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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, February 2006, p. 1692-1695, Vol. 72, No. 2
0099-2240/06/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AEM.72.2.1692-1695.2006
Copyright © 2006, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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Joe M. Dragavon,2,
Tyler J. Hankins,2
James B. Callis,2
Lloyd W. Burgess,2 and
Mary E. Lidstrom3,4*
Department of Bioengineering,1 Department of Chemistry,2 Department of Chemical Engineering,3 Department of Microbiology, Microscale Life Sciences Center, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington 98195-21804
Received 19 July 2005/ Accepted 24 November 2005
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A number of methods are available to detect oxygen concentrations, such as the use of Clark electrodes, electrochemical cells, electrochemical microscopy, and paramagnetic cells (7, 15). One of the most commonly performed techniques is the use of a Clark electrode. However, the caveats of this method are low sensitivities, signal drift, probe fragility, electrode consumption of oxygen, and the ability to only measure the immediate microenvironment (15, 17, 22). In addition, high-throughput analysis requires a number of individual devices, increasing the cost and decreasing reproducibility. One method that has seen a rapid increase in use recently is the application of optical sensors, such as phosphorescent dyes (4, 12), which impart greater signal-to-noise ratios, signal independence of the dye concentration and photobleaching, rapid response characteristics, and functionality while imbedded in a variety of materials (15, 23). Additionally, optical methods are amenable to high-throughput screening using high-density well formats (1), but existing systems tend to be custom designed and not broadly available.
Recently, commercially available polystyrene beads doped with a platinum(Pt)-porphyrin dye and inexpensive off-the-shelf components have become available for O2 measurements. We examined this system to demonstrate its utility in measuring respiration rates of Methylobacterium extorquens AM1 cultures. M. extorquens AM1 has the ability to grow on C1 substrates, e.g., methanol, as a sole source of carbon and energy and is an inexpensive renewable biofeedstock, which can reduce production costs of value-added products (5, 13). A broad range of biochemical and genetic tools along with a metabolic flux balance model has allowed a comprehensive mapping of central metabolism during C1 and multicarbon growth (19, 20).
In addition to the wild type, two mutant strains were analyzed. The first mutant (20) was null for NADH-ubiquinone oxidoreductase subunit B (NADH-UOR; NADH-UOR subunit B::Tetr), which couples NADH oxidation to the respiratory chain during multicarbon growth. The second mutant was null for PhaR (phaR::Kmr), which regulates carbon flux through acetyl-coenzyme A (acetyl-CoA) within the central metabolism (8).
Cultures were grown aerobically in batches at 28°C using mineral salts medium supplemented with 50 µg/ml rifamycin (3) and either 0.3% methanol or 0.4% succinate (20). One-micrometer platinum luminescent Fluorspheres (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA) were used to monitor the O2 concentrations within cell solutions. Bead preparation entailed washing and resuspension of 50-µl aliquots of stock solution in 1 ml minimal medium. Modified VWR borosilicate culture tubes (13 mm x 100 mm) were used as sample cells because the inner diameter was approximately the same as that of a quartz cuvette and they could be flame sealed without heating the cell solution while minimizing the free air volume (Fig. 1B).
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FIG. 1. Lifetime detection apparatus. (A) Schematic of the detection system showing an LED set up at 90o to an APD while addressing the sample cell (SC). A standard-size cuvette holder held the sample cell with a magnetic stirrer underneath. (B) Schematic of a flame-sealed modified culture tube with a magnetic stir bar within the sample cell.
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Oxygen concentrations were calculated from the Stern-Volmer equation, T0/T = 1 + KQT0[O2] (T0 = lifetime at 0% oxygen, T = lifetime at [oxygen], and KQ = the Stern-Volmer constant [22]), and the atomic oxygen concentration in water of 489.7 µM O at 28°C (16). Oxygen uptake was calculated from initial rates at 5 to 30 min for succinate and 5 to 15 min for methanol data. Numbers of cells/ml were calculated from the OD600 by the equation y = 4e8x 2e7 and were corrected for volume (x = OD600; y = CFU). Respiration rates were calculated as mol O/cell-min. Statistical significance was calculated using a two-sample t test.
The sensor response was highly reproducible, and calibration plots exhibited a linear trend (Fig. 2). Calibration curves obtained using a quartz cuvette and the modified culture tube were superimposable (data not shown). The device functionality was tested with wild-type M. extorquens AM1 grown on succinate and methanol, using a Clark electrode and the sensor beads simultaneously, and both detection modalities were consistent (Fig. 3 and 4). Figure 4 illustrates oxygen uptake for the wild type during growth on succinate and is characteristic of the data collected (Table 1).
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FIG. 2. Calibration curves of porphyrin-doped polystyrene beads displayed as phosphorescence lifetime decay (squares) and Stern-Volmer (diamonds) plots.
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FIG. 3. Comparison of Pt-porphyrin-doped beads and a Clark electrode for measurement of wild-type M. extorquens AM1 respiration rate during growth on methanol.
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FIG. 4. Oxygen uptake data for wild-type M. extorquens AM1 grown on succinate. (A) Phosphorescence lifetimes collected. (B) Oxygen consumption over time.
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TABLE 1. Respiration rates calculated for wild-type and mutant strains of M. extorquens AM1 during growth on succinate and methanol
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4 h versus
6 h; data not shown). The increased rate during methanol growth may reflect the coupling of methanol oxidation with cytochrome c (2) and the more efficient energy metabolism during growth on succinate. Respiration rates for the NADH-UOR mutant during growth on methanol were not different from those of the wild type (P > 0.25), consistent with the lack of a growth phenotype and predictions that methanol growth is reducing power limited (19). Growth on succinate resulted in a significant drop in oxygen uptake rates (P < 0.005). NADH-UOR subunit B is homologous to NouB, forming part of the catalytic core of complex I in electron transport (20). A deletion of subunit B would result in little or no electrons being derived from NADH (18). The O2 uptake rate during growth on succinate is predicted to come from electrons that enter the electron transport chain downstream of NADH (20).
Measurements of subtle phenotypes were tested with the PhaR mutant, which grows 15% slower than the wild type during growth on methanol (8). Respiration rates during growth on succinate were not different from those of the wild type (P > 0.25), consistent with the lack of a growth phenotype. However, rates detected during growth on methanol indicated a 15% decrease in oxygen consumption (P < 0.025), which is comparable to the difference in growth rates. 13C label tracing experiments indicated that 70% of acetyl-CoA during growth on methanol is redirected into the tricarboxylic acid cycle, which results in an increase in CO2 production (21). Our results likely reflect inefficiencies in converting methanol into acetyl-CoA and then reoxidizing the carbon to CO2 (21).
For this study, commercially available technology was used to measure the respiration rates of M. extorquens AM1. The results correlate with those obtained using a Clark electrode, and the optical method was found to be highly sensitive to environmental changes and was reproducible, with respiration rate changes as little as 5 to 10% being detected. The data indicate that respiration rates of M. extorquens AM1 differ significantly depending on the carbon source utilized and can be diagnostic for the metabolic mode under these growth conditions. In addition, we have demonstrated a correlation of mutant phenotypes to respiration rates and the ability to detect subtle phenotypes. This technique could also be expanded to the study of bacterial interactions and viable but nonculturable populations (6, 10). Overall, this method shows promise as a routine phenotypic screening tool for metabolic dynamics and mutant phenotypes and could be adapted to small-volume, high-density well formats for high-throughput screening.
This work was supported by a grant from NHGRI (P50 HG02360) for a Center of Excellence in Genomic Sciences.
T.J.S. and J.M.D. contributed equally to this study. ![]()
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