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Journal of Bacteriology, June 2003, p . 3606-3612, Vol . 185,
No . 12
Molecular Characterization of Inulosucrase from Leuconostoc citreum: a
Fructosyltransferase within a Glucosyltransferase
Vanesa Olivares-Illana, Agustín López-Munguía,*
and Clarita Olvera
Departamento de Ingeniería Celular y Biocatálisis, Instituto de
Biotecnología, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Cuernavaca Morelo,
Mexico
Received 15 January 2003/ Accepted 26 March 2003
The gene coding for inulosucrase in Leuconostoc citreum CW28,
islA, was cloned, sequenced, and expressed in Escherichia coli .
The recombinant enzyme catalyzed inulin synthesis from sucrose
like the wild-type enzyme . Inulosucrase presents an unusual
structure: its N-terminal region is similar to the variable region of
glucosyltransferases, its catalytic domain is similar to
fructosyltransferases from various microorganisms, and its C-terminal
domain presents similarity to the glucan binding domain from
alternansucrase, a glucosyltransferase from Leuconostoc
mesenteroides NRRL B-1355 . From sequence comparison, it was found
that this fructosyltransferase is a natural chimeric enzyme resulting
from the substitution of the catalytic domain of alternansucrase by a
fructosyltransferase . Two different forms of the islA gene
truncated in the C-terminal glucan binding domain were successfully
expressed in E . coli and retained their ability to synthesize
inulin but lost thermal stability . This is the first report of an
inulosucrase bearing structural features of both glucosyltransferases
and fructosyltransferases .
Glycosyltransferases are enzymes that catalyze the transfer of
glycosyl residues from a donor molecule to a particular acceptor (22) .
Lactic acid bacteria produce a wide variety of a particular group of
glycosyltransferases: glucosyltransferases (GTFs) and
fructosyltransferases (FTFs), which synthesize glucose and fructose
polymers, respectively, from sucrose without the need of cofactors (9,
26) . An interesting feature of FTFs and GTFs is their ability
to synthesize oligosaccharides of different polymerization degrees
when efficient acceptor molecules like maltose or lactose are
added to sucrose in the reaction medium (8, 16,
24) . This is known as the acceptor reaction, and
the enzymes vary in their efficiency to perform this reaction .
GTFs have been the subject of intensive research, particularly
those involved in industrial dextran production such as dextransucrase
(DS) or alternansucrase produced by Leuconostoc spp . (28),
whereas GTFs from Streptococcus spp . are important due to
their role in dental plaque formation (1) .
Depending on its specificity, a GTF may transfer glucose, building
polymers with the main chain joined by
1-6,
1-3,
or
1-4
linkages (7) . However, no crystal structure is
available for GTFs with the exception of amylosucrase (30),
a GTF producer of an amylose-type polysaccharide . GTFs present a
large size, between 155 and 200 kDa, and are organized in three
domains, starting in the N-terminal end by the signal peptide and a
variable region with an unknown function, followed by the catalytic
domain, where the residues implicated in catalysis have been located .
Finally, a C-terminal domain is involved in binding to the
synthesized glucan .
It has been proposed by sequence analysis and analogy with
-amylases
that GTFs present a circular permutation of a (ß/ )8
barrel in the catalytic domain (5) . This contrasts with
FTFs, which on average have one third the molecular mass of GTFs and
are not organized in domains . Moreover, Pons et al . (27)
predicted a ß-propeller model for FTFs . Among FTFs, inulosucrase
produces inulin, a fructan polymer with ß2-1 linkages, whereas
levansucrase catalyzes a similar reaction resulting in a ß2-6-linked
fructose polymer known as levan . In both cases, branching can occur
in ß2-6 and ß2-1 . In spite of the growing importance of inulin and
fructooligosaccharides in the food industry, little is known about
the biochemistry and molecular biology of these enzymes (4) .
Up to now, more than 19 bacterial FTFs have been reported in GenBank,
but no crystal structure is available . FTFs are also common in fungi
and plants .
