The enhancement of nitrogen fixation activity of diazotrophs is essential for safe crop production. Lysine succinylation (KSuc) is widely present in eukaryotes and prokaryotes and regulates various biological process. However, knowledge of the extent of KSuc in nitrogen fixation of Azotobacter chroococcum is scarce. In this study, we found that 250 mg/l of rhamnolipid (RL) significantly increased the nitrogen fixation activity of A. chroococcum by 39%, as compared with the control. Real-time quantitative reverse transcription PCR (qRT-PCR) confirmed that RL could remarkably increase the transcript levels of nifA and nifHDK genes. In addition, a global KSuc of A. chroococcum was profiled using a 4D label-free quantitative proteomic approach. In total, 5,008 KSuc sites were identified on 1,376 succinylated proteins. Bioinformatics analysis showed that the addition of RL influence on the KSuc level, and the succinylated proteins were involved in various metabolic processes, particularly enriched in oxidative phosphorylation, tricarboxylic acid cycle (TCA) cycle, and nitrogen metabolism. Meanwhile, multiple succinylation sites on MoFe protein (NifDK) may influence nitrogenase activity. These results would provide an experimental basis for the regulation of biological nitrogen fixation with KSuc and shed new light on the mechanistic study of nitrogen fixation.
The soil bacterial communities have been widely investigated. However, there has been little study of the bacteria in Qinghai-Tibet Plateau, especially about the culturable bacteria in highland barley cultivation soil. Here, a total of 830 individual strains were obtained at 4°C and 25°C from a highland barley cultivation soil in Qamdo, Tibet Autonomous Region, using fifteen kinds of media. Seventy-seven species were obtained, which belonged to 42 genera and four phyla; the predominant phylum was Actinobacteria (68.82%), followed by Proteobacteria (15.59%), Firmicutes (14.29%), and Bacteroidetes (1.30%). The predominant genus was Streptomyces (22.08%, 17 species), followed by Bacillus (6.49%, five species), Micromonospora (5.19%, four species), Microbacterium (5.19%, four species), and Kribbella (3.90%, three species). The most diverse isolates belonged to a high G+C Gram-positive group; in particular, the Streptomyces genus is a dominant genus in the high G+C Gram-positive group. There were 62 species and 33 genera bacteria isolated at 25°C (80.52%), 23 species, and 18 genera bacteria isolated at 4°C (29.87%). Meanwhile, only eight species and six genera bacteria could be isolated at 25°C and 4°C. Of the 77 spe¬cies, six isolates related to six genera might be novel taxa. The results showed abundant bacterial species diversity in the soil sample from the Qamdo, Tibet Autonomous Region.
This study aimed to investigate the prevalence, molecular characteristics and antibiotic resistance of Staphylococcus aureus isolates from yak butter in Tibet, China. A total of 218 yak butter samples were collected from retail stores in Tibet and screened for Staph. aureus. Furthermore, the virulence genes, resistance genes, antimicrobial susceptibility, and molecular typing [pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE), multilocus sequence typing, and staphylococcal protein A (spa) typing] of Staph. aureus isolates were detected. The results showed that 12.4% of yak butter samples were contaminated with Staph. aureus, including 5 samples positive for methicillin-resistant Staph. aureus (MRSA). Among all isolates, 96.3% harbored one or more virulence genes, including classical (sea and sec), novel enterotoxin-encoding genes (seh, sek, sel, and seq), and hemolysin genes (hla and hld). All isolates were resistant to at least 2 different antibiotic classes, and the isolates were most commonly resistant to sulfonamides, β-lactams, and erythromycin. For resistance genes, blaZ (74.1%) was most frequently detected, followed by dfrG (51.9%), erm(B) (22.2%), mecA (18.5%), tet(K) (14.8%), aph(2″)-Ia, aph(3′)-III, and ant(6)-Ia (11.1% for each), and erm(C) (7.4%). We detected 8 spa types, 6 sequence types (ST), and 5 clonal complex (CC) types. In addition, 1 isolate of Staph. aureus was nontypeable. We found that CC1-ST1-t559 (55.6%) was the most predominant clone, followed by CC59-ST59-t437 (11.1%), CC5-ST5-t002 (7.4%), CC1-ST1, CC1-ST1-t114, CC1-ST573-t4938, CC1-ST573-t8915, CC30-ST30-t021, and CC25-ST25-t167 (3.7% for each). For PFGE typing, a total of 5 clusters and 15 pulsotypes were generated, and some isolates from different samples showed indistinguishable pulsotypes. Our findings suggest that yak butter produced in Tibet, China, could be contaminated by Staph. aureus strains, including MRSA strains, carrying various virulence and resistance genes, representing multiple antimicrobial resistance phenotypes. The presence of potentially virulent and antibiotic-resistant Staph. aureus strains in yak butter poses a potential threat to consumers, and appropriate measures need to be taken in the production chain to reduce the occurrence of Staph. aureus in yak butter.
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