agouron microbial oceanography summer course 2007

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“Non-oxygenic microbial photophysiologies in the ocean: rhodopsin and bacteriochlorophyll based systems” Agouron Microbial Oceanography Summer Course 2007

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“Non-oxygenic microbial photophysiologies in the ocean: rhodopsin and bacteriochlorophyll based systems”. Agouron Microbial Oceanography Summer Course 2007. Photophysiology in the sea. N,P,S,Fe…. Respiration. Chemical energy or heat. Animals Bacteria. Solar energy. Photosynthesis. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Agouron Microbial Oceanography Summer Course 2007

“Non-oxygenic microbial photophysiologies in the ocean:

rhodopsin and bacteriochlorophyll based systems”

Agouron Microbial Oceanography Summer Course 2007

Page 2: Agouron Microbial Oceanography Summer Course 2007

Photophysiology in the seaPhotophysiology in the sea

COCO22 + H + H22OO

carbon watercarbon waterdioxidedioxide

CC66HH1212OO66 + O + O2 2

organic oxygenorganic oxygencarboncarbon

Plants Algae, Plants Algae, photosynthetic bacteriaphotosynthetic bacteria

PhotosynthesisPhotosynthesisSolar energySolar energy

Animals Animals BacteriaBacteria

Chemical Chemical energy or heatenergy or heat

RespirationRespiration

N,P,S,Fe….N,P,S,Fe….

Page 3: Agouron Microbial Oceanography Summer Course 2007

Dave Karl, Nature, 2002

Page 4: Agouron Microbial Oceanography Summer Course 2007

OTHER SORTS of PHOTOTROPHY

Type Electron donor C source

Photolithoautotroph H2O, H2S, S0, H2 CO2

Photolithoheterotroph H2O, H2S, S0, H2 Organic substrate

Photoorganoautotroph Organic substrate CO2

Photoorganoheterotroph Organic substrate Organic substrate

Photomixotroph Mixed inorganic/organic

Mixed inorganic/organic

Page 5: Agouron Microbial Oceanography Summer Course 2007

http://helios.bto.ed.ac.uk/bto/microbes/winograd.htm http://ecosystems.mbl.edu/SES/MicrobialMethods/Winogradsky/default.htm

Page 6: Agouron Microbial Oceanography Summer Course 2007

Winogradsky columnO2 H2S

Page 7: Agouron Microbial Oceanography Summer Course 2007

OXYGENIC PAs

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LOTS OF DIVERSITY IN BACTERIAL ANOXYGENIC PHOTOTROPHS !

Page 12: Agouron Microbial Oceanography Summer Course 2007

Many grow photoorganotrophically in the absence of oxygen

When growing phototrophically, derive most of their ATP from light

Carbon sources used predominantly for reducing power, biosynthesis

Many are capable of photoautotrophic growth

General features of anaerobic photosynthetic bacteria

Page 13: Agouron Microbial Oceanography Summer Course 2007

Erythrobacter longus Erythrobacter sp. OCh114. (Roseobacter denitrificans) Roseobacter litoralis

1% to 6 % of isolates from sand, seaweed, seawater, sediments Tokyo Bay

Page 14: Agouron Microbial Oceanography Summer Course 2007

Shimada coined the term in 1995 :“Aerobic anoxygenic phototrophs ”

Not capable of anaerobic phototrophic growth; most strict aerobes

Wide variety and large amounts of carotenoids

Relatively low amounts of bacteriochlorophyll a

Appear not able use light as sole source of energy

Light-induced oxid./reduct. of photosynthetic apparatus demonstrated

Mostly organotrophic (carbon used for energy and as carbon source)

Aerobic Anoxygenic Phototrophic BacteriaMICROBIOLOGY AND MOLECULAR BIOLOGY REVIEWS, Sept. 1998, p. 695 ミ 724. Yurkov and Beatty

Page 15: Agouron Microbial Oceanography Summer Course 2007

“Pump and probe”or

Fast repetition rate fluorometry

Page 16: Agouron Microbial Oceanography Summer Course 2007
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Bcll-containing bacteria may contribute 2- 5 % photosynthetic electron transport in the upper ocean

IRFRRInstrument

Vent photosyn !!!

Page 19: Agouron Microbial Oceanography Summer Course 2007

Kolber et al. 2000. Nature 407:178

Page 20: Agouron Microbial Oceanography Summer Course 2007

Kolber et al. Science 292:2492

“Photosynthetically competent anoxygenic phototrophicbacteria comprise at least 11% ofthe total microbial community”

Page 21: Agouron Microbial Oceanography Summer Course 2007

P/I curves and CO2 fixation in NAP-1 isolate(a little more controversial…)

“Daily cellular rates of CO2 fixation about or 3% of the cellular carbon content...”

Kolber et al. Science 292:2492

Page 22: Agouron Microbial Oceanography Summer Course 2007

Anapleurotic reactions !• TCA cycle intermediates are

used to provide carbon skeletons for other biomolecules. Cycle would halt if OAA is not replaced.

