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Journal of Bacteriology, September 2004, p . 5826-5833, Vol .
186, No . 17
Linkage
between Catecholate Siderophores and the Multicopper Oxidase CueO in
Escherichia coli
Gregor Grass,1,2 Keshari Thakali,1 Phillip E .
Klebba,3 Daniel Thieme,2 Axel Müller,4 Günter
F . Wildner,4 and Christopher Rensing1*
Department of Soil, Water, and Environmental Science, University of Arizona,
Tucson, Arizona,1 Institute for Microbiology, Martin Luther
University, Halle,2 Department of Biology, Ruhr University, Bochum,
Germany,4 Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of
Oklahoma, Norman, Oklahoma3
Received 4 February 2004/ Accepted 21 May 2004
The multicopper oxidase CueO had previously been demonstrated to
exhibit phenoloxidase activity and was implicated in intrinsic copper
resistance in Escherichia coli . Catecholates can potentially
reduce Cu(II) to the prooxidant Cu(I) . In this report we provide
evidence that CueO protects E . coli cells by oxidizing enterobactin,
the catechol iron siderophore of E . coli, in the presence of
copper . In vitro, a mixture of enterobactin and copper was toxic
for E . coli cells, but the addition of purified CueO led to
their survival . Deletion of fur resulted in copper hypersensitivity
that was alleviated by additional deletion of entC, preventing
synthesis of enterobactin . In addition, copper added together
with 2,3-dihydroxybenzoic acid or enterobactin was able to induce a
(cueO-lacZ)
operon fusion more efficiently than copper alone . The reaction
product of the 2,3-dihydroxybenzoic acid oxidation by CueO that can
complex Cu(II) ions was determined by gas chromatography-mass
spectroscopy and identified as 2-carboxymuconate .
Recently, two copper efflux exporters were described in Escherichia
coli, CopA, a copper/silver P-type ATPase (27), and
CusCFBA, a protein complex encompassing both the cytoplasmic and
outer membranes (10, 21) . The
multicopper oxidase CueO was identified as an additional component
involved in copper homeostasis in E . coli (12,
13, 22), and the three-dimensional
structure of this protein was solved at a resolution of 1.4 Å (29) .
It was shown that CueO is a laccase-like enzyme (EC 1.10.3.2),
as proposed by Alexandre and Zhulin (2) . CueO is a periplasmic
protein and translocated into the periplasm via the TAT pathway
(7) . Four copper ions are bound in the CueO monomer, forming
an active center typical of multicopper oxidases such as ascorbate
oxidase, fungal laccases, Saccharomyces cerevisiae Fet3, and
human ceruloplasmin (29) . The enzyme is activated by
binding of a labile Cu(II) at a novel copper-binding site (30) .
The mechanism of protection from copper-mediated toxicity by CueO
was postulated to be the oxidation of cuprous copper (12,
23) . This hypothesis was recently strengthened by the
demonstration that the related multicopper oxidases Fet3 and human
ceruloplasmin are able to oxidize Cu(I) to Cu(II), maintaining the
cuprous-cupric redox balance in aerobic organisms and preventing
copper-mediated toxicity (33, 34) .
CueO was responsible for the oxidation of cuprous copper and the
potential Cu(II) reductant enterobactin . Enterobactin is the
indigenous catecholate siderophore of E . coli secreted to
sequester iron from the environment . Recently it was demonstrated
that enterobactin is a substrate of CueO in vitro (16) .
Copper in combination with the catecholate siderophore is much more
toxic than copper alone because enterobactin and other catecholates
can act as a Cu(II) reductants (15, 18) .
We showed that CueO oxidized the siderophore enterobactin and its
precursor 2,3-dihydroxybenzoic acid and thus protected E . coli
cells against copper-induced killing . The product of
2,3-dihydroxybenzoic acid oxidation was able to bind copper . In
addition, the global iron-dependent repressor Fur was identified as
an important determinant of copper tolerance, since a fur
mutant overproduced enterobactin . Reduction of Cu(II) by enterobactin
facilitated Cu(I) uptake into cells . These results give insight into
the complex mode of CueO-mediated protection from copper toxicity .
