Published December 19, 2008 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Genetic and Computational Identification of a Conserved Bacterial Metabolic Module

  • 1. University of Chicago
  • 2. Stanford University
  • 3. Case Western Reserve University

Description

We have experimentally and computationally defined a set of genes that form a conserved metabolic module in the α-proteobacterium Caulobacter crescentus and used this module to illustrate a schema for the propagation of pathway-level annotation across bacterial genera. Applying comprehensive forward and reverse genetic methods and genome-wide transcriptional analysis, we (1) confirmed the presence of genes involved in catabolism of the abundant environmental sugar myo-inositol, (2) defined an operon encoding an ABC-family myo-inositol transmembrane transporter, and (3) identified a novel myo-inositol regulator protein and cis-acting regulatory motif that control expression of genes in this metabolic module. Despite being encoded from non-contiguous loci on the C. crescentus chromosome, these myo-inositol catabolic enzymes and transporter proteins form a tightly linked functional group in a computationally inferred network of protein associations. Primary sequence comparison was not sufficient to confidently extend annotation of all components of this novel metabolic module to related bacterial genera. Consequently, we implemented the Graemlin multiple-network alignment algorithm to generate cross-species predictions of genes involved in myo-inositol transport and catabolism in other α-proteobacteria. Although the chromosomal organization of genes in this functional module varied between species, the upstream regions of genes in this aligned network were enriched for the same palindromic cis-regulatory motif identified experimentally in C. crescentus. Transposon disruption of the operon encoding the computationally predicted ABC myo-inositol transporter of Sinorhizobium meliloti abolished growth on myo-inositol as the sole carbon source, confirming our cross-genera functional prediction. Thus, we have defined regulatory, transport, and catabolic genes and a cis-acting regulatory sequence that form a conserved module required for myo-inositol metabolism in select α-proteobacteria. Moreover, this study describes a forward validation of gene-network alignment, and illustrates a strategy for reliably transferring pathway-level annotation across bacterial species.

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Additional details

Identifiers

DOI
10.1371/journal.pgen.1000310
Other
oai:uchicago.tind.io:10315

Funding

National Institutes of Health
Graduate Training Grant
National Science Foundation
VIGRE postdoctoral fellowship
Stanford University
Graduate Fellowship
National Science Foundation
Protein Interaction Networks: Integration and Alignment
U.S. Department of Energy Office of Science
DE-FG02-05ER64136
Beckman Young
Investigator Award
Mallinckrodt Foundation

UChicago Information

Division(s)
Biological Sciences Division
Department(s)
Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Biophysical Sciences, Microbiology