• Anapleurotic reactions produce TCA cycle intermediates from pyruvate or PEP.

Page 23: Agouron Microbial Oceanography Summer Course 2007
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Oceanic puf M/L phylogenyOceanic puf M/L phylogenyBéjà, Suzuki, et al. 2002.

Nature 415:630-633

Page 25: Agouron Microbial Oceanography Summer Course 2007

BACTERIOCHLOROPHYLL BIOSYNTHETIC GENES in BACTERIOCHLOROPHYLL BIOSYNTHETIC GENES in BACTERIOPLANKTON from MONTEREY BAYBACTERIOPLANKTON from MONTEREY BAYBEJA et al, 2002 NATURE

Page 26: Agouron Microbial Oceanography Summer Course 2007

Matching Environmental DNA Sequence to Cultured Cell Proteomes:

A protein profile of the photosynthetic reaction center of HTCC2080

Unpublished: Jang ChoMartha DeganDoug BarofskySteve GiovannoniHTC Lab (LIONS)/EHSC Mass Spec Lab

Oregon State Univ.

Courtesy Steve Giovannoni

Page 27: Agouron Microbial Oceanography Summer Course 2007

Cho et al.

Page 28: Agouron Microbial Oceanography Summer Course 2007

OM60 and Congregibacter littoralis

Page 29: Agouron Microbial Oceanography Summer Course 2007
Page 30: Agouron Microbial Oceanography Summer Course 2007

HALOARCHAEAHALOARCHAEA

Page 31: Agouron Microbial Oceanography Summer Course 2007
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Halobacterium salinarum (electron microscope image)9 0.5-1.2 um x 1.0-6.0 um in size10

light

H+

H+

ADP ATP

H+

Sensor rhodopsins SR I and SR II

Purple membrane = 2-D crystalline bacteriorhodopsin lattice

ATP-synthase

flagellae

Page 34: Agouron Microbial Oceanography Summer Course 2007

QuickTime™ and aTIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

Page 35: Agouron Microbial Oceanography Summer Course 2007

QuickTime™ and aTIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

The cycle can be formally described in terms of 6 steps :isomerization (I), ion transport (T), accessibility change (switch S). Retinal first photo-isomerizes from an all-trans to a 13-cis configuration followed by a proton transfer from the Schiff baseto the proton acceptor Asp-85. To allow vectoriality, reprotonation of the Schiff base from Asp-85 must be excluded. Thus, its accessibility is switched from extracellular to intracellular. The Schiff base is then reprotonated from Asp-96 in the cytoplasmic channel. After reprotonation of Asp-96 from the cytoplasmic surface, retinal reisomerizes thermally and the accessibility of the Schiff base switches back to extracellular to reestablish

the initial state.

http://www.biochem.mpg.de/oesterhelt/photobiology/br.html

Page 36: Agouron Microbial Oceanography Summer Course 2007

QuickTime™ and aTIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

Genome sequence of Halobacterium species NRC-1Wailap Victor N et al., PNAS | October 24, 2000 | vol. 97 | no. 22 | 12176-12181

Page 37: Agouron Microbial Oceanography Summer Course 2007

Microbial rhodopsins fall into two different functional classes• Light-driven ion pumps

• Sensory rhodopsins

Page 38: Agouron Microbial Oceanography Summer Course 2007

LIBRARYLIBRARYCONSTRUCTION CONSTRUCTION

AND AND SCREENINGSCREENING

Page 39: Agouron Microbial Oceanography Summer Course 2007

1

SAR86 130 kbp BAC

1

Page 40: Agouron Microbial Oceanography Summer Course 2007

“SAR86” 130kb GENOME FRAGMENT

Page 41: Agouron Microbial Oceanography Summer Course 2007
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Fast photcycle kinetics

Expression of proteorhodopsin in E. coli

ON

OFF

5 min

OFF

ON

Retinal Proteorhodopsin

+

-

+

+

-+ -

-

pH

0.02

LIGHT-DRIVEN PROTON PUMPING IN E. COLI(via “ SAR86” PROTEORHODOPSIN)

Oded Beja

Béjà et al. Science 289: 1902-1906 (2000)

Page 45: Agouron Microbial Oceanography Summer Course 2007
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Phylogenetic distribution of proteorhodopsin variants

Page 49: Agouron Microbial Oceanography Summer Course 2007

SAR86 SUBGROUPS from the COASTAL and OPEN OCEANS

SSU rRNA

Monterey

Red Sea

Hawaii

**

0.10

env. clone MB11B0, AY033326env. clone MB11E0, AY033304env. clone MB12D0, AY033314

env. clone MB11G0, AY033311

BAC clone eBACRed20E09BAC clone eBACHOT4E07env. clone OM10, U70693

env. clone OCS44, AF001650env. clone KTc0917, AF173974

BAC clone EBAC31A08 AF279106env. clone ZD0108, AJ400345

env. clone NAC11-19, AF245642env. clone MB12G1, AY033317

env. clone CHAB-III-1, AJ240912env. clone MB12G0, AY033328env. clone KTc1112, AF241654env. clone KTc1121, AF241653

env. clone KTc1107, AF173975env. clone ARCTIC97A-18, AF354613

env. clone OCS5, AF001651marine bacterium ZD0107, AJ400344BAC clone EBAC27G05, AF268217

