Major advances in mastering metabolism of single carbon (C1) gaseous feedstocks in acetogenic microorganisms are primed to fuel the transition toward environmentally sustainable and cost-efficient production schemes of biofuels and value-added biochemicals. Since acetogens grow under autotrophic energy-limited conditions, protein synthesis is expected to be controlled. This survey integrated publicly available RNA sequencing and ribosome profiling studies of several acetogens, providing data on genome-scale transcriptional and translational responses of A. woodii, E. limosum, C. drakei, and C. ljungdahlii to autotrophic and heterotrophic growth conditions. The extent of translational efficiency turned out to vary across key functional modules in acetogens’ metabolism. Translational control was confirmed to support stoichiometric protein production in multimeric complexes. Comparing the autotrophic to the heterotrophic growth condition revealed growth-dependent regulation of translational efficiency, pointing at translational buffering as a widespread phenomenon shared by acetogens.
Translational efficiency in gas-fermenting bacteria: Adding a new layer of regulation to gene expression in acetogens / Re, Angela. - In: ISCIENCE. - ISSN 2589-0042. - ELETTRONICO. - 26:12(2023), pp. 1-17. [10.1016/j.isci.2023.108383]
Translational efficiency in gas-fermenting bacteria: Adding a new layer of regulation to gene expression in acetogens
Re, Angela
2023
Abstract
Major advances in mastering metabolism of single carbon (C1) gaseous feedstocks in acetogenic microorganisms are primed to fuel the transition toward environmentally sustainable and cost-efficient production schemes of biofuels and value-added biochemicals. Since acetogens grow under autotrophic energy-limited conditions, protein synthesis is expected to be controlled. This survey integrated publicly available RNA sequencing and ribosome profiling studies of several acetogens, providing data on genome-scale transcriptional and translational responses of A. woodii, E. limosum, C. drakei, and C. ljungdahlii to autotrophic and heterotrophic growth conditions. The extent of translational efficiency turned out to vary across key functional modules in acetogens’ metabolism. Translational control was confirmed to support stoichiometric protein production in multimeric complexes. Comparing the autotrophic to the heterotrophic growth condition revealed growth-dependent regulation of translational efficiency, pointing at translational buffering as a widespread phenomenon shared by acetogens.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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https://hdl.handle.net/11583/2983990