Malate Translocator (OMT1) in

May 7, 2019 - Shandong Tobacco Monopoly Bureau (Company), Jinan 250101 , People's Repbulic of China. J. Agric. Food Chem. , Article ASAP...
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Biotechnology and Biological Transformations

The Role of Glucose and 2-Oxoglutarate/malate Translocator (OMT1) in the Production of Phenyllactic Acid and pHydroxyphenyllactic Acid, Two Food-borne Pathogen Inhibitors Ya Dao, Ke Zhang, Xiafei Lu, Zebao Lu, Chenjian Liu, Min Liu, and Yi-Yong Luo J. Agric. Food Chem., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.jafc.9b01444 • Publication Date (Web): 07 May 2019 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on May 7, 2019

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Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry

1

The Role of Glucose and 2-Oxoglutarate/malate Translocator (OMT1)

2

in the Production of Phenyllactic Acid and p-Hydroxyphenyllactic

3

Acid, Two Food-borne Pathogen Inhibitors

4 †,║

5

Ya Dao,

Ke Zhang,

6

Yiyong Luo*,†

†,║

Xiafei Lu,



Zebao Lu,

§

Chenjian Liu,



Min Liu,

#

and

7 8

†Faculty

9

Technology, Kunming 650500, P. R. China

of Life Science and Technology, Kunming University of Science and

10

§Department

11

P. R. China

12

#Shandong

of Laboratory Medicine, Chuxiong Medical College, Chuxiong 675005,

Tobacco Monopoly Bureau (Company), Jinan 250101, P. R. China

13 14

║These

authors contributed equally to this work

15 16

*To

17

+86-871-65920759. E-mail: [email protected]

whom correspondence should be addressed. Phone: +86-871-65920759. Fax:

18 19 20 21 22 1

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ABSTRACT: This paper aims to uncover how glucose affected the production of

24

phenyllactic acid (PLA) and p-hydroxyphenyllactic acid (p-OH-PLA). The highest

25

yields of PLA (68.53 mg/L) and p-OH-PLA (50.39 mg/L) were observed after

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Lactobacillus plantarum strain YM-4-3 fermentation in media containing 30 and 10

27

g/L glucose, respectively. Additionally, the antimicrobial activity of YM-4-3 against

28

food-borne pathogens and the NADH/NAD+ ratio were positively correlated with the

29

production of PLA and p-OH-PLA, respectively. In addition, a 2-oxoglutarate/malate

30

translocator coding gene (Omt1) was selected based on the qPCR results, and its

31

knockout mutant, compared with the wild-type strain YM-4-3, showed that the PLA

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and p-OH-PLA production was decreased by 1.37-6.99 and 1.53-1.59 times,

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respectively. This result indicated that OMT1 was involved in the biosynthesis of

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PLA and p-OH-PLA. To conclude, this study suggests that glucose, NADH/NAD+

35

ratio and/or the Omt1 gene, PLA and p-OH-PLA production, and antimicrobial

36

activity contribute to a cause-and-effect relationship.

37

KEYWORDS: Lactobacillus plantarum, phenyllactic acid, p-hydroxyphenyllactic

38

acid, NADH/NAD+ ratio, 2-oxoglutarate/malate translocator

39 40 41 42 43 44 2

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INTRODUCTION

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Lactic acid bacteria (LAB) represent a group of gram-positive bacteria that have long

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been used as natural or selected starter cultures for food fermentation because of their

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GRAS (generally regarded as safe) status, their ability to produce a range of

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functional metabolites and influence the food flavor, and their antagonistic properties

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which offer protection against food spoilage bacteria and molds.

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phenyllactic acid (PLA) and p-hydroxyphenyllactic acid (p-OH-PLA) have received

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growing interest in recent years due to their effective antimicrobial activity. PLA

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occurs in honey and some fermented foods

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towards some bacterial pathogens, such as Listeria (L.) monocytogenes,

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Staphylococcus (S.) aureus and Escherichia (E.) coli,

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food-borne fungi including Aspergillus (A.) flavus, Penicillium (P.) verrucosum and P.

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citrinum etc. 2, 5 p-OH-PLA is the 4-hydroxy derivative of PLA, which also shows a

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broad inhibitory activity against both bacterial and fungal pathogens. 6 However, PLA

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is more effective than p-OH-PLA and shows a synergistic effect that enhances the

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antimicrobial potential of these compounds.

