Utilize este identificador para referenciar este registo: http://hdl.handle.net/10362/172817
Título: Energy flux couples sulfur isotope fractionation to proteomic and metabolite profiles in Desulfovibrio vulgaris
Autor: Leavitt, William D.
Waldbauer, Jacob
Venceslau, Sofia S.
Sim, Min Sub
Zhang, Lichun
Boidi, Flavia Jaquelina
Plummer, Sydney
Diaz, Julia M.
Pereira, Inês A.C.
Bradley, Alexander S.
Palavras-chave: chemostat
compound-specific hydrogen isotopes
microbial sulfate reduction
quantitative proteomics
stable sulfur isotopes
Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Environmental Science(all)
Earth and Planetary Sciences(all)
Data: 9-Mai-2024
Resumo: Microbial sulfate reduction is central to the global carbon cycle and the redox evolution of Earth's surface. Tracking the activity of sulfate reducing microorganisms over space and time relies on a nuanced understanding of stable sulfur isotope fractionation in the context of the biochemical machinery of the metabolism. Here, we link the magnitude of stable sulfur isotopic fractionation to proteomic and metabolite profiles under different cellular energetic regimes. When energy availability is limited, cell-specific sulfate respiration rates and net sulfur isotope fractionation inversely covary. Beyond net S isotope fractionation values, we also quantified shifts in protein expression, abundances and isotopic composition of intracellular S metabolites, and lipid structures and lipid/water H isotope fractionation values. These coupled approaches reveal which protein abundances shift directly as a function of energy flux, those that vary minimally, and those that may vary independent of energy flux and likely do not contribute to shifts in S-isotope fractionation. By coupling the bulk S-isotope observations with quantitative proteomics, we provide novel constraints for metabolic isotope models. Together, these results lay the foundation for more predictive metabolic fractionation models, alongside interpretations of environmental sulfur and sulfate reducer lipid-H isotope data.
Descrição: Funding Information: We thank S. Moore and D. Fike for bulk sulfur isotope analyses (WashU); M. Seuss for assistance with lipid\u2010H isotope analyses (Bradley lab, WashU); X. Feng (Dartmouth) and M. Osburn (Northwestern) for water H\u2010isotope analyses; and A. Sessions and J. Adkins (CalTech) for access to HPLC\u2010ICP\u2010MS. Metabolite analyses were performed by the Proteomics & Mass Spectrometry Facility at the Danforth Plant Science Center (St. Louis, MO, USA). Funding was provided: by NASA Exobiology Award 13\u2010EXO13\u20100082 (ASB, WDL, JW), NSF\u2010EAR Award 1928309 (WDL), Washington University in St. Louis Department of Earth & Planetary Sciences Fossett Fellowship (WDL), the Walter and Constance Burke Fund at Dartmouth College (WDL), and the Fulbright\u2014Bunge & Born\u2014Williams Foundation Scholarship Program (FJB), Funda\u00E7\u00E3o para a Ci\u00EAncia e Tecnologia (Portugal) through R&D unit MOSTMICRO\u2010ITQB (UIDB/04612/2020 and UIDP/04612/2020) and LS4FUTURE Associated Laboratory (LA/P/0087/2020) (IACP), NSF GRFP [2017250547] (SP). Funding Information: We thank S. Moore and D. Fike for bulk sulfur isotope analyses (WashU); M. Seuss for assistance with lipid-H isotope analyses (Bradley lab, WashU); X. Feng (Dartmouth) and M. Osburn (Northwestern) for water H-isotope analyses; and A. Sessions and J. Adkins (CalTech) for access to HPLC-ICP-MS. Metabolite analyses were performed by the Proteomics & Mass Spectrometry Facility at the Danforth Plant Science Center (St. Louis, MO, USA). Funding was provided: by NASA Exobiology Award 13-EXO13-0082 (ASB, WDL, JW), NSF-EAR Award 1928309 (WDL), Washington University in St. Louis Department of Earth & Planetary Sciences Fossett Fellowship (WDL), the Walter and Constance Burke Fund at Dartmouth College (WDL), and the Fulbright\u2014Bunge & Born\u2014Williams Foundation Scholarship Program (FJB), Funda\u00E7\u00E3o para a Ci\u00EAncia e Tecnologia (Portugal) through R&D unit MOSTMICRO-ITQB (UIDB/04612/2020 and UIDP/04612/2020) and LS4FUTURE Associated Laboratory (LA/P/0087/2020) (IACP), NSF GRFP [2017250547] (SP). Publisher Copyright: © 2024 The Authors. Geobiology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
Peer review: yes
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10362/172817
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1111/gbi.12600
ISSN: 1472-4677
Aparece nas colecções:Home collection (ITQB)



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