Involvement of an FNR-like oxygen sensor in Komagataeibacter medellinensis for survival under oxygen depletion

2021 
During acetic acid fermentation, acetic acid bacteria face oxygen depletion stress caused by the vigorous oxidation of ethanol to acetic acid. However, the molecular mechanisms underlying the response to oxygen depletion stress remain largely unknown. Here, we focused on an oxygen-sensing FNR homolog, FnrG, in Komagataeibacter medellinensis. Comparative transcriptomic analysis between the wild-type and fnrG-disrupted strains revealed that FnrG upregulated eight genes (fold change > 3). Recombinant FnrG bound to a specific DNA sequence only when FnrG was reconstituted anaerobically. An operon consisting of acetate kinase and xylulose-5-phosphate/fructose-6-phosphate phosphoketolase genes was found to be an FnrG regulon involved in cell survival under oxygen-limiting conditions. Moreover, a strain that overexpressed these two genes accumulated more acetic acid than the wild-type strain harboring an empty vector. Thus, these two genes could be new targets for the molecular breeding of acetic acid bacteria with high acetic acid productivity.
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