4.6 Article

The Generation of an Artificial ATP Deficit Triggers Antibiotic Production in Streptomyces lividans

Journal

ANTIBIOTICS-BASEL
Volume 11, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/antibiotics11091157

Keywords

phosphate limitation; ATP deficit; oxidative phosphorylation; oxidative stress; ATPase; antibiotics

Funding

  1. ANR project Innovantibio [ANR-17-ASTR-0018]
  2. European program ActinoGEN (2005-2009)
  3. CNRS
  4. University Paris-Saclay
  5. Agence Nationale de la Recherche (ANR) [ANR-17-ASTR-0018] Funding Source: Agence Nationale de la Recherche (ANR)

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In most Streptomyces species, antibiotic production is triggered by a low ATP content, which is correlated with phosphate limitation. This study investigated the hypothesis that a low ATP content directly triggers antibiotic biosynthesis. The functional ATPase, but not the non-functional mutated version, was over-expressed in Streptomyces lividans, resulting in the production of bioactive metabolites. These findings confirm the link between phosphate limitation, ATP deficit, and antibiotic biosynthesis.
In most Streptomyces species, antibiotic production is triggered in a condition of phosphate limitation, a condition that is known to be correlated with a low intracellular ATP content compared to growth in a condition of phosphate proficiency. This observation suggests that a low ATP content might be a direct trigger of antibiotic biosynthesis. In order to test this hypothesis, we introduced into the model strain Streptomyces lividans, a functional and a non-functional ATPase cloned into the replicative vector pOSV206 and expressed under the control of the strong ErmE* promoter. The functional ATPase was constituted by the alpha (AtpA), beta (AtpB) and gamma (AtpD) sub-units of the native F1 part of the ATP synthase of S. lividans that, when separated from the membrane-bound F0 part, bears an ATPase activity. The non-functional ATPase was a mutated version of the latter, bearing a 12 amino acids deletion encompassing the active site of the AtpD sub-unit. S. lividans was chosen to test our hypothesis since this strain hardly produces any antibiotics. However, it possesses the same biosynthetic pathways of various specialized metabolites as S. coelicolor, a phylogenetically closely related strain that produces these metabolites in abundance. Our results demonstrated that the over-expression of the functional ATPase, but not that of its mutated version, indeed correlated with the production of the bioactive metabolites of the CDA, RED and ACT clusters. These results confirmed the long known and mysterious link existing between a phosphate limitation leading to an ATP deficit and the triggering of antibiotic biosynthesis. Based on this work and the previous published results of our group, we propose an entirely novel conception of the nature of this link.

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