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Study of Excess Manganese Stress Response Highlights the Central Role of Manganese Exporter Mnx for Holding Manganese Homeostasis in the Cyanobacterium Sp. PCC 6803

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Specialty Microbiology
Date 2024 Nov 7
PMID 39508727
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Abstract

Cellular levels of the essential micronutrient manganese (Mn) need to be carefully balanced within narrow borders. In cyanobacteria, a sufficient Mn supply is critical for ensuring the function of the oxygen-evolving complex as the central part of the photosynthetic machinery. However, Mn accumulation is fatal for the cells. The reason for the observed cytotoxicity is unclear. To understand the causality behind Mn toxicity in cyanobacteria, we investigated the impact of excess Mn on physiology and global gene expression in the model organism sp. PCC 6803. We compared the response of the WT and the knock-out mutant in the eporter (Mnx), ∆, which is disabled in the export of surplus Mn and thus functions as a model for toxic Mn overaccumulation. While growth and pigment accumulation in ∆ were severely impaired 24 h after the addition of tenfold Mn, the WT was not affected and thus mounted an adequate transcriptional response. RNA-seq data analysis revealed that the Mn stress transcriptomes partly resembled an iron limitation transcriptome. However, the expression of iron limitation signature genes was not affected by the Mn treatment, indicating that Mn excess is not accompanied by iron limitation in . We suggest that the ferric uptake regulator, Fur, gets partially mismetallated under Mn excess conditions and thus interferes with an iron-dependent transcriptional response. To encounter mismetallation and other Mn-dependent problems on a protein level, the cells invest in transcripts of ribosomes, proteases and chaperones. In the case of the ∆ mutant, the consequences of the disability to export excess Mn from the cytosol manifest in additionally impaired energy metabolism and oxidative stress transcriptomes with a fatal outcome. This study emphasizes the central importance of Mn homeostasis and the transporter Mnx's role in restoring and holding it.

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