Project description:Root exudates contain specialised metabolites that affect the plant’s root microbiome. How host-specific microbes cope with these bioactive compounds, and how this ability shapes root microbiomes, remains largely unknown. We investigated how maize root bacteria metabolise benzoxazinoids, the main specialised metabolites of maize. Diverse and abundant bacteria metabolised the major compound in the maize rhizosphere MBOA and formed AMPO. AMPO forming bacteria are enriched in the rhizosphere of benzoxazinoid-producing maize and can use MBOA as carbon source. We identified a novel gene cluster associated with AMPO formation in microbacteria. The first gene in this cluster, bxdA encodes a lactonase that converts MBOA to AMPO in vitro. A deletion mutant of the homologous bxdA genes in the genus Sphingobium, does not form AMPO nor is it able to use MBOA as a carbon source. BxdA was identified in different genera of maize root bacteria. Here we show that plant-specialised metabolites select for metabolisation-competent root bacteria. BxdA represents a novel benzoxazinoid metabolisation gene whose carriers successfully colonize the maize rhizosphere and thereby shape the plant’s chemical environmental footprint
Project description:This repository contains Waters .raw files from the manuscript entitled "Discovery of megapolipeptins by genome mining of a Burkholderiales bacteria collection". The dataset contains positive and negative MS data for megapolipeptin A and B, as well as the positive MS data for the methyl ester derivatives of the two molecules. All data were aquired on a SYNAPT G2-Si in MSe mode.
Project description:Histone proteins have traditionally been thought to be restricted to eukaryotes and most archaea, with eukaryotic nucleosomal histones deriving from their archaeal ancestors. In contrast, bacteria lack histones as a rule. However, in recent years histone proteins have been identified in a few bacterial clades, in particular the phylum Bdellovibrionota, and these histones have been proposed to exhibit a range of divergent features compared to histones in archaea and eukaryotes. However, no experimental functional genomic studies of the properties of Bdellovibrionota chromatin have been carried out. In this work, we map the landscape of chromatin accessibility, active transcription and three-dimensional genome organization in a member of Bdellovibrionota (a Bacteriovorax strain). We find that Bacteriovorax chromatin is characterized by preferential accessibility around promoter regions, similar to what is observed in eukaryotes with compact genomes such as yeast, and also to some archaea. As in eukaryotes, chromatin accessibility positively correlates with gene expression. Mapping active transcription through single-strand DNA (ssDNA) profiling revealed that Bacteriovorax promoters exhibit very strong polymerase pausing, unlike in yeast, but similar to the state of mammalian and fly promoters. Finally, the Bacteriovorax genome exists in a three-dimensional (3D) conformation analogous to that of other bacteria without histones, organized by the parABS system and along the axis defined by replication origin and termination regions. These results provide a foundation for understanding the chromatin biology of the unique Bdellovibrionota bacteria and the deep evolution of chromatin organization across the tree of life.