Abstract
The thermophilic hydrogenotrophic methanogen Methanothermobacter sp. CaT2 aggregates by itself. CaT2 is known to have a surface sugar layer and extracellular proteins that may be related to its aggregation. Aggregation-enhanced mutants, CHA001 and CHA002, were isolated after repeated cultivation for more than two years. When treated with proteinase K, CHA001 and CaT2 similarly exhibited a very low degree of aggregation and CHA002 exhibited less aggregation but still retained aggregation, suggesting protein-based aggregation via extracellular proteins in both CHA001 and CHA002, presumably via a putative membrane-bound and extracellularly protruding protein, MTCT_1020, identified previously. Genomic analysis revealed that CHA001 and CHA002 shared a missense mutation of MTCT_1348 and had distinct mutations. These results suggested that the MTCT_1348 mutation provides subsidiary support to the adhesive function of extracellular proteins and that there is an additional mutation(s) in CHA002 for the non-proteinous aggregation capability.
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Sumikawa, K., Kosaka, T., Udo, K., Kanesaki, Y., Yoshikawa, H., & Yamada, M. (2020). Characteristics of physiology of and genomic mutations in aggregation-enhanced mutants of Methanothermobacter sp. CaT2. Bioscience, Biotechnology and Biochemistry, 84(5), 1047–1055. https://doi.org/10.1080/09168451.2019.1709790
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