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Journal of Bacteriology, September 2004, p . 5968-5971, Vol .
186, No . 17
Overexpression of gnsA, a Multicopy Suppressor of the secG Null
Mutation, Increases Acidic Phospholipid Contents by Inhibiting
Phosphatidylethanolamine Synthesis at Low Temperatures
Rie Sugai, Hisayo Shimizu, Ken-ichi Nishiyama, and Hajime Tokuda*
Institute of Molecular and Cellular Biosciences, University of Tokyo, Yayoi,
Bunkyo-ku, Tokyo, Japan
Received 22 April 2004/ Accepted 3 June 2004
GnsA overproduction was previously found to suppress both the secG
null mutation and the fabA6 mutation in Escherichia coli
by increasing the unsaturated fatty acid contents . We report
here that it also increased the acidic phospholipid contents at 20°C
but not at 37°C . GnsA overproduction at 20°C specifically inhibited
phosphatidylethanolamine synthesis and therefore caused the increase
in the proportion of acidic phospholipids .
Escherichia coli contains three major phospholipids,
phosphatidylethanolamine (PE), phosphatidylglycerol (PG), and
cardiolipin (CL) . The phospholipid composition is important for the
activities of various membrane proteins . For example, acidic
phospholipids PG and CL are essential for the function of SecA (3,
8, 23), which drives protein translocation
across membranes . Nonbilayer lipid PE has been reported to be
important for protein translocation (16) and development of
the functional membrane topology of lactose permease (1) .
SecG is a membrane component of the protein translocation machinery
and facilitates the SecA function (11) . The secG
null mutation significantly retards protein translocation (4,
22) . All multicopy suppressors of the secG
null mutation have been found to be involved in lipid synthesis (7,
19, 21-23) . The gnsA
gene is one of these suppressors and encodes a hydrophilic protein
consisting of 57 amino acids (21) . Overproduction
of GnsA also corrects the defect in a temperature-sensitive
unsaturated fatty acid auxotroph, the fabA6 mutant (17,
21), through an unknown mechanism .
Although GnsA overproduction was previously shown to increase the
unsaturated fatty acid contents without affecting the phospholipid
composition (21), detailed examinations described here
revealed that GnsA overproduction affected the phospholipid
composition at low temperatures (Table 1) . E .
coli strain K003 (24) harboring pKQ2 (ParaB)
(10) or pSRA (ParaB gnsA) (21) was
inoculated into Luria-Bertani medium containing 1% glycerol, 25 µg of
ampicillin/ml, and 0.2% arabinose to give an optical density at
660 nm (OD660) of 0.1 . Cells were cultivated in the presence
of [32P]orthophosphoric acid (0.37 MBq/ml; NEN Life Science
Products) at 37°C to an OD660 of 0.8 or at 20°C for
24 h . The OD of the culture reached
1.0
after 24 h of incubation at 20°C . Phospholipids were extracted and
analyzed by thin-layer chromatography (Silicagel 60; Merck) as
described previously (21) . The level of
incorporation of radioactivity into phospholipids was determined at
least twice throughout this study, and experimental error was within
5% . Although GnsA overproduction had no effect on the phospholipid
composition at 37°C, as previously reported (21),
it significantly decreased the PE content at 20°C, causing an
increase in the acidic phospholipid content (PG plus CL) from
19
to
33% .
To confirm that the effect of GnsA overproduction is specific to low
temperatures, cells were grown at 37°C to an OD660 of 0.8
and then incubated at 20°C for 3 h . When the labeling was started at
37°C, the phospholipid composition remained normal irrespective of
the presence or absence of GnsA overproduction, suggesting that
incubation for 3 h at 20°C did not affect the overall phospholipid
composition . In contrast, when phospholipids synthesized after the
temperature downshift were labeled, GnsA overproduction decreased the
PE content and increased the acidic phospholipid contents . The
culture turbidity increased by
10%
during cultivation at 20°C . These results indicate that GnsA
overproduction specifically increases the acidic phospholipid
contents at low temperatures . Essentially the same effects of GnsA
overproduction were observed with KN553 (K003
secG::Kanr)
(11), FS1576 (12, 20),
and KN370 (FS1576
secG::Kanr)
(10) . We therefore examined the growth and phospholipid
synthesis of KN553 harboring pKQ2 or pSRA after the temperature
downshift . GnsA overproduction had little stimulatory effect on
growth (Fig . 1A) . In contrast, labeling of
phospholipids decreased to
20%
upon GnsA overproduction (Fig . 1B) .
| TABLE 1 . GnsA overproduction increases the acidic phospholipid contents
at 20°C
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FIG . 1 . GnsA overproduction decreases phospholipid synthesis . KN553
cells harboring pKQ2 or pSRA were grown at 37°C to an OD660
of 0.8, and the temperature was then shifted to 20°C . (A) The OD660
of the culture was monitored at specified times after the temperature
downshift . (B) Labeling of the cells with [32P]orthophosphoric
acid was started after the temperature downshift . Phospholipids were
extracted from 100 µl of culture at the specified time points, and then
radioactivity was determined.
