Cell Survival Enabled by Leakage of a Labile Metabolic Intermediate
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Medina Carmona, Encarnación; Gutiérrez Rus, Luis Ignacio; Manssour Triedo, Fadia; Gámiz Arco, María Gloria; Mota Ávila, Antonio José; Reiné Díaz, Pablo; Ortega Muñoz, Mariano; Andrés León, Eduardo; Ibarra Molero, Beatriz; Sánchez Ruiz, José ManuelEditorial
Oxford University Press
Materia
Auxotrophy rescue Prototrophy restoration Metabolic innovation Labile metabolic intermediates Evolutionary repair experiments Laboratory evolution
Date
2023-02-15Referencia bibliográfica
Encarnación Medina-Carmona, Luis I Gutierrez-Rus, Fadia Manssour-Triedo, Matilda S Newton, Gloria Gamiz-Arco, Antonio J Mota, Pablo Reiné, Juan Manuel Cuerva, Mariano Ortega-Muñoz, Eduardo Andrés-León, Jose Luis Ortega-Roldan, Burckhard Seelig, Beatriz Ibarra-Molero, Jose M Sanchez-Ruiz, Cell Survival Enabled by Leakage of a Labile Metabolic Intermediate, Molecular Biology and Evolution, Volume 40, Issue 3, March 2023, msad032, [https://doi.org/10.1093/molbev/msad032]
Sponsorship
Human Frontier Science Program RGP0041/2017; Spanish Government RTI2018-097142-B-100; Ministry of Science and Innovation, Spain (MICINN) 80NSSC18K1277; European Commission; Junta de Andalucia; Regional Andalusian Government E-BIO-464-UGR-20 2020_DOC_00541Abstract
Many metabolites are generated in one step of a biochemical pathway and consumed in a subsequent step. Such
metabolic intermediates are often reactive molecules which, if allowed to freely diffuse in the intracellular milieu,
could lead to undesirable side reactions and even become toxic to the cell. Therefore, metabolic intermediates
are often protected as protein-bound species and directly transferred between enzyme active sites in multi-function al enzymes, multi-enzyme complexes, and metabolons. Sequestration of reactive metabolic intermediates thus con tributes to metabolic efficiency. It is not known, however, whether this evolutionary adaptation can be relaxed in
response to challenges to organismal survival. Here, we report evolutionary repair experiments on Escherichia coli
cells in which an enzyme crucial for the biosynthesis of proline has been deleted. The deletion makes cells unable
to grow in a culture medium lacking proline. Remarkably, however, cell growth is efficiently restored by many single
mutations (12 at least) in the gene of glutamine synthetase. The mutations cause the leakage to the intracellular
milieu of a highly reactive phosphorylated intermediate common to the biosynthetic pathways of glutamine and pro line. This intermediate is generally assumed to exist only as a protein-bound species. Nevertheless, its diffusion upon
mutation-induced leakage enables a new route to proline biosynthesis. Our results support that leakage of seques tered metabolic intermediates can readily occur and contribute to organismal adaptation in some scenarios.
Enhanced availability of reactive molecules may enable the generation of new biochemical pathways and the poten tial of mutation-induced leakage in metabolic engineering is noted