Zinc oxide induces the stringent response and major reorientations in the central metabolism of Bacillus subtilis
Sylvie Luche (1), Elise Eymard-Vernain (1), H\'el\`ene Diemer (2),, Alain Van Dorsselaer (2), Thierry Rabilloud (1), C\'ecile Lelong (1) ((1), LCBM - UMR 5249, (2) LSMBO-DSA-IPHC)

TL;DR
This study reveals that zinc oxide nanoparticles induce a stringent response and reorient central metabolism in Bacillus subtilis, mainly through zinc dissolution and complex regulatory mechanisms, affecting bacterial stress responses and metabolism.
Contribution
It demonstrates that ZnO nanoparticles trigger a specific metabolic reorientation and stringent response in Bacillus subtilis, highlighting zinc dissolution as the main factor and elucidating underlying regulatory pathways.
Findings
ZnO induces the stringent response in B. subtilis.
ZnO causes reorientation of central metabolism.
Zinc dissolution mainly drives observed effects.
Abstract
Microorganisms, such as bacteria, are one of the first targets of nanoparticles in the environment. In this study, we tested the effect of two nanoparticles, ZnO and TiO2, with the salt ZnSO4 as the control, on the Gram-positive bacterium Bacillus subtilis by 2D gel electrophoresis-based proteomics. Despite a significant effect on viability (LD50), TiO2 NPs had no detectable effect on the proteomic pattern, while ZnO NPs and ZnSO4 significantly modified B. subtilis metabolism. These results allowed us to conclude that the effects of ZnO observed in this work were mainly attributable to Zn dissolution in the culture media. Proteomic analysis highlighted twelve modulated proteins related to central metabolism: MetE and MccB (cysteine metabolism), OdhA, AspB, IolD, AnsB, PdhB and YtsJ (Krebs cycle) and XylA, YqjI, Drm and Tal (pentose phosphate pathway). Biochemical assays, such as free…
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