4.6 Article

Application of comparative genomics of Acetobacter species facilitates genome-scale metabolic reconstruction of the Acetobacter ghanensis LMG 23848T and Acetobacter senegalensis 108B cocoa strains

Journal

FRONTIERS IN MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 13, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2022.1060160

Keywords

cocoa fermentation; Acetobacter metabolism; comparative genomics; genome-scale metabolic modelling; flux balance analysis

Categories

Funding

  1. Research Council of the Vrije Universiteit Brussel [SRP7, IOF342]
  2. Research Foundation Flanders (FWO-Vlaanderen) [1S27316N]

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In this study, a comparative genomic analysis was conducted on two candidate starter culture strains for cocoa fermentation, A. ghanensis LMG 23848(T) and A. senegalensis 108B, using genome sequence data. Genome-scale metabolic models (GEMs) were reconstructed to gain insights into their metabolic adaptations. The analysis revealed differences in carbon core metabolism and redox metabolism among Acetobacter species, providing new insights into cocoa fermentation and potential guidelines for future research.
Acetobacter species play an import role during cocoa fermentation. However, Acetobacter ghanensis and Acetobacter senegalensis are outcompeted during fermentation of the cocoa pulp-bean mass, whereas Acetobacter pasteurianus prevails. In this paper, an in silico approach aimed at delivering some insights into the possible metabolic adaptations of A. ghanensis LMG 23848(T) and A. senegalensis 108B, two candidate starter culture strains for cocoa fermentation processes, by reconstructing genome-scale metabolic models (GEMs). Therefore, genome sequence data of a selection of strains of Acetobacter species were used to perform a comparative genomic analysis. Combining the predicted orthologous groups of protein-encoding genes from the Acetobacter genomes with gene-reaction rules of GEMs from two reference bacteria, namely a previously manually curated model of A. pasteurianus 386B (iAp386B454) and two manually curated models of Escherichia coli (EcoCyc and iJO1366), allowed to predict the set of reactions present in A. ghanensis LMG 23848(T) and A. senegalensis 108B. The predicted metabolic network was manually curated using genome re-annotation data, followed by the reconstruction of species-specific GEMs. This approach additionally revealed possible differences concerning the carbon core metabolism and redox metabolism among Acetobacter species, pointing to a hitherto unexplored metabolic diversity. More specifically, the presence or absence of reactions related to citrate catabolism and the glyoxylate cycle for assimilation of C2 compounds provided not only new insights into cocoa fermentation but also interesting guidelines for future research. In general, the A. ghanensis LMG 23848(T) and A. senegalensis 108B GEMs, reconstructed in a semi-automated way, provided a proof-of-concept toward accelerated formation of GEMs of candidate functional starter cultures for food fermentation processes.

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