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potential for practical application in the food industry as novel biopreservatives.

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2

1

In this respect,

and has a broad-spectrum inhibition

2, 7

3, 4

and a wide range of

Thus, PLA and p-OH-PLA have

PLA and p-OH-PLA are produced by LAB strains through phenylalanine (Phe) and 8

64

tyrosine (Tyr) degradation, respectively.

Transamination reaction is the first

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catabolic step undergone by Phe and Tyr to produce phenylpyruvic acid (PPA) and

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p-hydroxyphenylpyruvic acid (p-OH-PPA), respectively, in which the α-amino group

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is transferred to a suitable acceptor, such as 2-oxoglutarate, by an aminotransferase 3

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(ATase).

PPA and p-OH-PPA are further reduced to PLA and p-OH-PLA by

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hydroxyl acid dehydrogenases, such as lactate dehydrogenase (LDH). 9, 10

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Among the biocatalytic approaches, PLA production can be significantly improved

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by the addition of precursors, such as Phe and PPA, to the growth medium, 9, 11, 12 and

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the effect of PPA was remarkably better than that of Phe. 11, 12 In particular, PLA yield

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increased 14-fold in Lactobacillus sp. SK007 upon the addition of PPA instead of Phe

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as substrate.

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SK007 fermentation could significantly enhance the yield of p-OH-PLA, and the

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direct precursor p-OH-PPA had a much better effect than Tyr. 6 In general, glucose is

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not only an essential nutrient for bacterial growth, but is also involved in PLA and

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p-OH-PPA bioproduction. In E. coli, an expanded shikimate pathway allows PLA and

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p-OH-PPA production from glucose. 10 With regard to Lactobacillus spp., Mu et al., 12

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found that PLA yield first increased and then decreased with increasing glucose

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concentration, and 30 g/L glucose was the optimized concentration.

82

11

Similarly, Tyr and p-OH-PPA supplements during Lactobacillus sp.

To improve PLA and p-OH-PLA production, some enzymes and genes involved in 8

83

Phe and Tyr metabolism were purified/cloned and characterized. Yvon et al.,

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reported

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5’-phosphate-dependent enzyme and initiated the conversion of Phe and Tyr to PPA

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and p-OH-PPA, respectively. LDH is one of the key enzymes responsible for PLA

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and p-OH-PLA biosynthesis. Zheng et al., 9 cloned and expressed two LDH encoding

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genes (LdhL and LdhD) and found that both the recombinant LDHs (L-LDH and

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D-LDH) converted PPA to PLA with a similar catalytic efficiency. Li et al., 13 found

that

ATase

from

Lactococcus

(La.)

4

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lactis

was

a

pyridoxal

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that NADH was necessary for the enzymatic production of PLA from PPA. In

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addition, the result from the heterologous coexpression of LDH and formate

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dehydrogenase in E. coli indicated that PLA production using LDH coupled with

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NADH regeneration system was significantly higher than that by a single-enzyme

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reaction. 14, 15 Conceivably, some genes coding for dicarboxylates transporters were

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crucial for the yield of extra-cellular PLA and p-OH-PLA. The citrate transporter

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(CitP) of LAB is such a transporter that catalyzes the exchange of citrate versus

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L-lactate/PLA.

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(OMT), was characterized to accumulate organic acids. 17 Therefore, it is worthwhile

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to uncover the relationship between OMTs and the production of PLA and

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16

Another transporter, a pea 2-oxoglutarate/malate translocator

p-OH-PLA.

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Recently, the canonical pathway of PLA and p-OH-PLA biosynthesis has become

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well known. However, the regulation process of PLA and p-OH-PLA bioproduction

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remains uninvestigated. To solve this issue, at least in part, the effect of glucose on

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PLA and p-OH-PLA production was first determined. Then, the expression profiling

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of six genes was evaluated to screen the associated factors between glucose and PLA

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and p-OH-PLA formation. Finally, one gene coding for a 2-oxoglutarate/malate

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translocator (Omt1) was chosen and its role on PLA and p-OH-PLA production was

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investigated. The experiments will help us to more fully understand the biosynthesis

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process of PLA and p-OH-PLA.

110 111

MATERIALS AND METHODS 5

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Chemicals, Strains and Growth Conditions. PLA and p-OH-PLA were

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purchased from Sigma-Aldrich (St. Louis, MO). Chromatographic grade methanol

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and trifluoroacetic acid (TFA) were obtained from Sangon Biothech Co., Ltd.

