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Journal of Bacteriology, July 2002, p . 3539-3548, Vol . 184, No . 13 Genetic Locus Encoding Functions Involved in Biosynthesis and Outer Membrane Localization of Xanthomonadin in Xanthomonas oryzae pv . oryzae
Ajay Kumar Goel, Lakshmi Rajagopal,, Centre for Cellular and Molecular Biology, Hyderabad 500 007, Andhra Pradesh, India Received 18 December 2001/ Accepted 3 April 2002
An 18.6-kb genomic region from X . campestris pv . campestris that contains seven transcriptional units (pig genes) required for xanthomonadin production has been isolated (34, 35) . One of the transcriptional units, pigB, is involved in biosynthesis of a diffusible factor that affects the production of xanthomonadin as well as extracellular polysaccharide (34) . The unavailability of nucleotide sequences for these transcriptional units, however, limits further insight into the mechanism of xanthomonadin biosynthesis . X . oryzae pv . oryzae mutants that are defective in shikimate dehydrogenase activity have been shown to be deficient for pigment production (14) . It was suggested that the aryl ring in the pigment might be derived from the aromatic amino acid biosynthetic pathway . We have sequenced and characterized by insertional inactivation a 21.0-kb genomic region from X . oryzae pv . oryzae that is homologous to the previously identified X . campestris pv . campestris pig gene cluster . Our data suggest that the X . oryzae pv . oryzae pig cluster contains three open reading frames (ORFs) that might be part of a novel type II polyketide synthase (PKS) pathway involved in the biosynthesis of xanthomonadin . We demonstrate that the pigment localizes to the outer membrane in X . oryzae pv . oryzae and that a putative cytoplasmic membrane protein encoded in the pig cluster is required for this localization .
Mutagenesis, marker exchange, and complementation. Thirteen independent mini-Tn5 (mTn5) (Tn5gusA40) (49) insertions were obtained on the cloned DNA in pLR9 and marker exchanged into the BXO43 background (38) to obtain the mutant strains listed in Table 1 . The 5.0- and 4.5-kb EcoRI fragments from pLR10 (Table 1) were cloned into pBluescript KS to obtain pAG13 and pAG14, respectively . The 12.0-kb fragment was cloned into pBR329 to obtain pAG15 (Table 1) . The plasmids pAG13 and pAG15 were mutagenized with mTn7 (genome priming system; NEB) in order to sequence the cloned DNA as well as to isolate insertions within individual ORFs . The mTn7 insertions zxx-36::mTn7 and zxx-37::mTn7 obtained in orf12 and pig-56::mTn7 obtained in orf4 were electroporated into BXO43 cells by selecting Kmr Aps colonies (mTn7 encodes Kmr) . The plasmid vectors pBluescript KS and pBR329 (Apr vectors) do not replicate in X . oryzae pv . oryzae, therefore, the Kmr Aps colonies are expected to have undergone a marker exchange event . The mutant strains BXO1709 (pig-56::mTn7), BXO1712 (zxx-36::mTn7), and BXO1713 (zxx-37::mTn7) were obtained in this manner . After the mTn5 and mTn7 mutagenesis, no insertions could be obtained in ORFs 5, 7, and 11 . In order to mutagenize orf7 (Fig . 1), a BamHI-cut tetA cassette was cloned into a BclI restriction site in this ORF to obtain the plasmid pAG14-pig55::tetA (BclI and BamHI produce compatible ends that can be ligated together) . This plasmid was electroporated into BXO43 to obtain BXO1708 (Aps Tcr Pig-) . Mutagenesis of orf11 and orf5 was done by cloning DNA fragments, truncated at the 5' and 3' termini of these ORFs, into plasmid vectors that do not replicate in X . oryzae pv . oryzae . A 500-bp XhoI-SmaI fragment from orf11 was cloned into pBluescript KS to obtain the plasmid pAG16 . Similarly, a 200-bp PCR-amplified fragment from orf5 was cloned into pMOSBlue (Table 1) to obtain pAG17 . The plasmids pAG16 and pAG17 were then electroporated into BXO43 electrocompetent cells to obtain the Apr strains BXO1711 and BXO1710, respectively . The Apr strains were expected to have undergone a single recombination event that would create a gene disruption . All of the mutants obtained were analyzed by Southern hybridization to confirm that the gene disruption events had occurred as expected (data not shown) .
