Low cell surface hydrophobicity is one of the key factors for high butanol tolerance of Lactic acid bacteria

Eng Life Sci. 2018 Nov 29;19(2):133-142. doi: 10.1002/elsc.201800141. eCollection 2019 Feb.

Abstract

Highly butanol-tolerant strains have always been attractive because of their potential as microbial hosts for butanol production. However, due to the amphiphilic nature of 1-butanol as a solvent, the relationship between the cell surface hydrophobicity and butanol resistance remained ambiguous to date. In this work, the quantitatively estimated cell surface hydrophobicity of 74 Lactic acid bacteria strains were juxtaposed to their tolerance to various butanol concentrations. The obtained results revealed that the strains' hydrophobicity was inversely proportional to their butanol tolerance. All highly butanol-resistant strains were hydrophilic (cell surface hydrophobicity<1%), whereas the more hydrophobic the strains were, the more sensitive to butanol they were. Furthermore, cultivation at increasing butanol concentrations showed a clear tendency to decrease the level of hydrophobicity in all tested organisms, thus suggesting possible adaptation mechanisms. Purposeful reduction of cell surface hydrophobicity (by removal of S-layer proteins from the cell envelope) also led to an increase of butanol resistance. Since the results covered 23 different Lactic acid bacteria species of seven genera, it could be concluded that regardless of the species, the lower degree of cells' hydrophobicity clearly correlates with the higher level of butanol tolerance.

Keywords: Lactic acid bacteria; butanol tolerance; hydrophobicity; surface layer proteins.