4.6 Article

Resource Allocation During the Transition to Diazotrophy in Klebsiella oxytoca

Journal

FRONTIERS IN MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 12, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2021.718487

Keywords

nitrogen stress; absolute protein quantification; Klebsiella oxytoca; nif gene expression; PII proteins; nitrogenase; diazotrophic bacteria; biological fixation of nitrogen; resource allocation

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Funding

  1. BBSRC Strategic LOLA grant (BBSRC) [BB/N003608/1]
  2. BBSRC [BB/N003608/1] Funding Source: UKRI

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Free-living nitrogen-fixing bacteria can improve growth yields of non-leguminous plants and address nutrient imbalances in crop production. Nitrogen fixation is a resource-costly adaptation regulated by signaling processes, and reinvestment of fixed nitrogen is essential for sustained nitrogenase activity. The study highlights the quantitative resource allocation required for successful nitrogen fixation in free-living diazotrophs.
Free-living nitrogen-fixing bacteria can improve growth yields of some non-leguminous plants and, if enhanced through bioengineering approaches, have the potential to address major nutrient imbalances in global crop production by supplementing inorganic nitrogen fertilisers. However, nitrogen fixation is a highly resource-costly adaptation and is de-repressed only in environments in which sources of reduced nitrogen are scarce. Here we investigate nitrogen fixation (nif) gene expression and nitrogen starvation response signaling in the model diazotroph Klebsiella oxytoca (Ko) M5a1 during ammonium depletion and the transition to growth on atmospheric N-2. Exploratory RNA-sequencing revealed that over 50% of genes were differentially expressed under diazotrophic conditions, among which the nif genes are among the most highly expressed and highly upregulated. Isotopically labelled QconCAT standards were designed for multiplexed, absolute quantification of Nif and nitrogen-stress proteins via multiple reaction monitoring mass spectrometry (MRM-MS). Time-resolved Nif protein concentrations were indicative of bifurcation in the accumulation rates of nitrogenase subunits (NifHDK) and accessory proteins. We estimate that the nitrogenase may account for more than 40% of cell protein during diazotrophic growth and occupy approximately half the active ribosome complement. The concentrations of free amino acids in nitrogen-starved cells were insufficient to support the observed rates of Nif protein expression. Total Nif protein accumulation was reduced 10-fold when the NifK protein was truncated and nitrogenase catalysis lost (nifK(1-1203)), implying that reinvestment of de novo fixed nitrogen is essential for further nif expression and a complete diazotrophy transition. Several amino acids accumulated in non-fixing Delta nifLA and nifK(1-1203) mutants, while the rest remained highly stable despite prolonged N starvation. Monitoring post-translational uridylylation of the PII-type signaling proteins GlnB and GlnK revealed distinct nitrogen regulatory roles in Ko M5a1. GlnK uridylylation was persistent throughout the diazotrophy transition while a Delta glnK mutant exhibited significantly reduced Nif expression and nitrogen fixation activity. Altogether, these findings highlight quantitatively the scale of resource allocation required to enable the nitrogen fixation adaptation to take place once underlying signaling processes are fulfilled. Our work also provides an omics-level framework with which to model nitrogen fixation in free-living diazotrophs and inform rational engineering strategies.

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