Mechanisms of chromium and uranium toxicity in pseudomonas stutzeri RCH2 grown under anaerobic nitrate-reducing conditions

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Abstract

Chromium and uranium are highly toxic metals that contaminate many natural environments. We investigated their mechanisms of toxicity under anaerobic conditions using nitrate-reducing Pseudomonas stutzeri RCH2, which was originally isolated from a chromium-contaminated aquifer. A random barcode transposon site sequencing library of RCH2 was grown in the presence of the chromate oxyanion (Cr[VI]O2-4) or uranyl oxycation (U[VI]O2+2). Strains lacking genes required for a functional nitrate reductase had decreased fitness as both metals interacted with heme-containing enzymes required for the later steps in the denitrification pathway after nitrate is reduced to nitrite. Cr[VI]-resistance also required genes in the homologous recombination and nucleotide excision DNA repair pathways, showing that DNA is a target of Cr[VI] even under anaerobic conditions. The reduced thiol pool was also identified as a target of Cr[VI] toxicity and psest_2088, a gene of previously unknown function, was shown to have a role in the reduction of sulfite to sulfide. U[VI] resistance mechanisms involved exopolysaccharide synthesis and the universal stress protein UspA. As the first genome-wide fitness analysis of Cr[VI] and U[VI] toxicity under anaerobic conditions, this study provides new insight into the impact of Cr[VI] and U[VI] on an environmental isolate from a chromium contaminated site, as well as into the role of a ubiquitous protein, Psest_2088.

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Thorgersen, M. P., Andrew Lancaster, W., Ge, X., Zane, G. M., Wetmore, K. M., Vaccaro, B. J., … Adams, M. W. W. (2017). Mechanisms of chromium and uranium toxicity in pseudomonas stutzeri RCH2 grown under anaerobic nitrate-reducing conditions. Frontiers in Microbiology, 8(AUG). https://doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2017.01529

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