DNA sequence analysis.
The sequence of the 20,310-bp X . oryzae pv . oryzae region was obtained by using primers directed outward from mTn7 (provided in the genome priming system kit from NEB) and mTn5 (10) . Primer walking was performed to fill gaps . The sequencing reactions, electrophoresis, and sequence data analyses were performed with the ABI Prism 3700 automated DNA sequencer (Perkin Elmer, Foster City, Calif.) . ORF analysis and homology searches were performed by using ORF finder and the BLAST algorithm (1), respectively, which are available at www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov . Analysis of the transmembrane domains (TMDs) for Orf4 was performed by using TMpred software (16), which is available at www.expasy.ch . The palindromic structure (
Separation of cytoplasmic and outer membranes.
The cytoplasmic and outer membranes of X . oryzae pv . oryzae were separated as described previously for X . campestris pv . campestris (18) . In brief, the X . oryzae pv . oryzae cultures were grown to the late exponential phase in peptone-sucrose medium . Cells were harvested by centrifugation, washed with ice-cold distilled water, and resuspended in 10 mM HEPES, pH 7.5 (approximately 1 ml for 100 to 150 mg [wet weight] of cells), containing 1 mM MgCl2, DNase (50 µg ml-1), and RNase (50 µg ml-1) . The cells were disrupted by being passed twice through a French pressure cell at 18,000 to 20,000 lb/in2 . Unbroken cells were removed by centrifugation at 3,500 x g for 10 min . The total-membrane preparation was pelleted by centrifugation at 342,000 x g for 45 min, washed once with 10 mM HEPES, pH 7.5, and resuspended in the same buffer . Concentrated membranes were then loaded on a step sucrose gradient (25 to 65%) and centrifuged at 130,000 x g for 20 h at 4°C . Densities of the fractions were calculated by using the refractive index values determined with a refractometer . Samples from each fraction were loaded on Tricine-sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) gels (24) and stained with silver nitrate (47) . The samples were also treated with protease, and the protease-resistant bands on Tricine-SDS-PAGE gels were compared with lipopolysaccharide (LPS) profiles . LPS was prepared from X . oryzae pv . oryzae cells by using the protocol of Yi and Hackett (51) . Succinate dehydrogenase activity was assayed by using the protocol described previously for Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium (31) . One unit of enzyme activity was defined as the amount of enzyme used to produce 1 nmol of thiazolyl formazan ( Nucleotide sequence accession number. The 20,310-bp X . oryzae pv . oryzae sequence described in this report has been submitted to the GenBank database and assigned the accession number AY010120 .
