» Articles » PMID: 39261732

The Ultra-high Affinity Transport Proteins of Ubiquitous Marine Bacteria

Overview
Journal Nature
Specialty Science
Date 2024 Sep 11
PMID 39261732
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

SAR11 bacteria are the most abundant microorganisms in the surface ocean and have global biogeochemical importance. To thrive in their competitive oligotrophic environment, these bacteria rely heavily on solute-binding proteins that facilitate uptake of specific substrates via membrane transporters. The functions and properties of these transport proteins are key factors in the assimilation of dissolved organic matter and biogeochemical cycling of nutrients in the ocean, but they have remained largely inaccessible to experimental investigation. Here we performed genome-wide experimental characterization of all solute-binding proteins in a prototypical SAR11 bacterium, revealing specific functions and general trends in their properties that contribute to the success of SAR11 bacteria in oligotrophic environments. We found that the solute-binding proteins of SAR11 bacteria have extremely high binding affinity (dissociation constant >20 pM) and high binding specificity, revealing molecular mechanisms of oligotrophic adaptation. Our functional data have uncovered new carbon sources for SAR11 bacteria and enable accurate biogeographical analysis of SAR11 substrate uptake capabilities throughout the ocean. This study provides a comprehensive view of the substrate uptake capabilities of ubiquitous marine bacteria, providing a necessary foundation for understanding their contribution to assimilation of dissolved organic matter in marine ecosystems.

Citing Articles

From duplication to fusion: Expanding Dayhoff's model of protein evolution.

Muthahari Y, Magnus L, Laurino P Protein Sci. 2025; 34(3):e70054.

PMID: 39969106 PMC: 11837038. DOI: 10.1002/pro.70054.


SUPREM: an engineered non-site-specific m6A RNA methyltransferase with highly improved efficiency.

Ochiai Y, Clifton B, Le Coz M, Terenzio M, Laurino P Nucleic Acids Res. 2024; 52(20):12158-12172.

PMID: 39417589 PMC: 11551740. DOI: 10.1093/nar/gkae887.