Methanogens often inhabit sulfidic environments that favor the precipitation of transition metals such as iron (Fe) as metal sulfides, including mackinawite (FeS) and pyrite (FeS). These metal sulfides have historically been considered biologically unavailable. Nonetheless, methanogens are commonly cultivated with sulfide (HS) as a sulfur source, a condition that would be expected to favor metal precipitation and thus limit metal availability. Recent studies have shown that methanogens can access Fe and sulfur (S) from FeS and FeS to sustain growth. As such, medium supplied with FeS should lead to higher availability of transition metals when compared to medium supplied with HS. Here, we examined how transition metal availability under sulfidic (i.e., cells provided with HS as sole S source) versus non-sulfidic (cells provided with FeS as sole S source) conditions impact the metalloproteome of Fusaro. To achieve this, we employed size exclusion chromatography coupled with inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry and shotgun proteomics. Significant changes were observed in the composition and abundance of iron, cobalt, nickel, zinc, and molybdenum proteins. Among the differences were alterations in the stoichiometry and abundance of multisubunit protein complexes involved in methanogenesis and electron transport chains. Our data suggest that utilizes the minimal iron-sulfur cluster complex and canonical cysteine biosynthesis proteins when grown on FeS but uses the canonical Suf pathway in conjunction with the tRNA-Sep cysteine pathway for iron-sulfur cluster and cysteine biosynthesis under sulfidic growth conditions.IMPORTANCEProteins that catalyze biochemical reactions often require transition metals that can have a high affinity for sulfur, another required element for life. Thus, the availability of metals and sulfur are intertwined and can have large impacts on an organismismal biochemistry. Methanogens often occupy anoxic, sulfide-rich (euxinic) environments that favor the precipitation of transition metals as metal sulfides, thereby creating presumed metal limitation. Recently, several methanogens have been shown to acquire iron and sulfur from pyrite, an abundant iron-sulfide mineral that was traditionally considered to be unavailable to biology. The work presented here provides new insights into the distribution of metalloproteins, and metal uptake of Fusaro grown under euxinic or pyritic growth conditions. Thorough characterizations of this methanogen under different metal and sulfur conditions increase our understanding of the influence of metal availability on methanogens, and presumably other anaerobes, that inhabit euxinic environments.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11337800 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/aem.00516-24 | DOI Listing |
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