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(Shanghai, China). All the strains used in this study are listed in Table S1.

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Lactobacillus (Lb.) plantarum strain YM-4-3

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cultivated in de Man, Rogosa and Sharpe medium (MRS) (Oxoid, Hamshire, UK) or

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chemically defined medium (CDM) prepared according to Teusink et al.

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food-borne pathogens A. fumigatus HH6, P. expansum BNCC146144, Botrytis (B.)

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cinerea BNCC338228, Fusarium (F.) oxysporum DQL, E. coli O157:H7 ATCC43895,

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S. aureus KM3 and L. monocytogenes JS2 were used as indicator strains. The molds

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were cultivated in PDB media (Coolaber, Beijing, China). E. coli was cultured in LB

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broth (HKM, Guangdong, China), and strain DH5α was the host cell for plasmid

124

construction. S. aureus and L. monocytogenes were grown in BHI broth (Oxoid,

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Hamshire, UK). Solid media were prepared by adding agar (18 g/L) to the

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corresponding broth. When required, erythromycin was used at a concentration of 500

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μg/mL for E. coli and 5 μg/mL for YM-4-3.

18

(hereafter referred as YM-4-3) was

19

The

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Preparation of YM-4-3 Cell-free Supernatant. The YM-4-3 cell suspension (1.5

129

× 106 CFU/mL) was inoculated (4‰, v/v) in 100 mL of modified MRS or CDM broth

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where the glucose concentration was changed to 0, 10, 20, 30, 40, 50, 60 or 70 g/L.

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After incubation at 37 °C for 48 h, the cell-free supernatant (CFS) was prepared by

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centrifugation (10,000g for 10 min; 4 °C) and sterile filtration using a 0.45 μm filter

133

(Millipore, Billerica, MA). Subsequently, the CFS was used for further high 6

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performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) analysis and antimicrobial activity

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investigation. To avoid the impact of H2O2 and bacteriocins on the antimicrobial

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activity evaluation, the CFS, which was obtained from YM-4-3 cultivated in mMRS0,

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mMRS30 and mMRS60 (the modified MRS whose glucose concentration was 0, 30 or

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60 g/L, respectively), was treated in succession using 1 mg/mL proteinase K at 37 °C

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for 2 h, 1 mg/mL catalase at 25 °C for 30 min, and heat to inactivate the residual

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enzymes. Then, the treated CFS was centrifuged at 10,000g for 10 min and filtered

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with a 0.45 μm filter. The filter liquor was designated as tCFS.

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Determination of PLA and p-OH-PLA Production. The assessment of PLA and

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p-OH-PLA production in CFS was determined by a HPLC system (Agilent

144

Technologies Inc, Palo Alto, CA). Aliquots of 10 μL were injected onto an Agilent

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Eclipse DB-C18 column (4.6 × 250 μm). Linear gradient elution was used with

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solvent A (water + 0.05% TFA) and solvent B (methanol + 0.05% TFA) at a

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temperature of 30 °C and a flow rate of 1 mL/min. The gradient profile was as follows:

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(1) 0–6 min, 72% A + 28% B; (2) 6–13 min, 62% A + 38% B; (3) 13–18 min, 62% A

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+ 38% B; (4) 18–20 min, 100% B; (5) 20–30 min, 100% B; and (6) 30–40 min, 72%

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A+ 28% B. PLA and p-OH-PLA were monitored at 210 nm and their concentrations

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were determined by integrating the calibration curves obtained from the standards.

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Evaluation of YM-4-3 Antimicrobial Activity in vitro. The microdilution method

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was employed to determine the antimicrobial activity. For the antifungal activity test,

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the fungal conidia were collected according to our previous study

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day-old PDA (Coolaber, Beijing, China) cultures and prepared with sterile water to 7

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from 7 to 14

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produce 1.5 × 105 conidia/mL suspension. A total of 20 µL of the conidial suspension

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and 130 µL YM-4-3 CFS or tCFS were added into a well of sterile, disposable,

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multiwell microdilution plates (96 wells; Corning Incorporated, Corning, NY). For

159

evaluation of the antibacterial activity, E. coli O157:H7, S. aureus and L.

