Regulation of proteorhodopsin gene expression by nutrient limitation in the marine bacterium Vibrio sp. AND4

Environ Microbiol. 2013 May;15(5):1400-15. doi: 10.1111/1462-2920.12085. Epub 2013 Feb 5.

Abstract

Proteorhodopsin (PR), a ubiquitous membrane photoprotein in marine environments, acts as a light-driven proton pump and can provide energy for bacterial cellular metabolism. However, knowledge of factors that regulate PR gene expression in different bacteria remains strongly limited. Here, experiments with Vibrio sp. AND4 showed that PR phototrophy promoted survival only in cells from stationary phase and not in actively growing cells. PR gene expression was tightly regulated, with very low values in exponential phase, a pronounced peak at the exponential/stationary phase intersection, and a marked decline in stationary phase. Thus, PR gene expression at the entry into stationary phase preceded, and could therefore largely explain, the stationary phase light-induced survival response in AND4. Further experiments revealed nutrient limitation, not light exposure, regulated this differential PR expression. Screening of available marine vibrios showed that the PR gene, and thus the potential for PR phototrophy, is found in at least three different clusters in the genus Vibrio. In an ecological context, our findings suggest that some PR-containing bacteria adapted to the exploitation of nutrient-rich micro-environments rely on a phase of relatively slowly declining resources to mount a cellular response preparing them for adverse conditions dispersed in the water column.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Culture Media / chemistry
  • Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial*
  • Gene Order
  • Light
  • Mutation
  • Phylogeny
  • Rhodopsin / genetics*
  • Rhodopsin / metabolism*
  • Rhodopsins, Microbial
  • Vibrio / classification
  • Vibrio / genetics*
  • Vibrio / growth & development
  • Vibrio / metabolism*

Substances

  • Culture Media
  • Rhodopsins, Microbial
  • proteorhodopsin
  • Rhodopsin