Bacterial strains and growth media. The strains used in this
work are listed in Table 1 . E . coli was
grown in Luria-Bertani (LB) medium or Tris-buffered mineral salts
medium (19) containing 2 ml of glycerol and 1 g of yeast
extract or 3 g of Casamino Acids per liter . Antibiotics [chloramphenicol
(15 to 20 µg/ml) pr kanamycin (25 µg/ml)] and CuCl2
were added where appropriate .
| TABLE 1 . E . coli strains
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Gene disruptions, deletions, and operon fusions. Genes were
disrupted by the insertion of a chloramphenicol resistance cassettes
with a protocol developed in the laboratory of B . Wanner which is
based on the
Red recombinase system as described previously (6) .
CAS liquid assay and plates. E . coli strains GR1 ( cueO-
cat) and W3110 were grown overnight in Luria-Bertani medium with
shaking at 37°C, diluted 1:500 into Tris-buffered minimal medium (19)
supplemented with 0.2% glycerol and 0.3% Casamino Acids . Cultures
were grown overnight, diluted 1:500 into fresh minimal medium without
iron but with 0.3% deferrated Casamino Acids (25)
and different concentrations of CuCl2 and grown for 16 h
to an optical density at 600 nm of 1.0 . The cell density was
adjusted, spent medium was centrifuged at 12,000 rpm for 2 min, and
cleared spent medium was stored at 4°C .
The chrome azurol S (CAS) assay solution was prepared as described
by Payne (25) . In short, 0.0219 g of
hexadecyltrimethylammonium bromide was dissolved in 50 ml of water;
1.5 ml of 1 mM FeCl3 · 6H2O in 10 mM HCl was
mixed with 7.5 ml of 2 mM CAS solution . This Fe-CAS solution and also
piperazine buffer (4.307 g of piperazine dissolved in 30 ml of water
with 6.75 ml of concentrated HCl to bring the pH to 6.5) was added to
the hexadecyltrimethylammonium bromide solution, and the volume was
brought up to 100 ml . CAS agar plates were prepared as described by
Schwyn and Neilands (33); 0.5 ml of cleared spent
culture medium was added to 0.5 ml of CAS assay solution and mixed,
and 10 µl of shuttle solution (0.2 M 5-sulfosalicylic acid, stored in
the dark) was added to facilitate transfer of iron from the CAS
complex to enterobactin, and the sample was mixed . After 5 min, the
absorbance at 655 nm was measured .
Enterobactin concentration determination. The reaction
between the CAS solution, Fe(III), and enterobactin proceeds as
Fe(III)-CAS + enterobactin
Fe(III)-enterobactin + CAS . The decrease in absorbance at 655 nm can
be used to calculate the concentration of enterobactin-bound iron
with Fe(III)-CAS having a molar extinction coefficient of 105,000 M–1
cm–1 . It is assumed that the Fe(III) and enterobactin form
1:1 complexes (14) . Enterobactin concentrations
were calculated from desferrioxamine units via a calibration curve .
Ferric enterobactin oxidation by CueO. Purified CueO was
suspended at 1 µg/ml in 0.05 M morpholinepropanesulfonic acid (MOPS)
buffer, pH 6.5, containing 0.5 mM CuCl2 . Enterobactin was
purified from culture supernatants of E . coli K-12 (17),
complexed with iron, and chromatographically purified (33) .
Various concentrations of ferric enterobactin were added to
reaction mixtures at 25°C, and the oxidation of ferric enterobactin
was monitored by the change in absorption at 393 nm . The data were
plotted and analyzed to determine Km with the enzyme kinetics
algorithm of Grafit (version 4.013; Erithacus Ltd.) . Visible
spectra of the product were collected on a Beckman DU7 spectrophotometer .
Copper-enterobactin toxicity measurement. E . coli
strains were grown overnight in LB medium with shaking at 37°C,
diluted 1:400 into Tris-buffered minimal medium (19)
with 0.2% glycerol and 0.3% Casamino Acids, grown overnight, and
diluted 1:400 into fresh minimal medium without iron . Cultures were
incubated for 16 h and centrifuged, and the spent medium was filter
sterilized (20-µm pore size; Nalgene) . Cells to be challenged were
also subsequently grown in LB medium and regular minimal medium .