EB750-02H09,AY458632marine bacterium ZD0433, AJ400356

BAC Clone EB000-65A11

Sar86 - II

Sar86 - I

Sar86 - IIIa

Sar86 - IIIb100

100

100

100

82

100

89

97

***

Phylogentic relationships of naturally occurring SAR86 ribotypes

Sabehi et al., Environ. Microbiol. 6:903(2004)

**

Do different SAR86 phylotypes encode proteorhodopsins ?

Page 50: Agouron Microbial Oceanography Summer Course 2007

de la Torre et al. PNAS 2003

Page 51: Agouron Microbial Oceanography Summer Course 2007

(Pelagibacter)

Page 52: Agouron Microbial Oceanography Summer Course 2007

Venter et al., Environmental Genome ShotgunSequencing of the Sargasso Sea,

Science 394:66-74 (2004)

Page 53: Agouron Microbial Oceanography Summer Course 2007

Haloarchaea

“Marine Group IV”

“Marine Group II”“Marine Group III”

ThermoplasmatalesMethanococcales

Thermococcales

Archaeoglobales

pSL12

“Marine Group I”

Thermoproteales

pJP33

To Eucarya, Bacteria

EURYARCHAEOTACRENARCHAEOTA

ARCHAEA

Methanobacteriales

Sulfolobales

Methanopyrales

Methanomicrobiales

Page 54: Agouron Microbial Oceanography Summer Course 2007

Depth-specific differences in proteorhodopsin variants

Béjà et al. Nature 411:786-789 (2001)

Page 55: Agouron Microbial Oceanography Summer Course 2007

Man et al. EMBO J. 2003

Leu105 -> Gln105

Page 56: Agouron Microbial Oceanography Summer Course 2007

Man et al. EMBO J. 2003

Page 57: Agouron Microbial Oceanography Summer Course 2007

Sabehi et al. ISME J. 2007

Page 58: Agouron Microbial Oceanography Summer Course 2007

Leu105 -> Gln105

Glu96 (cytoplasmic H+ donor)Asp85 (periplasmic H+ acceptor)

Sensory rhodopsinslack the cytoplasmicproton donor - 22 ofSargasso Sea PR variantshave either Thr (18),Ile (3), or Lys (1). Each appears linked in an operon to a putative sensory rhodopsin.

Page 59: Agouron Microbial Oceanography Summer Course 2007

Sensory rhodopsins in bacteria

R

R

R

R

ST

ST

ST

ST

R, rhodopsinST, Signal transducer (histidine kinase domain)

Page 60: Agouron Microbial Oceanography Summer Course 2007

Sharma,et al.TRENDS in Microbiology Vol.14p. 463, 2006

Page 61: Agouron Microbial Oceanography Summer Course 2007

Jay McCarren

MB_41B09 PR-1 PR-2

Betaproteobacterium

GENOMES

& BACS

Page 62: Agouron Microbial Oceanography Summer Course 2007

“Typical” carotenoid (retinal) biosynthesis genesco-associated with PRs

blh

Exceptions:GII Archaea, Pelagibacter, a few others, PR unlinked to retinal biosynthetic operonCFB = PR-blh linkage (Pinhassi and colleagues)

Page 63: Agouron Microbial Oceanography Summer Course 2007

PR crtE crtI crtB crtY blh moaEIpp

Jay McCarren/Chon Martinez

Proteorhodopsin photosystem gene organization

Page 64: Agouron Microbial Oceanography Summer Course 2007

crtB

PR,carotenoid and retinal biosynthetic gene co-evolution ?

crtI crtB

Gram -

CFB

crtI

crtE crtY

Gram -

**

**

**

**

****

Jay McCarren

Page 65: Agouron Microbial Oceanography Summer Course 2007

X

X

X

X

Chon Martinez

Page 66: Agouron Microbial Oceanography Summer Course 2007

A single genetic event can confer phototrophy

~ 1e5 ATP/cell/min

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Distribution of PR photosystems among marine bacteria

Page 70: Agouron Microbial Oceanography Summer Course 2007

Life on Earth Today: The Life on Earth Today: The FoundationFoundation

COCO22 + H + H22OO

carbon watercarbon waterdioxidedioxide

CC66HH1212OO66 + O + O2 2

organic oxygenorganic oxygencarboncarbon

Plants Algae, Plants Algae, photosynthetic bacteriaphotosynthetic bacteria

PhotosynthesisPhotosynthesisSolar energySolar energy

Animals Animals BacteriaBacteria

Chemical Chemical energy or heatenergy or heat

RespirationRespiration

N,P,S,Fe….N,P,S,Fe….

Page 71: Agouron Microbial Oceanography Summer Course 2007

Dave Karl, Nature, 2002