Mutagenesis of the X . oryzae pv . oryzae pig cluster was performed as described in Materials and Methods . Thirteen independent mTn5, three mTn7, two Apr cassettes, and one Tcr cassette insertion in the pig cluster were marker exchanged into BXO43, an Rfr derivative of BXO1 . The mutant strains BXO717, BXO718, BXO719, BXO720, and BXO1708 obtained with the insertions pig-15::mTn5, pig-16::mTn5, pig-17::mTn5, pig-18::mTn5, and pig-55::tetA, respectively (Table 1), did not produce visible amounts of pigment . All of the other insertions resulted in strains that are visibly indistinguishable from the wild-type strain, BXO43 . Also, the absorption spectra of methanolic extracts from these strains are identical to that of BXO43 (data not shown) . The clones pLR9 and pLR10 complement all five of the Pig- mutants for pigment production (data not shown) . Sequence analysis of the 20,310-bp pig region was performed as described in Materials and Methods . Fourteen putative ORFs have been predicted in the sequenced region . The insertions pig-15::mTn5, pig-55::tetA, and pig-16::mTn5, which caused the Pig- phenotype, were found to disrupt orf10, orf7, and orf6, respectively (Fig . 1) . Two insertions, pig-17::mTn5 and pig-18::mTn5, that affect pigmentation were found to be at different sites in orf3 (Fig . 1) . As shown in Fig . 1, insertions in orf9 and orf8 which are downstream of orf10 do not cause the Pig- phenotype . This suggests that the phenotype of the insertion in orf10 is not due to a polar effect on these genes and that orf10, by itself, is required for pigment production . Similarly orf6 is essential for pigment production as insertions in the downstream ORFs (orf5 and orf4) do not affect visible levels of pigmentation (Fig . 1) . The Pig- phenotype of the strain BXO1708 (pig-55::tetA) (Table 1) in orf7 could be due to the polar effect of this insertion on orf6 (Fig . 1) . Therefore, a pLR9 derivative, pLR9-pig-16::mTn5, containing an insertion in orf6 was mobilized into BXO1708 . The resultant strain, BXO1714 (Table 1), produces wild-type levels of the pigment (data not shown) . This suggests that orf7, per se, is required for pigment production . The intergenic region between orf3 and orf2 shows homology to a transposase-like protein (Table 2), which is very unlikely to affect pigment production . Moreover, the homology extends in two different reading frames (amino acids [aa] 1 to 178 and 188 to 317), which suggests that the transposase homologue is a pseudogene with a frameshift mutation in the coding region . Therefore, we conclude that orf3 is also required for pigment production . It is evident from these results that four putative ORFs, orf10, orf7, orf6, and orf3, in the X . oryzae pv . oryzae pig cluster are required for xanthomonadin biosynthesis .
orf4 encodes a putative membrane transporter.
orf4 is homologous to a putative membrane protein from X . fastidiosa (Table 2) . Hydropathy plot and secondary structure analysis predicted 12
orf11 is homologous to bacterial halogenases but is not essential for xanthomonadin production and bromination orf11 is homologous to prnC, a halogenase that is required for production of the antifungal antibiotic pyrrolnitrin, a dichlorinated tryptophan derivative in Pseudomonas fluorescens (22) . PrnC belongs to a novel class of bacterial halogenases that utilize either NADH or reduced flavin adenine dinucleotide as cofactors (22, 30) . An NADH binding site, GXGX2(G/A)X3(G/A)X6G (42), characteristic of these enzymes has been identified in the N-terminal region of the putative protein product of orf11 . The insertion zxx-35::bla in this ORF, however, does not affect either visible levels of pigmentation or the absorption profile and molecular weights of xanthomonadin as determined by mass spectroscopy (data not shown) . The majority of the isolated compound in purified xanthomonadin from the wild-type and the orf11 mutant X . oryzae pv . oryzae strains was found to be monobrominated (molecular weight of 551), and a minor dibrominated fraction had a molecular weight of 631 (data not shown) . The molecular weights obtained are in a range similar