A New Physiological Role for the DNA Molecule as a Protector against Drying Stress in Desiccation-Tolerant Microorganisms
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
García Fontana, Cristina; Narváez Reinaldo, Juan Jesús; Castillo Correa, Francisco José; González-López, Jesús; Luque Fernández, Irene; Manzanera Ruiz, Maximino EnriqueEditorial
Frontiers Media
Materia
xeroprotection DNA lipase activity
Fecha
2016-12-22Referencia bibliográfica
García Fontana, C. et. al. Front. Microbiol. 7:2066. [https://doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2016.02066]
Patrocinador
Andalusian Regional Government (Spain); European Regional Development Funds (EU) as part of research project P11-RNM-7844Resumen
The DNA molecule is associated with the role of encoding information required to
produce RNA which is translated into proteins needed by the cell. This encoding involves
information transmission to offspring or to other organisms by horizontal transfer.
However, despite the abundance of this molecule in both the cell and the environment,
its physiological role seems to be restricted mainly to that of a coding and inheritance
molecule. In this paper, we report a new physiological role for the DNA molecule
as involved in protection against desiccation, in addition to its well-established main
information transfer and other recently reported functions such as bio-film formation
in eDNA form. Desiccation-tolerant microorganisms such as Microbacterium sp. 3J1
significantly upregulate genes involved in DNA synthesis to produce DNA as part of their
defensive mechanisms to protect protein structures and functions from drying according
to RNA-seq analysis. We have observed the intracellular overproduction of DNA in
two desiccation-tolerant microorganisms, Microbacterium sp. 3J1 and Arthrobacter
siccitolerans 4J27, in response to desiccation signals. In addition, this conclusion can
be made from our observations that synthetic DNA protects two proteins from drying
and when part of a xeroprotectant preparation, DNA from various organisms including
desiccation-sensitive species, does the same. Removal of DNA by nuclease treatment
results in absence of this additive protective effect. We validated this role in biochemical
and biophysical assays in proteins and occurs in trans even with short, single chains of
synthetically produced DNA.