RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Detoxification of endogenous serine prevents cell lysis upon glucose depletion in bacteria JF bioRxiv FD Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory SP 343921 DO 10.1101/343921 A1 Michelle A. Kriner A1 Arvind R. Subramaniam YR 2018 UL http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2018/06/11/343921.abstract AB The amino acid serine, despite its diverse metabolic roles, can become toxic when present in excess. Indeed, many bacteria rapidly deaminate exogenously supplied serine into pyruvate and ammonia, even at the expense of biomass production. Here we report a surprising case in which endogenously produced serine must be detoxified in order for the bacterium Escherichia coli to survive. Specifically, we show that E. coli cells lacking the sdaCB operon, which encodes a serine transporter and a serine deaminase, lyse upon glucose depletion when serine is absent from the growth medium. Lysis can be prevented by omission of glycine or by inhibition of the glycine cleavage system, suggesting that activation of glycine catabolism upon glucose depletion causes a transient increase in intracellular serine levels. Heterologous expression of the serine transporter SdaC is sufficient to prevent lysis, indicating a dominant role for serine export, rather than deamination, in mitigating serine toxicity. Since lysis can be modulated by altering alanine availability, we further propose that mis-incorporation of serine instead of alanine into peptidoglycan crosslinks is the cause of lysis. Together, our results reveal that SdaC-mediated detoxification of intracellularly produced serine plays a protective role during sudden shifts in nutrient availability in bacteria.Author summary The amino acid serine is a building block used to make many types of macromolecules, yet bacteria actively degrade serine that is provided in growth media. Serine degradation is thought to prevent toxic serine accumulation, but the biological role of this process is not fully understood. We observed that cells lacking the sdaCB operon, which encodes a serine transporter and an enzyme that converts serine to pyruvate, suddenly lyse upon depletion of glucose from the growth medium. This surprising phenotype occurs only in media lacking serine, suggesting that sdaCB is required to detoxify intracellularly produced serine. Expression of the serine transporter SdaC is sufficient to prevent lysis, providing the first evidence that serine export can be an essential function of this protein. Our results reveal that sudden shifts in nutrient availability can increase the intracellular concentration of useful metabolites to toxic levels and suggest that increasing intracellular serine levels by manipulating SdaC activity may be a possible antimicrobial strategy.