AI Article Synopsis

  • * The regulation of glycolate metabolism in certain alphaproteobacteria is complex, involving multiple regulators: BhcR activates the BHAC, while GlcR represses glycolate oxidase production, and CceR influences the shift between glycolysis and gluconeogenesis.
  • * This study highlights the metabolic flexibility of Alphaproteobacteria, showing their ability to simultaneously utilize glycolate along with other carbon sources depending on environmental availability.

Article Abstract

The hydroxyacid glycolate is a highly abundant carbon source in the environment. Glycolate is produced by unicellular photosynthetic organisms and excreted at petagram scales to the environment, where it serves as growth substrate for heterotrophic bacteria. In microbial metabolism, glycolate is first oxidized to glyoxylate by the enzyme glycolate oxidase. The recently described β-hydroxyaspartate cycle (BHAC) subsequently mediates the carbon-neutral assimilation of glyoxylate into central metabolism in ubiquitous Alpha- and Gammaproteobacteria. Although the reaction sequence of the BHAC was elucidated in , little is known about the regulation of glycolate and glyoxylate assimilation in this relevant alphaproteobacterial model organism. Here, we show that regulation of glycolate metabolism in is surprisingly complex, involving two regulators, the IclR-type transcription factor BhcR that acts as an activator for the BHAC gene cluster, and the GntR-type transcriptional regulator GlcR, a previously unidentified repressor that controls the production of glycolate oxidase. Furthermore, an additional layer of regulation is exerted at the global level, which involves the transcriptional regulator CceR that controls the switch between glycolysis and gluconeogenesis in . Together, these regulators control glycolate metabolism in , allowing the organism to assimilate glycolate together with other carbon substrates in a simultaneous fashion, rather than sequentially. Our results show that the metabolic network of Alphaproteobacteria shows a high degree of flexibility to react to the availability of multiple substrates in the environment.IMPORTANCEAlgae perform ca. 50% of the photosynthetic carbon dioxide fixation on our planet. In the process, they release the two-carbon molecule glycolate. Due to the abundance of algae, massive amounts of glycolate are released. Therefore, this molecule is available as a source of carbon for bacteria in the environment. Here, we describe the regulation of glycolate metabolism in the model organism . This bacterium uses the recently characterized β-hydroxyaspartate cycle to assimilate glycolate in a carbon- and energy-efficient manner. We found that glycolate assimilation is dynamically controlled by three different transcriptional regulators: GlcR, BhcR, and CceR. This allows to assimilate glycolate together with other carbon substrates in a simultaneous fashion. Overall, this flexible and multi-layered regulation of glycolate metabolism in represents a resource-efficient strategy to make optimal use of this globally abundant molecule under fluctuating environmental conditions.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11323563PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mbio.01524-24DOI Listing

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