Project description:How post-translational modification of nitrogenase is circumvented in Rhodopseudomonas palustris strains that produce hydrogen gas constitutively
Project description:Characterization of post-translational modification of nitrogenase in Rhodopseudomonas palustris strains that produce hydrogen gas constitutively.
Project description:The purple bacterium Rhodopseudomonas palustris is a model organism for dissecting the energy and electron transfer processes that have evolved in phototrophic organisms. This bacterium is of particular interest because, in addition to driving its metabolism via solar energy capture, it is capable of nitrogen and carbon dioxide fixation, producing hydrogen and utilising a wide range of organic compounds. Understanding these processes underpins the potential exploitation of Rhodopseudomonas palustris for synthetic biology, biohydrogen production and bioremediation, for example. Like other purple bacteria, Rhodopseudomonas palustris has 2 light-harvesting (LH) systems: LH1 and LH2. The former has already been extensively characterised by X-ray crystallography and cryo-EM. The aim of this proteomics project is to provide complementary information to support the cryo-EM mapping of LH2 structure.
Project description:Non-growing Rhodopseudomonas palustris increases the hydrogen gas yield from acetate by shifting from the glyoxylate shunt to the tricarboxylic acid cycle
Project description:Facultative phototrophic bacteria are excellent models for analyzing the coordination of major metabolic traits including oxidative phosphorylation, photophosphorylation, carbon dioxide fixation and nitrogen fixation. In Rhodobacter sphaeroides and R. capsulatus, a two-component system called RegBA (PrrBA) controls these functions and it has been thought that this redox sensing regulatory system was essential for coordinating electron flow and could not be easily replaced in facultative phototrophs. Here we show that this is not the case and that the oxygen-sensing FixlJ-K system, initially described in rhizobia, controls microaerobic respiration, photophosphorylation and several other metabolic traits in Rhodopseudomonas palustris. A R. palustris fixK mutant grew normally aerobically but was impaired in microaerobic growth. It was also severely impaired in photosynthetic growth and has very little bacteriochlorophyll. Transcriptome analyses indicated that FixK positively regulates heme and bacteriochlorophyll biosynthesis, cbb3 oxidase and NADH dehydrogenase genes, as well as genes for hydrogen uptake, iron oxidation, and aromatic compound degradation. Electrophoretic mobility shift assays showed that FixK binds directly to the promoters of a bacteriochlorophyll biosynthesis operon, a bacteriophytochrome-histidine kinase gene and the fnr-type regulatory gene, aadR. AadR is likely responsible for mediating some indirect effects of FixK on expression of anaerobic genes. These results underscore that physiologically similar bacteria can use very different regulatory strategies to control common major metabolisms.