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ELSEVIER FEMS Microbiology Letters 129 (1995) 189-194 Sulfonate-sulfur can be assimilated for fermentative growth Chih-Ching Chien, E.R. Leadbetter *, Walter Godchaux III Department ofMolecular and Cell Biology, University of Connecticut, Storrs CT 06269-2131, USA Received 28 March 199.5; accepted 4 April 1995 Abstract Bacterial assimilation of sulfonate-sulfur under anaerobic conditions has been demonstrated.Two different bacteria able to grow ferrnentatively using sulfonate-sulfuras sole sulfur source were isolated by enrichment culture; neither were able to utilize sulfonates as sole source of carbon and energy for growth. The isolate of Clostridiunt pusteuriunum assimilated the sulfur of isethionate (2-hydroxyethanesulfonate), taurine (2-aminoethanesulfonate), or p-toluenesulfonate. A facultatively fermentative Klebsiellu strain did not utilize the sulfur of any of these sulfonates, but assimilated cysteate-sulfur; in contrast, when growing by aerobic respiration, the range of sulfonates able to serve as sulfur source was greater. Both bacteria displayed a preferential utilization of sulfate-sulfur to that of the sulfonates tested. Thus, bacterial assimilation of sulfonate-sulfur during anaerobic growth has direct parallels with features until now recognized only for aerobic assimilatory processes. Keywords: Sulfonate-sulfur assimilation; Anaerobic sulfonate transformation; Sulfur metabolism 1. Introduction The organosulfur compounds termed sulfonates contain a sulfur atom (oxidation state, +5) covalently linked to one of carbon. These compounds are widely distributed in natural habitats as a result of biosynthesis by quite diverse biota (e.g. [l-5]) as well as chemical syntheses for commerce [6]. Although a few types of bacteria have been reported to utilize some sulfonates as sole sources of carbon, energy, and sulfur [7-111, many microbes utilize * Corresponding author. Tel.: + 1 (203) 486 5398; Fax: (203) 486 1936; e-mail: [email protected] 0378-1097/95/$09.50 0 1995 Federation SSDI 0378-1097(95)00156-5 of European + 1 Microbiological sulfonate-sulfur for growth even when unable to grow at the sulfonate’s expense as carbon and energy source [12-151. In a recent study, Uria-Nickelsen et al. 1141noted that several enteric bacteria utilized sulfonate-sulfur as sole sulfur source for aerobic, respiratory growth, but could not do so for fermentative growth. This raised the prospect that sulfonate-sulfur might not be subject to bacterial attack under anoxic conditions, perhaps reflecting the need for molecular oxygen in attack on the C-S linkage. In order to assess this possibility, we employed enrichment culture in attempts to isolate soil bacteria capable of utilizing sulfonate-sulfur as sole source for assimilation during fermentative growth under anaerobic conditions. Societies. All rights reserved C.-C. Chien et ai./FEMS 190 2. Materials Microbiology and methods 2.1. Strain isolation and identification Bacteria were isolated from soil using a sulfonate (cysteate, isethionate or taurine) as sole sulfur source in glucose-mineral salts medium (see below) at 25” C under anaerobic conditions attained by use of screw-capped culture tubes completely filled with medium. Pure cultures were isolated on medium solidified by addition of washed agar [131 and incubated in an anaerobic hood. The isolates were identified on the basis of morphology, staining characteristics, and selected determinative tests. 2.2. Chemicals The highest purity chemicals available from Fisher Scientific, Sigma Chemical, or Eastman Kodak were employed. Radiolabelled sulfur compound sources were [35S]sulfate (ICN Radiochemicals) and [35S]cysteate (synthesized from L-[35S1cysteine (ICN Radiochemicals), as described by Clark and Inouye 1161). 2.3. Media Medium for Klebsiella The minimal medium contained: glucose (55 mM) as carbon and energy source; NH,Cl (10 mM) as nitrogen source; mineral base (1171; modified so that chloride salts replaced those listed as sulfate salts), 1% (v/v>; phosphate buffer (50 mM, pH 7.0) and either sodium sulfate or a sulfonate (50 PM) as sulfur source. The same medium was used for testing the ability of a sulfonate to serve as sole carbon and energy source except that 30 mM, 60 mM or 90 mM of sulfonate replaced glucose as carbon source; these levels of sulfonate were not growth-inhibitory when present with glucose. To determine whether a sulfonate could serve as electron acceptor for anaerobic respiration, 0.5 mM, 1 mM or 5 mM sulfonate was added to medium with growth-limiting carbon and energy source (glucose, 0.5 mM). Media were adjusted to pH 7.0 and sterilized before use. Medium for Clostridium pasteurianum The minimal medium for C. pasteurianum contained: sucrose (55 mM) as carbon and energy source; Letters 129 (199.5) 189-194 NH,Cl (10 mM) as nitrogen source; phosphate buffer (0.1 Ml, 1% (v/v) mineral base, as above); biotin (20 pg l- ’ > and either sulfate or a sulfonate (50 PM) as sole sulfur source. For testing a sulfonate as sole