Title Scavenging for hydroxybenzoic acids in Cupriavidus necator: studying ligand sensitivity using a biosensor-based approach
Authors Sabaliauske, Ingrida ; Augustiniene, Ernesta ; Al Akiki Dit Al Mazraani, Rizkallah ; Tamasauskaite, Monika ; Malys, Naglis
DOI 10.3390/biom16010157
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Is Part of Biomolecules.. Basel : MDPI. 2026, vol. 16, iss. 1, art. no. 157, p. 1-14.. ISSN 2218-273X
Keywords [eng] transcription factor-based biosensor ; hydroxybenzoic acid ; 2-hydroxybenzoate ; 4-hydroxybenzoate ; Cupriavidus necator
Abstract [eng] The increasing demand for rapid identification of bacteria capable of degrading environmentally relevant organic compounds highlights the need for scalable and selective analytical tools. Cupriavidus necator catabolizes several hydroxybenzoic acids, including 2-hydroxybenzoate (salicylate, 2-HBA), 4-hydroxybenzoate (4-HBA), and 3-hydroxybenzoate (3-HBA), funneling them into central aromatic catabolism via monooxygenation to 2,5-dihydroxybenzoate (gentisate, 2,5-dHBA) and 3,4-dihydroxybenzoate (protocatechuate, 3,4-dHBA) followed by the oxidative cleavage reaction, enabling complete conversion to tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle intermediates. To quantify how readily C. necator is able to activate catabolic genes in response to hydroxybenzoic acid, an extracellular ligand, we applied an approach centered on a transcription-factor (TF)-based biosensor that combines ligand-bound regulator activity with a fluorescent reporter. This approach allowed to evaluate the ligand sensitivity by determining gene activation threshold ACmin and halfmaximal effective concentration EC50. Amongst studied hydroxybenzoic acids, 2-HBA and 4-HBA sensors from C. necator showed very low thresholds 4.8 and 2.4 μM and EC50 values of 19.91 and 13.06 μM, indicating high sensitivity to these compounds and implicating a scavenging characteristic of associated catabolism. This study shows that the TF-basedbiosensor approach applied for mapping functional sensing ranges of hydroxybenzoates combined with the research and informatics of catabolism can advance our understanding of how gene expression regulation systems have evolved to respond differentially to the availability and concentration of carbon sources. Furthermore, it can inform metabolic engineering strategies in the prevention of premature pathway activation or in predicting competitive substrate hierarchies in complex mixed environments.
Published Basel : MDPI
Type Journal article
Language English
Publication date 2026
CC license CC license description