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Cited 11 time in webofscience Cited 12 time in scopus
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Genome-scale analysis of syngas fermenting acetogenic bacteria reveals the translational regulation for its autotrophic growthopen access

Authors
Song, YosebShin, JongohJin, SangrakLee, Jung-KulKim, Dong RipKim, Sun ChangCho, SuhyungCho, Byung-Kwan
Issue Date
Nov-2018
Publisher
BMC
Keywords
Acetogenic bacteria; Eubacterium limosum; Gas fermentation; Wood-Ljungdahl pathway; Translation efficiency
Citation
BMC GENOMICS, v.19
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
BMC GENOMICS
Volume
19
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/hanyang/handle/2021.sw.hanyang/15975
DOI
10.1186/s12864-018-5238-0
ISSN
1471-2164
Abstract
BackgroundAcetogenic bacteria constitute promising biocatalysts for the conversion of CO₂/H₂ or synthesis gas (H₂/CO/CO₂) into biofuels and value-added biochemicals. These microorganisms are naturally capable of autotrophic growth via unique acetogenesis metabolism. Despite their biosynthetic potential for commercial applications, a systemic understanding of the transcriptional and translational regulation of the acetogenesis metabolism remains unclear.ResultsBy integrating genome-scale transcriptomic and translatomic data, we explored the regulatory logic of the acetogenesis to convert CO₂ into biomass and metabolites in Eubacterium limosum. The results indicate that majority of genes associated with autotrophic growth including the Wood-Ljungdahl pathway, the reduction of electron carriers, the energy conservation system, and gluconeogenesis were transcriptionally upregulated. The translation efficiency of genes in cellular respiration and electron bifurcation was also highly enhanced. In contrast, the transcriptionally abundant genes involved in the carbonyl branch of the Wood-Ljungdahl pathway, as well as the ion-translocating complex and ATP synthase complex in the energy conservation system, showed decreased translation efficiency. The translation efficiencies of genes were regulated by 5UTR secondary structure under the autotrophic growth condition.ConclusionsThe results illustrated that the acetogenic bacteria reallocate protein synthesis, focusing more on the translation of genes for the generation of reduced electron carriers via electron bifurcation, rather than on those for carbon metabolism under autotrophic growth.
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