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monocytogenes were cultivated overnight in LB, BHI and BHI media, respectively,

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and bacterial culture with a density of 1.0 × 107 CFU/mL was obtained. The test

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solution in a well of the microdilution plates contained 75 µL YM-4-3 CFS or tCFS,

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1.5 µL bacterial culture and 73.5 µL LB (for E. coli O157:H7) or BHI (for S. aureus

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and L. monocytogenes) media. The inoculated wells were prepared in triplicate. All

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microdilution plates were incubated in a humid chamber at 28 °C for 72 h or at 37 °C

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for 16 h for the antifungal and antibacterial activity test, respectively. The microbial

167

growth was recorded with photos and measured by determining the optical density at

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600 nm with a microplate reader (BioTek, Winooski, VT). In each experiment, the

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untreated control (fungal conidial suspension + MRS medium or bacterial cells +

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MRS medium + LB/BHI medium) was included. Each experiment was repeated three

171

times. The antimicrobial activity was expressed as percentage of inhibition, which

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was calculated as (Ac - At)/(Ac) × 100%, where Ac is the absorption value of the

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untreated control and At is that of a treatment.

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Determination of the NADH/NAD+ Ratio. YM-4-3 was grown in mMRS0,

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mMRS30 and mMRS60 for 48 h, and cells from a 1 mL culture were harvested by

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centrifugation at 10,000g for 1 min. The pellets were washed once with cold PBS and

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resuspended with 800 μL of extraction buffer. The samples were homogenized with 8

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ultrasonication (Φ3, 45%, with sonication for 3 s and rest for 10 s, over a total

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duration of 7 min) on ice. The homogenized samples were successively centrifuged at

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4 °C at 10,000g for 5 min to remove insoluble material and to deproteinize with a 10

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kDa cut-off spin column (Abcam, Cambridge, UK). The intracellular concentrations

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of NADH and NAD+ were measured using the NAD/NADH Quantitation Kit

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(Sigma-Aldrich, St. Louis, MO) according to the manufacturer’s instructions. The

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NADH and NAD+ levels were normalized to the protein concentrations.

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RNA Extraction, cDNA Synthesis and Quantitative Real-time PCR (qPCR).

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Six genes that were possibly involved in PLA and p-OH-PLA biosynthesis, two

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aminotransferase (ATaseI and ATaseII), three lactate dehydrogenase (L1-LDH,

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L2-LDH and D-LDH) and one 2-oxoglutarate/malate translocator (OMT1), were

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selected, and their expression profiling was evaluated by qPCR. YM-4-3 was grown

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in mMRS0, mMRS30 and mMRS60 for 16 h and then 5 mL of the culture was pelleted

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down. The total RNA was extracted using Trizol reagent (Takara, Dalian, China), and

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the first strand cDNA was synthesized using a Hiscript II Q RT SuperMix for qPCR

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(+ gDNA wiper) Kit (Vazyme, Nanjing, China) as recommended by the manufacturer.

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Further qPCR and calculations were essentially performed as previously described. 21

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The 16S rRNA gene was used for an internal control and the primers are listed in

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Table S1.

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Cloning and Sequence Analysis of the Omt1 Gene. The total genomic DNA of

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YM-4-3 was extracted by a DNAprep Pure Bacteria Kit (Bioteke, Beijing, China). An

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Omt1 gene was amplified using the primer pair HC-F and HC-R (Table S1), and the 9

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PCR product was directly sequenced. The amino acid sequence was deduced using

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DNAman software (Lynnon BioSoft, San Ramon, CA), and its theoretical isoelectric

202

point

203

(http://web.expasy.org/compute_pi/). The deduced amino acid sequence was

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submitted to the NCBI GenBank database (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/BLAST) and

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the search for homology was performed using the BLAST algorithms. The amino acid

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sequences of OMT1 homologs from different bacteria and Spinacia (Sp.) oleraceae

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chloroplasts were downloaded, and a neighbor-joining tree was constructed using the

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MEGA 6.0 software package. 22 The transmembrane helices of OMT1 were detected

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by TMHMM (v2.0c) (http://www.cbs.dtu.dk/services/).

210

and

molecular

weight

were

calculated

using

the

pI/MW

tool

Plasmid Construction and the Omt1 Gene Knockout. The gene knockout 23

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plasmid was constructed similar to Mashburn-Warren et al.

