Characterizing the surface-exposed proteome of Planococcus halocryophilus during cryophilic growth.

Extremophiles

Department of Natural Resource Sciences, McGill University, 21111 Lakeshore Rd. Sainte-Anne-de-Bellevue, Montreal, QC, H9X3V9, Canada,

Published: May 2015

AI Article Synopsis

  • Planococcus halocryophilus OR1 is a unique bacterium that can grow in extreme temperatures, from sub-zero to 37 °C, and exhibits nodular features on its cell surface under cold conditions, though the specifics of these features and their benefits are unclear.
  • The study investigates the differences in the bacterial surface proteins (surfaceome) under various salt and temperature conditions to understand how the bacteria adapt to cold.
  • A total of 144 proteins were identified, revealing changes in amino acid usage indicating cold adaptation, as well as differences in peptidoglycan metabolism and iron acquisition strategies in response to environmental stressors.

Article Abstract

Planococcus halocryophilus OR1 is a bacterial isolate capable of growth at temperatures ranging from -15 to +37 °C. During sub-zero (cryophilic) growth, nodular features appear on its cell surface; however, the biochemical compositions of these features as well as any cold-adaptive benefits they may offer are not understood. This study aimed to identify differences in the cell surface proteome (surfaceome) of P. halocryophilus cells grown under optimal (24 °C, no added salt), low- and mid-salt (5 and 12 % NaCl, respectively) at 24 °C, and low- and mid-salt sub-zero (5 % NaCl at -5 °C and 12 % NaCl at -10 °C) culture conditions, for the purpose of gaining insight into cold-adapted proteomic traits at the cell surface. Mid-log cells were harvested, treated briefly with trypsin and the resultant peptides were purified followed by identification by LC-MS/MS analysis. One hundred and forty-four proteins were subsequently identified in at least one culture condition. Statistically significant differences in amino acid usage, a known indicator of cold adaptation, were identified through in silico analysis. Two proteins with roles in peptidoglycan (PG) metabolism, an N-acetyl-L-alanine amidase and a multimodular transpeptidase-transglycosylase, were detected, though each was only detected under optimal conditions, indicating that high-salt and high-cold stress each affect PG metabolism. Two iron transport-binding proteins, associated with two different iron transport strategies, were identified, indicating that P. halocryophilus uses a different iron acquisition strategy at very low temperatures. Here we present the first set of data that describes bacterial adaptations at the cellular surface that occur as a cryophilic bacterium is transitioned from optimal to near-inhibitory sub-zero culture conditions.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00792-015-0743-4DOI Listing

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