The inulosucrase of Leuconostoc citreum is a cell-associated
enzyme . It has been characterized both in its cell-associated
insoluble form and after solubilization by urea treatment . Unexpectedly,
this FTF has a molecular mass of around 165 kDa, the highest
reported for FTFs . In its cell-associated form, it is highly specific
for polymer synthesis, with low levels of fructose transferred to
maltose and lactose when added to the reaction medium . The
synthesized polymer has an inulin-like structure with ß2-1 glycosidic
linkages, as demonstrated by 13C nuclear magnetic resonance (25) .
In the present study, we report the identification and functional
characterization of islA, a gene encoding for inulosucrase from
Leuconostoc citreum CW28 . From the analysis of the nucleotide
and the predicted amino acid sequence, it was concluded that
this is a natural chimeric enzyme with three domains: the first and
third with high identity with alternansucrase, a GTF from
Leuconostoc mesenteroides NRRL B-1355 able to produce alternan, a
dextran-type polymer with alternating
1-3
and
1-6
linkages (2) . The second domain, which is the
catalytic one, has similarity with levansucrase and inulosucrase of
several microorganisms . No similarities have been reported between
GTFs and FTFs in spite of the already mentioned analogies .
Bacterial strains, media, and growth conditions. The bacterial
strain L . citreum CW28 (Facultad de Química, Universidad
Nacional Autonoma Mexico, México) was grown at 30°C and 200 rpm as
previously reported (25), with 20 g of either
sucrose, as the carbon source, or glucose per liter in order to avoid
enzyme and polymer synthesis, as these interfere with DNA extraction .
Escherichia coli DH5 ,
the host for cloning, was grown at 37°C and 250 rpm in Luria-Bertani
(LB) medium and, when appropriate, supplemented with 50 µg of
kanamycin per ml in order to maintain the plasmid construction . Agar
(1.5%, wt/vol) was added for growth in solid medium .
General molecular techniques. Plasmid and genomic DNAs of
L . citreum CW28 were extracted from cells according to Ausubel et
al . (3) . E . coli plasmid DNA was isolated
with a QiaPrep spin plasmid kit (Qiagen, Inc., Chatsworth, Calif.) as
recommended by the manufacturer . Restriction and DNA-modifying
enzymes were from New England Biolabs (Beverly, Mass.) and Roche
Biochemical (Basel, Switzerland) . DNA was amplified with PCR
techniques in a Robocycler Gradient 96 (Stratagene, La Jolla,
Calif.) . E . coli transformations were performed by
electroporation in 0.2-mm cuvettes with a Bio-Rad Micropulser
apparatus (Bio-Rad Laboratories, Hercules, Calif.) at 2.5 kV, 25 µF,
and 200
.
DNA fragments were isolated from the agarose gel with a Qiagen
extraction kit (Qiagen, Inc., Chatsworth, Calif.) . In all cases, the
biological reagents were applied following the instructions of the
supplier .
For Southern hybridization, DNA was restricted with endonucleases,
separated by agarose gel electrophoresis, and transferred to a
Hybond-N+ membrane (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech, Buckinghamshire,
England.) . The probes were labeled with 32P with a Rediprime
kit (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech, Buckinghamshire, England) .
Isolation of IslA. In order to isolate the islA gene,
first the FTF from L . citreum CW28 was purified by sodium
dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) (18)
and located through activity assay in the gel (Fig . 1).
L . citreum cells were treated with 8 M as already described,
and the extracted protein was applied to the gel in the sample buffer
containing SDS and 2-mercaptoethanol and incubated at 90°C for 5 min .
After separation, the protein was excised from the gel and digested,
and two of the resulting peptides were sequenced (Institute Pasteur,
Paris, France) . From the resulting inulosucrase peptide sequences
(28-MDVWDSWALQDSK and 29-TAPYGEAGAQFVDYV), the degenerate primers
28IS and 29IS were designed (Table 1) .
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FIG . 1 . SDS-PAGE analysis of L . citreum proteins . The in situ
polymer produced by inulosucrase is observed in lane 1 after incubation
with raffinose, while in lane 2 the urea-extracted proteins are stained
with Coomassie blue . Lane 3 contains the molecular size standards (sizes
shown in kilodaltons).
