Diaminopimelic acid is mineralized and recycled mainly by Proteobacteria
in the ocean
Abstract
Diaminopimelic acid (DAP) is a characteristic component of peptidoglycan
in Gram negative bacterial cell walls, and is an important component of
organic matters in the ocean. Microbes play a vital role in promoting
the recycling of marine DAP. However, neither the DAP content nor the
DAP-utilizing microbes in the ocean have been investigated. Here, we
measured the DAP contents in seawaters and investigated the diversity of
marine DAP-utilizing microbes and their mechanism for DAP metabolism.
The DAP contents are from 0.590 μM to 0.948 μM in the Western Pacific
seawater from surface to 5000 m depth. DAP-utilizing bacteria of 20
families from 4 phyla were recovered from the Western Pacific seawater,
and 14 strains were further isolated, which showed that Proteobacteria
are the dominant group to utilize DAP. Based on genomic and
transcriptional analyses combined with in vitro activity detection, DAP
decarboxylase (LysA) is a key enzyme involved in DAP metabolism in the
isolated Proteobacteria strains, which catalyzes the decarboxylation of
DAP to form lysine. MurE and MurF are also two key enzymes for DAP
metabolism, which are responsible for the incorporation of DAP into
peptidoglycan for cell wall construction. Investigation in the TARA and
GOS databases showed that microbes containing LysA-like sequences, which
are predominantly Proteobacteria, are widely distributed in multiple
habitats in the ocean, suggesting that DAP-utilizing microbes are widely
spread in the ocean. This study provides the first insight into
bacteria-driven DAP mineralization and recycling in the ocean.