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approximately 1 kbp flanking Omt1 gene were amplified by PCR from the genome of

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YM-4-3 using the primer pairs Up-F/Up-R and Dn-F/Dn-R (Table S1). The primer

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Dn-F has a 5' tail homologous to the primer Up-R (Table S1). The flanking fragments

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were fused together by overlapping PCR using primers Up-F and Dn-R with the

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amplified fragments as the templates. The fused fragment was digested with SpeI and

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EcoRI and subsequently ligated into thermosensitive plasmid pFED760 (a gift from

218

Michael J Federle, University of Illinois, USA, Table S1) that was digested with the

219

same restriction enzymes to create the Omt1 gene knockout construct, pKO. Then, the

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plasmid pKO was transferred into YM-4-3 by electroporation, and the Omt1 gene

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knockout strain was selected as described by Okano et al. 10

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The fragments of

The resulting mutant,

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named ∆Omt1, was confirmed by PCR using the primer pairs V-F/V-R (Table S1)

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and by sequencing the PCR products.

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Cell Growth, Acid Production and Morphology Assays. The growth and acid

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levels of ∆Omt1 and YM-4-3 cells in MRS and CDM broth were monitored by

226

measuring the OD600 and pH, respectively. A morphological analysis was investigated

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using a scanning electron microscope (SEM) and transmission electron microscope

228

(TEM). Briefly, ∆Omt1 and YM-4-3 were grown in MRS broth at 37 °C for 16 h, and

229

the bacteria were harvested by centrifugation at 5,000g for 5 min at 4 °C. The cells, in

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the following processes, were treated according to the method described by Wang et

231

al. 25 Finally, the bacteria were observed with a Hitachi S-3000N SEM (Tokyo, Japan)

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at 10 kV in high-vacuum mode or JEOL JEM-1011 TEM (Tokyo, Japan) operated at

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the 100 kV accelerating voltage.

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Production of PLA and p-OH-PLA of the Omt1 Gene Knockout Strain. ∆Omt1

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and YM-4-3 were cultivated in mMRS0, mMRS30 and mMRS60 at 37 °C for 48 h. For

236

the extra-cellular PLA and p-OH-PLA test, the CFS was prepared as described above.

237

For the intra- and extra-cellular PLA and p-OH-PLA tests, cell cultures of 10 mL

238

were disrupted by ultrasonication (Φ3, 45%, with sonication for 5 s and rest for 5 s,

239

over a total duration of 15 min) before centrifugation, and the CFS was then prepared

240

as described above. The PLA and p-OH-PLA levels in CFS were determined by the

241

HPLC method describe above.

242 243

RESULTS AND DISCUSSION 11

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The PLA and p-OH-PLA Production are Affected by Glucose. Apparently,

245

glucose is the main carbon source for bacterial growth and should have a multifaceted

246

role on bacterial metabolites bioproduction. In this paper, the PLA and p-OH-PLA

247

yields of YM-4-3 responding to different glucose concentrations were investigated.

248

As shown in Figure 1, the yields of PLA and p-OH-PLA first increased and then

249

decreased with increasing glucose concentration when YM-4-3 was grown in the

250

modified MRS and CDM broth; glucose at 30 and 10 g/L was the optimal

251

concentration for PLA and p-OH-PLA production at the maximum output of 68.53

252

and 50.39 mg/L, respectively. These observations were consistent with a previous

253

report of Mu et al., 12 who demonstrated that glucose facilitated PLA production and

254

30 g/L was the optimal concentration. The significance of glucose for PLA and

255

p-OH-PLA production can be explained as follows. Generally, low glucose

256

concentration promotes bacterial growth, and increase in biomass is always in concert

257

with metabolites accumulation.

258

cofactor (NADH) regeneration from glycolysis, 9 and NADH provides the reducing

259

power for reductive product formation. For the yield decrease of PLA and p-OH-PLA

260

under > 30 and > 10 g/L glucose, respectively, the end-products inhibition and/or the

261

carbon metabolites (e.g., lactate, acetate and diacetyl) repression may be one of the

262

explanatory factors, as reported by de Felipe and Gaudu. 27

26

In addition, glucose is a good carbon source for

263

The Antimicrobial Activity is Affected by Glucose. As mentioned above, PLA

264

and p-OH-PLA are pathogen inhibitors whose production was affected by glucose.