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To analyze the synthesis of individual phospholipids with or without
GnsA overproduction, K003 cells harboring pKQ2 or pSRA were grown in
the presence of 0.2% arabinose at 37°C to an OD660 of 0.8
and then transferred to 20°C . At the indicated time points, aliquots
of the culture were pulse-labeled with [32P]orthophosphoric
acid for 2 min and then radioactivities incorporated into individual
phospholipids were determined (Fig . 2) . GnsA
overproduction decreased the incorporation of 32P into the
three phospholipids even at 37°C, although the decrease was less
significant than that at 20°C . Incorporation of 32P into PG was
greater than that into PE at 37°C whether GnsA was overproduced or
not (Fig . 2A and B) . It is known that the rate of
PG synthesis is higher than that of PE synthesis, while the PG
content is lower than the PE content due to the unstable property of
PG (13, 14) . The profile of 32P
incorporation was significantly different at 20°C, at which the
labeling of phospholipids drastically decreased . A higher level of
radioactivity was incorporated into PE than PG without GnsA
overproduction (Fig . 2A) . In contrast, the level of
radioactivity incorporated into PE, but not PG, was significantly
decreased by GnsA overproduction (Fig . 2B) . The
level of radioactivity incorporated into CL remained low irrespective
of the presence or absence of GnsA overproduction (Fig .
2A and B) . The proportion of each phospholipid pulse-labeled for
2 min was determined at different time points (Fig . 2C and D) .
GnsA overproduction did not affect the proportions of the three
phospholipids at 37°C . In marked contrast, the proportion of newly
synthesized PE increased to
60%
at 20°C without GnsA overproduction (Fig . 2C)
whereas it decreased to less than 20% upon GnsA overproduction (Fig.
2D) . Essentially the same results were obtained
with KN553 ( secG)
cells (data not shown), indicating that SecG has no effect on the
specificity of phospholipids synthesized at 20°C . Taken together,
these results indicate that GnsA overproduction at 20°C specifically
reduces the synthesis of PE, thereby causing increases in the acidic
phospholipid contents .
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FIG . 2 . GnsA overproduction specifically inhibits PE synthesis at 20°C .
K003 cells harboring pKQ2 (A and C) or pSRA (B and D) were grown at 37°C
to an OD660 of 0.8, and the temperature was then shifted to
20°C (0 time) . An aliquot (667 µl) of the culture was withdrawn at the
indicated times before and after the temperature downshift, followed by
labeling with [32P]orthophosphoric acid for 2 min at 37°C
(gray area) or 20°C . (A and B) The phospholipids were extracted and
analyzed by thin-layer chromatography . The levels of radioactivity
incorporated into PE, PG, and CL were determined . (C and D) The
proportions of PE, PG, and CL at different time points were calculated
from the results in A and B.
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The effects of GnsA overproduction on cell morphology were examined
at 37 and 20°C . Although GnsA overproduction had no apparent effect
on the cell morphology at 37°C (data not shown), more than 30% of
both K003 and KN553 cells became filamentous upon the overproduction
of GnsA at 20°C (Fig . 3) . Some cells overproducing
GnsA were longer than 20 µm, while the length of cells was
3
µm without GnsA overproduction . It has been reported that PE is
important for FtsZ ring formation, which is required for cell
division (9) . Indeed, a decrease in the level of PE
causes the appearance of filamentous cells (2,
5, 15) . Therefore, a decrease in the level
of PE due to GnsA overproduction at 20°C is responsible for the
appearance of elongated cells .
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FIG . 3 . GnsA overproduction makes E . coli cells filamentous at
low temperatures . K003 and KN553 cells harboring pKQ2 or pSRA were grown
at 20°C for 24 h.
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Although the increases in the unsaturated fatty acid contents were
independent of temperature (17, 21),
acidic phospholipid contents were increased by GnsA overproduction
only at low temperatures . The increases in acidic phospholipid
contents most likely resulted from inhibition of PE synthesis and not
stimulation of PG and CL synthesis . However, it is not clear at
present why the overproduction of GnsA, a small cytosolic protein
possessing a helix-turn-helix motif (21), has such
drastic and pleiotropic effects on the compositions of both fatty
acids and phospholipids .
PE synthesis is dependent on phosphatidylserine (PS) synthase (18),
which catalyzes the formation of PS from CDP-diacylglycerol and
L-serine . PS is then rapidly converted to PE by PS
decarboxylase . The synthesis of phospholipids and the maintenance of
their compositions in membranes are regulated in complex manners and
are not fully understood (18) . GnsA overproduction may
affect transcription, translation, and even enzyme activity . It has
been reported that the inhibition of phospholipid synthesis
rapidly blocks fatty acid synthesis (6) . However, the
relationship between the increases in the unsaturated fatty acid
contents and the inhibition of PE, both of which are induced by GnsA
overproduction, remains to be clarified .
Overproduction of GnsB, a homologue of GnsA, also caused increases
in acidic phospholipid contents at low temperatures (data not shown) .
However, it had a lesser effect than GnsA overproduction . The
increases in unsaturated fatty acid contents were also more
significant with GnsA than with GnsB (21) . Disruption of both
gnsA and gnsB affected neither the phospholipid composition
nor growth (data not shown) . The levels of GnsA and GnsB are
under the detection limits in wild-type cells (17,
21) . More analyses are therefore necessary to
reveal the physiological function of GnsA .
We thank Akihiko Okuno for his efforts in the initial stage of this
study and Rika Ishihara for technical assistance and secretarial
support .
This work was supported by grants to H.T . from the Ministry of
Education, Science, Sports and Culture of Japan .
* Corresponding author . Mailing address: Institute of Molecular
and Cellular Biosciences, University of Tokyo, 1-1-1 Yayoi, Bunkyo-ku, Tokyo
113-0032, Japan . Phone: 81-3-5841-7830 . Fax: 81-3-5841-8464 . E-mail: htokuda@iam.u-tokyo.ac.jp.
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