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SRX9319247: GSM4838152: marR-MeOH-3; Methylorubrum extorquens PA1; RNA-Seq
1 ILLUMINA (Illumina HiSeq 4000) run: 10.8M spots, 3.2G bases, 1.3Gb downloads

Submitted by: NCBI (GEO)
Study: Formaldehyde-responsive proteins, TtmR and EfgA, reveal a tradeoff between formaldehyde resistance and efficient transition to methylotrophy in Methylorubrum extorquens
show Abstracthide Abstract
In order for bacteria to thrive, they must be well-adapted to their environmental niche, which may involve specialized metabolism, timely adaptation to shifting environments, and/or the ability to mitigate numerous stressors. These attributes are highly dependent on cellular machinery that can sense both the external and intracellular environment. Methylorubrum extorquens is an extensively studied facultative methylotroph, an organism that can use single-carbon compounds as their sole source of carbon and energy. In methylotrophic metabolism, carbon flows through formaldehyde as a central metabolite; thus, formaldehyde is both an obligate metabolite and a metabolic stressor. Via the one-carbon dissimilation pathway, free formaldehyde is rapidly incorporated by formaldehyde activating enzyme (Fae), which is constitutively expressed at high levels. In the presence of elevated formaldehyde levels, a recently identified formaldehyde-sensing protein, EfgA, induces growth arrest. Herein, we describe TtmR, a formaldehyde-responsive transcription factor that, like EfgA, modulates formaldehyde resistance. It is a member of the MarR family of transcription factors and impacts the expression of 75 genes distributed throughout the genome, many of which are themselves transcription factors and/or involved in stress response, including efgA. Notably, when M. extorquens is adapting its metabolic network during the transition to methylotrophy, efgA and ttmR mutants experience an imbalance in formaldehyde production and a notable growth delay. Although methylotrophy necessitates that M. extorquens maintain a relatively high level of formaldehyde tolerance, this work reveals a tradeoff between formaldehyde resistance and the efficient transition to methylotrophic growth and suggests that TtmR and EfgA play a pivotal role in maintaining this balance. Overall design: RNASeq analysis of wild-type and ttmR mutant of Methylorubrum extorquens PA1 during growth on methanol.
Sample: marR-MeOH-3
SAMN16490094 • SRS7544056 • All experiments • All runs
Library:
Instrument: Illumina HiSeq 4000
Strategy: RNA-Seq
Source: TRANSCRIPTOMIC
Selection: cDNA
Layout: PAIRED
Construction protocol: The total RNA was extracted with the RNeasy Plus Mini Kit (Qiagen); rRNA was depleted with the Ribo-Zero rRNA removal kit (Illumina); the quality of resulting RNA samples was determined with an Agilent 2100 BioAnalyzer and Qubit assay. RNAs were fragmented for 15 minutes at 94 °C. First strand and second strand cDNA were subsequently synthesized. cDNA fragments were end repaired and adenylated at 3'ends, and universal adapter was ligated to cDNA fragments, followed by index addition and library enrichment with limited cycle PCR.
Experiment attributes:
GEO Accession: GSM4838152
Links:
Runs: 1 run, 10.8M spots, 3.2G bases, 1.3Gb
Run# of Spots# of BasesSizePublished
SRR1285228010,783,2573.2G1.3Gb2021-03-11

ID:
12171397

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