Environmental Protection Agency of Ireland (ERTDI) [2005-ET-LS-9-M3]

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Environmental Protection Agency of Ireland (ERTDI) [2005-ET-LS-9-M3]

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Analysis of the Pseudomonas putida CA-3 proteome during growth on styrene under nitrogen-limiting and non-limiting conditions

Nikodinović-Runić, Jasmina; Flanagan, Michelle; Hume, Aisling R.; Cagney, Gerard; O'Connor, Kevin

(Microbiology Soc, London, 2009)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Nikodinović-Runić, Jasmina
AU  - Flanagan, Michelle
AU  - Hume, Aisling R.
AU  - Cagney, Gerard
AU  - O'Connor, Kevin 
PY  - 2009
UR  - https://imagine.imgge.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/373
AB  - Pseudomonas putida CA-3 is a styrene-degrading bacterium capable of accumulating medium-chain-length polyhydroxyalkanoate (mcIPHA) when exposed to limiting concentrations of a nitrogen source in the growth medium. Using shotgun proteomics we analysed global proteome expression in P. putida CA-3 supplied with styrene as the sole carbon and energy source under N-limiting (condition permissive for mclPHA synthesis) and non-limiting (condition non-permissive for mcIPHA accumulation) growth conditions in order to provide insight into the molecular response of P. putida CA-3 to limitation of nitrogen when grown on styrene. A total of 1761 proteins were identified with high confidence and the detected proteins could be assigned to functional groups including styrene degradation, energy, nucleotide metabolism, protein synthesis, transport, stress response and motility. Proteins involved in the upper and lower styrene degradation pathway were expressed throughout the 48 h growth period under both nitrogen limitation and excess. Proteins involved in polyhydroxyalkanoate (PHA) biosynthesis, nitrogen assimilation and amino acid transport, and outer membrane proteins were upregulated under nitrogen limitation. PHA accumulation and biosynthesis were only expressed under nitrogen limitation. Nitrogen assimilation proteins were detected on average at twofold higher amounts under nitrogen limitation. Expression of the branched-chain amino acid ABC transporter was up to 16-fold higher under nitrogen-limiting conditions. Branched chain amino acid uptake by nitrogen-limited cultures was also higher than that by non-limited cultures. Outer membrane lipoproteins were expressed at twofold higher levels under nitrogen limitation. This was confirmed by Western blotting (immunochemical detection) of cells grown under nitrogen limitation. Our study provides the first global description of protein expression changes during growth of any organism on styrene and accumulating mcIPHA (nitrogen-limited growth).
PB  - Microbiology Soc, London
T2  - Microbiology-Sgm
T1  - Analysis of the Pseudomonas putida CA-3 proteome during growth on styrene under nitrogen-limiting and non-limiting conditions
EP  - 3361
SP  - 3348
VL  - 155
DO  - 10.1099/mic.0.031153-0
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Nikodinović-Runić, Jasmina and Flanagan, Michelle and Hume, Aisling R. and Cagney, Gerard and O'Connor, Kevin ",
year = "2009",
abstract = "Pseudomonas putida CA-3 is a styrene-degrading bacterium capable of accumulating medium-chain-length polyhydroxyalkanoate (mcIPHA) when exposed to limiting concentrations of a nitrogen source in the growth medium. Using shotgun proteomics we analysed global proteome expression in P. putida CA-3 supplied with styrene as the sole carbon and energy source under N-limiting (condition permissive for mclPHA synthesis) and non-limiting (condition non-permissive for mcIPHA accumulation) growth conditions in order to provide insight into the molecular response of P. putida CA-3 to limitation of nitrogen when grown on styrene. A total of 1761 proteins were identified with high confidence and the detected proteins could be assigned to functional groups including styrene degradation, energy, nucleotide metabolism, protein synthesis, transport, stress response and motility. Proteins involved in the upper and lower styrene degradation pathway were expressed throughout the 48 h growth period under both nitrogen limitation and excess. Proteins involved in polyhydroxyalkanoate (PHA) biosynthesis, nitrogen assimilation and amino acid transport, and outer membrane proteins were upregulated under nitrogen limitation. PHA accumulation and biosynthesis were only expressed under nitrogen limitation. Nitrogen assimilation proteins were detected on average at twofold higher amounts under nitrogen limitation. Expression of the branched-chain amino acid ABC transporter was up to 16-fold higher under nitrogen-limiting conditions. Branched chain amino acid uptake by nitrogen-limited cultures was also higher than that by non-limited cultures. Outer membrane lipoproteins were expressed at twofold higher levels under nitrogen limitation. This was confirmed by Western blotting (immunochemical detection) of cells grown under nitrogen limitation. Our study provides the first global description of protein expression changes during growth of any organism on styrene and accumulating mcIPHA (nitrogen-limited growth).",
publisher = "Microbiology Soc, London",
journal = "Microbiology-Sgm",
title = "Analysis of the Pseudomonas putida CA-3 proteome during growth on styrene under nitrogen-limiting and non-limiting conditions",
pages = "3361-3348",
volume = "155",
doi = "10.1099/mic.0.031153-0"
}
Nikodinović-Runić, J., Flanagan, M., Hume, A. R., Cagney, G.,& O'Connor, K.. (2009). Analysis of the Pseudomonas putida CA-3 proteome during growth on styrene under nitrogen-limiting and non-limiting conditions. in Microbiology-Sgm
Microbiology Soc, London., 155, 3348-3361.
https://doi.org/10.1099/mic.0.031153-0
Nikodinović-Runić J, Flanagan M, Hume AR, Cagney G, O'Connor K. Analysis of the Pseudomonas putida CA-3 proteome during growth on styrene under nitrogen-limiting and non-limiting conditions. in Microbiology-Sgm. 2009;155:3348-3361.
doi:10.1099/mic.0.031153-0 .
Nikodinović-Runić, Jasmina, Flanagan, Michelle, Hume, Aisling R., Cagney, Gerard, O'Connor, Kevin , "Analysis of the Pseudomonas putida CA-3 proteome during growth on styrene under nitrogen-limiting and non-limiting conditions" in Microbiology-Sgm, 155 (2009):3348-3361,
https://doi.org/10.1099/mic.0.031153-0 . .
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