Large-scale reduction of the Bacillus subtilis genome: Consequences for the transcriptional network, resource allocation, and metabolism
- Daniel R. Reuß1,
- Josef Altenbuchner2,
- Ulrike Mäder3,
- Hermann Rath3,
- Till Ischebeck1,
- Praveen Kumar Sappa3,
- Andrea Thürmer1,
- Cyprien Guerin4,
- Pierre Nicolas4,
- Leif Steil3,
- Bingyao Zhu1,
- Ivo Feussner1,
- Stefan Klumpp1,
- Rolf Daniel1,
- Fabian M. Commichau1,
- Uwe Völker3 and
- Jörg Stülke1,5
- 1 University of Göttingen;
- 2 University of Stuttgart;
- 3 University Medicine Greifswald;
- 4 MalAGE, INRA, France
- ↵* Corresponding author; email: jstuelk{at}gwdg.de
Abstract
Understanding cellular life requires a comprehensive knowledge of the essential cellular functions, the components involved, and their interactions. Minimized genomes are an important tool to gain this knowledge. We have constructed strains of the model bacterium Bacillus subtilis whose genomes have been reduced by about 36%. These strains are fully viable and their growth rates in complex medium are comparable to those of wild type strains. An in-depth multi-omics analysis of the genome reduced strains revealed how the deletions affect the transcription regulatory network of the cell, translation resource allocation, and metabolism. A comparison of gene counts and resource allocation demonstrates drastic differences in the two parameters, with 50% of the genes using as little as 10% of translation capacity whereas the 6% essential genes require 57% of the translation resources. Taken together, the results are a valuable resource on gene dispensability in B. subtilis, and they suggest the roads to further genome reduction to approach the final aim of a minimal cell in which all functions are understood.
- Received August 29, 2016.
- Accepted December 1, 2016.
- Published by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press
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