265

This finding prompts us to investigate whether glucose accordingly will change the 12

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antimicrobial activity of YM-4-3. As shown in Figure 2 and Figure S1, the CFS and

267

tCFS from mMRS30, mMRS60 and mMRS0 constituted at descending order in

268

antimicrobial activity although the inhibition ratios were dependent on indicator

269

pathogens. This result indicates that glucose facilitates PLA and p-OH-PLA

270

production, which in turn affects YM-4-3 antimicrobial effect. In addition, the

271

inhibition ratios between CFS and tCFS were different in some conditions, such as

272

when CFS and tCFS were harvested from mMRS0 and B. cinerea, F. oxysporum and

273

E. coli O157:H7 worked as indicators (Figure 2), which indicated that hydroxyl acids

274

and other metabolites together play a key role in antimicrobial action. 5, 7

275

The NADH/NAD+ Ratio is Affected by Glucose. Using the methods described

276

above, the levels of NADH and NAD+ were measured. The concentrations of NADH

277

and NAD+ ranged from 1.43 to 220.68 nmole/mg/L, and with the increasing glucose

278

concentration, NADH showed a gradual increase, while NAD+ decreased first and

279

then increased, which made the largest ratio of NADH/NAD+ appear when YM-4-3

280

was grown in mMRS30 (Table 1). The fact of the NADH/NAD+ ratio being affected

281

by different carbon source was usually reported, which is the theoretical basis for

282

enhancing some microbial metabolites production. 28, 29 As glycolysis facilitates the

283

NADH regeneration and the conversion of α-keto acid and hydroxyl acid needs

284

NADH, 9, 10 it was speculated that glucose, the NADH/NAD+ ratio, and the production

285

of PLA and p-OH-PLA contributed to a cause-and-effect relationship.

286

The Expression of PLA and p-OH-PLA Biosynthetic-related Genes is

287

Regulated by Glucose. The result of qPCR showed that the expression levels of four 13

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genes (AtaseI, LdhL1, LdhL2 and Omt1) increased as the glucose concentration

289

increased initially and decreased afterwards (Figure 3). Compared with AtaseI, LdhL1

290

and LdhL2, Omt1 showed the largest change rate of gene expression (Figure 3). When

291

YM-4-3 was grown in mMRS30, the expression levels were 44.3 and 4.51 times than

292

those in mMRS0 and mMRS60, respectively (Figure 3). The consistency of the

293

correlation of glucose concentrations and four genes expression levels with the

294

correlation of glucose concentrations and PLA and p-OH-PLA levels suggests that

295

four genes may be involved in PLA and p-OH-PLA production. As ATases and LDHs

296

were characterized in much of the literature,

297

biological functions were studied by gene knockout technology in the following

298

experiments.

8, 9, 14, 15, 30

Omt1 was chosen and its

299

Cloning, Sequencing and Phylogenetic Analysis of the Omt1 Gene. The

300

predicted open reading frame (ORF) of Omt1 is 1,419 bp, encoding a polypeptide of

301

472 amino acid residues, whose theoretic molecular weight and isoelectric point are

302

50.63 kDa and 9.14, respectively. The predicted polypeptide contains 14 putative

303

transmembrance segments in an α-helical conformation, suggesting that OMT1 is

304

located in the cell membrane. The result of homology search indicates that sequences

305

showing high homology with OMT1 are anion permease, 2-oxoglutarate/malate

306

translocator, and citrate transporter (data not shown). As the anion permease comes

307

from genome annotation data and no specific biological functions are characterized in

308

literature, the sequence similarity analysis of OMT1, Sp. oleraceae chloroplastic

309

2-oxoglutarate/malate translocator (SoOMT)

31

and La. lactis citrate transporter

14

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(LlCitP) 32 was performed. The results showed that OMT1 was 35.73% and 12.78%

311

identical to SoOMT and LlCitP, respectively, suggesting that OMT1 was a

312

2-oxoglutarate/malate translocator. This conclusion was further supported by the

313

phylogenetic tree analysis (Figure S2). Interestingly, two other OMT1 homologs,

314

OMT2 and OMT3, were found in the YM-4-3 genome using a local BLAST search.

315

OMT1, OMT2 and OMT3 demonstrated 49.26%-69.98% homology with each other

316

and were clustered into three different subclades (Figure S2). The GenBank accession

317

numbers of Omt1, Omt2 and Omt3 were MH726204, MH726205 and MH726206,

318

respectively.

319

The Omt1-deficient Strain Construction and its Morphology Investigation.

320

After selection based on a temperature change according to Okano et al., 24 the mutant

321

(∆Omt1) losing a fragment in the middle of Omt1 ORF (Figure S3A) was obtained.