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| TABLE 1 . Primers designed for isolation of the inulosucrase gene islA
from L . citreuma
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A PCR fragment of 3,000 bp was amplified with the L . citreum
CW28 chromosomal DNA as the template with Vent polymerase (Fig .
2A) . The analysis of its nucleotide sequence confirmed the
similarities found between the two peptides with FTF and
alternansucrase . Based on the 3,000-bp sequence and on the
alternansucrase homology primers, 539IS and 868IS were designed in
order to isolate the C terminus (Table 1) . An
amplification product with the expected size (about 445 bp) was
obtained from L . citreum CW28 genomic DNA and sequenced (Fig.
2B) . On the other hand, and based also on the
3,000-bp sequence, primers 128rIS and 421rIS were designed in order
to isolate the N-terminal region by inverse PCR (Table
1) . L . citreum CW28 genomic DNA was digested with HindIII and
ligated, yielding circular DNA that was used as the template
for a PCR with the diverging primers 128rIS and 421rIS, yielding an
amplification product of about 1,600 bp (Fig . 2C) . The
complete sequence of the islA gene, including the promoter
region, was deduced from the three fragments . Finally, a 5,063-bp
fragment containing the whole gene was amplified with primers 11pIS
and 868IS (Fig . 2D) .
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FIG . 2 . Strategy for isolation of the islA gene from L .
citreum CW28 chromosomal DNA . Panels A to D are explained in the
text.
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Construction of plasmids for expression in E . coli of the islA
gene and the truncated versions. For the construction of an expression
plasmid for the complete islA gene, primer 11pIS, located at
nucleotide 56, and primer 868IS, at the end of the gene, were
designed . A PCR product of 5,007 bp was amplified and cloned with the
pCR4-TOPO vector in E . coli strain DH5
(Invitrogen, Carlsbad, Calif.) . The correct construction of the
plasmid was confirmed by sequence analysis of single DNA strands from
the insert .
For the construction of a truncated version of the protein (ISE2),
primer 385IS was designed and used together with primer 11pIS (Table
1) . An amplification product of 3,333 bp without the
region with similarity to alternansucrase was obtained . This
product was cloned with the pCR4-TOPO vector in E . coli DH5 .
A third version of the protein was constructed by deleting the
complete C-terminal domain that is the alternansucrase-like region as
well as 602 bp which are part of a transition region, a lower
similarity module located between the high-homology alternansucrase
region and the FTF catalytic domain . For this construction, primers
384IS and 11pIS were designed (Table 1) . This
product was cloned with the pCR4-TOPO vector in E . coli DH5 .
Preparation of E . coli cell extracts and enzyme activity
assay. E . coli DH5
harboring the aforementioned constructs was grown overnight and
harvested by centrifugation (10 min at 4°C and 5,000
x g) . The resulting pellet was washed
twice with 50 mM sodium phosphate buffer (pH 6.5) . Afterwards, the
cells were resuspended in the same buffer and broken by
ultrasonication with four 10-s pulses of 10 µE at 3-min intervals .
Cell debris was removed by centrifugation for 40 min at 4°C and
10,000 x g, and the supernatant
was assayed for activity . Initial rates of the inulosucrase reaction
were measured at 30°C in 50 mM potassium phosphate buffer (pH 6.5) in
the presence of 292 mM sucrose . The inulosucrase activity was
measured by determination of glucose and fructose release from
sucrose by the 3,5-dinitrosalicylic acid method (31) .
One unit (U) of activity is defined as the amount of enzyme that
produces 1 µmol of glucose equivalent per minute . In order to
determine only the transferase and hydrolytic activities, a
determination of glucose and fructose by high-pressure liquid
chromatography is required . All free fructose is the product of
hydrolysis, so after subtracting the amount of free fructose from the
total glucose, the residual glucose is equivalent to the transferase
activity .
