BMC Microbiology (Oct 2010)

The tricarboxylic acid cycle in <it>Shewanella oneidensis </it>is independent of Fur and RyhB control

  • Parsons Andrea B,
  • McCue Lee,
  • Yang Yunfeng,
  • Feng Sheng,
  • Zhou Jizhong

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2180-10-264
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 1
p. 264

Abstract

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Abstract Background It is well established in E. coli and Vibrio cholerae that strains harboring mutations in the ferric uptake regulator gene (fur) are unable to utilize tricarboxylic acid (TCA) compounds, due to the down-regulation of key TCA cycle enzymes, such as AcnA and SdhABCD. This down-regulation is mediated by a Fur-regulated small regulatory RNA named RyhB. It is unclear in the γ-proteobacterium S. oneidensis whether TCA is also regulated by Fur and RyhB. Results In the present study, we showed that a fur deletion mutant of S. oneidensis could utilize TCA compounds. Consistently, expression of the TCA cycle genes acnA and sdhA was not down-regulated in the mutant. To explore this observation further, we identified a ryhB gene in Shewanella species and experimentally demonstrated the gene expression. Further experiments suggested that RyhB was up-regulated in fur mutant, but that AcnA and SdhA were not controlled by RyhB. Conclusions These cumulative results delineate an important difference of the Fur-RyhB regulatory cycle between S. oneidensis and other γ-proteobacteria. This work represents a step forward for understanding the unique regulation in S. oneidensis.