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One substrate, many fates: different ways of methanol utilization in the acetogen Acetobacterium woodii.

Dennis LittyFlorian KrempVolker Müller
Published in: Environmental microbiology (2022)
Acetogenic bacteria such as Acetobacterium woodii use the Wood-Ljungdahl pathway (WLP) for fixation of CO 2 and energy conservation. This pathway enables conversion of diverse substrates to the main product of acetogenesis, acetate. Methyl group containing substrates such as methanol or methylated compounds, derived from pectin, are abundant in the environment and a source for CO 2 . Methyl groups enter the WLP at the level of methyltetrahydrofolic acid (methyl-THF). For methyl transfer from methanol to THF a substrate-specific methyltransferase system is required. In this study, we used genetic methods to identify mtaBC2A (Awo_c22760-Awo_c22740) as the methanol-specific methyltransferase system of A. woodii. After methyl transfer, methyl-THF serves as carbon and/or electron source and the respiratory Rnf complex is required for redox homeostasis if methanol + CO 2 is the substrate. Resting cells fed with methanol + CO 2 , indeed converted methanol to acetate in a 4:3 stoichiometry. When methanol was fed in combination with other electron sources such as H 2  + CO 2 or CO, methanol was converted Rnf-independently and the methyl group was condensed with CO to build acetate. When fed in combination with alternative electron sinks such as caffeate methanol was oxidized only and resulting electrons were used for non-acetogenic growth. These different pathways for the conversion of methyl-group containing substrates enable acetogens to adapt to various ecological niches and to syntrophic communities.
Keyphrases
  • carbon dioxide
  • gene expression
  • minimally invasive
  • cell proliferation
  • oxidative stress
  • drinking water
  • genome wide
  • dna damage
  • climate change
  • signaling pathway
  • copy number
  • cell wall