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Tracking gene expression and oxidative damage of O-stressed Clostridioides difficile by a multi-omics approach. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Clostridioides difficile is a major cause of antibiotic-related diarrhea and has some oxygen tolerance, challenging its classification as a strictly anaerobic bacterium.
  • In an experiment, the strain C. difficile 630Δerm was grown in micro-aerobic conditions and maintained growth similar to anaerobic conditions, although significant changes in gene expression were recorded, especially in fermentation pathways and carbohydrate metabolism.
  • The study also highlighted a marked increase in oxidative stress response, particularly regarding cysteine, indicating a complex adaptation process enabling C. difficile to survive in low-oxygen environments while only minimally altering its physical characteristics.

Article Abstract

Clostridioides difficile is the major pathogen causing diarrhea following antibiotic treatment. It is considered to be a strictly anaerobic bacterium, however, previous studies have shown a certain and strain-dependent oxygen tolerance. In this study, the model strain C. difficile 630Δerm was shifted to micro-aerobiosis and was found to stay growing to the same extent as anaerobically growing cells with only few changes in the metabolite pattern. However, an extensive change in gene expression was determined by RNA-Seq. The most striking adaptation strategies involve a change in the reductive fermentation pathways of the amino acids proline, glycine and leucine. But also a far-reaching restructuring in the carbohydrate metabolism was detected with changes in the phosphotransferase system (PTS) facilitated uptake of sugars and a repression of enzymes of glycolysis and butyrate fermentation. Furthermore, a temporary induction in the synthesis of cofactor riboflavin was detected possibly due to an increased demand for flavin mononucleotid (FMN) and flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD) in redox reactions. However, biosynthesis of the cofactors thiamin pyrophosphate and cobalamin were repressed deducing oxidation-prone enzymes and intermediates in these pathways. Micro-aerobically shocked cells were characterized by an increased demand for cysteine and a thiol redox proteomics approach revealed a dramatic increase in the oxidative state of cysteine in more than 800 peptides after 15 min of micro-aerobic shock. This provides not only a catalogue of oxidation-prone cysteine residues in the C. difficile proteome but also puts the amino acid cysteine into a key position in the oxidative stress response. Our study suggests that tolerance of C. difficile towards O is based on a complex and far-reaching adjustment of global gene expression which leads to only a slight change in phenotype.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.anaerobe.2018.05.018DOI Listing

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