Copper challenge was carried out as follows: 5 µl of stationary-phase
culture was added to 1 ml of sterile spent medium containing 5 mM
CuCl2, mixed, and incubated at room temperature for 15
min . The mixture was diluted 1:200 into LB medium, and 25 µl was
plated onto LB agar plates .
Precipitate preparation, UV-visible spectrum, and EDX analysis.
Purified CueO protein (5 µg) was added to a solution of 100 mM sodium
acetate (pH 6.5), 500 µM CuCl2 and 2 mM
2,3-dihydroxybenzoic acid . The reaction was incubated at 50°C for 2
h . For UV-visible analysis, the reaction product was scanned on a
Uvikon 922 (Kontron Instruments) . For energy-dispersive X-ray (EDX)
analysis, the colored oxidation product was harvested by
centrifugation, and the resulting pellet was redissolved in water and
recentrifuged to remove excess copper . The washed precipitate was
subjected to analysis with an EM 912 OMEGA electron transmission
microscope (Leo, Oberkochen, Germany) equipped with an EDX system
(energy-dispersible X-ray analysis, LINK eXIII; Oxford Instruments,
High Wycombe, United Kingdom) in the spot mode (100-nm spot size at
80 keV and 20 µA emission current) . For analysis, a computer program
considering the net counts and excitation probability, determined
with the in-column filter, was used .
2,3-Dihydroxybenzoic acid oxidation by CueO. Purified CueO
was incubated with 1 mM 2,3-dihydroxybenzoic acid in the presence of
0.5 mM CuCl2 and 100 mM Tris-HCl buffer, pH 8.0 . The
reaction was stopped after 1 min by rapid chilling and acidification
with HCl to pH 2, and the reaction mixture was extracted twice with
ethyl acetate . The combined organic phase was dried with sodium
sulfate and filtered, and the solvent was removed by evaporation in a
SpeedVac concentrator (Eppendorf) . The sample was redissolved in 20
µl of methanol treated with 100 µl of ethereal diazomethane which was
prepared from N-nitrosomethyl urea and transferred to an
autosampler vial (Chromacol 05-CTV[A]116; Fisher Scientific,
Schwerte, Germany) . Excessive diazomethane and solvent were removed
in a gentle stream of nitrogen, and the methylated compounds were
taken up in 20 µl of chloroform .
An aliquot of 1 µl was applied to the gas chromatography-mass
spectroscopy (GC-MS) system for mass fragment analysis of main
signals . All spectra were recorded with a Finnigan Magnum ion-trap
mass spectrometer connected to a Varian GC 3400 gas chromatograph
(Varian, Walnut Creek, Calif.) . Injections were made with a CTC A200S
autoinjector . The following conditions were chosen for GC: splitless
injector temperature 260°C, transfer line temperature 260°C,
capillary column Zebron ZB-5 (Phenomenex, Aschaffenburg, Germany),
film thickness 30 m by 0.25 mm by 0.25 µm, and helium as the carrier
gas . The temperature program was constant for 1 min at 60°C and a
linear increase was chosen (30°C per min) to 280°C . The mass
spectrometer was operated in full scan mode (m/z 50 to 400)
with chemical ionization and methanol as the reactant gas .
Miscellaneous. Standard molecular genetic techniques were
used (31) . PCR was performed in the presence of
Pwo or Taq DNA polymerase (Roche, Fermentas) . CueO was
purified as described previously (13) . CueO was
concentrated where applicable with Midi centrifuge filters (Nalgene) .
The protein concentration of purified CueO was determined at 280 nm ( CueO
= 63063 M–1 cm–1) . The ß-galactosidase activity
in permeabilized cells was determined as published previously (11,
20) .
