TY - JOUR
T1 - ADI pathway and histidine decarboxylation are reciprocally regulated in Lactobacillus hilgardii ISE 5211
T2 - Proteomic evidence
AU - Lamberti, Cristina
AU - Purrotti, Micol
AU - Mazzoli, Roberto
AU - Fattori, Paolo
AU - Barello, Cristina
AU - Coïsson, Jean Daniel
AU - Giunta, Carlo
AU - Pessione, Enrica
N1 - Funding Information:
This research has been carried out within CESQTA and financed by grants from the Regione Piemonte (CIPE 2004, Progetto di Ricerca Sanitaria Finalizzata 2004). The authors are grateful to Emilia Garcia-Moruno who kindly supplied the L. hilgardii ISE 5211 strain.
PY - 2011/7
Y1 - 2011/7
N2 - Amine production by amino acid decarboxylation is a common feature that is used by lactic acid bacteria (LAB) to complement lactic fermentation, since it is coupled with a proton-extruding antiport system which leads to both metabolic energy production and the attenuation of intracellular acidity. Analogous roles are played in LAB by both malolactic fermentation (MLF) and the arginine deiminase (ADI) pathway. The present investigation was aimed at establishing reciprocal interactions between amino acid decarboxylation and the two above mentioned routes. The analyses were carried out on a Lactobacillus hilgardii strain (ISE 5211) that is able to decarboxylate histidine to histamine, which had previously been isolated from wine and whose complete genome is still unknown. The 2DE proteomic approach, followed by MALDI TOF-TOF and De Novo Sequencing, was used to study the protein expression levels. The experimental evidence has indicated that malate does not influence histidine decarboxylase (HDC) biosynthesis and that histidine does not affect the malolactic enzyme level. However, the expression of the ADI route enzymes, arginine deiminase and ornithine transcarbamylase, is down-regulated by histidine: this biosynthetic repression is more important (4-fold) in cultures that are not supplemented with arginine, but is also significant (2-fold) in an arginine supplemented medium that normally induces the ADI pathway. On the other hand, arginine partially represses HDC expression, but only when histidine and arginine are both present in the culture medium. This proteomic study has also pointed out a down-regulation exerted by histidine over sugar metabolism enzymes and a GroEL stress protein. These data, together with the reciprocal antagonism between arginine deimination and histidine decarboxylation, offer clue keys to the understanding of the accumulation of lactate, amine, ammonia and ethylcarbamate in wine, with consequent implications on different health risk controls.
AB - Amine production by amino acid decarboxylation is a common feature that is used by lactic acid bacteria (LAB) to complement lactic fermentation, since it is coupled with a proton-extruding antiport system which leads to both metabolic energy production and the attenuation of intracellular acidity. Analogous roles are played in LAB by both malolactic fermentation (MLF) and the arginine deiminase (ADI) pathway. The present investigation was aimed at establishing reciprocal interactions between amino acid decarboxylation and the two above mentioned routes. The analyses were carried out on a Lactobacillus hilgardii strain (ISE 5211) that is able to decarboxylate histidine to histamine, which had previously been isolated from wine and whose complete genome is still unknown. The 2DE proteomic approach, followed by MALDI TOF-TOF and De Novo Sequencing, was used to study the protein expression levels. The experimental evidence has indicated that malate does not influence histidine decarboxylase (HDC) biosynthesis and that histidine does not affect the malolactic enzyme level. However, the expression of the ADI route enzymes, arginine deiminase and ornithine transcarbamylase, is down-regulated by histidine: this biosynthetic repression is more important (4-fold) in cultures that are not supplemented with arginine, but is also significant (2-fold) in an arginine supplemented medium that normally induces the ADI pathway. On the other hand, arginine partially represses HDC expression, but only when histidine and arginine are both present in the culture medium. This proteomic study has also pointed out a down-regulation exerted by histidine over sugar metabolism enzymes and a GroEL stress protein. These data, together with the reciprocal antagonism between arginine deimination and histidine decarboxylation, offer clue keys to the understanding of the accumulation of lactate, amine, ammonia and ethylcarbamate in wine, with consequent implications on different health risk controls.
KW - 2DE
KW - ADI pathway
KW - HDC
KW - LAB
KW - MLF
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=79960206346&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1007/s00726-010-0781-2
DO - 10.1007/s00726-010-0781-2
M3 - Article
SN - 0939-4451
VL - 41
SP - 517
EP - 527
JO - Amino Acids
JF - Amino Acids
IS - 2
ER -