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Horizontal transfer of a pathway for coumarate catabolism unexpectedly inhibits purine nucleotide biosynthesis
Author(s) -
Close Dan M.,
Cooper Connor J.,
Wang Xingyou,
Chirania Payal,
Gupta Madhulika,
Ossyra John R.,
Gian Richard J.,
Engle Nancy,
Tschaplinski Timothy J.,
Smith Jeremy C.,
Hedstrom Lizbeth,
Parks Jerry M.,
Michener Joshua K.
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
molecular microbiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.857
H-Index - 247
eISSN - 1365-2958
pISSN - 0950-382X
DOI - 10.1111/mmi.14393
Subject(s) - biology , catabolism , nucleotide , biosynthesis , purine , horizontal gene transfer , purine metabolism , biochemistry , genetics , metabolism , gene , enzyme , phylogenetics
Summary A microbe’s ecological niche and biotechnological utility are determined by its specific set of co‐evolved metabolic pathways. The acquisition of new pathways, through horizontal gene transfer or genetic engineering, can have unpredictable consequences. Here we show that two different pathways for coumarate catabolism failed to function when initially transferred into Escherichia coli . Using laboratory evolution, we elucidated the factors limiting activity of the newly acquired pathways and the modifications required to overcome these limitations. Both pathways required host mutations to enable effective growth with coumarate, but the necessary mutations differed. In one case, a pathway intermediate inhibited purine nucleotide biosynthesis, and this inhibition was relieved by single amino acid replacements in IMP dehydrogenase. A strain that natively contains this coumarate catabolism pathway, Acinetobacter baumannii , is resistant to inhibition by the relevant intermediate, suggesting that natural pathway transfers have faced and overcome similar challenges. Molecular dynamics simulation of the wild type and a representative single‐residue mutant provide insight into the structural and dynamic changes that relieve inhibition. These results demonstrate how deleterious interactions can limit pathway transfer, that these interactions can be traced to specific molecular interactions between host and pathway, and how evolution or engineering can alleviate these limitations.

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