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conference poster not in proceedings

Survey of one-carbon metabolism in Desulfitobacteria

Maillard, Julien  
•
Prat, Laure
•
Holliger, Christof  
2010
Gordon Research conference on Molecultar Basis of Microbial One-Carbon Metabolism

Desulfitobacterium is a Gram-positive obligate anaerobic bacterium affiliated to the Firmicutes with a highly versatile carbon and energy metabolism. Increasing interest in this genus came with its involvement in the degradation of chlorinated compounds used as terminal electron acceptor in a process called dehalorespiration. A proteomic study in our laboratory revealed the participation of the Wood-Ljungdahl pathway in tetrachloroethene dehalorespiration when D. hafniense strain TCE1 was cultivated in presence of hydrogen and carbon dioxide, providing first indication for CO2 fixation in Desulfitobacterium. A genomic survey of both Desulfitobacterium available genomes (D. hafniense strain Y51 and strain DCB-2) showed a full set of genes involved in carbon dioxide and carbon monoxide metabolism similarly to the five CODH complexes present in the thermophilic CO-utilizing bacterium Carboxydothermus hydrogenoformans (Wu et al., 2006, PloS Genetics 1:e65), including CODH-III complex which has been shown to participate to acetogenesis in Moorella thermoacetica (Pierce et al., 2008, Environ. Microbiol. 10:2550). No clear evidence however has been yet given for acetogenesis or hydrogenogenesis in Desulfitobacterium. A survey of B12 metabolism in Desulfitobacterium revealed the presence of 15 and 23 predicted B12-dependent methyltransferases (MeTr) in the genome of strains Y51 and DCB-2, respectively. A detail study of the genetic environment of the MeTr suggests that most of them are part of O-demethylase complexes. Phenyl methyl ethers have been indeed shown to serve as electron donor for some Desulfitobacterium strains (Kreher et al., 2008, Arch. Microbiol. 190:489). A few other MeTr belong to predicted archaeal-type di- and trimethylamine methyltransferases complexes, one of which being a putative pyrrolysine containing enzyme. The richness and functional redundancy of Desulfitobacteria make them good candidates to further study specific pathways dedicated to one-carbon metabolism.

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Type
conference poster not in proceedings
Author(s)
Maillard, Julien  
Prat, Laure
Holliger, Christof  
Date Issued

2010

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LBE  
Event nameEvent placeEvent date
Gordon Research conference on Molecultar Basis of Microbial One-Carbon Metabolism

Lewiston, Maine, UA

August 1-6, 2010

Available on Infoscience
January 17, 2011
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/63033
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