carbon and energy source, 30 mM, 60 mM or 90 mM sulfonate replaced sucrose. Media were adjusted to pH 6.0 and sterilized before use. 2.4. Isotopic competition experiments Klebsiella: aerobic growth Cells were grown, with aeration, in glucosemineral salts medium with sulfate as sole sulfur source to mid-exponential phase (OD,,, = 0.5), harvested by centrifugation (10000 X g), and the cell pellets washed, resuspended and recentrifuged in 0.05 M potassium phosphate buffer (pH 7.5) three times. Resuspended pellets were then transferred to flasks containing minimal medium with either (in control experiments) a radioactive sulfur compound ([35Slsulfate or i_35S]cysteate) or (for competition studies) with both a radioactive sulfur compound (as above) and a different non-radioactive sulfur compound (sulfate, cysteate, taurine or isethionate). The concentration of each test compound was 50 PM and the specific radioactivity of the radiolabelled one was 1 $Zi pmol-‘. During the growth period, l-ml samples were removed at successive time intervals, cells collected on filters (0.45 pm pore size, Gelman Sciences) and washed with 5 ml of the phosphate buffer. The radioactivity incorporated into cells was then determined by liquid scintillation counting. Counting rates were divided by the OD,,, of the culture at the time of sampling to calculate specific radioactivity values. Klebsiella sp.: anaerobic growth The same medium, specific radioactivity of radiolabelled sulfur source and filter method were used as above except cultures were grown in closed culture tubes containing a head-space gas mixture of H,, 20%, CO,, 20%, and N,, 60% (v/v/v). Samples were removed at successive time intervals, and the cells collected by filtration for subsequent determination of radioactivity. 2.5. Clostridium pasteurianum Cells were grown in minimal medium containing [35Slsulfate (1 &i kmol-‘1 as sole sulfur source C.-C. Chien et al. /FEMS Microbiology Letters 129 (1995) 189-194 or, for competition tests, [35S]sulfate and a sulfonate (either taurine or isethionate), each at 50 PM. Cells were grown anaerobically and l-ml samples removed for assay of sulfate-sulfur incorporation into cells, as described above. 2.6. Reproducibility Experiments were replicated at least two times and values obtained were reproducible within + 5%. 3. Results 3.1. Iden tijication Positive results for tests of catalase, urease, lysine decarboxylase and Pgalactosidase activities, of growth using citrate and inositol, dinitrogen ‘fixation’, and production of indole and acetoin along with negative traits including oxidase, gelatinase, arginine dihydrolase and omithine decarboxylase activities, or production of sulfide and acid (methyl red negative) led to the identification of the non-motile, Gram-negative facultatively anaerobic bacterium as an isolate of Klebsiella, most likely K. oxytoca. The motile, obligately anaerobic, Gram-positive endospore-forming bacterium was identified as Clostridium pasteurianum on the basis of traits including growth in sucrose-minimal medium, ability to ‘fix’ dinitrogen, and acid and gas production. 191 3.2. Growth with sulfonates: Klebsiella The isolate used the sulfur of many sulfonates as sole sulfur source for growth under aerobic respiratory conditions, but only that of cysteate for fermentative growth (Table 1). Other sulfonates tested that were not utilized under either growth mode were metanilate, m-nitrobenzenesulfonate, sulfanilate, and taurocholate. The generation times for aerobic growth with taurine or sulfate were essentially identical (72 min) while those with isethionate or cysteate were somewhat longer (84 min); under fermentative conditions the generation time with sulfate or cysteate was 120 min. None of the three sulfonates -cysteate, isethionate, taurine - tested as sole carbon, energy and sulfur source supported growth either by respiration or fermentation. None of these sulfonates served as electron acceptor for anaerobic respiratory growth. The Clostridium pasteurianum isolate assimilated the sulfur of taurine, isethionate and p-toluene sulfonate for its strictly fermentative growth (Table 1). Although taurine-sulfur supported cell yields identical to those with an equimolar amount of sulfate (OD = 1.21, cultures using the sulfur of either isethionate or p-toluene sulfonate grew to only slightly more than one-half of that level. Generation times were essentially identical (180 min) with sulfate, isethionate, or taurine. No growth resulted when cysteate, isethionate or taurine were tested as a sole sources of carbon, energy and sulfur. Table 1 Growth of bacteria using sulfonate as sole sulfur source Sulfur source Sulfate Taurine Isethionate Cysteate HEPES Methanesulfonate pToluenesulfonate Clostridium Klebsiella Aerobic growth mode Fermentative growth mode Fermentative growth mode + + + + + + - + - + + + (0.7) - + - + (0.7) A ( + ) indicates an OD6so value of 1.0 or greater, except where lesser values are listed in parentheses; ( -) indicates a measured value of 0.1 or less; in the absence of an added sulfur source tbe measured value was 0.1 or less. HEPES, N-[2-Hydroxyethyl]piperaxine-N’-[2ethanesulfonate]. C.