Bioanalytical Methods Development for Detection and Characterization of Labile Metal Pools in Escherichia Coli
Abstract
Low-molecular-mass (LMM) transition metal complexes are thought to play essential roles in metal ion trafficking, regulation, and signaling in biological systems. Their chemical identities
remain largely unknown due to their rapid ligand-exchange rates and weak metal-ligand bonds. Lack of chemical characterization unfortunately precludes biological function. In this dissertation, methods were developed and ameliorated for an integrative approach using LC, ICP-MS, and ESI-MS to investigate the chemical nature of the labile metal pools (LMP) constituting the E. coli cytosol.
An E. coli cytosol isolation procedure was developed that was devoid of detergents,
strongly coordinating buffers, and EDTA. The interaction of metal ions from LMM metal complexes with a SEC column was minimized by pre-loading the column with 67ZnSO4. FTSs contained ca. 80 μM iron, 15 μM nickel, 13 μM zinc, 10 μM copper, and 1.4 μM manganese. FTSs
chromatographically exhibited 2 – 5 iron, 2 nickel, 2 – 5 zinc, 2 – 4 copper, and 2 manganese species. Endogenous cytosolic salts suppressed ESI-MS signals, making detection of LMM metal
complexes difficult. Major LMM sulfur- and phosphorus-containing species were identified, though. These included GSH, GSSG, methionine, cysteine, orthophosphate, and common mono- and dinucleotides such as ATP, ADP, AMP, and NADH. FTSs from cells grown in media supplemented with one of these metal salts exhibited increased peak intensity for the supplemented metal indicating that the size of the LMPs is sensitive to the nutrient metal concentration whereas treatment of the FTS with a metal chelator demonstrated the lability of these LMM metal complexes.
The labile nickel pool (LNP) was selected for further identification efforts based on water-exchanging rates for transition metals. SEC-ICP-MS revealed 4 Ni-containing peaks, which were tentatively assigned to Ni(GSSG), Ni(Asp), Ni(L-His), and Ni(ATP) due to chromatographic
behavior of nickel standards and results from exogenous nickel and ligand spiking into FTS. ESI-MS analysis of SEC fractions from FTS revealed Ni(GSSG), suggesting Ni(GSSG) is part of the
LNP. HILIC-ESI-MS and HILIC-ICP-MS revealed Ni(GSSG) as the dominant Ni(II) species in the FTS followed by Ni(L-His)2 and then Ni(Asp)2 and Ni(ATP), showcasing the first molecular description of a LMP in E. coli.
Subject
labile metal poolslow-molecular-mass
Inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry
liquid chromatography
size-exclusion
hydrophilic interaction
electrospray ionization mass spectrometry
E. coli
nickel
iron
zinc
copper
manganese
Citation
Brawley, Hayley N (2021). Bioanalytical Methods Development for Detection and Characterization of Labile Metal Pools in Escherichia Coli. Doctoral dissertation, Texas A&M University. Available electronically from https : / /hdl .handle .net /1969 .1 /195205.