to that reported for the dibrominated form of xanthomonadin (molecular weight, 576) from X . juglandis (2) . Therefore, although orf11 is homologous to halogenases, it does not appear to be essential for halogenation of xanthomonadin . ORFs 1, 2, 5, 8, 9, 12, and 13 are not essential for xanthomonadin production, and their respective homologies are indicated in Table 2 . The transposase gene homologue located between ORFs 3 and 2 is not related at the nucleotide level to previously identified insertion sequence (IS) elements, suggesting that this may be a part of a novel IS element . A partial sequence of ISXo3 (130 bp), obtained within the sequenced region in this study, is identical to the corresponding region of the fully sequenced element (GenBank accession no . AF339839) . Orf4 is involved in localization of xanthomonadin to the outer membrane of X . oryzae pv . oryzae. We determined the localization of xanthomonadin in X . oryzae pv . oryzae by separating the cytoplasmic and outer membranes of strain BXO43 on sucrose density gradient columns . Twenty-two fractions of 0.5 ml each were collected from the columns and analyzed for LPS and succinate dehydrogenase activity, the outer and cytoplasmic membrane markers, respectively . Protein profiles of fractions 9 to 13 and 17 to 21 are distinct from each other as seen on silver nitrate-stained SDS-PAGE gels (Fig . 3A) . Four bands of approximately 25, 37, 65, and 100 kDa are specific to fractions 9 to 13 (Fig . 3A) . Similarly, at least three bands of 40, 45, and 80 kDa are specific to fractions 17 to 21 (Fig . 3A) . Interestingly, some of the bands present in fractions 9 and 11 do not appear in fraction 13 (Fig . 3A) . The fractions between fractions 13 and 17 contained bands characteristic of both classes (data not shown) . Two bands of <25 kDa that are protease resistant and comigrate with purified low-molecular-mass X . oryzae pv . oryzae LPS bands (data not shown) are present in fractions 17 to 21 and absent from fractions 9 to 13 (Fig . 3A) . Succinate dehydrogenase activity was found to be maximum in fractions 9 to 13, whereas little or no activity was found in fractions 17 to 21 (Fig . 3B) . The fractions 9 to 13 and 17 to 21 correspond to sucrose densities of 1.12 to 1.16 and 1.18 to 1.22 g/ml, respectively (Fig . 3B) . The distribution of LPS (31) and succinate dehydrogenase activity (18) and the corresponding sucrose densities (18) suggest that cytoplasmic membranes are present in fractions 9 to 13, whereas fractions 17 to 21 contain the outer membranes . Methanolic extracts were prepared for each of the fractions, and the pigment was quantified as the OD445 per milligram of protein . The absorption spectra of the methanolic extracts exhibit peaks and shoulders characteristic of xanthomonadin (data not shown) . As shown in Fig . 3B, most of the xanthomonadin in BXO43 is present in fractions 17 to 21, indicating that the pigment in X . oryzae pv . oryzae is mainly localized in the outer membrane .
Identification of a novel repeat element in the X . oryzae pv . oryzae pig locus. Two copies of a novel 145-bp repeat element were identified in the X . oryzae pv . oryzae pig region . These elements are located 51 and 79 bp downstream of the stop codons for orf3 and orf12, respectively (Fig . 1) . The repeat is an imperfect palindrome and may adopt a stable stem-loop structure (Fig . 4A) with a free energy of -44.9 kcal mol-1 . We have called this element the XRIC sequence . The G+C content (64%) of the element is characteristic of xanthomonads . A nucleotide BLAST search in the database revealed the presence of three more copies of this element in X . oryzae pv . oryzae and four copies in X . campestris pv . campestris (Fig . 4B) . No other homologues of the XRIC element were found in the database . Based on the total sequence deposited to date in the database for X . oryzae pv . oryzae (approximately 165 kb) and X . campestris pv . campestris (approximately 170 kb), we estimate that there might be approximately 150 and 120 copies of the XRIC element, respectively, in these organisms, assuming the genome sizes to be 5.0 Mb .
