Enhancement of Thermal Resistance by Metal Ions in Thermotolerant Zymomonas mobilis TISTR 548
Tomoyuki Kosaka, Aya Nishioka, Tomoko Sakurada, Kento Miura, Sakunda Anggarini, Mamoru Yamada
Abstract
The thermal resistance of fermenting microbes is a key characteristic of stable fermentation at high temperatures. Therefore, the effects of various metal ions on the growth of Zymomonas mobilis TISTR 548, a thermotolerant ethanologenic bacterium, at a critical high temperature (CHT) were examined. Addition of Mg2+ and K+ increased CHT by 1°C, but the effects of the addition of Mn2+, Ni2+, Co2+, Al3+, Fe3+, and Zn2+ on CHT were negligible. To understand the physiological functions associated with the addition of Mg2+ or K+, cell morphology, intracellular reactive oxygen species (ROS) level, and ethanol productivity were investigated at 39°C (i.e., above CHT). Cell elongation was repressed by Mg2+, but not by K+. Addition of both metals reduced intracellular ROS level, with only K+ showing the highest reduction strength, followed by both metals and only Mg2+. Additionally, ethanol productivity was recovered with the addition of both metals. Moreover, the addition of Mg2+ or K+ at a nonpermissive temperature in 26 thermosensitive, single gene-disrupted mutants of Z. mobilis TISTR 548 revealed that several mutants showed metal ion-specific growth improvement. Remarkably, K+ repressed growth of 2 mutants. These results suggest that K+ and Mg2+ enhance cell growth at CHT via different mechanisms, which involve the maintenance of low intracellular ROS levels.