Phase transitions by an abundant protein in the anammox extracellular matrix mediate cell-to-cell aggregation and biofilm formation

This study describes the first direct functional assignment of a highly abundant extracellular protein from a key environmental and biotechnological biofilm performing an anaerobic ammonium oxidation (anammox) process. Expression levels of Brosi_A1236, belonging to a class of proteins previously sug...

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Main Authors: Seviour, Thomas, Wong, Lan Li, Lu, Yang, Mugunthan, Sudarsan, Yang, Qiaohui, Chanda Segaran, Uma Shankari, Bessarab, Irina, Liebl, David, Williams, Rohan B. H., Law, Yingyu, Kjelleberg, Staffan
Other Authors: School of Biological Sciences
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2021
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/145843
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
id sg-ntu-dr.10356-145843
record_format dspace
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Science::Biological sciences
Anammox
Aggregation
spellingShingle Science::Biological sciences
Anammox
Aggregation
Seviour, Thomas
Wong, Lan Li
Lu, Yang
Mugunthan, Sudarsan
Yang, Qiaohui
Chanda Segaran, Uma Shankari
Bessarab, Irina
Liebl, David
Williams, Rohan B. H.
Law, Yingyu
Kjelleberg, Staffan
Phase transitions by an abundant protein in the anammox extracellular matrix mediate cell-to-cell aggregation and biofilm formation
description This study describes the first direct functional assignment of a highly abundant extracellular protein from a key environmental and biotechnological biofilm performing an anaerobic ammonium oxidation (anammox) process. Expression levels of Brosi_A1236, belonging to a class of proteins previously suggested to be cell surface associated, were in the top one percentile of all genes in the "Candidatus Brocadia sinica"-enriched biofilm. The Brosi_A1236 structure was computationally predicted to consist of immunoglobulin-like anti-parallel β-strands, and circular dichroism conducted on the isolated surface protein indicated that β-strands are the dominant higher-order structure. The isolated protein was stained positively by the β-sheet-specific stain thioflavin T, along with cell surface- and matrix-associated regions of the biofilm. The surface protein has a large unstructured content, including two highly disordered domains at its C terminus. The disordered domains bound to the substratum and thereby facilitated the adhesion of negatively charged latex microspheres, which were used as a proxy for cells. The disordered domains and isolated whole surface protein also underwent liquid-liquid phase separation to form liquid droplets in suspension. Liquid droplets of disordered protein wet the surfaces of microspheres and bacterial cells and facilitated their coalescence. Furthermore, the surface layer protein formed gels as well as ordered crystalline structures. These observations suggest that biophysical remodeling through phase transitions promotes aggregation and biofilm formation. Importance: By employing biophysical and liquid-liquid phase separation concepts, this study revealed how a highly abundant extracellular protein enhances the key environmental and industrial bioprocess of anaerobic ammonium oxidation (anammox). Extracellular proteins of environmental biofilms are understudied and poorly annotated in public databases. Understanding the function of extracellular proteins is also increasingly important for improving bioprocesses and resource recovery. Here, protein functions were assessed based on theoretical predictions of intrinsically disordered domains, known to promote adhesion and liquid-liquid phase separation, and available surface layer protein properties. A model is thus proposed to explain how the protein promotes aggregation and biofilm formation by extracellular matrix remodeling and phase transitions. This work provides a strong foundation for functional investigations of extracellular proteins involved in biofilm development.
author2 School of Biological Sciences
author_facet School of Biological Sciences
Seviour, Thomas
Wong, Lan Li
Lu, Yang
Mugunthan, Sudarsan
Yang, Qiaohui
Chanda Segaran, Uma Shankari
Bessarab, Irina
Liebl, David
Williams, Rohan B. H.
Law, Yingyu
Kjelleberg, Staffan
format Article
author Seviour, Thomas
Wong, Lan Li
Lu, Yang
Mugunthan, Sudarsan
Yang, Qiaohui
Chanda Segaran, Uma Shankari
Bessarab, Irina
Liebl, David
Williams, Rohan B. H.
