Oxidation of trimethylamine to trimethylamine N-oxide facilitates high hydrostatic pressure tolerance in a generalist bacterial lineage.
Qi-Long QinZhi-Bin WangHai-Nan SuXiu-Lan ChenJie MiaoXiu-Juan WangChun-Yang LiXi-Ying ZhangPing-Yi LiMin WangJiasong FangIan D E A LidburyWeipeng ZhangXiao-Hua ZhangGui-Peng YangYin ChenYu-Zhong ZhangPublished in: Science advances (2021)
High hydrostatic pressure (HHP) is a characteristic environmental factor of the deep ocean. However, it remains unclear how piezotolerant bacteria adapt to HHP. Here, we identify a two-step metabolic pathway to cope with HHP stress in a piezotolerant bacterium. Myroides profundi D25T, obtained from a deep-sea sediment, can take up trimethylamine (TMA) through a previously unidentified TMA transporter, TmaT, and oxidize intracellular TMA into trimethylamine N-oxide (TMAO) by a TMA monooxygenase, MpTmm. The produced TMAO is accumulated in the cell, functioning as a piezolyte, improving both growth and survival at HHP. The function of the TmaT-MpTmm pathway was further confirmed by introducing it into Escherichia coli and Bacillus subtilis Encoded TmaT-like and MpTmm-like sequences extensively exist in marine metagenomes, and other marine Bacteroidetes bacteria containing genes encoding TmaT-like and MpTmm-like proteins also have improved HHP tolerance in the presence of TMA, implying the universality of this HHP tolerance strategy in marine Bacteroidetes.
Keyphrases
- escherichia coli
- bacillus subtilis
- single cell
- multidrug resistant
- genome wide
- stem cells
- reactive oxygen species
- transcription factor
- dna methylation
- gene expression
- hydrogen peroxide
- polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons
- risk assessment
- pseudomonas aeruginosa
- bone marrow
- heat stress
- climate change
- human health
- biofilm formation
- bioinformatics analysis