4.4 Article

Comparative Analysis of Corrinoid Profiles across Host-Associated and Environmental Samples

Journal

BIOCHEMISTRY
Volume 61, Issue 24, Pages 2791-2796

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.biochem.2c00367

Keywords

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Funding

  1. U.S. Department of Energy Research [DE-SC0020155]
  2. National Science Foundation predoctoral fellowship
  3. UC Berkeley Graduate Student and National Science and Engineering Research Council Fellowships
  4. U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) [DE-SC0020155] Funding Source: U.S. Department of Energy (DOE)

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Vitamin B-12 plays an essential role in human health and also affects microbial metabolism and community function. Cobalamin, a type of cobamide cofactor, is produced by certain prokaryotes and is considered a shared nutrient in microbial communities. Different microbes have metabolic specificity for specific cobamides, and the availability of cobamides in the environment is important for cobamide-dependent microbes.
Vitamin B-12 (the cyanated form of cobalamin cofactors) is best known for its essential role in human health. In addition to its function in human metabolism, cobalamin also plays important roles in microbial metabolism and can impact microbial community function. Cobalamin is a member of the structurally diverse family of cofactors known as cobamides that are produced exclusively by certain prokaryotes. Cobamides are considered shared nutrients in microbial communities because the majority of bacteria that possess cobamide-dependent enzymes cannot synthesize cobamides de novo. Furthermore, different microbes have evolved metabolic specificity for particular cobamides, and therefore, the availability of cobamides in the environment is important for cobamide-dependent microbes. Determining the cobamides present in an environment of interest is essential for understanding microbial metabolic interactions. By examining the abundances of different cobamides in diverse environments, including 10 obtained in this study, we find that, contrary to its preeminence in human metabolism, cobalamin is relatively rare in many microbial habitats. Comparison of cobamide profiles of mammalian gastrointestinal samples and wood-feeding insects reveals that host-associated cobamide abundances vary and that fecal cobamide profiles differ from those of their host gastrointestinal tracts. Environmental cobamide profiles obtained from aquatic, soil, and contaminated groundwater samples reveal that the cobamide compositions of environmental samples are highly variable. As the only commercially available cobamide, cobalamin is routinely supplied during microbial culturing efforts. However, these findings suggest that cobamides specific to a given microbiome may yield greater insight into nutrient utilization and physiological processes that occur in these habitats.

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