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Dive into the research topics where Michael Rother is active.

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Featured researches published by Michael Rother.


Archives of Microbiology | 2008

Carbon monoxide-dependent energy metabolism in anaerobic bacteria and archaea

Ellen Oelgeschläger; Michael Rother

Despite its toxicity for the majority of living matter on our planet, numerous microorganisms, both aerobic and anaerobic, can use carbon monoxide (CO) as a source of carbon and/or energy for growth. The capacity to employ carboxidotrophic energy metabolism anaerobically is found in phylogenetically diverse members of the Bacteria and the Archaea. The oxidation of CO is coupled to numerous respiratory processes, such as desulfurication, hydrogenogenesis, acetogenesis, and methanogenesis. Although as diverse as the organisms capable of it, any CO-dependent energy metabolism known depends on the presence of carbon monoxide dehydrogenase. This review summarizes recent insights into the CO-dependent physiology of anaerobic microorganisms with a focus on methanogenic archaea. Carboxidotrophic growth of Methanosarcina acetivorans, thought to strictly rely on the process of methanogenesis, also involves formation of methylated thiols, formate, and even acetogenesis, and, thus, exemplifies how the beneficial redox properties of CO can be exploited in unexpected ways by anaerobic microorganisms.


Archives of Microbiology | 2007

Genetic and proteomic analyses of CO utilization by Methanosarcina acetivorans

Michael Rother; Ellen Oelgeschläger; William W. Metcalf

Methanosarcinaacetivorans, a member of the methanogenic archaea, can grow with carbon monoxide (CO) as the sole energy source and generates, unlike other methanogens, substantial amounts of acetate and formate in addition to methane. Phenotypic analyses of mutant strains lacking the cooS1F operon and the cooS2 gene suggest that the monofunctional carbon monoxide dehydrogenase (CODH) system contributes to, but is not required for, carboxidotrophic growth of M. acetivorans. Further, qualitative proteomic analyses confirm a recent report (Lessner et al., Proc Natl Acad Sci USA, 103:17921–17926, 2006) in showing that the bifunctional CODH/acetyl-CoA synthase (ACS) system, two enzymes involved in CO2-reduction, and a peculiar protein homologous to both corrinoid proteins and methyltransferases are synthesized at elevated levels in response to CO; however, the finding that the latter protein is also abundant when trimethylamine serves as growth substrate questions its proposed involvement in the reduction of methyl-groups to methane. Potential catabolic mechanisms and metabolic adaptations employed by M. acetivorans to effectively utilize CO are discussed.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2009

Selenoproteins in Archaea and Gram-positive bacteria.

Tilmann Stock; Michael Rother

Selenium is an essential trace element for many organisms by serving important catalytic roles in the form of the 21st co-translationally inserted amino acid selenocysteine. It is mostly found in redox-active proteins in members of all three domains of life and analysis of the ever-increasing number of genome sequences has facilitated identification of the encoded selenoproteins. Available data from biochemical, sequence, and structure analyses indicate that Gram-positive bacteria synthesize and incorporate selenocysteine via the same pathway as enterobacteria. However, recent in vivo studies indicate that selenocysteine-decoding is much less stringent in Gram-positive bacteria than in Escherichia coli. For years, knowledge about the pathway of selenocysteine synthesis in Archaea and Eukarya was only fragmentary, but genetic and biochemical studies guided by analysis of genome sequences of Sec-encoding archaea has not only led to the characterization of the pathways but has also shown that they are principally identical. This review summarizes current knowledge about the metabolic pathways of Archaea and Gram-positive bacteria where selenium is involved, about the known selenoproteins, and about the respective pathways employed in selenoprotein synthesis.


Archaea | 2010

Selenocysteine, Pyrrolysine, and the Unique Energy Metabolism of Methanogenic Archaea

Michael Rother

Methanogenic archaea are a group of strictly anaerobic microorganisms characterized by their strict dependence on the process of methanogenesis for energy conservation. Among the archaea, they are also the only known group synthesizing proteins containing selenocysteine or pyrrolysine. All but one of the known archaeal pyrrolysine-containing and all but two of the confirmed archaeal selenocysteine-containing protein are involved in methanogenesis. Synthesis of these proteins proceeds through suppression of translational stop codons but otherwise the two systems are fundamentally different. This paper highlights these differences and summarizes the recent developments in selenocysteine- and pyrrolysine-related research on archaea and aims to put this knowledge into the context of their unique energy metabolism.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2005

