4.5 Article

Unraveling the concentration-dependent metabolic response of Pseudomonas sp HF-1 to nicotine stress by 1H NMR-based metabolomics

期刊

ECOTOXICOLOGY
卷 21, 期 5, 页码 1314-1324

出版社

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10646-012-0885-4

关键词

Nicotine; Oxidative stress; Metabolomics; NMR spectroscopy

资金

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31100032, 31170115]
  2. Zhejiang Provincial Natural Science Foundation of China [Y3090046]
  3. University National Oceanographic Public Welfare Project [201205029]
  4. K. C. Wong Magna Fund in Ningbo [xkl11089]
  5. Academic Discipline Project of Ningbo University [xkl11089]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Nicotine can cause oxidative damage to organisms; however, some bacteria, for example Pseudomonas sp. HF-1, are resistant to such oxidative stress. In the present study, we analyzed the concentration-dependent metabolic response of Pseudomonas sp. HF-1 to nicotine stress using H-1 NMR spectroscopy coupled with multivariate data analysis. We found that the dominant metabolites in Pseudomonas sp. HF-1 were eight aliphatic organic acids, six amino acids, three sugars and 11 nucleotides. After 18 h of cultivation, 1 g/L nicotine caused significant elevation of sugar (glucose, trehalose and maltose), succinate and nucleic acid metabolites (cytidine, 5'-CMP, guanine 2',3'-cyclic phosphate and adenosine 2',3'-cyclic phosphate), but decrease of glutamate, putrescine, pyrimidine, 2-propanol, diethyl ether and acetamide levels. Similar metabolomic changes were induced by 2 g/L nicotine, except that no significant change in trehalose, 5'-UMP levels and diethyl ether were found. However, 3 g/L nicotine led to a significant elevation in the two sugars (trehalose and maltose) levels and decrease in the levels of glutamate, putrescine, pyrimidine and 2-propanol. Our findings indicated that nicotine resulted in the enhanced nucleotide biosynthesis, decreased glucose catabolism, elevated succinate accumulation, severe disturbance in osmoregulation and complex antioxidant strategy. And a further increase of nicotine level was a critical threshold value that triggered the change of metabolic flow in Pseudomonas sp. HF-1. These findings revealed the comprehensive insights into the metabolic response of nicotine-degrading bacteria to nicotine-induced oxidative toxicity.

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