N-terminal amino acid sequencing. In order to determine the
N-terminal amino acid sequence, the protein was extracted from L .
citreum cells by 8 M urea treatment and then separated in an
SDS-PAGE gel as already described (18) . After
separation, the proteins were transferred to a polyvinylidene
difluoride membrane (3), and after staining with Ponceau S
solution, the inulosucrase protein band was cut from the membrane and
subjected to amino acid sequence analysis (Harvard Medical School,
Harvard, Mass.) .
SDS-PAGE activity staining. Electrophoresis of the
recombinant protein was performed as reported by Laemmli (18) .
Samples were mixed with an equal volume of 2x
sample buffer (0.125 M Tris-HCl [pH 6.8], 1% SDS, 20% glycerol, 10%
2-mercaptoethanol) and incubated at 90°C for 5 min . Denatured samples
were then electrophoretically separated on 6% polyacrylamide gels and
stained with Coomassie brilliant blue . In order to detect the
activity of the recombinant proteins in SDS-PAGE gels, the periodic
acid-Schiff reagent method was performed . The proteins of the
cellular extract were separated on SDS-PAGE gels, followed by
incubation in 50 mM potassium phosphate buffer (pH 6.5) and 1% Tween
80 . In situ polymer synthesis was then induced by overnight
incubation in the same buffer including 5% raffinose, a specific
substrate of FTFs . Afterwards, the gels were washed with a solution
of ethanol (75%, vol/vol) and acetic acid (5%, vol/vol), for 30 min,
followed by three incubations in sodium metabisulfite (0.2%, wt/vol)
and acetic acid (5%, vol/vol) for 20 min . Finally, the gels were
stained with Schiff reagent (Sigma-Aldrich, St . Louis, Mo.), yielding
purple spots where the fructan polymer was produced . The Schiff
reaction was stopped by incubation with a solution of sodium
metabisulfite (0.2%, wt/vol) and acetic acid (5%, vol/vol) .
In order to determine the type of polymer produced by the IS2 and
IS3 forms, two SDS-PAGE activity gels were carried out in parallel .
After incubation with raffinose, the buffer was changed to 50 mM
acetate buffer (pH 4.5), and one gel was treated with inulinase from
Aspergillus niger (Fluka) at 37°C for 48 h . After this
treatment, staining by the periodic acid-Schiff method was performed .
Nucleotide sequence accession number. The sequence of the
entire islA gene has been submitted to GenBank under accession
number
AY191311 .
Purification of inulosucrase from L . citreum and isolation of
islA gene. Two peptides were sequenced from inulosucrase extracted
from L . citreum cells with 8 M urea (11)
and purified by SDS-PAGE (Fig . 1) . With genomic DNA
from L . citreum, a 3-kbp fragment was amplified by PCR with
primers that were designed from the two peptides (Fig .
2A) . Sequence analysis of the 3-kbp fragment indicates similarity
with fructosyltransferase genes (ftf) in the amino terminus
and also with the alternansucrase gene product in the C terminus .
Based on the homology with alternansucrase, two additional
primers were designed in order to isolate the 3' end (Fig.
2B) . The 5' of the islA open reading frame and
the promoter region of the gene were obtained with inverse PCR
techniques (Fig . 2C) .
Nucleotide sequence analysis. In total, a DNA fragment of
5,063 bp was sequenced . The analysis of this sequence shows one open
reading frame of 4,473 bp (ORF1), starting at position 591, and a
putative ribosome-binding site with the sequence AGGGAG located 8 bp
upstream from the ATG initiation codon . The same ribosome-binding
site has been reported 8 bp upstream of the initiation codon for the
alternansucrase in L . mesenteroides NRRL B-1355 (2) .
A putative promoter sequence was also identified 34 bp upstream of
the ATG, with -35 (TTGTAAC) and -10 (TATAGT) sequences separated by
19 nucleotides with the program Neural Network Prediction . The gene
for inulosucrase, islA, encodes a protein of 1,490 amino acids
with a deduced molecular mass of 165,137 Da and a pI of 5.09 . This is
the largest FTF described so far .
The G+C content of the islA gene was 37.25%, which is consistent
with the value reported by Kim et al . for Leuconostoc kimchii
(15) . The codon usage in the islA gene is also
consistent with the typical codon preferences found in Leuconostoc
genes .