Methanol-Dependent Gene Expression Demonstrates that Methyl-Coenzyme M Reductase Is Essential in Methanosarcina acetivorans C2A and Allows Isolation of Mutants with Defects in Regulation of the Methanol Utilization Pathway

Michael Rother; Paolo Boccazzi; Arpita Bose; Matthew A. Pritchett; William W. Metcalf

Methanosarcina acetivorans C2A is able to convert several substrates to methane via at least four distinct methanogenic pathways. A common step in each of these pathways is the reduction of methyl-coenzyme M (CoM) to methane catalyzed by methyl-CoM reductase (MCR). Because this enzyme is used in each of the known pathways, the mcrBDCGA operon, which encodes MCR, is expected to be essential. To validate this prediction, a system for conditional gene inactivation was developed. A heterologous copy of the mcrBDCGA operon was placed under the control of the highly regulated mtaC1 promoter, which directs the expression of genes involved in methanol utilization, and recombined onto the M. acetivorans chromosome. This allowed for disruption of the endogenous mcr operon in the presence of methanol. Because the PmtaC1 promoter is transcribed only during growth on methanol, mcrBDCGA was rendered methanol dependent and the strain was unable to grow in trimethylamine media, strongly suggesting that mcrBDCGA is essential. Upon prolonged incubation, suppressed mutants which expressed mcrBDCGA constitutively could be selected. Expression analysis of PmtaC1::uidA gene fusions in several isolated suppressed mutants suggests that they carry trans-active mutations leading to deregulation of all genes under control of this promoter. Subsequently, proteome analysis of one such suppressed mutant revealed that all known proteins derived from mtaC1 promoter-dependent expression were constitutively expressed in this mutant. This genetic system can therefore be employed for the testing of essential genes and for the identification of genes under a common regulatory mechanism by making regulatory mutations phenotypically selectable.


Molecular Microbiology | 2009

In vivo role of three fused corrinoid/methyl transfer proteins in Methanosarcina acetivorans.

Ellen Oelgeschläger; Michael Rother

Methanosarcina acetivorans is able to use carbon monoxide (CO) as the sole source of energy for growth. Its carboxidotrophic growth is peculiar as it involves formation of acetate, formate and methylated thiols, besides methane. Under this condition three proteins homologous to both corrinoid proteins and methyltransferases (MA0859, MA4384 and MA4558) are highly abundant. To address their role in M. acetivorans, a set of single and double mutants, and the triple mutant, was constructed by deletion/disruption of the encoding genes. Phenotypic analysis of the mutants rules out an important role of the methyltransferase homologues in the CO2 reduction pathway of methanogenesis. Instead, the single and double mutants were affected to various degrees in their capacity to generate dimethylsulphide (DMS) from CO and to form methane from DMS. The triple mutant was unable to produce or metabolize DMS, and could not grow with DMS as the sole energy source, which demonstrates that MA0859, MA4384 and MA4558 are involved in, and required for, methylsulphide metabolism of M. acetivorans. Based on these findings we propose to designate MA0859, MA4384 and MA4558 as methyltransferases specific for methylsulphides, MtsD, MtsF and MtsH respectively.


Molecular Microbiology | 2010

In vivo requirement of selenophosphate for selenoprotein synthesis in archaea

Tilmann Stock; Mirjam Selzer; Michael Rother

Biosynthesis of selenocysteine, the 21st proteinogenic amino acid, occurs bound to a dedicated tRNA in all three domains of life, Bacteria, Eukarya and Archaea, but differences exist between the mechanism employed by bacteria and eukaryotes/archaea. The role of selenophosphate and the enzyme providing it, selenophosphate synthetase, in archaeal selenoprotein synthesis was addressed by mutational analysis. Surprisingly, MMP0904, encoding a homologue of eukaryal selenophosphate synthetase in Methanococcus maripaludis S2, could not be deleted unless selD, encoding selenophosphate synthetase of Escherichia coli, was present in trans, demonstrating that the factor is essential for the organism. In contrast, the homologous gene of M. maripaludis JJ could be readily deleted, obviating the strains ability to synthesize selenoproteins. Complementing with selD restored selenoprotein synthesis, demonstrating that the deleted gene encodes selenophosphate synthetase and that selenophosphate is the in vivo selenium donor for selenoprotein synthesis of this organism. We also showed that this enzyme is a selenoprotein itself and that M. maripaludis contains another, HesB‐like selenoprotein previously only predicted from genome analyses. The data highlight the use of genetic methods in archaea for a causal analysis of their physiology and, by comparing two closely related strains of the same species, illustrate the evolution of the selenium‐utilizing trait.