322

On agarose gel electrophoresis, the ∆Omt1 showed a smaller band compared with the

323

wild-type strain YM-4-3 (278 bp vs. 1424 bp) (Figure S3B), which corresponded with

324

the expected changes. These results and further DNA sequencing analyses (data not

325

shown) confirmed the deletion of the Omt1 gene. The strain growth ratio and acid

326

production ability had no obvious difference between ∆Omt1 and YM-4-3 (Figure S4).

327

For the morphological analysis, the SEM images revealed that the cell surface of

328

YM-4-3 was smooth and the cell size was uniform, while the ∆Omt1 cells showed

329

characteristics with different size and aggregation distribution and some with ruptured

330

cell walls, which lead to the cellular contents exudation (Figure 4A and B). The

331

phenomenon that the cell integrity of ∆Omt1 was damaged was further confirmed by 15

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the TEM images (Figure 4C and D). These results suggest that the Omt1 gene is

333

involved in the cell morphogenesis of YM-4-3, which may be related to the identity of

334

the OMT1 membrane protein.

335

Production of PLA and p-OH-PLA in the Omt1-deficient Strain. To explore

336

whether OMT1 is related to the transport and biosynthesis of PLA and p-OH-PLA,

337

the intra- and/or extra-cellular PLA and p-OH-PLA levels were detected. As shown in

338

Figure 5, the intra- and extra-cellular production of PLA and p-OH-PLA was not

339

significantly different from the extra-cellular production when YM-4-3 or ΔOmt1 was

340

grown in the same media. The result indicated that the intra-cellular PLA and

341

p-OH-PLA was completely transported out of the cells once synthesized, and the

342

Omt1 gene disruption had no effect on the transport of PLA and p-OH-PLA. However,

343

the extra-cellular PLA production of YM-4-3 was increased to 1.37-6.99 times

344

compared with that of ΔOmt1 when the strains were cultivated in the same media

345

(Figure 5A). In comparison, the extra-cellular p-OH-PLA output of YM-4-3 was 1.53

346

and 1.59 times higher than that of ΔOmt1 when the strains were grown in mMRS30

347

and mMRS60, respectively (Figure 5B). These results together with the fact of the

348

Omt1 gene knockout without impacting the transport of PLA and p-OH-PLA

349

illustrated that OMT1 was involved in the biosynthesis of PLA and p-OH-PLA. As

350

mentioned above, OMT1 was identified as a 2-oxoglutarate/malate translocator. In

351

plant chloroplasts and plastids, the 2-oxoglutarate/malate translocator is responsible

352

for the importation of 2-oxoglutarate in exchange for stromal malate. 17, 31, 33 In Lb.

353

plantarum, OMTs may import 2-oxoglutarate into the cytosol and in counter 16

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exchange with the export of malate, just like the citrate carrier CitT (an OMT1

355

homolog) works in E. coli.

356

intra-cellular 2-oxoglutarate level, which accordingly interferes with the conversion of

357

Phe and Tyr to PPA and p-OH-PPA, respectively, because 2-oxoglutarate is a suitable

358

and necessary α-amino group acceptor in amino acid metabolism. 8, 35 As a result of

359

the decreasing PPA and p-OH-PPA content, the production of PLA and p-OH-PLA

360

was consequentially reduced. This may be the reason that OMT1 affects the synthesis

361

of PLA and p-OH-PLA.

34

In this sense, Omt1 gene disruption will reduce the

362

In conclusion, glucose showed pleiotropic effects on the metabolism of YM-4-3,

363

including on the production of PLA and p-OH-PLA, the antimicrobial activity, the

364

NADH/NAD+ ratio and the expression of PLA and p-OH-PLA biosynthetic-related

365

genes. Among them, PLA and p-OH-PLA showed strong antimicrobial ability,

366

NADH supplied the reducing capability in the process of PLA and p-OH-PLA

367

biosynthesis, and OMT1 mediated the biosynthesis of PLA and p-OH-PLA and the

368

cell morphogenesis of YM-4-3. The data indicated that glucose, the NADH/NAD+

369

ratio and/or some genes (e.g., the Omt1 gene), the PLA and p-OH-PLA production,

370

and the antimicrobial activity were involved in the cause-and-effect relationship. To

371

our knowledge, this study reported for the first time the mechanism of glucose

372

affecting the production of PLA and p-OH-PLA from the perspectives of both

373

metabolites and genes.

