Mines, R Sugarek, EPA, and R Carver for site access and on-site assistance. We thank Mary Ann Gawinowicz at the Columbia University Protein Core Facility for N-terminal sequence analysis, and Stephanie Malfatti at LLNL for DNA sequencing. This work was performed under the auspices of the US Department of Energy by Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory under Contract DE-AC52-07NA27344, and was funded by the DOE Office of Science, Genomics: GTL Program grant DE-FG02-05ER64134 to JFB, RLH and MPT.
Keywords
- cytochrome
- metagenomics
- proteomics
- redox
- variation