With the complete islA gene as a probe, a Southern blot analysis
was carried out in order to locate the islA gene in the L .
citreum CW28 genome . The plasmid and genomic DNAs of L .
citreum were run in separate lanes . After transfer and
hybridization, only the lane with the genomic DNA and the control
hybridized with the islA probe (data not shown), indicating
that the islA gene is not located on a plasmid in L .
citreum .
Amino acid sequence analysis. The analysis of the deduced
inulosucrase amino acid sequence revealed the presence of a putative
gram-positive signal peptide, and a cleavage site following amino
acid 39 was predicted with the program designed by Nielsen et al . (23) .
To confirm the cleavage site, the L . citreum CW28 enzyme was
purified by SDS-PAGE and subjected to N-terminal sequence analysis .
The first 10 amino acids were identified as DVNQPLLAQK; except for
the 10th residue, this sequence is identical to that of the deduced
amino acid sequence after the predicted signal peptide cleavage site .
Blast searches with the deduced amino acid sequence revealed a
natural chimeric enzyme with three domains, as shown in Fig .
3: the first domain in the N terminus (amino acids 1 to 138)
shows similarities with alternansucrase (40% identity) . This
domain includes a variable region which is not conserved among GTFs
and has no evident function . The second domain, which is the
catalytic domain, shows similarities with Bacillus subtilis
levansucrase (02730; 39% identity and 56% similarity in 433 amino
acids), Clostridium acetobutylicum levansucrase (AAK79737.1;
39% identity and 55% similarities in 456 amino acids), Streptococcus
salivarius FTF (Q55242; 36% identity and 52% similarities in
714 amino acids), and Streptococcus mutans FTF (P11701; 31%
identity and 45% similarities in 784 amino acids) . Lower similarities
were found with Erwinia amylovora levansucrase (Q46656; 28%
identity and 44% similarities in 438 amino acids) and Rahnella
aquatilis levansucrase (O54435; 28% identity and 43% similarities
in 435 amino acids) .
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FIG . 3 . Representation of three versions of the inulosucrase proteins
that were expressed in E . coli DH5 .
EIS is the complete enzyme; EIS2 is the enzyme with a deletion of the
high-homology C-terminal alternansucrase (ASR), and EIS3 is the enzyme
with a deletion of the same region of EIS2 plus a transition region.
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High similarity among FTFs and the catalytic domain of inulosucrase
was found in the amino acid 209 to 734 region . In the deduced
sequence, amino acid residues 293 to 734, a core of 441 amino acids,
could be related to the glycosylhydrolase 68 family, which includes
several bacterial levansucrases and invertase from a Zymomonas
sp . (pfam02435; http//pfam.wustl.edu/) .
Alignments with FTFs from gram-positive bacteria showed eight blocks
of conserved motifs that can be easily identified in inulosucrase
(Fig . 4) .
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FIG . 4 . High-homology regions derived from an alignment of FTFs from
S . salivarius (36% identity), S . mutans (31% identity), L .
reuteri (35% identity), and L . citreum.
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Surprisingly, the carboxy-terminal regions (amino acids 940 to 1490)
also showed a remarkable identity (80%) with the alternansucrase
C-terminal domain . This domain has been considered capable of binding
polymer (glucan for alternansucrase), and it consists of a series of
four related but not identical tandem repeats of 20 to 30 amino acids
each, defined according to their sequences (10) .
In general, the glucan binding domain from GTF presents different
repeat motifs (6) . In inulosucrase as well as in
alternansucrase, only the motif defined as A by Giffard and Jacques (10)
was found (Fig . 5A) . Furthermore, a seven-repeat
element set only found for alternansucrase (14)
but not for another glucosyltransferase was present in inulosucrase
(Fig . 5B) . This natural chimeric construction
explains the high molecular weight of inulosucrase compared with most
FTFs which are not structured by multiple domains . In this context,
inulosucrase may be viewed as an alternansucrase in which the
catalytic domain has been replaced with a complete FTF or as an FTF
to which the alternansucrase N-terminal and C-terminal regions have
been added .