Fems Microbiology Letters | 2009

Influence of carbon monoxide on metabolite formation in Methanosarcina acetivorans

Ellen Oelgeschläger; Michael Rother

Methanogenic archaea conserve energy for growth by reducing some one- and two-carbon compounds to methane and concomitantly generating an ion motive force. Growth of Methanosarcina acetivorans on carbon monoxide (CO) is peculiar as it involves formation of, besides methane, formate, acetate and methylated thiols. It has been argued that methane formation is partially inhibited under carboxidotrophic conditions and that the other products result from either detoxification of CO or from bypassing methanogenesis with other pathways for energy conservation. To gain a deeper understanding of the CO-dependent physiology of M. acetivorans we analyzed metabolite formation in resting cells. The initial rates of methane, acetate, formate, and dimethylsulfide formation increased differentially with increasing CO concentrations but were maximal already at the same moderate CO partial pressure. Strikingly, further increase of the amount of CO was not inhibitory. The maximal rate of methane formation from CO was approximately fivefold lower than that from methanol, consistent with the previously observed significant downregulation of the energy converting sodium-dependent methyltransferase. The rate of dimethylsulfide formation from CO was only 1-2% of that of methane formation under any conditions tested. Implications of the data presented for previously proposed pathways of CO utilization are discussed.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2012

Function and Regulation of Isoforms of Carbon Monoxide Dehydrogenase/Acetyl Coenzyme A Synthase in Methanosarcina acetivorans

Nicole Matschiavelli; Ellen Oelgeschläger; Berardino Cocchiararo; Johannes Finke; Michael Rother

Conversion of acetate to methane (aceticlastic methanogenesis) is an ecologically important process carried out exclusively by methanogenic archaea. An important enzyme for this process as well as for methanogenic growth on carbon monoxide is the five-subunit archaeal CO dehydrogenase/acetyl coenzyme A (CoA) synthase multienzyme complex (CODH/ACS) catalyzing both CO oxidation/CO(2) reduction and cleavage/synthesis of acetyl-CoA. Methanosarcina acetivorans C2A contains two very similar copies of a six-gene operon (cdh genes) encoding two isoforms of CODH/ACS (Cdh1 and Cdh2) and a single CdhA subunit, CdhA3. To address the role of the CODH/ACS system in M. acetivorans, mutational as well as promoter/reporter gene fusion analyses were conducted. Phenotypic characterization of cdh disruption mutants (three single and double mutants, as well as the triple mutant) revealed a strict requirement of either Cdh1 or Cdh2 for acetotrophic or carboxidotrophic growth, as well as for autotrophy, which demonstrated that both isoforms are bona fide CODH/ACS. While expression of the Cdh2-encoding genes was generally higher than that of genes encoding Cdh1, both appeared to be regulated differentially in response to growth phase and to changing substrate conditions. While dispensable for growth, CdhA3 clearly affected expression of cdh1, suggesting that it functions in signal perception and transduction rather than in catabolism. The data obtained argue for a functional hierarchy and regulatory cross talk of the CODH/ACS isoforms.


Archive | 2011

Selenium Metabolism in Prokaryotes

Michael Rother

Biologically active selenium occurs as a modification in tRNA, noncovalently attached cofactor, or as the amino acid selenocysteine, exerting functions key to the metabolism of the organism harboring it. In prokaryotes, selenocysteine is found in the catalytic site of numerous redox-active enzymes. It was designated as the 21st genetically encoded amino acid because it is cotranslationally inserted into growing polypeptides and universally encoded by the stop-codon UGA on the mRNA. The pathway of selenocysteine biosynthesis and incorporation is well understood in Bacteria, but considerable gaps of knowledge still exist in the respective system of the Archaea. This chapter aims to summarize details on prokaryal selenium biology with a focus on emphasizing the differences of the bacterial and the archaeal pathways of selenoprotein synthesis.

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Tilmann Stock

Goethe University Frankfurt

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Julia Fersch

Dresden University of Technology

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Christian Sattler

Goethe University Frankfurt

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Deniz Seyhan

Goethe University Frankfurt

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Marc Stassen

Goethe University Frankfurt

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Mirjam Selzer

Goethe University Frankfurt

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