Mannitol, a compatible solute synthesized by A cinetobacter baylyi in a two‐step pathway including a salt‐induced and salt‐dependent mannitol‐1‐phosphate dehydrogenase

The nutritionally versatile and naturally competent soil bacterium A cinetobacter baylyi copes with salt stress by the accumulation of compatible solutes. NMR analyses revealed that cells amassed glutamate and the rather unusual sugar alcohol mannitol upon an increase of the external NaCl concentrat...

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Veröffentlicht in:Environmental microbiology 2013-08, Vol.15 (8), p.2187-2197
Hauptverfasser: Sand, Miriam, Mingote, Ana I., Santos, Helena, Müller, Volker, Averhoff, Beate
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The nutritionally versatile and naturally competent soil bacterium A cinetobacter baylyi copes with salt stress by the accumulation of compatible solutes. NMR analyses revealed that cells amassed glutamate and the rather unusual sugar alcohol mannitol upon an increase of the external NaCl concentration. To unravel the path of mannitol biosynthesis, the genome was inspected for genes potentially involved in its biosynthesis. A gene encoding a potential mannitol‐1‐phosphate dehydrogenase ( mtlD ) was identified in the genome of A . baylyi . Expression of mtlD was highly induced at high salinity. mtlD was overexpressed and the purified protein indeed produced mannitol‐1‐phosphate from fructose‐6‐phosphate. The enzyme preferred NADPH over NADH and the specific activity of fructose‐6‐phosphate reduction with NADPH was 130 U mg −1 . Enzymatic activity was strictly salt‐dependent. Deletion of mtlD resulted in a complete loss of salt‐dependent mannitol biosynthesis. We provide clear evidence that osmo‐induced synthesis of the compatible solute mannitol is by a two‐step pathway and that the mannitol‐1‐phosphate dehydrogenase mediating the first step of this pathway is regulated by salinity on the transcriptional as well as on the activity level.
ISSN:1462-2912
1462-2920
DOI:10.1111/1462-2920.12090