Microbes display broad diversity in cobamide preferences.

mSystems

Department of Plant and Microbial Biology, University of California, Berkeley, Berkeley, California, USA.

Published: April 2025


Category Ranking

98%

Total Visits

921

Avg Visit Duration

2 minutes

Citations

20

Article Abstract

Cobamides, the vitamin B (cobalamin) family of cofactors, are used by most organisms but produced by only a fraction of prokaryotes, and are thus considered key shared nutrients among microbes. Cobamides are structurally diverse, with multiple different cobamides found in most microbial communities. The ability to use different cobamides has been tested for several bacteria and microalgae, and nearly all show preferences for certain cobamides. This approach is limited by the commercial unavailability of cobamides other than cobalamin. Here, we have extracted and purified seven commercially unavailable cobamides to characterize bacterial cobamide preferences based on growth in specific cobamide-dependent conditions. The tested bacteria include engineered strains of , , and expressing native or heterologous cobamide-dependent enzymes, cultured under conditions that functionally isolate specific cobamide-dependent processes such as methionine synthesis. Comparison of these results to those of previous studies of diverse bacteria and microalgae revealed that a broad diversity of cobamide preferences exists not only across different organisms but also between different cobamide-dependent metabolic pathways within the same organism. The microbes differed in the cobamides that support growth most efficiently, cobamides that do not support growth, and the minimum cobamide concentrations required for growth. The latter differ by up to four orders of magnitude across organisms from different environments and by up to 20-fold between cobamide-dependent enzymes within the same organism. Given that cobamides are shared, required for use of specific growth substrates, and essential for central metabolism in certain organisms, cobamide preferences likely impact community structure and function.IMPORTANCENearly all bacteria are found in microbial communities with tens to thousands of other species. Molecular interactions such as metabolic cooperation and competition are key factors underlying community assembly and structure. Cobamides, the vitamin B family of enzyme cofactors, are one such class of nutrients, produced by only a minority of prokaryotes but required by most microbes. A unique aspect of cobamides is their broad diversity, with nearly 20 structural forms identified in nature. Importantly, this structural diversity impacts growth as most bacteria that have been tested show preferences for specific cobamide forms. We measured cobamide-dependent growth in several model bacteria and compared the results to those of previous analyses of cobamide preference. We found that cobamide preferences vary widely across bacteria, showing the importance of characterizing these aspects of cobamide biology to understand the impact of cobamides on microbial communities.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC12013260PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/msystems.01407-24DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

cobamide preferences
20
cobamides
13
broad diversity
12
microbial communities
12
cobamide
9
diversity cobamide
8
preferences cobamides
8
cobamides vitamin
8
cobamides microbial
8
tested bacteria
8

Similar Publications

Cobamides, the vitamin B (cobalamin) family of cofactors, are used by most organisms but produced by only a fraction of prokaryotes, and are thus considered key shared nutrients among microbes. Cobamides are structurally diverse, with multiple different cobamides found in most microbial communities. The ability to use different cobamides has been tested for several bacteria and microalgae, and nearly all show preferences for certain cobamides.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Bacteria encounter chemically similar nutrients in their environment, which impact their growth in distinct ways. Among such nutrients are cobamides, the structurally diverse family of cofactors related to vitamin B (cobalamin), which function as cofactors for diverse metabolic processes. Given that different environments contain varying abundances of different cobamides, bacteria are likely to encounter cobamides that enable them to grow robustly and also those that do not function efficiently for their metabolism.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Cobamides, the vitamin B (cobalamin) family of cofactors, are used by most organisms but produced by only a fraction of prokaryotes, and are thus considered key shared nutrients among microbes. Cobamides are structurally diverse, with multiple different cobamides found in most microbial communities. The ability to use different cobamides has been tested for several bacteria and microalgae, and nearly all show preferences for certain cobamides.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Unlabelled: () DSM 20271 is a bacterium known for its ability to thrive in diverse environments and to produce vitamin B12. Despite its anaerobic preference, recent studies have elucidated its ability to prosper in the presence of oxygen, prompting a deeper exploration of its physiology under aerobic conditions. Here, we investigated the response of DSM 20271 to aerobic growth by employing comparative transcriptomic and surfaceome analyses alongside metabolite profiling.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Carbon and chlorine isotope effects for biotransformation of chloroform by different microbes show significant variability. Reductive dehalogenases (RDase) enzymes contain different cobamides, affecting substrate preferences, growth yields, and dechlorination rates and extent. We investigate the role of cobamide type on carbon and chlorine isotopic signals observed during reductive dechlorination of chloroform by the RDase CfrA.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF