Summary
The Gram-positive aerobe Streptomyces coelicolor
undergoes a complex life cycle including growth as vegetative hyphae
and the production of aerial hyphae and spores. Little is known about
how spores retain viability in the presence of oxygen; however, nothing
is known about this process during anaerobiosis. Here, we demonstrate
that one of the three respiratory nitrate reductases, Nar-1, synthesized
by S. coelicolor is functional exclusively in spores. A tight
coupling between nitrite production and the activity of the
cytoplasmically oriented Nar-1 enzyme was demonstrated. No exogenous
electron donor was required to drive nitrate reduction, which indicates
that spore storage compounds are used as electron donors. Oxygen
reversibly inhibited nitrate reduction by spores but not by spore
extracts, suggesting that nitrate transport might be the target of
oxygen inhibition. Nar-1 activity required no de novo protein
synthesis indicating that Nar-1 is synthesized during sporulation and
remains in a latently active state throughout the lifetime of the spore.
Remarkably, the rates of oxygen and of nitrate reduction by wetted
spores were comparable. Together, these findings suggest that S. coelicolor spores have the potential to maintain a membrane potential using nitrate as an alternative electron acceptor.
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