PLoS ONE (Jan 2013)

Stress responses of the industrial workhorse Bacillus licheniformis to osmotic challenges.

  • Rebecca Schroeter,
  • Tamara Hoffmann,
  • Birgit Voigt,
  • Hanna Meyer,
  • Monika Bleisteiner,
  • Jan Muntel,
  • Britta Jürgen,
  • Dirk Albrecht,
  • Dörte Becher,
  • Michael Lalk,
  • Stefan Evers,
  • Johannes Bongaerts,
  • Karl-Heinz Maurer,
  • Harald Putzer,
  • Michael Hecker,
  • Thomas Schweder,
  • Erhard Bremer

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0080956
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 11
p. e80956

Abstract

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The Gram-positive endospore-forming bacterium Bacillus licheniformis can be found widely in nature and it is exploited in industrial processes for the manufacturing of antibiotics, specialty chemicals, and enzymes. Both in its varied natural habitats and in industrial settings, B. licheniformis cells will be exposed to increases in the external osmolarity, conditions that trigger water efflux, impair turgor, cause the cessation of growth, and negatively affect the productivity of cell factories in biotechnological processes. We have taken here both systems-wide and targeted physiological approaches to unravel the core of the osmostress responses of B. licheniformis. Cells were suddenly subjected to an osmotic upshift of considerable magnitude (with 1 M NaCl), and their transcriptional profile was then recorded in a time-resolved fashion on a genome-wide scale. A bioinformatics cluster analysis was used to group the osmotically up-regulated genes into categories that are functionally associated with the synthesis and import of osmostress-relieving compounds (compatible solutes), the SigB-controlled general stress response, and genes whose functional annotation suggests that salt stress triggers secondary oxidative stress responses in B. licheniformis. The data set focusing on the transcriptional profile of B. licheniformis was enriched by proteomics aimed at identifying those proteins that were accumulated by the cells through increased biosynthesis in response to osmotic stress. Furthermore, these global approaches were augmented by a set of experiments that addressed the synthesis of the compatible solutes proline and glycine betaine and assessed the growth-enhancing effects of various osmoprotectants. Combined, our data provide a blueprint of the cellular adjustment processes of B. licheniformis to both sudden and sustained osmotic stress.