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Reduction of fumarate, mesaconate and crotonate by Mfr, a novel oxygen-regulated periplasmic reductase inCampylobacter jejuni

Authors :
David J. Kelly
Andrew Hitchcock
Stephen J. Hall
Edward Guccione
Neil Shearer
Francis Mulholland
Arnoud H. M. van Vliet
Source :
Environmental Microbiology. 12:576-591
Publication Year :
2010
Publisher :
Wiley, 2010.

Abstract

Summary Methylmenaquinol : fumarate reductase (Mfr) is a newly recognized type of fumarate reductase present in some e-proteobacteria, where the active site subunit (MfrA) is localized in the periplasm, but for which a physiological role has not been identified. We show that the Campylobacter jejuni mfrABE operon is transcribed from a single promoter, with the mfrA gene preceded by a small open reading-frame (mfrX) encoding a C. jejuni-specific polypeptide of unknown function. The growth characteristics and enzyme activities of mutants in the mfrA and menaquinol : fu- marate reductase A (frdA) genes show that the cyto- plasmic facing Frd enzyme is the major fumarate reductase under oxygen limitation. The Mfr enzyme is shown to be necessary for maximal rates of growth by fumarate respiration and rates of fumarate reduction in intact cells measured by both viologen assays and 1 H-NMR were slower in an mfrA mutant. As periplas- mic fumarate reduction does not require fumarate/ succinate antiport, Mfr may allow more efficient adaptation to fumarate-dependent growth. However, a further rationale for the periplasmic location of Mfr is suggested by the observation that the enzyme also reduces the fumarate analogues mesaconate and crotonate; fermentation products of anaerobes with which C. jejuni shares its gut environment, that are unable to be transported into the cell. Both MfrA and MfrB subunits were localized in the periplasm by immunoblotting and 2D-gel electrophoresis, but an mfrE mutant accumulated unprocessed MfrA in the cytoplasm, suggesting a preassembled MfrABE holoenzyme has to be recognized by the TAT system for translocation to occur. Gene expression studies in chemostat cultures following an aerobic-anaerobic shift showed that mfrA is highly upregulated by oxygen limitation, as would be experienced in vivo. Our results indicate that in addition to a role in fuma- rate respiration, Mfr allows C. jejuni to reduce analo- gous substrates specifically present in the host gut environment.

Details

ISSN :
14622920 and 14622912
Volume :
12
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Environmental Microbiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....843f06ecd10e3d43b6ea93f7bca3f143
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1462-2920.2009.02096.x