Oxidation of catecholate siderophores by CueO and copper. When
E . coli strain W3110 was grown in mineral salt medium under
iron-restricted conditions and in the presence of elevated copper
concentrations, spent medium and cells turned brownish gray (data not
shown) . Neither E . coli strain GR1 ( cueO::cat)
nor GR417 ( entC::cat)
(defective in enterobactin synthesis) was able to produce this
colored compound (data not shown) . The necessity for the presence of
both CueO and EntC clearly indicated that colored-compound formation
is strictly dependent on both the oxidase activity of CueO and the
presence of enterobactin .
A similar finding was obtained with the enterobactin precursor
2,3-dihydroxybenzoic acid . 2,3-Dihydroxybenzoic acid and copper added
to wild-type cultures resulted in enhanced production of a colored
precipitate (Fig . 1) . No colored precipitate was
formed when 2,3-dihydroxybenzoic acid was added to E . coli strain
GR1 ( cueO::cat)
(Fig . 1) .
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FIG . 1 . Effect of 2,3-dihydroxybenzoic acid (DHB) on different E .
coli strains . Colored precipitate formation in E . coli by
CueO, CuCl2 and 2,3-dihydroxybenzoic acid in strains GR1 ( cueO::cat)
and wild-type (Wt) W3110 . Overnight cultures grown in Luria-Bertani
medium were diluted 1:500 into minimal medium, and grown overnight,
diluted 1:500 into fresh minimal medium with 500 µM CuCl2
added to all cultures, 2,3-dihydroxybenzoic acid was added where
indicated, and growth at 37°C was continued for 16 h.
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Deletion of cueO, encoding the multicopper oxidase of E . coli,
leads to elevated biosynthesis of enterobactin under conditions of iron scarcity
when copper is present. Determination of the enterobactin
concentrations of spent medium from strain GR1 ( cueO::cat)
and wild-type W3110 was performed in the presence of different
concentrations of CuCl2 under iron deprivation (Fig.
2) . We clearly demonstrated that in the absence of
copper and thus no expression of cueO, both wild-type strain
W3110 and GR1 ( cueO::cat)
produced enterobactin at very similar concentrations . In contrast,
under copper stress, i.e., when cueO is expressed in the
wild-type strain, strain GR1 ( cueO::cat)
exhibited a significant increase in enterobactin compared to
the wild-type W3110 (Fig . 2) . This difference is probably due
to the oxidation of enterobactin by CueO (16) in the
presence of copper rather than decreased enterobactin biosynthesis in
the cueO deletion strain GR1 ( cueO::cat),
since enterobactin levels were very much the same in the wild-type
strain and the cueO mutant when copper was not present .
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FIG . 2 . Enterobactin production in E . coli strains in the
presence of copper . Overnight cultures grown in Luria-Bertani medium
were diluted 1:500 into minimal medium, grown overnight, and diluted
1:500 into fresh minimal medium, and after 2 h of growth at 37°C the
cells were diluted 1:500 into fresh minimal medium with the indicated
concentrations of CuCl2 and 50 µM FeCl3 . The
strains were W3110 (solid bars) and GR1 ( cueO::cat)
(open bars) . Cell growth was continued for 16 h at 37°C with shaking
before the enterobactin content was determined as described in Materials
and Methods.
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Enterobactin oxidation prevents copper-induced killing of E . coli.
We started out with the hypothesis that enterobactin can act as a
Cu(II) reductant, shifting the balance from Cu(II) to Cu(I),
increasing both uptake of Cu(I) and generation of reactive oxygen
species by the prooxidant Cu(I) . CueO could prevent this in two ways,
oxidation of Cu(I) and oxidation of enterobactin .
In order to validate this hypothesis, we investigated whether
enterobactin oxidation by CueO reduces the toxicity of the interaction
of enterobactin with copper . Therefore, E . coli strain W3110
was challenged with spent medium supplemented with copper from
either a cueO deletion strain, which is rich in enterobactin,
or from strain GR417 ( entC::cat),
which is unable to produce enterobactin (Table 2) .
