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The proteome is a terminal electron acceptor. | LitMetric

The proteome is a terminal electron acceptor.

Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A

Division of Biology and Biological Engineering, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, CA 91125.

Published: January 2025

AI Article Synopsis

  • Microbial metabolism is highly adaptable, allowing growth on varying carbon sources through fermentation and respiration.
  • A mathematical framework was developed to analyze cellular resource allocation alongside redox chemistry, highlighting how metabolism balances carbon, electrons, and energy while treating biomass as both a product and catalyst for growth.
  • The study found that proteins in microbes evolve to enhance redox matching, suggesting that genetic changes that may not benefit individual proteins can still be favored if they improve the overall fitness of the microbial population.

Article Abstract

Microbial metabolism is impressively flexible, enabling growth even when available nutrients differ greatly from biomass in redox state. , for example, rearranges its physiology to grow on reduced and oxidized carbon sources through several forms of fermentation and respiration. To understand the limits on and evolutionary consequences of this metabolic flexibility, we developed a coarse-grained mathematical framework coupling redox chemistry with principles of cellular resource allocation. Our models inherit key qualities from both of their antecedents: i) describing diverse metabolic chemistries and ii) enforcing the simultaneous balancing of atom (e.g., carbon), electron, and energy (adenosine triphosphate) flows, as in redox models, while iii) treating biomass as both the product and catalyst of the growth process, as in resource allocation models. Assembling integrated models of respiration, fermentation, and photosynthesis clarified key microbiological phenomena, including demonstrating that autotrophs grow more slowly than heterotrophs because of constraints imposed by the intracellular production of reduced carbon. Our model further predicted that heterotrophic growth is improved by matching the redox state of biomass to the nutrient environment. Through analysis of [Formula: see text]60,000 genomes and diverse proteomic datasets, we found evidence that proteins indeed accumulate amino acid substitutions promoting redox matching. We therefore propose an unexpected mode of genome evolution where substitutions neutral or even deleterious to the individual biochemical or structural functions of proteins can nonetheless be selected due to a redox-chemical benefit to the population.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2404048121DOI Listing

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