If indeed a PKS pathway is involved in xanthomonadin biosynthesis, it would require several other functions, such as a ketosynthase and a ketoreductase, that are not encoded in the X . oryzae pv . oryzae pig locus . It is possible that these functions are encoded elsewhere in the genome . Another possibility is that some of these functions are shared with the cellular FAS biosynthetic pathway . Rhizobium leguminosarum has been reported to synthesize a polyunsaturated fatty acid that is attached to the Nod factor by using two dedicated proteins, NodF (an ACP) and NodE (a ketosynthase), as well as a third protein, FabG (a ketoreductase), shared with the cellular FAS pathway (26) . It was suggested that xanthomonadin is localized in the cytoplasmic membrane in X . juglandis, as the kinetics of release of the pigment upon ballistic disintegration of bacterial cells was found to be the same as that of NADH oxidase, a cytoplasmic membrane marker (46) . Dianese and Schaad (11) physically separated the two membranes of X . campestris pv . campestris by sucrose density centrifugation and showed that xanthomonadin resides exclusively in the outer membrane . We have also used the sucrose density gradient method for separation of the two membranes of X . oryzae pv . oryzae . The apparent discrepancy between our results and those of Stephens and Starr (46) can be explained as we find high NADH oxidase activity in the outer membrane fraction of X . oryzae pv . oryzae (data not shown) . This activity, which may be due to an as yet unidentified outer membrane-associated protein, indicates that NADH oxidase is not a good cytoplasmic membrane marker for X . oryzae pv . oryzae and possibly for other xanthomonads as well . The product encoded by orf4 is a putative membrane transporter . We demonstrate that Orf4 is essential for outer membrane localization of xanthomonadin in X . oryzae pv . oryzae . The predicted structure of this protein resembles that of the RND family of proton motive force-dependent cytoplasmic membrane proteins that transport a wide variety of substrates like antibiotics, detergents, dyes, and oligosaccharides, etc., across the outer membrane (32) . In gram-negative bacteria, these proteins usually work in concert with a periplasmic protein called membrane fusion protein and an outer membrane factor . The membrane fusion protein probably brings the two membranes closer by causing fusion of the cytoplasmic and outer membranes (12), and the outer membrane factor acts as a channel for transport of the substrates across the outer membrane (27) . Is Orf4 acting in concert with such proteins for outer membrane localization of xanthomonadin? Sequence analysis indicates that ORFs 1 and 2 in the X . oryzae pv . oryzae pig locus encode putative outer membrane and periplasmic proteins, respectively . However, initial results suggest that these may not be essential for transport of the pigment to the outer membrane (data not shown) . The mechanism of action of the putative membrane transporter and the possible involvement of other proteins in the localization of the pigment to the outer membrane needs to be investigated . The xanthomonadin produced by Xanthomonas populi is not halogenated (19) . Our results suggest that, like most xanthomonads, the xanthomonadin isolated from X . oryzae pv . oryzae is halogenated and that it can exist in either mono- or dibrominated forms . The orf11 product is a putative halogenase . A mutation in this ORF, however, does not seem to affect bromination, as determined by mass spectrometry . This suggests that either the putative halogenase is not involved in bromination or that this function is redundant, as there may be another halogenase in the X . oryzae pv . oryzae genome . Two different halogenases, prnA and prnC have been shown to be required for the production of pyrrolnitrin in P . fluorescens (22) . Three putative halogenases, PltA, PltD, and PltM, have been identified in the pyoluteorin (a dichlorinated antifungal antibiotic) biosynthetic gene cluster in P . fluorescens strain Pf-5 (30) . As per the predicted gene organization (Fig . 1), ORFs 7 and 6, 6 and 5, and 4 and 3 overlap each other by 4, 77, and 14 bp, respectively . Reverse transcription-PCR analysis (data not shown) suggests that ORFs 8, 7, 6, and 5 and ORFs 4 and 3 constitute two separate transcription units . ORFs 9, 10, 11, and 12 do not appear to be cotranscribed with either each other or with ORF 8 . The pigment-proficient phenotype associated with the zxx-3::mTn5 (orf8) and pig-56::mTn7 (orf4) insertions suggests that these are nonpolar on downstream genes . Complementation analysis indicates that the pig-55::tetA insertion in orf7 is not polar on orf6 . It is possible that the lack of polarity is due to multiple internal promoters in the pig locus and/or promoters reading out of the insertions . It is interesting that ORFs 10, 9, 7, 6, and 4 in the X . oryzae pv . oryzae pig locus are extremely homologous and have similar organization to ORFs 0771, 0772, 