Lecture 10: Fermentation - BIOL371 Microbiology PDF
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This document is a lecture on fermentation, detailing fermentations, energy conservation, and redox considerations. The lecture also mentions various types of fermentations including primary and secondary fermentations.
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BIOL371: Microbiology Lecture 10 – Fermentation 1 Topics of today 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. Energetic and redox considerations Lactic and mixed acid fermentation Fermentations of obligate anaerobes Secondary fermentations Fermentations that lack substrate-level phosphorylation Syntrophy Hydrocarbon...
BIOL371: Microbiology Lecture 10 – Fermentation 1 Topics of today 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. Energetic and redox considerations Lactic and mixed acid fermentation Fermentations of obligate anaerobes Secondary fermentations Fermentations that lack substrate-level phosphorylation Syntrophy Hydrocarbon metabolism Materials covered: Chapters 14.17-14.23 Figures 14.43-14.48, 14.50, 14.51, 14.53 Table 14.5, 14.6 2 Fermentations Fermentations: Energy conservation depends primarily on substrate-level phosphorylation Defined by lack of external electron acceptor Achieve redox balance by donating electrons to metabolic intermediates excreted as fermentation products Two major challenges Conserve much less energy than respiratory organisms Difficult to achieve redox balance Tremendous reaction diversity Many only ferment when lacking external electron acceptors anoxically Many more exclusively fermentative 3 Energy-rich compounds and substrate-level phosphorylation Energy-rich compounds contain an energy-rich phosphate bond or coenzyme A These compounds are formed during fermentation Allows microbe to make ATP by transferring the phosphate bond to ADP by substrate-level phosphorylation Production of fatty acids is common in fermentations, gives opportunity to do substrate-level phosphorylation by producing fatty acid coenzyme-A derivative 4 Energy-rich compounds that can couple to substrate-level phosphorylation 5 Achieving redox balance Total number of each type of atom and electrons in reactants/substrates and products must balance Redox balance achieved by excretion of fermentation products; e.g., acids, alcohols Redox balance often facilitated by H2 production H2 is a powerful electron donor for respiration 6 Mechanisms of reducing protons to H2 during fermentation 7 Common fermentations and example organisms Fermentations are classified by either the substrate fermented or the products formed (e.g., alcohol) 8 Homofermentative lactic acid bacteria Lactic acid bacteria are Gram-positive nonsporulating bacteria that produce lactic acid as sole or major fermentation product Homofermentative yields only lactic acid and two ATP/ glucose Difference is the presence of aldolase from glycolysis 9 Heterofermentative lactic acid bacteria Heterofermentation yields lactic acid, ethanol, CO2, and one ATP/glucose Absence of aldolase from glycolysis Observation of CO2 in culture distinguishes heterofermenters from homofermenters 10 Mixed-acid fermentations and butanediol production Mixed-acid fermentations: characteristics of enteric bacteria; e.g., E. coli Generate acetic, lactic, and succinic acids Also typically formed are ethanol, CO2, and H2 Glycolysis used Some produce neutral products such as butanediol 11 Obligate anaerobic fermenters Many fermenters are obligate anaerobes Grow under highly reducing conditions Cannot tolerate O2, often produce H2 from fermentation • Clostridium species are obligately fermentative anaerobes • Ferment sugars, amino acids, purines and pyrimidines, and other compounds • Most ATP synthesis from substrate-level phosphorylation • Some generate proton motive force 12 Sugar fermentation by Clostridium Saccharolytic (sugar fermenting); e.g., Clostridium pasteruianum Produce butyric acid and H2 as major products 1.5 glucose converted to 3 pyruvates and 3 NADHs via glycolysis Pyruvate from glycolysis split to acetyl Co-A, CO2, and ferrodoxinred Cytoplasmic hydrogenase reduces H+ to H2 to balance redox 13 Amino acid fermentation and the Stickland reaction Amino Acid Fermentation by Clostridia Proteolytic clostridia degrade proteins released from dead organisms and ferment amino acids Some strictly proteolytic, some both saccharolytic and proteolytic