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FIG . 5 . (A) Alignment of the three repeat elements type A from the C
terminus of L . citreum inulosucrase . The A element represents the
consensus (10) . (B) Seven repeat sequences from the
C-terminal domain of inulosucrase of L . citreum.
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The C-terminal repeat domain of streptococcal GTFs binds glucans and
probably contributes to sucrose-dependent adherence . In some but not
all GTFs, it is also essential for the retention of glucan
synthesizing activity, as some become sucrose hydrolysing enzymes
upon deletion of the repeat units (21) . What are the
functions of this additional domains in inulosucrase? We think
that the additional C-terminal domain that is the GTFs’ glucan
binding domain may be useful to inulosucrase for binding to glucans
produced by other GTFs in the culture . Although a GTF in L .
citreum CW28 has not been found, L . mesenteroides NRRL
B-1355, producer of alternansucrase, has now been reclassified as
L . citreum (personal communication from Gregory Cote, National
Center for Agricultural Utilization Research, Peoria, Ill.) . It is
therefore not surprising that the two enzymes may have coexisted in
an L . citreum ancestor, where inulosucrase of the CW28 strain
resulted from recombination between an FTF and alternansucrase . The
new inulosucrase could then bind to glucans supporting the growth and
sucrose consumption of the strain as it is associated with the cell
wall .
Expression of islA gene in E . coli and characterization
of the protein. A fragment of 5,007 bp including the complete islA
gene and its promoter region was cloned in vector pCR4-TOPO,
resulting in the plasmid pCRIS, used to transform E . coli DH5 .
The full-length construction of inulosucrase yielded many
transformants . Extracts of E . coli DH5
cells containing the plasmid pCRIS showed sucrose-transforming
activity, as measured by the release of reducing power from sucrose .
SDS-PAGE of cell extracts showed that the inulosucrase protein was
present as a band corresponding to the same molecular weight as the
L . citreum enzyme . An activity gel with raffinose as the
substrate was performed, showing polymer-synthesizing activity in
both the L . citreum and the recombinant enzymes after staining
with the Schiff reagent (Fig . 6) .
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FIG . 6 . (A) SDS-PAGE activity analysis of L . citreum proteins
cloned in E . coli after staining with Schiff . We used
levansucrase of B . subtilis as a control (lane 1), wild
inulosucrase from L . citreum (lane 2), recombinant EIS from E .
coli (lane 3), the truncated EIS2 from E . coli (lane 4), and
the truncated EIS3 from E . coli (lane 5) . (B) Activity analysis
of the polymers after staining with Schiff reagent after inulinase
treatment . We used levansucrase from B . subtilis as a control
(lane 1), inulosucrase from L . citreum (lane 2), recombinant EIS
from E . coli (lane 3), the truncated EIS2 from E . coli
(lane 4), and the truncated EIS3 from E . coli (lane 5).
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Expression of two C-terminally (glucan binding domain) truncated
versions of the islA gene in E . coli. In order to
investigate the function of the C-terminal region in the enzyme, two
deletions of the carboxy-terminal region were designed (Fig.
3) . In the first deletion (bp 56 to 3333), the
alternansucrase identity region was eliminated . A fragment of 3,277
bp was cloned in the pCR4-TOPO vector, resulting in plasmid pCRIS2,
which was used to transform E . coli DH5 .
In the second deletion, a fragment of 2,731 bp was constructed,
deleting the same region as before plus the transition region .
The fragment was cloned in the same vector, resulting in plasmid
pCRIS3, used to transform E . coli DH5 .
Transformants were obtained with both plasmids .
Extracts of E . coli DH5
cells showed polymer-synthesizing activities . According to the
SDS-PAGE activity gel, molecular weights of 105,000 and 83,000 were
estimated for the two deletion-truncated proteins (Fig .
5A) . The three enzyme forms showed activity at 30°C and pH 6.5 .