No cells survived with spent medium of strain GR1 ( cueO::cat)
(Table 2) . Conversely, spent medium of strain GR417
( entC::cat),
whichcontained no enterobactin at all, was not toxic for E . coli
cells in the presence of copper . This indicated that copper alone was
lethal only in combination with enterobactin under the conditions
used . Moreover, addition of purified CueO protein to the survival
assay with spent medium rich in enterobactin resulted in survival of
challenged cells (Table 2) . This again demonstrated
that oxidation of enterobactin by CueO rescued E . coli cells
from copper- and enterobactin-induced killing . Conversely, when CueO
was heat inactivated (10 min of boiling) prior to copper challenge,
E . coli cells did not survive (data not shown) . Thus,
protection against copper toxicity could only be accomplished when
CueO oxidized enterobactin .
| TABLE 2 . Enterobactin toxicity to E . coli in the presence of Cu
and the protective activity of CueO
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Oxidation of ferric enterobactin. The ability of CueO to act on
catecholate compounds, especially its oxidation of the native E .
coli siderophore enterobactin, led us to test its recognition and
oxidation of the iron complex ferric enterobactin . When suspended
with ferric enterobactin at slightly acidic pH in the presence of
copper ions, CueO rapidly oxidized the ferric siderophore (16) .
We reevaluated these experiments with slightly different conditions
that better mimicked the physiological, periplasmic environment of
CueO . Under these conditions, we determined a Km of
1.5 µM for ferric enterobactin oxidation by CueO (Fig .
3) compared to the 40 µM described by Kim et al . (16) .
This high affinity of ferric enterobactin indicates that it is a
natural substrate of CueO in vivo .
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FIG . 3 . Oxidation of ferric enterobactin by purified CueO . The initial
rates of ferric enterobactin (FeEnt) oxidation by CueO (1 µg/ml) were
spectrophotometrically monitored at 393 nm; the data were analyzed and
plotted with the enzyme kinetics algorithm of Grafit 4.013 (Erithacus
Ltd., Middlesex, United Kingdom) . The apparent Km of
the plotted data for the enzymatic reaction was 1.5 µM.
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Oxidation-product of 2,3-dihydroxybenzoic acid and CueO sequesters
copper. Incubation of 2,3-dihydroxybenzoic acid with CueO in the
presence of copper resulted in the formation of an insoluble colored
precipitate . The precipitate was found predominantly in the
growth medium, indicating that, after oxidation, 2,3-dihydroxybenzoic
acid is translocated to the outside of the cell . This oxidation
product might act as a metal-chelating compound, and therefore the
precipitate was examined by EDX spectral analysis . It was
demonstrated that copper was bound to this polymeric 2,3-dihydroxybenzoic
acid oxidation product (Fig . 4) . Since
2,3-dihydroxybenzoic acid is also an excellent iron chelator, iron
was also detected in the analysis . This suggests that oxidized
2,3-dihydroxybenzoic acid did not lose its ability to bind iron but
gained the ability to complex copper . This could create a sink for
copper outside the cell, thereby decreasing the overall solubilized
copper concentration .
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FIG . 4 . Spectrum of CueO oxidation product . 2,3-Dihydroxybenzoic acid
was oxidized by CueO, and the oxidation product was analyzed . For EDX
analysis, the colored oxidation product was harvested by centrifugation,
and the resulting pellet was redissolved in water and recentrifuged to
remove excess copper . The washed precipitate was subjected to EDX
analysis with an EM 912 Omega electron transmission microscope (Leo,
Oberkochen, Germany) equipped with an EDX system (energy-dispersible
X-ray analysis Link eXIII; Oxford Instruments, High Wycombe, United
Kingdom) in the spot mode (100-nm spot size at 80 keV and 20 µA emission
current).
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Short-term incubation of CueO with 2,3-dihydroxybenzoic acid resulted
in an oxidation product in which the aromatic ring was opened by
oxidation and oxygen was added in a stoichiometry of 1 mol of O2
per mol of 2,3-dihydroxybenzoic acid, as determined by oxygraph
analysis (30) . The reaction product was identified
as 2-carboxymuconate by GC-MS and was able to complex Cu(II) ions .
The product has a molecular weight of 229, indicating that all three
carboxylic groups are methylated . The molecular weight of 197
corresponds to a fragment of the reaction product which is expected
when one molecule of methanol is lost, as shown in Fig .
5 .
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FIG . 5 . Chemical ionization-MS spectrum of the 2,3-dihydroxybenzoate
oxidation product catalyzed by CueO in the presence of 0.5 mM CuCl2 .
The m/z of 229 represents the protonized trimethylated reaction
product 2-carboxymuconate, and the m/z of 197 represents a
fragment after the loss of one molecule of methanol.
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Enterobactin may facilitate copper uptake. Previously, Outten
et al . (23) had shown that cueO expression
is induced by the cytoplasmic regulator of transcription CueR in a
copper-dependent fashion . Lysogen E . coli strain WOII260B (22)
expressing a
(cueO-lacZ)
operon fusion was also used to elucidate induction of cueO in
this study . Compared to copper alone, elevated lacZ expression
in E . coli
(cueO-lacZ)
was observed when 2,3-dihydroxybenzoic acid or enterobactin in
combination with copper was added (Fig . 6) . This
may be due to increased copper uptake as a result of Cu(II) reduction
by enterobactin or 2,3-dihydroxybenzoic acid .
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FIG . 6 . Induction of cueO in E . coli strain WOII260B
(cueO-lacZ)
under copper stress . Cells of E . coli strain WOII260B
(cueO-lacZ)
containing a cueO-lacZ operon fusion on the bacterial chromosome
grown in LB medium were diluted 15-fold into fresh minimal medium and
induced after 2 h of growth . Incubation was continued with shaking at
37°C for 2 h, and the ß-galactosidase activity was determined . Each
experiment was performed in triplicate, and the average and standard
deviation were calculated.
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It is thought that copper imposes oxidative stress by catalyzing
Fenton-like reactions (26) . This raised the question of
whether expression of cueO was also induced by oxidative
stress independent of copper . However, compounds generating oxidative
stress, such as hydrogen peroxide, t-butyl peroxide, and paraquat,
did not induce the reporter, and neither did a radical-generating
system comprising hematin and peroxide (data not shown) . Menadione
induced cueO only in the presence of copper (data not shown) .
However,
(cueO-lacZ)
was induced in the presence of low added copper concentrations (10
µM) by 2',2'-dipyridyl, a strong chelator of iron and copper
[Martell's critical stability constants log K = 8.5 for Cu(II), log K
= 16.3 for Fe(III)] (Fig . 6) . There was also a
slight increase in
(cueO-lacZ)
induction in medium without added copper, possibly due to residual
copper in the medium . This could indicate that copper bound to
2',2'-dipyridyl is able to enter the cell and might increase the
cytoplasmic copper concentration . This all suggested that expression
of cueO is directly dependent on copper and not indirectly on
copper-generated oxidative stress .
Deletion of fur leads to copper hypersensitivity. The
Fur protein of E . coli is the global regulator for iron uptake
systems, defense against oxidative stress, and iron storage (3) .
Thus, a strain deleted of fur is also derepressed for enterobactin
biosynthesis . We demonstrated that deletion of the fur gene
rendered E . coli hypersensitive to copper (Fig . 7) .
The presence of ascorbate at the initial setup of the experiment was
essential for the copper-sensitive phenotype of the fur
mutants, indicating that the production of the prooxidant Cu(I) is
the first step in creating toxic oxygen intermediates .
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FIG . 7 . Copper resistance of different E . coli strains . Growth in
the presence of different CuCl2 concentrations is shown .
Overnight cultures were diluted 1:400 into fresh LB broth and, after 2 h
of growth, diluted into fresh LB broth with the indicated concentrations
of CuCl2 and 1 mM ascorbate . Cell growth after 6 h of
incubation at 37°C with shaking was monitored as the optical density at
600 nm and converted to dry weight . The E . coli strains used were
W3110 ( ),
GG199 ( fur::cat)
( ),
and GG213 ( fur::cat
entC)
( ) .
Experiments were performed at least in triplicate, and the average is
shown.
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Because the combination of enterobactin and copper was shown to be
detrimental for E . coli, the entC gene was deleted in
addition to fur, preventing biosynthesis of enterobactin . The
resulting strain tolerated copper much better than the single fur
mutant (Fig . 7) . An entC single deletion mutant
exhibited copper tolerance comparable to that of the wild type at 100
µM (data not shown) . These results support our hypothesis on
the interaction of CueO with enterobactin that oxidation of
enterobactin in the presence of copper is advantageous for E . coli .
Moreover, this clearly indicated that the deregulation of iron uptake
might lead to enhanced copper uptake through transporters such as
FeoB, MntH, and ZupT, but additional deletion of enterobactin
production rendered E . coli more copper tolerant than a single
fur deletion, making enterobactin the major contributor to
cytotoxicity under copper stress . These results are consistent with
the data obtained for enterobactin- and copper-dependent killing of
E . coli . Previously, no involvement of the global iron
repressor Fur in copper tolerance had been observed . This emphasizes
the interrelationship of copper and iron homeostasis in E . coli .
The point of contact is probably enterobactin and CueO .
In our initial hypothesis (12), we and others proposed that
CueO converts periplasmic Cu(I) to the less toxic Cu(II) (8,
13, 23, 28) . This
mode of copper protection was recently confirmed for the related
multicopper oxidase Fet3 in S . cerevisiae . Fet3 was shown to
possess cuprous oxidase activity (35) . This activity
was only necessary for protection from copper toxicity if a
copper reductase was also present (34) . We also believe that
CueO-dependent cuprous oxidase activity may be important in
conferring copper resistance in E . coli and recently demonstrated
CueO-dependent Cu(I) oxidase activity (unpublished data) . In
addition to this activity, CueO appears to protect cells from the
interaction of enterobactin with copper by oxidation of enterobactin .
The current study suggests that CueO performs a catalytic reaction,
oxidizing the iron chelator enterobactin under copper stress in E .
coli . Figure 8 depicts known factors important
for periplasmic copper homeostasis in E . coli and presents the
most recent model of the central role of CueO as an interface between
copper detoxification and iron homeostasis .
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FIG . 8 . Model of copper homeostasis in E . coli and the central
role of CueO . Copper enters the bacterial cell by an unknown mechanism
and exerts its toxicity by generating reactive oxygen species via
copper-mediated redox cycling . Cytoplasmic detoxification of copper is
accomplished by the P-type ATPase CopA, while periplasmic copper is
effluxed by the CusCBA complex . The multicopper oxidase CueO probably
converts Cu(I) to the less toxic Cu(II) . Additionally, when copper is
present, CueO oxidizes the catechol siderophore enterobactin, avoiding
enterobactin-mediated reduction of Cu(II) to Cu(I) . The resulting
oxidation product of enterobactin, 2-carboxymuconate, sequesters copper
and might constitute a copper sink after export to the outside.
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CueO is only active aerobically because multicopper oxidases use
oxygen as a terminal electron acceptor . Furthermore, copper slowly
oxidizes catechols in the presence and/or absence of multicopper
oxidases . One electron is transferred to molecular oxygen in
copper-mediated oxidation of catechols, forming superoxide, which is
subsequently reduced to hydrogen peroxide and hydroxyl radicals . In
other words, enterobactin and other catechols reduce Cu(II) to Cu(I)
and thereby change the steady-state level of Cu(I) (15,
18, 32) . Increased redox cycling of copper
could lead to both increased production of reactive oxygen species
and increased Cu(I) uptake . CueO can therefore perform several
beneficial reactions . CueO can reduce the amount of Cu(I), reduce the
presence of unoxidized enterobactin, and prevent the accumulation of
free intermediate reactive oxygen species by coupling the oxidation
of substrates with the complete reduction of oxygen to water .
Given the relatively small increase in cueO expression in the
presence of copper plus siderophore compared to that in the
presence of copper alone, the effect of siderophore-mediated
reduction and subsequent uptake of copper into the cytoplasm and,
thus, increased copper concentration cannot be considered a major
stress factor within the cytoplasm . Probably, the critical
compartment for copper-siderophore toxicity is the periplasmic space,
where CueO exerts its protective oxidase activity .
This situation is reminiscent of mammalian systems, in which
ceruloplasmin, in addition to its ferrooxidase activity, is thought
to oxidize catecholamines such as 6-hydroxydopamine and thereby
prevent the formation of reactive oxygen species (9) .
For example, copper accelerated the autooxidation of 6-hydroxydopamine
61-fold (5) . Copper neurotoxicity was also found to be
dependent on dopamine-dependent copper uptake and may contribute to
the death of dopaminergic neurons in Parkinson's disease .
Interestingly, copper was implicated in the increased incidence of
parkinsonism in subjects exposed to copper in mining operations in
Chile (24) . Since ceruloplasmin was also shown to
have Cu(I) oxidase activity, it might have a bigger role in
protection from neurodegenerative diseases than previously
anticipated .
CueO might modify enterobactin so that it accumulates with sequestered
copper in the periplasm and the extracellular medium . EDX analysis
clearly demonstrated that the water-insoluble 2,3-dihydroxybenzoic
acid oxidation product was able to bind copper . It was pointed
out before that catechol-metal complexes are highly stable and that
compounds containing catecholic nuclei can sequester metals from
other complexes . This would also result in the prevention of redox
cycling of those metals (4, 32) .
In order to prevent an unfavorable constitutive oxidation of
enterobactin by CueO, expression of cueO occurs only in the
presence of copper . This control mechanism would ensure that the
deleterious interaction between copper and enterobactin is avoided .
CueO is regulated at the genetic and enzymatic levels by copper . CueO
possesses a methionine-rich region that is involved in
copper-dependent enzyme regulation . Recently, we showed that this
region is essential for CueO-mediated siderophore oxidation (30) .
E . coli strains deleted of fur were described as having a
higher free iron concentration (3,
36) . However, it was determined that such bacteria contain
considerably less total iron, presumably by downregulating iron
storage (1) . Our results demonstrated that deletion
of fur resulted in a severe copper-sensitive phenotype . Growth
of a fur-deleted strain was almost completely inhibited at a
CuCl2 concentration as low as 100 µM in the presence of
ascorbate . The parental wild-type strain E . coli W3110 under
the same growth conditions is only inhibited at much higher
concentrations (12) . About 5,000 copies of the Fur protein
are usually present in an E . coli cell, but under redox stress
this level is increased twofold (1) . A fur
mutant also produces an increased amount of enterobactin . That
enterobactin with copper is toxic to cells is again supported by the
ability of the
fur
entC
double deletion strain, which is unable to synthesize enterobactin,
to tolerate higher copper concentrations than the
fur
single-deletion strain .
The fact that the interaction of copper and the natural iron
chelator enterobactin is toxic indicates that CueO and enterobactin
constitute a connecting link between copper and iron homeostasis in
E . coli . These links between iron and copper homeostasis in
E . coli provide a launching pad from which to tackle the
physiological mechanisms of trace metal homeostasis in prokaryotes .
It also might initiate studies of CueO-mediated protection from
catecholate siderophore-enhanced copper toxicity as a model for
copper damage to dopaminergic neurons .
This work was supported by Hatch Project 136713 and NIEHS grant
ESO4940 with funds from the EPA to C.R .
We thank Jennifer Crispin and Raina Maier for desferric enterobactin
and Thomas V . O'Halloran for strain WOII260B . Thanks are due
Jim Imlay and Dietrich H . Nies for suggestions and Dieter Neumann
(Leipniz-Institut für Pflanzenbiochmie, Halle, Germany) for EDX
analysis . We also thank Barry Rosen and Nigel Brown for carefully
reading the manuscript and for suggestions .
* Corresponding author . Mailing address: Department of Soil,
Water, and Environmental Science, University of Arizona, Shantz Bldg . #38, Rm .
424, Tucson, AZ 85721 . Phone: (520) 626-8482 . Fax: (520) 621-1647 . E-mail: rensingc@ag.arizona.edu.
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