Some ferment individual amino acids to yield a fatty acid– CoA derivative, then produce ATP via substrate-level phosphorylation with ammonia (NH3) and CO2 Stickland reaction: ferment amino acid pairs with one amino acid as electron donor and the other acceptor Products are NH3 and CO2, and a carboxylic acid with one fewer carbon than the oxidized amino acid Purines and pyrimidines from nucleic acid degradation lead to many of the same fermentation products and ATP through fatty acid–CoA derivatives 14 Use of energy-converting hydrogenases Example: hyperthermophilic archaea Pyrococcus furiosus Uses modified glycolysis, forming 3phosphoglycerate instead of 1,3bisphosphoglyceric acid Forms ferrodoxinred and ATP from conversion of pyruvate to acetate Uses energy-converting hydrogenases to achieve redox balance Translocates Na+ across membrane, sodium motive force synthesizes ATP Generates 4 ATP from substrate-level and oxidative phosphorylation, better than lactic acid bacteria 15 Primary vs secondary fermentations Primary fermentations are carried out by organisms that break down and ferment carbohydrate, protein, fat polymers and monomers to reduced products, H2, CO2 Secondary fermentations use fermentation products as substrates for additional fermentation reactions Products are mainly volatile fatty acids, H2, CO2 Propionibacterium, an important agent in the ripening of Emmental (Swiss) cheese, probably uses lactic acid, a fermentation product of lactic acid bacteria, as a major substrate to produce propionic acid (nutty taste of the cheese) and CO2 (holes in the cheese) 16 Fermentations that lack substrate-level phosprylation Fermentations of certain compounds do not yield sufficient energy to synthesize ATP by substrate-level phosphorylation but support anaerobic growth In these cases, catabolism is linked to ion pumps that establish a membrane gradient (e.g., succinate fermentation by Propionigenium modestum, oxalate fermentation by Oxalobacter formigenes) 17 Succinate fermentation: lacking substrate-level phosphorylation Propionigenium modestum: requires NaCl for growth and succinate catabolism under strict anoxic conditions An unusual decarboxylase, sodiumextruding decarboxylase, is involved in the fermentation Succinate is converted to propionate through the decarboxylation of the intermediate (S)-methylmalonyl-CoA Energy released by the decarboxylation reaction is used to translocate two Na+ across the membrane Energy is then conserved by using a Na+ -linked ATPase 18 Syntrophy Syntrophy: Two different microbes cooperate to perform a metabolic reaction neither can do alone Most syntrophic reactions are secondary fermentations Major compounds are fatty acids and alcohols Interspecies Electron Transfer is the core of syntrophic reactions One species serves as the electron acceptor for another species that is the electron donor Electron transfer can be direct: through contact between cells; or Mediated: through diffusion of metabolic products; e.g., H2 19 Interspecies H2 transfer The ethanol fermentation carried out by the syntroph (Pelotomaculum) has a positive free energy; thus it cannot grow in pure culture The H2 produced can be used as an electron donor by a methanogen to produce methane The sum of the two reactions is exergonic; hence when cultured together, both organisms grow Overview of syntrophic transfer of H2 Reactions 20 Oxygenases in aliphatic hydrocarbon Oxygenases catalyze the incorporation of O2 into organic (and some inorganic) compounds Dioxygenases: incorporate both oxygen atoms Monooxygenases: incorporate one oxygen atom with the second reduced to H2O Usually dependent on NADH or NADPH Oxygen atom is incorporated initially at a terminal carbon End-product is a fatty acid of the same carbon length as the original hydrocarbon Fatty acid is oxidized by beta-oxidation: removing two carbons at a time, forming NADH for electron transport, acetyl Co-A, and a fatty acid two carbons shorter Acetyl-CoA is oxidized through the citric acid cycle or to make new cellular material 21 Multiple oxygenases in aromatics catabolism Typically starts with formation of catechol or structurally related compound formation via oxygenases Benzene to catechol using a hydroxylating monooxgenase Toluene to methylcatechol by a hydroxylating dioxygenase Catechol and related aromatics are cleaved by ring-cleavage dioxygenases Degraded into compounds that can enter the citric acid cycle 22