1. Proteomics analysis of Bifidobacterium longum NCC2705 growing on glucose, fructose, mannose, xylose, ribose, and galactose
- Author
-
Jie Wang, Liuyu Huang, Xuesong Wang, Christian U. Riedel, Dawei Liu, Shuai Wang, Bin Xu, Wei Liu, Feng Liu, Jing Yuan, Xiang He, Xiao Wei, Zhongke Sun, Changlin Shao, Jiangli Zhao, Yanghong Guo, Darong Hu, and Zheng Jiang
- Subjects
Proteomics ,Bifidobacterium longum ,Mannose ,Fructose ,Xylose ,Biochemistry ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Bacterial Proteins ,Xylose metabolism ,Humans ,Electrophoresis, Gel, Two-Dimensional ,Pyruvates ,Molecular Biology ,biology ,Galactose ,Carbohydrate ,biology.organism_classification ,Carbon ,Culture Media ,Lactic acid ,Glucose ,chemistry ,Spectrometry, Mass, Matrix-Assisted Laser Desorption-Ionization ,Bifidobacterium - Abstract
To investigate the molecular mechanisms underlying carbohydrate uptake and connected metabolic pathways of Bifidobacterium longum NCC2705, the proteomic profiles of bacteria grown on different carbon sources including glucose, fructose, mannose, xylose, ribose, and galactose were analyzed. Our results show that all sugars tested were catabolized via the bifid shunt. Sixty-eight proteins that exhibited changes in abundance of threefold or greater were identified by MS. A striking observation was the differential expression of proteins related to the pyruvate metabolism. Further analysis of acetic acid and lactic acid in the culture supernatants by HPLC at the end of fermentation showed that more lactic acid was produced during growth on fructose, ribose, xylose, galactose and more acetic acid was produced during the fermentation of glucose and mannose. Growth experiments revealed that B. longum NCC2705 preferentially used fructose, ribose, xylose, and galactose with higher growth rates over glucose and mannose. Furthermore, five proteins (GroEL, Eno, Tal, Pgm, and BL0033) exhibited clear phosphorylation modifications at serine and/or tyrosine residues. BL0033, a component of an ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporter, was significantly more abundant in bacteria grown on fructose and, to a lesser extent, ribose and xylose. RT-PCR analysis revealed that all genes of the ABC transporter are induced in the presence of these sugars suggesting that BL0033, BL0034, BL0035, and BL0036 constitute an ABC transporter with fructose as preferred substrate.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF