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Journal of Bacteriology, June 2003, p . 3333-3343, Vol . 185,
No . 11
Distribution and Organization of Auxotrophic Genes on the Multichromosomal
Genome of Burkholderia multivorans ATCC 17616
Harunobu Komatsu, Yoshiyuki Imura, Akira Ohori, Yuji Nagata, and
Masataka Tsuda*
Department of Environmental Life Sciences, Graduate School of Life Sciences,
Tohoku University, Sendai 980-8577, Japan
Received 4 December 2002/ Accepted 12 March 2003
The Burkholderia multivorans strain ATCC 17616 carries three
circular chromosomes with sizes of 3.4, 2.5, and 0.9 Mb . To determine
the distribution and organization of the amino acid biosynthetic
genes on the genome of this ß-proteobacterium, various auxotrophic
mutations were isolated using a Tn5 derivative that was
convenient not only for the determination of its insertion site on
the genome map but also for the structural analysis of the flanking
regions . Analysis by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis revealed that
20 out of 23 insertion mutations were distributed on the 3.4-Mb
chromosome . More detailed analysis of the his, trp,
arg, and lys mutations and their flanking regions revealed
the following properties of these auxotrophic genes: (i) all nine
his genes were clustered on the 3.4-Mb chromosome; (ii) seven
trp genes were organized within two distinct regions, i.e., a
trpEGDC cluster on the 3.4-Mb chromosome and a trpFBA
cluster on the 2.5-Mb chromosome; (iii) the leu gene cluster,
leuCDB, was also located close to the trpFBA cluster; and (iv)
lysA and argG genes were located on the 2.5-Mb chromosome,
in contrast to the argH gene, which was located on the 3.4-Mb
chromosome . Southern hybridization analysis, allelic exchange
mutagenesis of ATCC 17616, and complementation tests demonstrated
that all of the genes examined were functional and existed as a
single copy within the genome . The present findings also indicated
that the 2.5-Mb chromosome carried various auxotrophic genes
with no structural or functional counterparts on the remaining two
chromosomes .
The Burkholderia cepacia complex (Bcc) consists of several species
of closely related and aerobic bacteria belonging to the ß
subgroup of Proteobacteria, and they are ubiquitously distributed
in various natural environments (9, 27) .
Due to their production of various antifungal metabolites and
extraordinary biodegradative abilities, some strains within this
complex have shown great potential for application in the biocontrol
of soilborne plant pathogens and for the bioremediation of polluted
environments . Other strains within this complex have been recognized
as plant pathogens and as serious opportunistic pathogens of humans
with cystic fibrosis (21, 27) .
The Bcc complex has an unusually complex genome, and almost all
examined Bcc strains have three large (>600 kb) circular replicons
(most probably chromosomes) with total genome sizes of >7 Mb (21,
30) . The genomes of some strains have exhibited
frequent and large-scale rearrangements, including the deletion and
translocation of a part of one chromosome to another (21) .
One strain, ATCC 17616, belonging to genomovar II of the Bcc, has
recently been designated B . multivorans (38) . This
strain has been reported to show genome rearrangements that are
probably due to the high degree of transposition activity exhibited
by a number of its insertion elements (4,
14, 21) . As shown in Fig.
1, this strain has been reported to carry three circular
chromosomes of 3.4, 2.5, and 0.9 Mb in size (hereafter designated
Chr I, Chr II, and Chr III, respectively), each containing at
least one copy of the rRNA gene (7) . The genome map of ATCC
17616 has been constructed by use of three rare-cutting restriction
enzymes, PacI, PmeI, and SwaI . To date, however, the
genetic organization of the three chromosomes has remained poorly
characterized, and only four auxotrophic and three catabolic genes
have been mapped on the genome (i.e., the arg, ile, and
his genes on Chr I and a lys gene and the genes for the
catabolism of ribitol, trehalose, and phthalate on Chr II) (8) .
A more detailed characterization of the organization of these genes
and their flanking regions has until now remained a task for future
study .
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FIG . 1 . Genome map of B . multivorans ATCC 17616 . The numbers
shown with the restriction fragment designations are the sizes in
megabases . Note that Chr II and Chr III lack the SwaI and PacI
sites, respectively (8) . Arrowheads indicate the
positions of the auxotrophic genes identified in this study . The PFGE
mapping of the TnMod-RTp' insertion sites in the BT strains whose
designations are shown in parentheses are described in detail in the
text and in the legend to Fig . 3.
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Based on molecular biological and genome sequence analyses,
chromosome multiplicities have been recognized in other bacteria (1,
19, 25, 35,
37, 40, 42) . In
bacteria containing two chromosomes, the larger chromosome usually
carries almost all of the essential housekeeping genes and the genes
coding for primary metabolic enzymes such as those required for amino
acid biosynthesis . In contrast, the smaller chromosome tends to
contain second and/or third genes that have counterparts on the
larger chromosome (7, 11,
15-17, 31,
39) . However, there are several exceptions . For
example, Rhodobacter sphaeroides 2.4.1 was experimentally
shown to carry two functional tryptophan biosynthetic genes (i.e.,
trpB and trpF) on only the smaller chromosome (23),
whereas the smaller (2.1-Mb) chromosome (designated a megaplasmid in
reference 31) of a ß-proteobacterium, Ralstonia
solanacearum GMI1000, has been thought to carry some amino acid
biosynthetic genes (e.g., metB and metE) with no
counterparts on the larger (3.7-Mb) chromosome .
The aim of the present study was to gain additional experimental
understanding of the distribution and organization of the amino acid
biosynthetic genes on the B . multivorans ATCC 17616 genome .
For this purpose, we obtained various auxotrophic mutations by
insertion of a 1.2-kb mini-Tn5 derivative, TnMod-RTp' (Fig .
2), which enabled us to achieve the following goals: (i)
clarification of the function of the mutated gene, (ii) determination
of the position of the insertion site on the genome map, and (iii)
cloning and analysis of the flanking regions of the insertion
site (12) . The results indicated that (i) the majority of the
auxotrophic genes were present on Chr I and (ii) functional
auxotrophic genes such as argG, leuCDB, lysA, and trpFBA
were located on Chr II with no counterparts on the remaining two
chromosomes .
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FIG . 2 . Linearized map of pTnMod-RTp' . The figure is drawn
schematically (12) . The arrows represent the
transcriptional directions of the Tpr and transposase (tnp)
genes . The boxes represent the R6K origin of replication (R6KoriV)
and the RP4-derived origin of transfer (oriT) . The supply in
trans of
protein (pir gene product) and the RP4-specified transfer
function allowed vegetative replication and conjugal mobilization,
respectively, of pTnMod-RTp' (34) . The black
triangles represent inverted repeats . The arrowheads below the map
indicate the positions of the primers (Tntpow1 and Tntpow2) used for DNA
sequencing.
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Bacterial strains, plasmids, and media. The bacterial strains
and plasmids used in this study are listed in Table 1.
Escherichia coli and B . multivorans cells were cultivated
at 37 and 26°C, respectively . Liquid media used were M9 minimal
medium containing 0.2% succinate as a carbon source and Luria broth
(LB) (3) . Solid media were prepared by the addition
of 1.5% agar . When needed, isopropyl-ß-D-thiogalactopyranoside
and 5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indolyl-ß-D-galactopyranoside
were used at final concentrations of 0.5 mM and 40 µg/ml,
respectively . Selective agents added to the media were as follows:
ampicillin (Ap) at 50 µg/ml for E . coli, kanamycin (Km) at 50
µg/ml for E . coli and 150 µg/ml for B . multivorans,
tetracycline (Tc) at 10 µg/ml for E . coli and 50 µg/ml for
B . multivorans, and trimethoprim (Tp) at 250 µg/ml for E . coli
and 100 µg/ml for B . multivorans .
| TABLE 1 . Bacterial strains and plasmids used in this study
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Basic DNA manipulation. Established protocols were used for the
following procedures: preparation of genomic and plasmid DNA, DNA
digestion with restriction endonucleases, ligation, standard agarose
gel electrophoresis, and transformation of E . coli cells (32) .
Transformation of B . multivorans cells was carried out by
electroporation . B . multivorans cells grown to an optical
density at 600 nm of 0.6 were collected by centrifugation and washed
three times with a half-volume of ice-cold 1 mM MOPS buffer
containing 10% glycerol . The cells were then pelleted by
centrifugation for 10 min at 3,000 x
g and resuspended in a 0.01 vol of the buffer to obtain a
concentration of about 1 x 1010
cells/ml . A 100-µl aliquot of the cell suspension and plasmid DNA was
transferred to an ice-cold electroporation cuvette (Bio-Rad;
2-mm-wide gap) and pulsed using a Gene Pulser (Bio-Rad) at 2.5 kV, 25
µF, and 400
.
After electroporation, the cells were incubated for 4 h in 1 ml of LB
containing 10% glycerol and plated on LB agar plates containing the
appropriate antibiotics .
PCR was performed with ExTaq DNA polymerase (TaKaRa, Kyoto,
Japan) . PCR amplification of a portion of the 16S rRNA gene from the
ATCC 17616 genome was performed with primers 5'-AGAGTTTGATCCTGGCTCAG-3'
and 5'-AAGGAGGTGATCCRCCGCA-3' (2) . The 0.36-kb fragment
carrying a part of the ATCC 17616 trpB gene was amplified with
the degenerated primers 5'-GGNGGNGGNWSNAAYGCN-3' and
5'-YTCNARNGCNGGDATDATNCCYTC-3' (26) .
PFGE. An agarose block containing the unshared genomic DNA
was prepared as described by Cheng and Lessie (8) .
Before digestion of DNA with restriction endonuclease, an appropriate
amount of the agarose block was transferred into a 1.5-ml Eppendorf
tube and equilibrated three times with 1 ml of the restriction buffer
for 30 min at 4°C (29) . After replacement of this
buffer with 0.2 ml of fresh restriction buffer, the agarose block was
treated for 2 h with 10 U of PacI, I-CeuI, or SwaI at
37°C (for PacI and I-CeuI) or at 25°C (for SwaI) .
Using the CHEF DR III system (Bio-Rad), the DNA fragments ranging
from 50 kb to 1.4 Mb in size were separated by pulsed-field gel
electrophoresis (PFGE) through 1% pulsed-field certified agarose
(Bio-Rad) in 0.5x Tris-borate
buffer (45 mM Tris-HCl, 45 mM boric acid, 1 mM EDTA, pH 8.0) at 14°C
and 6 V cm-1 . The pulse times were 10 to 40 s for 24 h and
15 to 160 s for 28 h for the separation of the fragments ranging in
size from 50 kb to 600 kb and from 250 kb to 1.4 Mb, respectively . To
clearly separate the fragments of more than 1.4 Mb in size, PFGE was
carried out with pulse times of 120 to 360 s for 42 h through 0.8%
agarose in 1x TAE buffer (40 mM
Tris-HCl, 40 mM acetate, 1 mM EDTA, pH 8.0) at 14°C and at 4 V cm-1 .
The size of migrated DNA fragments was estimated based on
Saccharomyces cerevisiae chromosomal DNA (Bio-Rad), which was
used as a standard .
Southern hybridization. Using the established protocols (28),
Southern hybridization analysis was carried out . The DNA fragments
separated by gel electrophoresis were transferred onto a Hybond-N
nylon membrane (Amersham Biosciences) by capillary transfer (29) .
Using a GS GENE LINKER UV chamber (Bio-Rad) before transfer, the
large DNA fragments separated by PFGE were nicked by UV . Using a DIG
(digoxygenin) DNA labeling kit (Roche Diagnostics), the probe
DNA fragment was labeled with DIG, and the hybridized DNA fragment
was detected by a DIG DNA detection kit (Roche Diagnostics) .
Transposon and allelic exchange mutagenesis. To obtain B .
multivorans mutants that were auxotrophic for various amino
acids, we employed TnMod-RTp', a 1.2-kb Tn5 derivative
containing the PacI and SwaI sites at one extreme end (Fig .
2) (12) . A 3-µg portion of pTnMod-RTp'
was used to transform the ATCC 17616 cells by electroporation, and
the Tpr colonies selected on LB agar plates were checked
for growth on M9 succinate minimal agar plates . Using pEX18Tc, a
ColE1-based vector carrying the sacB gene and the RP4-derived
oriT region (34), allelic exchange
mutagenesis of the B . multivorans genome was carried out by
the method of Hoang et al . (18) . The ATCC 17616 DNA fragment
with an insert of the Tpr or Kmr gene was cloned
into pEX18Tc, and the resulting plasmid was mobilized conjugally from
an E . coli strain, S17-1 (33), to ATCC
17616 . The transconjugants were selected on Tp- or Km-containing M9
minimal agar plates supplemented with 5% sucrose and an appropriate
amino acid(s) . The genomic DNA of the transconjugants that were
sensitive to Tc was analyzed by Southern hybridization to confirm the
allelic exchange .
Construction of plasmids. The SuperCos1-based cosmid library
of the ATCC 17616 genome was constructed by partial digestion of the
genomic DNA with Sau3AI, ligation with the BamHI-treated
SuperCos1, in vitro packaging with Gigapack Gold III packaging
extracts (Stratagene), and transfection of XL1-Blue MR .
pBTB141 was the 8.2-kb R6KoriV-driven plasmid that was recovered
in JM109( pir)
by self-ligation of the BamHI-treated genome of BT141 (see
Fig . 4C) . The BamHI-linearized form of this plasmid
was inserted into the BamHI site of pEX18Tc to construct pKOM152
such that the BamHI site in truA was located adjacent to the
vector-derived EcoRI site . The TnMod-RTp'-containing EcoRI
fragment of pKOM152 was recloned into the EcoRI site of
pEX18Tc to obtain pKOM159 . The BamHI-flanked
Km
cassette from pHP45 Km
(13) was next inserted at the BglII site
that was located at one end of the transposon (Fig . 2)
on pKOM159, and the resulting plasmid was designated pKOM160 . The
BamHI-EcoRI fragment containing the leuD gene (see
Fig . 4C) was excised from pKOM152 and inserted into
the corresponding sites of pEX18Tc, and the PstI site in the
leuD gene of the resulting plasmid was subjected to insertion
of the pUC4K-derived, PstI-flanked Kmr gene to generate
pKOM154 . The trpFB-containing BamHI fragment from
pSBm1-92 (see Fig . 4C) was inserted into the BamHI
site of pEX18Tc, and the XhoI fragment covering the trpF
and trpB genes on the resulting plasmid was replaced by the
pUC4K-derived SalI-flanked Kmr gene to construct
pKOM157 .
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FIG . 4 . Organization of the ATCC 17616 gene clusters covering the TnMod-RTp'
insertion sites . The dashed lines indicate the regions not sequenced .
Arrows indicate the deduced transcriptional directions of the genes:
black arrows represent the genes directly involved in amino acid
biosynthesis, shaded arrows represent the genes postulated not to be
directly involved in amino acid biosynthesis, and open arrows and open
triangles represent the 5'- or 3'-truncated genes not directly involved
in amino acid biosynthesis . The flags represent the positions of the TnMod-RTp'
insertion sites, and the mutant names (without the prefix BT) are
indicated . The rightward and leftward directions of the flags represent
the orientations of the TnMod-RTp' inserts such that the
transposon-specified Tpr genes are located at the right and
left ends (Fig . 2), respectively . The open and filled
circles above the map in panel C indicate the positions of the pUC4K-
and
-Km-derived
Kmr genes, respectively, that were inserted into the ATCC
17616 genome to disrupt the wild-type allele, and the names of the
resulting mutants (without the prefix BT) are indicated . The open bars
above the maps indicate the wild-type genomic regions on the pKOM series
of plasmids, whereas the filled bars below the maps indicate the DNA
fragments used as the probes for Southern hybridization analysis . The
BamHI fragment in pBTB141 is indicated by the double-headed arrow
above the map in panel C . Abbreviations for restriction sites: B, BamHI;
E, EcoRI; K, KpnI; and Sp, SphI.
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To complement the auxotrophic mutations on the genome, the genomic
DNA fragments carrying the wild-type alleles were inserted into the
multiple cloning sites of pBBR1MCS (20) such that the
inserted genes were able to be transcribed from the vector-derived
lac promoter . Details of the procedures used to construct the
pBBR1MCS-based plasmids (see Fig . 4) are available
upon request . These plasmids were introduced into the auxotrophic
mutants of ATCC 17616 by electroporation .
Nucleotide sequence accession numbers. Cloned DNA fragments
were sequenced by using an ABI PRISM 310 sequencer (Applied
Biosystems) with universal, reverse, and custom-synthesized primers .
The two primers Tntpow1 (5'-TTAACGGCTGACATGGGGGGGT-3') and Tntpow2
(5'-TTGAACGTGTGGCCTAAGCGAGC-3') were employed for determination of
the ATCC 17616 sequences located adjacent to the R6KoriV and
Tpr ends, respectively, of the TnMod-RTp' insert
(Fig . 2) . The nucleotide and protein sequences were analyzed
by using Genetyx 11 software (SDC Inc., Tokyo, Japan) . Sequence
homologies were analyzed by the BLAST 2.0 programs (National
Institute of Genetics, Mishima, Japan) (24) . The nucleotide
sequences described in this paper have been deposited in the
DDBJ/EMBL/GenBank databases under the following accession numbers:
AB091436 (for the 8.5-kb region containing the nine his genes),
AB091305 (for the 7.5-kb region containing the trpEGDC cluster),
AB091435 (for the 13-kb region containing the leuCDB and trpFBA
clusters),
AB091437 (for the 3.7-kb region containing argH),
AB091438 (for the 5.4-kb region containing argG),
AB092607 (for the 3.0-kb region containing lysA), and
AB092606 (for the 1.5-kb region covering a part of the 16S rRNA
gene) .
Mapping of rrn operons. Cheng and Lessie (8)
have demonstrated by Southern hybridization analysis that the ATCC
17616 genome carried the rrn operons in the 1.2-, 1.1-, and
0.47-Mb SwaI-PacI fragments from Chr I, in the 1.4-Mb
PacI fragment from Chr II, and in Chr III (Fig .
1) . However, the exact copy number and precise position of each
rrn operon on the genome map remained unknown . Southern hybridization
analysis of the XhoI-digested genomic DNA by use of the
PCR-amplified fragment of the 16S rRNA gene as the probe revealed
that ATCC 17616 carried five copies of the 16S rRNA gene (data not
shown) . Enzyme I-CeuI specifically digests the prokaryotic 23S
rRNA gene (22), and digestion of the ATCC 17616
genome by I-CeuI generated five DNA fragments with sizes of
2.5, 1.9, 0.90, 0.90, and 0.61 Mb (Fig . 3A, lane
2) . These results indicated that (i) each of the five DNA fragments
reported by Cheng and Lessie (8) carried one copy
of the rrn operon, (ii) Chr I consisted of the 1.9-, 0.90-,
and 0.61-Mb I-CeuI fragments, and (iii) a single I-CeuI
site was situated on both Chr II and Chr III . The I-CeuI site
on Chr III was found to be located 0.34 Mb apart from a unique SwaI
site, since the Chr III-derived 0.90-Mb SwaI fragment was
converted into 0.56- and 0.34-Mb SwaI-I-CeuI fragments
(Fig . 3A, lanes 3 and 4) . The Chr II-derived 1.4-Mb PacI
fragment was divided into 0.96- and 0.44-Mb fragments by additional
treatment with I-CeuI (Fig . 3A, lanes 6 and
7) . Strain BT141 was an ATCC 17616 derivative in which a TnMod-RTp'
insert was located in the middle of the 0.27-Mb PacI fragment
on Chr II (Fig . 3B, lanes 2 and 4) (see below),
therefore giving this chromosome a novel SwaI site that had
originated from TnMod-RTp' . Since Chr II of BT141 generated
1.4- and 1.1-Mb fragments by double digestion with I-CeuI and
SwaI (data not shown), the I-CeuI site on Chr II was
concluded to be located at the position 0.44 Mb counterclockwise from
the 0.80-Mb PacI fragment (Fig . 1) . Double
digestion of the ATCC 17616 genome with I-CeuI and PacI
led to a loss of the Chr I-derived 2.2- and 0.6-Mb PacI fragments
with concomitant generation of novel 0.32- and 0.58-Mb fragments,
but the Chr I-derived 1.9-Mb I-CeuI and 0.56-Mb PacI
fragments remained unchanged by this double digestion (Fig.
3A, lanes 2, 6, and 7) . The Chr I-derived 1.2-Mb
SwaI fragment was divided into 0.74- and 0.46-Mb fragments by
additional digestion with I-CeuI (Fig . 3A,
lane 3) . These restriction patterns enabled the mapping of three I-CeuI
sites on Chr I such that (i) one site was 0.32 Mb clockwise from the
0.60-Mb PacI fragment and (ii) the remaining two sites in the
0.60- and 2.2-Mb PacI fragments were very close (<50 kb) to
both ends of the 0.56-Mb PacI fragment (Fig . 1) .
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FIG . 3 . PFGE mapping of the I-CeuI sites and the TnMod-RTp'
insertion sites on the genome of ATCC 17616 . Restriction patterns
determined by PFGE assays whose running conditions were suitable to
separate clearly the DNA fragments ranging in size from 250 kb to 1.4 Mb
are depicted . The restriction patterns clearly demonstrating the
presence of fragments more than 1.4 Mb and less than 250 kb in size are
not shown; they can be provided upon request . The S . cerevisiae
chromosomes were applied as size standards in lane 1 of each of the
three panels, and the sizes are indicated in kilobases . The DNA
fragments described in the text are marked by arrowheads . (A) Mapping of
the I-CeuI sites on the ATCC 17616 genome . The following enzymes
were used to digest the ATCC 17616 genome: lane 2, I-CeuI; lane
3, I-CeuI plus SwaI; lane 4, SwaI; lane 5, SwaI
plus PacI; lane 6, PacI; and lane 7, PacI plus I-CeuI .
(B) Mapping the TnMod-RTp' insertion sites in Trp- and
His- mutants . Lanes 2 and 6, ATCC 17616; lanes 3 and 7, BT124
(trpG); lanes 4 and 8, BT141 (a leaky Trp- mutant);
lanes 5 and 9, BT187 (hisA) . The genomes were digested by PacI
(lanes 2 to 5) and SwaI (lanes 6 to 9) . (C) Mapping of the TnMod-RTp'
insertionsites in Lys- and Arg- mutants . Lanes 2,
6, and 8, ATCC 17616; lanes 3 and 9, BT122 (lysA); lanes 4 and 7,
BT129 (argH); lanes 5 and 10, BT133 (argG) . The genomes
were digested by PacI (lanes 2 to 5), SwaI (lanes 6 and
7), and PacI plus I-CeuI (lanes 8 to 10).
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Transposon mutagenesis of ATCC 17616. For the mutagenesis of
ATCC 17616, we employed a plasmid, pTnMod-RTp', that carried
(i) the Tpr gene, the vegetative replication origin of the
E . coli-specific plasmid R6K, and the PacI and SwaI sites
in the 1.2-kb TnMod-RTp' region and (ii) the transposase gene
outside of the transposon (Fig . 2) (10) .
Electroporation of the ATCC 17616 cells with 1 µg of the plasmid DNA
led to the formation of approximately 200 transformants on LB agar
plates containing Tp . Southern hybridization analysis of six
such arbitrarily chosen transformants indicated that (i) each genome
carried only one copy of the TnMod-RTp' region with a
concomitant loss of the remaining portion of the plasmid and (ii) the
insertion sites differed among the transformants (data not shown) .
Approximately 5,100 Tpr transformants were obtained independently,
and the 44 derivatives failed to grow on M9 succinate minimal
agar plates . Among these derivatives, the 23 mutants grew normally on
the succinate minimal agar plates supplemented with an appropriate
amino acid(s) at a concentration of 1 mM (Table 2) and 12
mutants were auxotrophic for histidine or tryptophan (the His-
or Trp- phenotype) . Only one mutant, BT141, showed a leaky Trp-
phenotype and formed very minute colonies on the minimal agar plates,
and the addition of 1 mM tryptophan to the medium restored its
growth to the wild-type rate . The remaining 22 auxotrophic mutants
did not grow at all on the minimal agar plates .
| TABLE 2 . Summary of TnMod-RTp'-inserted mutants
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Mapping of transposon insertion sites on genome. The TnMod-RTp'
insert in a His- mutant, BT187, generated the 0.48- and
0.12-Mb PacI fragments with concomitant loss of the Chr
I-derived 0.60-Mb PacI fragment (Fig . 3B, lanes 2 and
5) . This mutant genome generated the 0.34-Mb and 0.16-Mb SwaI
fragments instead of the 0.50-Mb SwaI fragment of the
wild-type genome (Fig . 3B, lanes 6 and 9) . The
remaining four His- mutants showed restriction patterns
indistinguishable from those of BT187, indicating that the transposon
insertion sites in the five mutants were located close to one another
within the 0.47-Mb SwaI-PacI fragment on Chr I (Fig.
1) . The genome of the leaky Trp- mutant
(BT141) gave rise to a doublet of the 135-kb PacI fragment instead
of the 270-kb PacI fragment present in Chr II of ATCC 17616
(Fig . 3B, lanes 2 and 4) . The genomes of the remaining
six Trp- mutants (e.g., BT124) carried this 270-kb PacI
fragment, and no apparent changes in the other PacI fragments
were detected in comparisons of the genomes of these mutants with the
wild-type genome (Fig . 3B, lanes 2 and 3) . Loss of
the wild-type 1.7-Mb SwaI fragment and novel generation of
1.2- and 0.53-Mb fragments in the six mutant genomes (Fig.
3B, lanes 6 and 7) indicated that all six
transposon insertion sites were located close to one another at one
end of the 2.2-Mb PacI fragment, which was adjacent to the
0.56-Mb PacI fragment on Chr I (Fig . 1) .
BT122 and BT133 were auxotrophs for lysine (the Lys- phenotype)
and arginine (the Arg- phenotype), respectively (Table
2) . The PacI digestion of the BT122 and
BT133 genomes resulted in the loss of the wild-type 1.4-Mb fragment,
with concomitant generation of 1.3- and 0.10-Mb fragments and 1.1-
and 0.30-Mb fragments, respectively (Fig . 3C, lanes
2, 3, and 5) . Double digestion of the two mutant genomes with PacI
and I-CeuI allowed their transposon insertions to map in the
0.44- and 0.96-Mb PacI-I-CeuI fragments, respectively,
on Chr II (Fig . 1; Fig . 3C, lanes 8
to 10) . In contrast, the transposon insertion in another Arg-
mutant (BT129) was located within the region that was shared by the
2.2-Mb PacI and 1.2-Mb SwaI fragments on Chr I of ATCC
17616 (Fig . 3C, lanes 6 and 7) and generation of novel 0.25-
and 0.95-Mb SwaI fragments from the BT129 genome indicated that
the transposon insertion was located 0.25 Mb clockwise from the
0.50-Mb SwaI fragment (Fig . 1) .
Similar PFGE analysis (data not shown) of the genomes of eight
other auxotrophic mutants listed in Table 2 indicated that (i)
their TnMod-RTp' insertion sites were distributed on Chr I and
(ii) the insertion sites of the two aspartate-auxotrophic (Asp-)
mutants were close to each other and those of the two
isoleucine-auxotrophic (Ile-) mutants were also close to
each other (Fig . 1) .
Detailed structure of the regions covering the transposon insertion
sites. The chromosomal DNA regions that covered the transposon
insertion sites of the His-, Trp-, Arg-,
and Lys- mutants (Table 2) were further
investigated as follows . TnMod-RTp' carries the Tpr gene and
the oriV region of plasmid R6K but does not contain the EcoRI,
BamHI, or SphI site (12) . The plasmid
containing the transposon and its flanking chromosomal regions were
recovered by digestion of the genomic DNA with one of these enzymes,
self-ligation, and subsequent selection of the Tpr
transformants of an E . coli strain, JM109( pir) .
The recovered plasmids were used to determine the sequences of the
insertion sites and their flanking regions . Insertion of Tn5
and its derivatives is well known to generate a 9-bp duplication of
the target sequence (5), and all of the TnMod-RTp'
insertion sites examined in the present study showed such 9-bp
duplications (data not shown) . To test whether the auxotrophic
mutation was due to the TnMod-RTp' insertion, the recovered
R6KoriV-driven plasmid was linearized by BamHI or
EcoRI digestion and inserted into the corresponding site of
pEX18Tc (18) and the resulting plasmid was introduced into
the ATCC 17616 cells to obtain the Tpr transformants .
Among such transformants, those sensitive to Tc in which the donor Tpr
marker was inserted into the wild-type genome by a homology-dependent
double-crossover were chosen . These transformants showed auxotrophy
identical to that of the original transposon-induced mutant,
demonstrating that the auxotrophic phenotype was indeed due to the TnMod-RTp'
insertion . This finding was also supported by the successful
complementation of the mutation in the presence of pBBR1MCS-based
plasmids carrying the wild-type alleles . The functionality and copy
numbers of the genes closely located to the TnMod-RTp' insert
were investigated by (i) allelic exchange mutagenesis of the
wild-type genome by the Kmr gene, (ii) complementation by
the pBBR1MCS-based plasmids carrying the wild-type alleles, and (iii)
detection of homologous regions on the genome by Southern
hybridization analysis under low-stringency conditions .
(i) his genes. All five his insertion
mutations isolated in this study were located within a 4.1-kb segment
on Chr I (Fig . 4A) . Sequence analysis of the 8.5-kb
region covering this segment revealed 11 genes in the following
order: hisG-hisD-hisC-hisB-orf1-hisH-hisA-hisF-his-hisE-orf2 .
The TnMod-RTp' insertions were located in hisB (BT111),
hisA (BT187), and hisF (BT185) and at the same position in
hisE (BT148 and BT154) (Table 2), and these
his insertion mutations were complemented by pKOM167, pKOM168,
or pKOM169 (Fig . 4A) . BLAST searches of the
databases showed that hisD to hisE, the nine genes of
ATCC 17616, had very high sequence identities (up to 84 and 89% in
the nucleotide and amino acid sequences, respectively) to those of
the R . solanacearum GMI1000 chromosome (Table 3)
(31) . Both bacteria shared the same order of these nine
genes with the presence of an unknown gene, orf1, that was
located between hisB and hisH (Fig . 4A) .
Involvement of orf1 of ATCC 17616 in histidine biosynthesis
was not investigated . The presence of hisG just upstream of
hisD in the ATCC 17616 genome differed from that on the R .
solanacearum genome, for which the position of the hisG
gene remains unknown . However, the hisG sequence of ATCC 17616
showed very high homology (82% identity with a one-base gap) with the
R . solanacearum DNA region that was located just upstream of
hisD . Southern hybridization analysis (data not shown)
indicated that the ATCC 17616 genome carried only one copy of hisC
(Fig . 4A) . This finding was in contrast with the
presence in the R . solanacearum chromosome of an additional
copy of the hisC gene (hisC2) not linked to the his gene
cluster (31) .
| TABLE 3 . BLAST matches of the ATCC 17616 gene productsa
|
|
(ii) trp genes. All six trp insertion mutations
mapped on Chr I were clustered within a 3.4-kb segment of a 7.5-kb
sequenced fragment . This fragment contained the four trp genes
in the following order: trpE-trpG-trpD-trpC .
All of these genes were subjected to the insertion of TnMod-RTp'
(Fig . 4B) . The trpE, trpD, and trpC
mutations were complemented by pKOM170 . Each of the four trp
gene products from ATCC 17616 also showed >61% amino acid
sequence identity with the corresponding gene product encoded by the
R . solanacearum chromosome (Table 3) . The organization
and structure of the genes other than the trp genes (Fig.
4B) were also highly conserved between the two
bacteria, with the exception that a single open reading frame (ORF)
(RSc2883) located between trpG and trpD in R .
solanacearum (31) was absent in ATCC 17616 .
The R . solanacearum megaplasmid carried the second copy of
trpC and trpD (trpC2 and trpD2, respectively) (31) .
Our Southern hybridization analysis and disruption of the wild-type
alleles of ATCC 17616 (data not shown) supported the idea of
the presence of a single functional copy of the trpEGDC cluster
on Chr I (Table 2 and Fig . 4B) .
As described above, the leaky trp mutant (BT141) carried the
transposon within the 0.27-Mb PacI fragment on Chr II (Fig .
3B) . The 7.0-kb BamHI fragment subjected to the
transposon insertion (i.e., the chromosomal fragment on pBTB141) was
sequenced, and BLAST searches of the databases revealed that the ORFs
within this fragment did not have a clear match with any sequences
that were directly or indirectly involved in tryptophan biosynthesis
(Fig . 4C and Table 3) . The BamHI-linearized
form of pBTB141 was inserted into pEX18Tc, and the resulting plasmid
(pKOM152) (Fig . 4C and Table 1)
was used to introduce the BT141-specified TnMod-RTp' insert
into the ATCC 17616 genome by a homology-dependent double-crossover
event . The resulting strain showed the same leaky Trp-
phenotype as that exhibited by BT141, supporting the assumption that
the leaky phenotype of BT141 was the result of the insertion of the
transposon in orf5 .
A pair of degenerated primers were designed based on the conserved
amino acid sequences of the TrpB proteins in various bacterial
species, and the internal 360-bp fragment of the ATCC 17616 trpB
gene was amplified by PCR . One cosmid (pSBm1-92) hybridized with this
PCR product carried, in addition to the pBTB141-loaded chromosomal
region, a DNA region that was located downstream of orf5 (Fig.
4C) . Sequence analysis and subsequent database
searches strongly suggested that this region carried the trpF,
trpB, and trpA genes (Table 3) . Disruption of
the ATCC 17616 trpF and trpB genes by insertion of the
pKOM157-derived Kmr gene (Table 1) conferred the
Trp- phenotype on the resulting mutant (BT214), and
Southern hybridization analysis using a portion of the trpA
gene and the PCR product of the trpB gene as the probes (data
not shown) showed a single-copy state of both genes on the genome
(Fig . 4C) . These results indicated that the trpB
and trpF genes were indeed functional . The three Trp proteins
of ATCC 17616 also showed very high homology with the respective
proteins of R . solanacearum (Table 3), and the
gene organization of the truA-trpF-trpB-orf6-trpA
region in ATCC 17616 (Fig . 4C) was also highly
conserved on the R . solanacearum chromosome . Involvement of
orf6 in tryptophan biosynthesis was not investigated . A plausible
operon structure of at least the four genes, orf5 to trpB,
was inferred by very tight clustering (i.e., overlapping of the stop
and start codons) of these genes and the presence of a strong
promoter sequence upstream of orf5 . Strain BT216 (Table
1) differed from BT141 (ATCC 17616orf5::TnMod-RTp')
in that the
Km
cassette containing the transcriptional terminator sequence was added
to the right end of the transposon (Fig . 4C) . BT216
also showed the leaky Trp- . This leaky phenotype of BT141
and BT216 was complemented by the introduction of pKOM173, which
carried the wild-type trpFB genes but not orf5, indicating
that the putative orf5 product in itself was not responsible
for the leaky phenotype of BT141 and BT216 .
(iii) Genes located close to trpFBA genes on Chr II.
The 5.3-kb chromosomal region upstream of orf5 carried the putative
leuCDB and asd genes (Fig . 4C) . The last
gene encodes aspartate-semialdehyde dehydrogenase, which produces in
many bacterial species a cell-wall precursor, meso-diaminopimelate,
as well as L-aspartate 4-semialdehyde, a
common precursor for the biosynthesis of several amino acids (10) .
The gene organization of the leuCDB-asd region also showed
high resemblance to the corresponding region on the R . solanacearum
chromosome (Table 3) . Southern hybridization analysis
(data not shown) indicated that the ATCC 17616 genome possessed a
single copy of the leuCDB gene cluster and the asd gene
(Fig . 4C) . Disruption of the wild-type leuD
allele of ATCC 17616 by insertion of the pKOM154-loaded Kmr
gene led to the generation of the mutant auxotrophic for leucine
(BT211), and the BT211 derivative carrying pKOM171 (Fig.
4C) showed prototrophy . These results indicated
that the leuD gene was indeed functional .
(iv) arg and lys genes. The Chr I- and Chr
II-loaded TnMod-RTp' inserts in the two Arg- mutants, BT129
and BT133, respectively, were situated in the argH and argG
genes, respectively, and each gene was neither followed nor preceded
by the genes related to arginine biosynthesis (Fig . 4D
and E) . The Chr II-loaded transposon insert in the Lys-
mutant, BT122, was located within lysA (Fig . 4F) .
Located adjacent to this gene was the putative lysR gene, and
the two genes had a head-to-head organization with respect to their
relative transcriptional directions . We did not investigate the
functionality of the lysR gene . Disruption of the Chr II-loaded
argG and lysA alleles of ATCC 17616 by the cloned TnMod-RTp'
insertion mutations resulted in the generation of the Arg- and
Lys- mutants, respectively . The introduction of pKOM174 into
BT133 and pKOM173 into BT122 led to normal growth of the resulting
strains on the minimal agar plates . Southern hybridization analysis
(data not shown) also identified no structural homologues of
argG, argH, or lysA on the ATCC 17616 genome (Table
2 and Fig . 4) . The ArgH and ArgG
proteins revealed very high amino acid sequence identities (82 and
78%, respectively) to those encoded by the R . solanacearum
chromosome (Table 3), whereas the LysA and LysR
proteins showed much lower identities (34 and 32%, respectively) . The
other ORF products in the argG and lysA regions
revealed no significant homology with those encoded by R . solanacearum
and its related species .
In this study, the TnMod-RTp'-inserted mutations which were
auxotrophic for various amino acids were isolated from B . multivorans
ATCC 17616 (Table 2) and such mutation sites were found
to be distributed on Chr I and Chr II (Fig . 1 and
4) . The same strain has been previously used by
Cheng and Lessie (8) to demonstrate the positions
of their arg, his, and ile mutations on Chr I
and a lys mutation on Chr II . Although these mutations have
not been characterized in detail, their positions on the genome map
matched those of our mutations that exhibited similar auxotrophic
phenotypes . Use of the transposon-inserted mutations led to further
identification of the 24 auxotrophic genes (Fig . 4 and
Table 3), and the knockout mutagenesis, complementation
tests, and Southern hybridization analysis clarified that such genes
had no other functional or structural homologues on the other
regions of the genome . Many bacterial species require nine his
genes (hisA to hisI) and seven trp genes (trpA to
trpG) for the complete biosynthesis of histidine and tryptophan,
respectively, and all of these structural genes were identified on
the ATCC 17616 genome . While all of the nine his genes were
clustered on Chr I, the trpEGDC and trpFBA clusters
were located on Chr I and Chr II, respectively . Although not all of
the genes necessary for the complete biosynthesis of arginine,
leucine, and lysine were identified in this study, we demonstrated
the single-copy state of the functional argG, leuCDB,
and lysA genes on Chr II . The amino acid biosynthetic genes we
detected on Chr I and Chr II did not reveal any significant
differences with respect to their G+C content and codon usage .
Among the bacterial strains of which the complete genome sequences
have been published in print or online articles, R . solanacearum
GMI1000, a strain very closely related to B . multivorans from
a phylogenetical point of view, showed the highest homology to
ATCC 17616 with regard to our identified auxotrophic genes (31) .
Remarkable similarity between the two bacteria was also found in the
organization of the his, trpEGDC, and leuCDB-trpFBA
clusters (Fig . 4) as well as in the presence of large
noncoding regions (e.g., the regions flanking the asd gene;
Fig . 4C) . However, R . solanacearum was found
to carry the three clusters and the argH, argG, and
lysA genes on the same chromosome but not on the megaplasmid .
Some of the auxotrophic genes of R . solanacearum were reported
to be duplicated (or triplicated), and their second and/or third
copies (whose functionality remains to be investigated) were located
on the chromosome (in the case of hisC and trpD) or on
the megaplasmid (in the case of leuB, trpC, and trpD) .
Similar distribution of duplicated (or triplicated) copies of certain
auxotrophic genes in different replicons has been observed in other
multichromosomal bacteria such as Agrobacterium tumefaciens,
Sinorhizobium meliloti, and Vibrio cholerae (17,
31, 40) . The multichromosomal
bacteria in certain cases carry a few auxotrophic genes only on the
secondary chromosomes . Examples of such genes include trpB and
trpF in R . sphaeroides, metB and metE in
R . solanacearum, metF and asd in Leptospira interrogans,
metE and lysC in A . tumefaciens, and several genes in
Deinococcus radiodurans and two Brucella strains, B .
melitensis and B . suis (6,
11, 16, 23,
28, 31, 39,
42) . However, it should be noted that the
functionality of these genes has not yet been investigated
experimentally except in the case of the two trp genes of R .
sphaeroides . Furthermore, these genes are typically not clustered
with their related genes . Therefore, the B . multivorans ATCC
17616 genome differs considerably from those of R . solanacearum
and other multichromosomal bacteria in that (i) all of the auxotrophic
genes thus far examined exist in a single copy within the genome
and (ii) many auxotrophic genes (i.e., at least those in the
leuCDB-trpFBA region and the argG and lysA genes and most
probably many other genes as well) are present only on Chr II . It is
of interest that the flanking regions of the argH gene on Chr
I and those of the argG and lysA genes on Chr II did not
reveal structural similarities to those of R . solanacearum
(Table 3) . Additional sequence analysis of ATCC
17616 should reveal the extent of the differences between the two
genomes .
A unique structural property of the ATCC 17616 genome that was
also associated with the R . solanacearum genome was that the
apparently unrelated ORFs were tightly linked to the auxotrophic gene
clusters . This was exemplified by murA, orf1, orf3, orf5,
and truA; overlapping of the predicted stop and start codons
of the neighboring genes was observed in the murA-hisG,
orf1-hisH, trpC-orf3, and orf5-truA-trpF-trpB
regions . Although the roles of orf1, orf3, and orf5
in histidine and tryptophan biosynthesis were not elucidated in this
study, the leaky Trp- phenotype of the orf5::TnMod-RTp'
mutant (BT141) remained unchanged after the addition of a
transcriptional terminator sequence at the right end of the
transposon (in BT216) (Fig . 4C) . The leaky Trp-
phenotype of BT141 and BT216 in the absence of tryptophan was
complemented by pKOM173, which carried the wild-type alleles of
trpFB genes but not that of orf5 . This finding suggested
that the normal growth of the cells without tryptophan required
strong transcription from the promoter located upstream of orf5 .
Based on the nearly random mode of insertion of Tn5 into various
replicons (5), we anticipated that the TnMod-RTp'
insertion mutants carrying the transposons on Chr III occupied a
one-seventh [0.9 Mb/(0.9 + 2.5 + 3.4) Mb] proportion in the mutant
library . No such mutants were found among more than 100 randomly
chosen transposon-inserted derivatives . Although the reasons for our
failure to obtain such mutants are unknown at present, Chr III
might possess a unique structure that does not easily permit the
maintenance of the TnMod-RTp' insert . Since the ATCC 17616
cells maintained Chr III under various laboratory growth conditions,
this chromosome might play an important role in the propagation of
host cells . To determine whether or not such an influence exists, we
are currently analyzing the Chr III-derived DNA fragments present on
some of the cosmid clones .
A pathogenic B . cepacia genomovar III strain, J2315, and a B .
fungorum (formerly B . cepacia) strain, LB400, carry three
circular chromosomes (24) . Determination of the
genome sequence of the former strain was completed in January 2003,
and that of the latter strain is now in progress . Comparison with
these two strains revealed that the ATCC 17616 auxotrophic genes
identified in this study were highly homologous to those of B .
cepacia J2315 (94 and 97% identity with the nucleotide and amino
acid sequences, respectively) (NC_004503) and to those of B .
fungorum LB400 (88 and 93%, respectively) (NZ_AAAC01000000) . The
organizations of the six ATCC 17616 gene clusters shown in Fig.
4 were also conserved in the two Burkholderia
strains . In B . cepacia J2315, the genome of which consists of
3.9-, 3.2-, and 0.9-Mb chromosomes
(ftp://ftp.sanger.ac.uk/pub/pathogens/bc/), it was found that the
argH, his, and trpEGDC regions are located on the 3.9-Mb
chromosome and the argG, leuCDB-trpFBA, and lysA
regions are located on the 3.2-Mb chromosome . This finding indicated
that the six auxotrophic gene regions on the B . multivorans
ATCC 17616 genome (Fig . 1 and 4)
were similarly distributed on the B . cepacia J2315 genome .
However, the 3.9-Mb chromosome of B . cepacia carried both the
dnaK and dnaA genes in the following order: dnaK-his
region-trpEGDC-dnaA . This is a striking difference from
the genome of our B . multivorans strain, in which (i) the
dnaA and dnaK genes were located on Chr I and Chr II, respectively,
and (ii) the former gene was situated between the his and
trpEGDC regions (our unpublished data) . More detailed comparative
analysis of the two bacteria would be necessary to determine the
various distributions of other genes . Such investigations should
provide further insight into the molecular mechanisms of the
differentiation of bacterial genomes .
This work was supported by the Research for the Future Programs of
the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science and a Grant-in-Aid for
Scientific Research from the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports,
Science and Technology, Japan .
Preliminary sequence data for the B . fungorum LB400 and B . cepacia
J2315 genomes were obtained from The DOE Joint Genome Institute
(JGI) at
http://www.jgi.doe.gov/JGI_microbial/html/burkholderia/burk_homepage.html
and from the Sanger Institute at
ftp://ftp.sanger.ac.uk/pub/pathogens/bc/, respectively .
* Corresponding author . Mailing address: Department of
Environmental Life Sciences, Graduate School of Life Sciences, Tohoku
University, 2-1-1 Katahira, Sendai 980-8577, Japan . Phone and fax:
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