Co-catabolism of arginine and succinate drives symbiotic nitrogen fixation


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Date

2019-09-30

Publication Type

Working Paper

ETH Bibliography

yes

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Abstract

Biological nitrogen fixation emerging from the symbiosis between bacteria and crop plants holds a significant promise to increase the sustainability of agriculture. One of the biggest hurdles for the engineering of nitrogen-fixing organisms is to identify the metabolic blueprint for symbiotic nitrogen fixation. Here, we report on the CATCH-N cycle, a novel metabolic network based on co-catabolism of plant-provided arginine and succinate to drive the energy-demanding process of symbiotic nitrogen fixation in endosymbiotic rhizobia. Using systems biology, isotope labeling studies and transposon sequencing in conjunction with biochemical characterization, we uncovered highly redundant network components of the CATCH-N cycle including transaminases that interlink the co-catabolism of arginine and succinate. The CATCH-N cycle shares aspects with plant mitochondrial arginine degradation path-way. However, it uses N2 as an additional sink for reductant and therefore delivers up to 25% higher yields of nitrogen than classical arginine catabolism — two alanines and three ammonium ions are secreted for each input of arginine and succinate. We argue that the CATCH-N cycle has evolved as part of a specific mechanism to sustain bacterial metabolism in the microoxic and acid environment of symbiosomes. In sum, our systems-level findings provide the theoretical framework and enzymatic blueprint for the rational design of plants and plant-associated organisms with new properties for improved nitrogen fixation.

Publication status

published

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Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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Date collected

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Subject

Biological nitrogen fixation; Nitrogenase; TnSeq; Bradyrhizobium diazoefficiens; Sinorhizobium meliloti; CATCH-N

Organisational unit

09461 - Christen, Beat (ehemalig) / Christen, Beat (former) check_circle

Notes

Funding

166476 - Global identification and characterization of essential genome features by random transposon mutagenesis (SNF)
184664 - Chemical synthesis rewriting of a bacterial genome (SNF)
177164 - Intermicrobial and host-microbial interactions that determine the trajectory of mammalian microbial colorization in early life (SNF)

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