-C. Chien et al. / FEMS Microbiology 192 Letters 129 (1995) 189-194 J I 60 30 Time 0 90 30 60 QO brutes) 120 Time 160 I60 210 240 270 300 (mrutes) Fig. 1. Incorporation of “S into cells of a Klebsiella isolate grown aerobically with [3sS]sulfate as sole sulfur source (triangles) and with both sulfate and non-radiolabelled taurine present as sulfur sources (circles). Fig. 2. Incorporation of ‘5S into cells of Ckxtridium pusteurianum growing fermentatively with [35S]sulfate as sole sulfur source (triangles) and with both sulfate and a non-radiolabelled taurine present as sulfur sources (circles). 3.3. Competition isethionate in non-radiolabelled form (data not shown) resulted in a decrease (approx. 50%) of cysteate uptake. The Klebsiella used neither taurine nor isethionate as sole sulfur source for fermentative growth and the presence of either sulfonate had no effect on incorporation of [ 35S]cysteate during fermentative growth (data not shown). between sulfate and sulfonate During aerobic growth, the Klebsiella sp. incorporated essentially identical amounts of [ “5S]sulfate per unit of biomass (Fig. 1). no matter whether a sulfonate was present or not, thus indicating utilization of sulfate-sulfur in preference to that of a test sulfonate (taurine was the competitor for data of Fig. 1; cysteate and isethionate gave essentially identical results). During fermentative growth with cysteate (the only test sulfonate able to serve as sole sulfur source), cells incorporated sulfate at the same level as when the sulfonate was absent (data not shown). Thus sulfate-sulfur was used in preference to that of cysteate during fermentative growth as well. Clostridium pasteurianum cells grown in media with [35S]sulfate as sole sulfur source and those grown in a medium containing both [ 35Slsulfate and non-radiolabelled taurine (Fig. 2) (or isethionate, data not shown) likewise incorporated an identical amount of [35S]sulfate per unit of biomass, thus establishing preferential utilization of sulfate-sulfur in this organism as well. 3.4. Competition siella between different sulfonates: 3.5. Comments This report establishes for the first time the assimilation of sulfonate-sulfur in bacteria growing anaerobically by fermentation, and these studies extend to a strictly fermentative bacterium and to a facultatively fermentative one at least three findings until now known only to be characteristic of bacteria Kleb0 For examining competition between different sulfonates as sole sulfur source, [ 35S]cysteate (the only sulfonate readily available to us in radiolabelled form) was used as a reference. During respiratory growth the presence of either taurine (Fig. 3) or 30 Time 60 Qo (mtrwtes) Fig. 3. Incorporation of 35S into cells of a Klebsiellu isolate growing with [35S]cysteate as sole sulfur source (triangles) and with both cysteate and non-radiolabelled taurine present as sulfur sources (circles). C.-C. Chien et al. / FEMS Microbiology growing by means of aerobic respiration. These traits are (i) that sulfonate-sulfur can be assimilated into cellular compounds by organisms that are unable to utilize the sulfonate as sole nutrient source, (ii) that sulfate-sulfur is utilized in preference to that of a sulfonate (when both are present in equivalent amounts), and (iii) that the pattern, or specificity, for utilization of sulfonate-sulfur differs among different bacteria. The basis for this specificity for incorporation of sulfonate-sulfur into cellular compounds remains a matter for further study, as does also the preferential attack on sulfate-sulfur vs. that of a sulfonate. The apparent cleavage of the sulfonate C-S bond under anaerobic conditions indicates that molecular oxygen is not a participant in the reaction, and thus makes it likely that the enzymological features involved differ from those for some aliphatic and aromatic sulfonates where molecular oxygen is a reactant [10,12]. It remains to be determined whether the inability of the Klebsiella strain to assimilate, during fermentative growth, the sulfur of a sulfonate that serves as a sole sulfur source for aerobic respiratory growth results from the absence of a particular transport mechanism or of an enzyme specific for attack on the sulfonate. Regardless of these important enzymological details, it is clear that the desulfonations described here are of potential significance for sulfonate cycling in anoxic habitats. The carbon atoms, for example, of a sulfonate unable to serve as a sole source of carbon and energy could nonetheless become available for assimilation by either the desulfonating bacterium or, if the carbon skeleton were excreted, by other organisms. Acknowledgements This research was supported by the University of Connecticut Research Foundation and the Institute of Water Resources (US Geological Survey-Department of the Interior, 14-OB-OOOl-G2009). We thank Angelica P. 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