Law, Yingyu
Kjelleberg, Staffan
author_sort Seviour, Thomas
title Phase transitions by an abundant protein in the anammox extracellular matrix mediate cell-to-cell aggregation and biofilm formation
title_short Phase transitions by an abundant protein in the anammox extracellular matrix mediate cell-to-cell aggregation and biofilm formation
title_full Phase transitions by an abundant protein in the anammox extracellular matrix mediate cell-to-cell aggregation and biofilm formation
title_fullStr Phase transitions by an abundant protein in the anammox extracellular matrix mediate cell-to-cell aggregation and biofilm formation
title_full_unstemmed Phase transitions by an abundant protein in the anammox extracellular matrix mediate cell-to-cell aggregation and biofilm formation
title_sort phase transitions by an abundant protein in the anammox extracellular matrix mediate cell-to-cell aggregation and biofilm formation
publishDate 2021
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/145843
_version_ 1690658500015816704
spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1458432021-01-16T20:11:35Z Phase transitions by an abundant protein in the anammox extracellular matrix mediate cell-to-cell aggregation and biofilm formation Seviour, Thomas Wong, Lan Li Lu, Yang Mugunthan, Sudarsan Yang, Qiaohui Chanda Segaran, Uma Shankari Bessarab, Irina Liebl, David Williams, Rohan B. H. Law, Yingyu Kjelleberg, Staffan School of Biological Sciences Singapore Centre for Environmental Life Sciences and Engineering Science::Biological sciences Anammox Aggregation This study describes the first direct functional assignment of a highly abundant extracellular protein from a key environmental and biotechnological biofilm performing an anaerobic ammonium oxidation (anammox) process. Expression levels of Brosi_A1236, belonging to a class of proteins previously suggested to be cell surface associated, were in the top one percentile of all genes in the "Candidatus Brocadia sinica"-enriched biofilm. The Brosi_A1236 structure was computationally predicted to consist of immunoglobulin-like anti-parallel β-strands, and circular dichroism conducted on the isolated surface protein indicated that β-strands are the dominant higher-order structure. The isolated protein was stained positively by the β-sheet-specific stain thioflavin T, along with cell surface- and matrix-associated regions of the biofilm. The surface protein has a large unstructured content, including two highly disordered domains at its C terminus. The disordered domains bound to the substratum and thereby facilitated the adhesion of negatively charged latex microspheres, which were used as a proxy for cells. The disordered domains and isolated whole surface protein also underwent liquid-liquid phase separation to form liquid droplets in suspension. Liquid droplets of disordered protein wet the surfaces of microspheres and bacterial cells and facilitated their coalescence. Furthermore, the surface layer protein formed gels as well as ordered crystalline structures. These observations suggest that biophysical remodeling through phase transitions promotes aggregation and biofilm formation. Importance: By employing biophysical and liquid-liquid phase separation concepts, this study revealed how a highly abundant extracellular protein enhances the key environmental and industrial bioprocess of anaerobic ammonium oxidation (anammox). Extracellular proteins of environmental biofilms are understudied and poorly annotated in public databases. Understanding the function of extracellular proteins is also increasingly important for improving bioprocesses and resource recovery. Here, protein functions were assessed based on theoretical predictions of intrinsically disordered domains, known to promote adhesion and liquid-liquid phase separation, and available surface layer protein properties. A model is thus proposed to explain how the protein promotes aggregation and biofilm formation by extracellular matrix remodeling and phase transitions. This work provides a strong foundation for functional investigations of extracellular proteins involved in biofilm development. Ministry of Education (MOE) Nanyang Technological University National Research Foundation (NRF) National University of Singapore (NUS), Temasek Laboratories Published version This research was supported by the Singapore National Research Foundation under its Environment & Water Industry Research Programme and administered by PUB, project number 1301-IRIS-59. SCELSE is funded by Singapore’s Ministry of Education, National Research Federation, Nanyang Technological University (NTU), and National University of Singapore (NUS) and hosted by NTU in partnership with NUS. 2021-01-11T08:44:29Z 2021-01-11T08:44:29Z 2020 Journal Article Seviour, T., Wong, L. L., Lu, Y., Chanda Segaran, U. S., Bessarab, I., Liebl, D., . . . Kjelleberg, S. (2020). Phase transitions by an abundant protein in the anammox extracellular matrix mediate cell-to-cell aggregation and biofilm formation. mBio, 11(5), e02052-20-. doi:10.1128/mBio.02052-20 2161-2129 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/145843 10.1128/mBio.02052-20 32900808 2-s2.0-85090647645 5 11 en mBio © 2020 Seviour et al. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license. application/pdf