Polyphosphate - an ancient energy source and active metabolic regulator

<p>Abstract</p> <p>There are a several molecules on Earth that effectively store energy within their covalent bonds, and one of these energy-rich molecules is polyphosphate. In microbial cells, polyphosphate granules are synthesised for both energy and phosphate storage and are deg...

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Main Authors: Achbergerová Lucia, Nahálka Jozef
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2011-08-01
Series:Microbial Cell Factories
Online Access:http://www.microbialcellfactories.com/content/10/1/63
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spelling doaj-8041ccad61064a0b9250b13c9efed9b42020-11-25T00:45:01ZengBMCMicrobial Cell Factories1475-28592011-08-011016310.1186/1475-2859-10-63Polyphosphate - an ancient energy source and active metabolic regulatorAchbergerová LuciaNahálka Jozef<p>Abstract</p> <p>There are a several molecules on Earth that effectively store energy within their covalent bonds, and one of these energy-rich molecules is polyphosphate. In microbial cells, polyphosphate granules are synthesised for both energy and phosphate storage and are degraded to produce nucleotide triphosphate or phosphate. Energy released from these energetic carriers is used by the cell for production of all vital molecules such as amino acids, nucleobases, sugars and lipids. Polyphosphate chains directly regulate some processes in the cell and are used as phosphate donors in gene regulation. These two processes, energetic metabolism and regulation, are orchestrated by polyphosphate kinases. Polyphosphate kinases (PPKs) can currently be categorized into three groups (PPK1, PPK2 and PPK3) according their functionality; they can also be divided into three groups according their homology (<it>Ec</it>PPK1, <it>Pa</it>PPK2 and <it>Sc</it>VTC). This review discusses historical information, similarities and differences, biochemical characteristics, roles in stress response regulation and possible applications in the biotechnology industry of these enzymes. At the end of the review, a hypothesis is discussed in view of synthetic biology applications that states polyphosphate and calcium-rich organelles have endosymbiotic origins from ancient protocells that metabolized polyphosphate.</p> http://www.microbialcellfactories.com/content/10/1/63
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Achbergerová Lucia
Nahálka Jozef
spellingShingle Achbergerová Lucia
Nahálka Jozef
Polyphosphate - an ancient energy source and active metabolic regulator
Microbial Cell Factories
author_facet Achbergerová Lucia
Nahálka Jozef
author_sort Achbergerová Lucia
title Polyphosphate - an ancient energy source and active metabolic regulator
title_short Polyphosphate - an ancient energy source and active metabolic regulator
title_full Polyphosphate - an ancient energy source and active metabolic regulator
title_fullStr Polyphosphate - an ancient energy source and active metabolic regulator
title_full_unstemmed Polyphosphate - an ancient energy source and active metabolic regulator
title_sort polyphosphate - an ancient energy source and active metabolic regulator
publisher BMC
series Microbial Cell Factories
issn 1475-2859
publishDate 2011-08-01
description <p>Abstract</p> <p>There are a several molecules on Earth that effectively store energy within their covalent bonds, and one of these energy-rich molecules is polyphosphate. In microbial cells, polyphosphate granules are synthesised for both energy and phosphate storage and are degraded to produce nucleotide triphosphate or phosphate. Energy released from these energetic carriers is used by the cell for production of all vital molecules such as amino acids, nucleobases, sugars and lipids. Polyphosphate chains directly regulate some processes in the cell and are used as phosphate donors in gene regulation. These two processes, energetic metabolism and regulation, are orchestrated by polyphosphate kinases. Polyphosphate kinases (PPKs) can currently be categorized into three groups (PPK1, PPK2 and PPK3) according their functionality; they can also be divided into three groups according their homology (<it>Ec</it>PPK1, <it>Pa</it>PPK2 and <it>Sc</it>VTC). This review discusses historical information, similarities and differences, biochemical characteristics, roles in stress response regulation and possible applications in the biotechnology industry of these enzymes. At the end of the review, a hypothesis is discussed in view of synthetic biology applications that states polyphosphate and calcium-rich organelles have endosymbiotic origins from ancient protocells that metabolized polyphosphate.</p>
url http://www.microbialcellfactories.com/content/10/1/63
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