0774, 0775, and 0777, respectively, from X . fastidiosa (43) . ORFs 10, 9, 7, 6, 5, 4, and 3 of the pig locus also exhibit homology and have similar organization to the ORFs 434, 433, 432, 431, 430, 429, and 425, respectively, of the plant pathogenic bacterium R . solanacearum (39) . Intriguingly, R . solanacearum ORF 432 encodes a putative protein of 580 aa, of which the C-terminal 100 aa are homologous to Orf7 (putative dehydratase), which is 98 aa long . The rest of R . solanacearum ORF 432 exhibits homology to acyl or aryl-CoA ligases, which are reported to be involved in the synthesis of PKS precursors (17) . Two other genes, R . solanacearum ORFs 427 and 435, from the cognate locus in R . solanacearum are homologous to ketosynthases and ketoreductases, the functions that are required for PKS-FAS biosynthesis but are missing from the X . oryzae pv . oryzae pig locus . The function of these loci in X . fastidiosa and R . solanacearum is not clear (these bacteria are not reported to produce xanthomonadin), but they might be involved in the synthesis of a xanthomonadin-like molecule . Also, X . fastidiosa does not require an epiphytic phase because it is transmitted through an insect vector, and R . solanacearum is known to infect plants through their roots . Does this suggest another role for xanthomonadin during in planta growth? Alternatively, the homology could be related to a common PKS-FAS biosynthetic pathway that has been co-opted by xanthomonads to produce xanthomonadin . A novel repeat element, XRIC, was discovered during sequence analysis of the X . oryzae pv . oryzae pig locus . We identified nine copies of this element in the database, including two copies in the pig locus, and they were all found in either X . oryzae pv . oryzae or X . campestris pv . campestris . This element was not found in any other organism . The XRIC element, therefore, may be specific to either a few or all Xanthomonas species . Several classes of small extragenic sequences, repeated from 6 to more than 250 times have been reported in E . coli and other bacteria (reviewed by Bachellier et al . in reference 4) . In E . coli, these sequences represent almost 2% of the bacterial DNA . Most of these elements are known to be transcribed and have been postulated to be involved in varied functions: mRNA stabilization, transcription termination, organization of the bacterial nucleoid, and generation of chromosomal rearrangements, etc . (4) . The XRIC elements may also have roles similar to those identified earlier in extragenic, repetitive, palindromic sequences . Previously, it was demonstrated that shikimate dehydrogenase (AroE) is required for xanthomonadin production in X . oryzae pv . oryzae (14), and it was proposed that the aromatic ring in xanthomonadin may be derived from the shikimate pathway . The results presented here suggest the possibility that the polyene chain in xanthomonadin may be derived from a PKS pathway . We have isolated several pigment-deficient mutants of X . oryzae pv . oryzae that are not complemented by clones of either the shikimate dehydrogenase gene or the pig locus isolated in this study (L . Rajagopal and R . Sonti, unpublished results) . These mutants are likely to define additional functions that are involved in xanthomonadin biosynthesis, including those that might be involved in bridging the shikimate and PKS pathways . In order to gain a better understanding of these functions, we are planning to clone and characterize X . oryzae pv . oryzae genomic regions that complement these other pigment-deficient mutants . The X . campestris pv . campestris clone pIG102 complements all naturally isolated and induced pigment-deficient mutants of X . campestris pv . campestris (35) and X . oryzae pv . oryzae (Rajagopal and Sonti, unpublished results), including the shikimate dehydrogenase mutant, and is sufficient to produce xanthomonadin in P . fluorescens (35) . In X . oryzae pv . oryzae, on the other hand, the pig genes identified in this study and the shikimate dehydrogenase gene, are present at two different genomic loci . Also, several pigment-deficient mutants of X . oryzae pv . oryzae could not be complemented by genomic clones of either of these two loci (Rajagopal and Sonti, unpublished results) . These observations indicate that the X . oryzae pv . oryzae pig locus has been rearranged in comparison to the X . campestris pv . campestris pig locus . The sequence of the X . campestris pv . campestris pig locus will be available after the completion of the genome sequencing project that is under way in Brazil . Sequence comparison of the pig loci from these two organisms should reveal the nature of these rearrangements and identify the genes that have been either deleted or dispersed to other locations on the genome of X . oryzae pv . oryzae .
A.K.G . and L.R . were supported by fellowships from the Council of Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR) of the government of India .
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