374 375

ASSOCIATED CONTENT 17

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376

Supporting Information

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The strains, plasmids and primers used in this study (Table S1), the growth of

378

food-borne pathogens in 96 well plate (Figure S1), the phylogenetic neighbor-joining

379

tree of OMTs (Figure S2), the schematic illustration of the Omt1 gene knockout

380

(Figure S3), and the growth and acid production curves of YM-4-3 and ∆Omt1

381

(Figure S4).

382 383

AUTHOR INFORMATION

384

Corresponding Author

385

*(Y.L.)

386

[email protected].

387

Author Contributions

388

║Y.

389

Funding

390

This work was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (No.

391

31660451 and 31300068) and the Foundation of Key Scientific Research Project of

392

China Tobacco Yunnan Industrial Co., Ltd. (No. 2018XY03).

393

Notes

394

The authors declare no competing financial interest.

Phone:

+86-871-65920759.

Fax:

+86-871-65920759.

E-mail:

Dao and K. Zhang made equal contributions to this paper.

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Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry

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Figure Captions

528 529 530

Figure 1. The bioproduction yields of PLA and p-OH-PLA from YM-4-3 incubated in the modified MRS broth (A) and the modified CDM broth (B).

531

Figure 2. The inhibitory effects of YM-4-3 CFS and tCFS on food-borne pathogenic

532

fungi (A) and bacteria (B). * (P < 0.05), ** (P < 0.01) and *** (P < 0.001) are

533

considered significantly different from CFS or tCFS harvested from mMRS0.

534

Figure 3. The relative expression levels of PLA and p-OH-PLA biosynthetic-related

535

genes of YM-4-3. The expression level in mMRS0 was set as 1 and # denotes the

536

fold change relative to mMRS0 ≥ 2.

537

Figure 4. SEM (A and B) and TEM (C and D) micrographs of YM-4-3 (A and C) and

538

ΔOmt1 (B and D). The arrows in B and D indicate the leakage of cell contents

539

and cytolysis, respectively.

540

Figure 5. The intra- and extra-cellular PLA (A) and p-OH-PLA (B) levels of YM-4-3

541

and ΔOmt1. Significant differences are presented as *** (P < 0.001). Error bars

542

show standard deviations (SD) from three repeated experiments.

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Table 1. Determination of the Amount of NADH and NAD+ a

a

Media

NADH (nmol/mg/L)

NAD+ (nmol/mg/L)

NADH/NAD+ (1e-2)

mMRS0

1.43 ± 0.47

89.03 ± 0.61

1.61 ± 0.54

mMRS30

4.84 ± 0.34

45.94 ± 0.56

10.54 ± 0.88*

mMRS60

15.34 ± 0.27

220.68 ± 4.5

6.96 ± 0.27*

Each value is the mean of three parallel replicates ± standard deviation. Asterisks

indicate NADH/NAD+ ratios of YM-4-3 cultivated in mMRS30 and mMRS60 that are significantly different (P < 0.05) from YM-4-3 in mMRS0.

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Figure 1. The bioproduction yields of PLA and p-OH-PLA from YM-4-3 incubated in the modified MRS broth (A) and the modified CDM broth (B). 147x63mm (300 x 300 DPI)

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Figure 2. The inhibitory effects of YM-4-3 CFS and tCFS on food-borne pathogenic fungi (A) and bacteria (B). * (P < 0.05), ** (P < 0.01) and *** (P < 0.001) are considered significantly different from CFS or tCFS harvested from mMRS0. 147x77mm (600 x 600 DPI)

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Figure 3. The relative expression levels of PLA and p-OH-PLA biosynthetic-related genes of YM-4-3. The expression level in mMRS0 was set as 1 and # denotes the fold change relative to mMRS0 ≥ 2. 99x83mm (300 x 300 DPI)

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Figure 4. SEM (A and B) and TEM (C and D) micrographs of YM-4-3 (A and C) and ΔOmt1 (B and D). The arrows in B and D indicate the leakage of cell contents and cytolysis, respectively. 119x96mm (300 x 300 DPI)

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Figure 5. The intra- and extra-cellular PLA (A) and p-OH-PLA (B) levels of YM-4-3 and ΔOmt1. Significant differences are presented as *** (P < 0.001). Error bars show standard deviations (SD) from three repeated experiments. 177x58mm (300 x 300 DPI)

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For Table of Contents Only 84x45mm (300 x 300 DPI)

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