The effect of the additional C-terminal domain on inulosucrase
activity and stability was studied in three recombinant forms, and it
was concluded that while the complete enzyme expressed in E . coli
(EIS) had a specific activity of 0.015 U/mg of protein, 0.016 U/mg
and 0.031 U/mg were measured for EIS2 and EIS3, respectively (Table
2) . It may be concluded that deletion of 750 amino
acids had an impact on the enzyme activity, increasing the reaction
rate, probably due to less steric hindrance in reactant transport and
usually controlling the reaction rate . Interestingly, the half-life
of EIS2 and EIS3 at 40°C was reduced to 20 and 12 min, respectively,
while EIS1 was relatively more stable, with a half-life of 70
min (Table 2) . It is therefore possible to conclude that the
carboxy terminus contributes to the stability of the enzyme .
Moreover, when the C terminus was deleted, the enzyme EIS3 became
more hydrolytic than the complete enzyme (Table 2) .
| TABLE 2 . Physicochemical characterization of inulosucrase and two
C-terminally truncated recombinant forms
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In order to determine the type of polymer produced by the EIS2 and
EIS3 forms, two SDS-PAGE activity gels were carried out in parallel
as already described . It was found that the three recombinant
proteins synthesized a polymer after incubation with raffinose (Fig.
6A) and that this product was digested by inulinase
(Fig . 6B), while the control (levan) remained in
the gel . Therefore, EIS1, EIS2, and EIS3 are all capable of inulin
synthesis .
The L . citreum inulosucrase is the first glycosyltransferase
that has been found as a natural chimeric enzyme bearing structural
and modular features of GTFs but still bearing fructosyltransferase
activity . Whereas several microorganisms have been reported as
FTF producers (12), only a few genera produce GTF:
Streptomyces (19), which has not been studied
in detail; Leuconostoc (20);
Streptococcus (13); and Lactobacillus (17,
32) . It is interesting that GTFs are produced by
microorganisms that have also been reported to be FTF producers,
while the reverse is not true . Although both groups of enzymes, GTFs
and FTFs, build a polysaccharide from sucrose by transferring the
glucose or fructose residue, they have been found in the same
microorganism, but their reaction mechanisms, their sequences, and
their structural organization are quite different . This type of
recombination could be specific for microorganisms in which both GTFs
and FTFs are present, such as the genera Leuconostoc and
Streptococcus .
We have also identified two hypothetical proteins of Leuconostoc
mesenteroides ATCC 8293 with homology to another FTF, also bearing
C-terminal regions with identity with GTFs in the recently available
genome of Leuconostoc (NCBI Microbial Genome Annotation Project) .
Actually, the FTFs reported in Leuconostoc spp . have molecular
masses of more than 100 kDa, the average bacterial FTFs molecular
size . In 1983, Russell et al . reported a glucan binding protein
with FTF activity in S . mutans, but no explanation could be
given for this property (29), so it is possible that the same
recombination had taken place in S . mutans .
When the C-terminal domain was deleted (EIS3), the resulting
enzyme was more active and more hydrolytic than the wild-type enzyme .
The presence of the additional domains increased its stability and
reduced the hydrolytic activity of sucrose in favor of the
inulin-synthesizing activity, probably by limiting water access to
the catalytic domain . Nevertheless, FTFs could also recombine in
these genera to acquire useful GTF properties such as binding to
glucans . A phylogenetic study of various strains and
glycosyltransferases is in progress .
This project was supported by Dirección General de Estudios de
Posgrado (DGEP) UNAM and Consejo Nacional de Ciencia y Tecnología
(CONACyT) no . 118116 and 25281-B .
We thank Brenda Valderrama, Miguel Lara, and Guadalupe Espin for
important comments on the project and on the manuscript; we also
thank T . L . Fernando Gonzalez for technical support . Finally, we
thank Eugenio López and Paul Gaytan for primer synthesis .
* Corresponding author . Present address: Departamento de
Ingeniería Celular y Biocatálisis, Instituto de Biotecnología, UNAM, Avenida
Universidad 2001 Col . Chamilpa, Cuernavaca Morelos 62250, México . Phone:
(52-777) 3291609 . Fax: (52-777) 3172388 . E-mail: agustin@ibt.unam.mx .
- Abo, H., T . Matsumura, T . Kodama, H . Ohta, K . Fukui, K . Kato,
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