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Polyamines produced by an extreme thermophile are essential for cell growth at high temperature

Authors :
Akihiko Sakamoto
Masatada Tamakoshi
Toshiyuki Moriya
Tairo Oshima
Koichi Takao
Yoshiaki Sugita
Takemitsu Furuchi
Masaru Niitsu
Takeshi Uemura
Kazuei Igarashi
Keiko Kashiwagi
Yusuke Terui
Source :
Journal of biochemistry. 172(2)
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

An extreme thermophile, Thermus thermophilus grows at an optimum temperature of around 70°C and produces 16 different polyamines including long-chain and branched-chain polyamines. We found that the composition of polyamines in the thermophile cells changes with culture temperature. Long-chain and branched-chain polyamines (unusual polyamines) were increased in the cells grown at high temperature such as 80°C, but they were minor components in the cells grown at relatively lower temperature such as 60°C. The effects of polyamines on cell growth were studied using T. thermophilus HB8 ΔspeA deficient in arginine decarboxylase. Cell growth of this mutant strain was significantly decreased at 70°C. This mutant strain cannot produce polyamines and grows poorly at 75°C. It was also determined whether polyamines are directly involved in protecting DNA from DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs) induced by heat. Polyamines protected DNA against double-strand breaks. Therefore, polyamines play essential roles in cell growth at extremely high temperature through maintaining a functional conformation of DNA against DSBs and depurination.

Details

ISSN :
17562651
Volume :
172
Issue :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of biochemistry
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e12e94bc043362e45cfa03a0b7132d87