Reconfiguration of metabolic fluxes in Pseudomonas putida as a response to sub-lethal oxidative stress
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Authors
Nikel Mayer, Pablo Iván
Fuhrer, Tobias
Chavarría Vargas, Max
Sánchez Pascuala, Alberto
Sauer, Uwe
de Lorenzo, Víctor
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Abstract
As a frequent inhabitant of sites polluted with toxic chemicals, the soil bacterium and plant-root colonizer Pseudomonas
putida can tolerate high levels of endogenous and exogenous oxidative stress. Yet, the ultimate reason of such phenotypic
property remains largely unknown. To shed light on this question, metabolic network-wide routes for NADPH generation—
the metabolic currency that fuels redox-stress quenching mechanisms—were inspected when P. putida KT2440 was
challenged with a sub-lethal H2O2 dose as a proxy of oxidative conditions. 13C-tracer experiments, metabolomics, and flux
analysis, together with the assessment of physiological parameters and measurement of enzymatic activities, revealed a
substantial flux reconfiguration in oxidative environments. In particular, periplasmic glucose processing was rerouted to
cytoplasmic oxidation, and the cyclic operation of the pentose phosphate pathway led to significant NADPH-forming fluxes,
exceeding biosynthetic demands by ~50%. The resulting NADPH surplus, in turn, fueled the glutathione system for H2O2
reduction. These properties not only account for the tolerance of P. putida to environmental insults—some of which end up
in the formation of reactive oxygen species—but they also highlight the value of this bacterial host as a platform for
environmental bioremediation and metabolic engineering.
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Keywords
Pseudomonas putida, Bacterium, Bioremediation
Citation
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41396-020-00884-9