Functional Genomics Reveals TNT Bioremediation Strategies in Pantoea sp. MT58 and Pseudomonas putida KT2440

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Abstract

2,4,6-Trinitrotoluene (TNT) is a recalcitrant and pervasive environmental pollutant. Although different environmental microbes have demonstrated their ability to degrade or transform TNT, the underlying genetic basis and cellular machinery remain unclear. In this study, we investigated bacterial strategies in response to TNT exposure in Pantoea sp. MT58 and P. putida KT2440 using proteomics and random barcode transposon-site sequencing (RB-TnSeq). Pantoea sp. MT58 was found to utilize TNT as a sole nitrogen source, whereas P. putida KT2440 exhibited only stress tolerance without assimilation. Pantoea sp. MT58 encodes multiple putative nitroreductases that were upregulated, yet deletion of these genes did not affect growth on TNT, revealing pathway redundancy. Furthermore, fitness profiling provided no evidence for genes involved in the canonical Meisenheimer-complex pathway associated with nitrite release. Instead, the data are most consistent with a sequential nitro-group reduction route in which nitrogen is ultimately recovered as ammonium, with nitrogen routed through the GS-GOGAT pathway with purine and urea pools as the candidate buffering architecture for TNT mineralization. Conversely, P. putida KT2440 relied on Ttg/RND efflux pumps and toluene tolerance proteins for survival without nitrogen assimilation from TNT. This work distinguishes routes for productive nitrogen assimilation from those involved in nitroaromatic tolerance, expanding the mechanistic understanding of anthropogenic compound metabolism to inform future bioremediation efforts.

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