AupA and AupB Are Outer and Inner Membrane Proteins Involved in Alkane Uptake in Marinobacter hydrocarbonoclasticus SP17.
Julie MounierFlorence HakilPriscilla BranchuMuriel NaïtaliPhilippe GoulasPierre SivadonRégis GrimaudPublished in: mBio (2018)
This study describes the functional characterization of two proteins, AupA and AupB, which are required for growth on alkanes in the marine hydrocarbonoclastic bacterium Marinobacter hydrocarbonoclasticus The aupA and aupB genes form an operon whose expression was increased upon adhesion to and biofilm formation on n-hexadecane. AupA and AupB are outer and inner membrane proteins, respectively, which are able to interact physically. Mutations in aupA or/and aupB reduced growth on solid paraffin and liquid n-hexadecane, while growth on nonalkane substrates was not affected. In contrast, growth of aup mutants on n-hexadecane solubilized in Brij 58 micelles was completely abolished. Mutant cells had also lost the ability to bind to n-hexadecane solubilized in Brij 58 micelles. These results support the involvement of AupA and AupB in the uptake of micelle-solubilized alkanes and provide the first evidence for a cellular process involved in the micellar uptake pathway. The phylogenetic distribution of the aupAB operon revealed that it is widespread in marine hydrocarbonoclastic bacteria of the orders Oceanospirillales and Alteromonadales and that it is present in high copy number (up to six) in some Alcanivorax strains. These features suggest that Aup proteins probably confer a selective advantage in alkane-contaminated seawater.IMPORTANCE Bacteria are the main actors of the biological removal of hydrocarbons in seawater, and so, it is important to understand how they degrade hydrocarbons and thereby mitigate marine environmental damage. Despite a considerable amount of literature about the dynamic of microbial communities subjected to hydrocarbon exposure and the isolation of strains that degrade hydrocarbons, most of the genetic determinants and molecular mechanisms of bacterial hydrocarbon uptake remain unknown. This study identifies two genes, aupA and aupB, in the hydrocarbonoclastic bacterium Marinobacter hydrocarbonoclasticus that are present frequently in multiple copies in most of the marine hydrocarbon-degrading bacteria for which the genomic sequence is available. AupA and AupB are two novel membrane proteins interacting together that are involved in the uptake of alkanes dissolved in surfactant micelles. The function and the phylogenetic distribution of aupA and aupB suggest that they might be one attribute of the remarkable adaptation of marine hydrocarbonoclastic bacteria that allow them to take advantage of hydrocarbons.
Keyphrases
- copy number
- genome wide
- biofilm formation
- drug delivery
- escherichia coli
- mitochondrial dna
- pseudomonas aeruginosa
- staphylococcus aureus
- dna methylation
- systematic review
- magnetic resonance imaging
- poor prognosis
- magnetic resonance
- candida albicans
- gene expression
- hyaluronic acid
- computed tomography
- transcription factor
- risk assessment
- cell migration
- long non coding rna
- human health
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- cell cycle arrest
- bioinformatics analysis
- liquid chromatography