|








| |
Journal of Bacteriology, September 2004, p . 5708-5714, Vol .
186, No . 17
The
eutT Gene of Salmonella enterica Encodes an Oxygen-Labile,
Metal-Containing ATP:Corrinoid Adenosyltransferase Enzyme
Nicole R . Buan,1 Sang-Jin Suh,2 and Jorge C .
Escalante-Semerena1*
Department of Bacteriology, University of Wisconsin—Madison, Madison,
Wisconsin,1 Department of Biological Sciences, Auburn University,
Auburn, Alabama2
Received 23 March 2004/ Accepted 23 May 2004
The eutT gene of Salmonella enterica was cloned and overexpressed,
and the function of its product was established in vivo and in
vitro . The EutT protein has an oxygen-labile, metal-containing
ATP:co(I)rrinoid adenosyltransferase activity associated with it .
Functional redundancy between EutT and the housekeeping
ATP:co(I)rrinoid adenosyltransferase CobA enzyme was demonstrated
through phenotypic analyses of mutant strains . Lack of CobA and EutT
blocked ethanolamine utilization . EutT was necessary and sufficient
for growth of an S . enterica cobA eutT strain on ethanolamine
as a carbon and energy or nitrogen source . A eutT+
gene provided in trans corrected the adenosylcobalamin-dependent
transcription of a eut-lacZ operon fusion in a cobA
strain . Cell extracts enriched for EutT protein contained strong,
readily detectable ATP:co(I)rrinoid adenosyltransferase activity . The
activity was only detected in extracts maintained under anoxic
conditions, with complete loss of activity upon exposure to air or
treatment with the Fe2+ ion chelator bathophenanthroline .
While the involvement of another metal ion cannot be ruled out, the
observed sensitivity to air and bathophenanthroline suggests
involvement of Fe2+ . We propose that the EutT protein is a unique
metal-containing ATP:co(I)rrinoid adenosyltransferase . It is
unclear whether the metal ion plays a structural or catalytic role .
The biosynthesis of AdoCbl (coenzyme B12) is unique to some
prokaryotes . Multiple functions (encoded by >25 genes) are
required for the assembly of this complex molecule (36) . The
chief structural feature of AdoCbl is the presence of an adenosyl
moiety liganded to the Co ion of cobalamin via a covalent Co-C
bond . In the enterobacterium Salmonella enterica, corrinoid
adenosylation is required for de novo synthesis and for the
assimilation of incomplete precursors such as cobinamide (12) .
Insights into the corrinoid adenosylation pathway in S . enterica
(Fig . 1) were recently reported, including the
three-dimensional crystal structure of the ATP:co(I)rrinoid
adenosyltransferase (CobA) enzyme responsible for the formation of
the Co-C bond (2, 13-15,
35) . The cobA gene in S . enterica is not part
of the 17-gene cob operon (27,
33) and appears to be constitutively expressed (34) .
In this bacterium, CobA is the housekeeping adenosyltransferase
needed for de novo biosynthesis and for the assimilation of exogenous
corrinoids . However, CobA is not the only corrinoid
adenosyltransferase present in S . enterica . Other large
operons like the 1,2-propanediol utilization (pdu) and
ethanolamine utilization (eut) operons appear to encode their
own corrinoid adenosyltransferases . Johnson et al . recently reported
evidence that the pduO gene of S . enterica encodes an
ATP:cobalamin adenosyltransferase (19) . The eutT gene
of the eut operon was suggested to encode the corrinoid
adenosyltransferase enzyme for this pathway, but support for this
assignment was inconclusive (20) . Interestingly,
CobA, PduO, and EutT do not have an ancestor in common, suggesting
that they evolved in response to a specific need (18) .
|
FIG . 1 . The corrinoid adenosylation pathway in S . enterica . Fpr,
NADP+:ferredoxin (flavodoxin) reductase; FAD/FADH2,
flavin adenine dinucleotide/reduced flavin adenine dinucleotide; FMNH2,
reduced flavin mononucleotide; FMNH · , flavin mononucleotide
semiquinone; PPPi, inorganic triphosphate; Ado,
5-deoxyadenosine; FldA, flavodoxin A . The corrin ring is schematized as
shown with the Co ion in the appropriate oxidation state.
|
|
In this paper we report biochemical and genetic evidence that the
eutT gene of S . enterica encodes an ATP:cob(I)alamin
adenosyltransferase . The data show that EutT enzyme activity requires
the involvement of a metal ion(s) for function and is O2
sensitive .
Bacteria, culture media, and growth conditions. The genotypes
of the strains used in these studies are listed in Table
1 . The ability of strains to use ethanolamine as a
nitrogen source was assessed on no-carbon, no-nitrogen medium (24)
supplemented with glucose (11 mM), MgSO4 (1 mM), methionine
(0.5 mM), cyanocobalamin (CNCbl; 15 nM), and ethanolamine (20
mM) . The ability of strains to use ethanolamine as a carbon and
energy source was assessed on no-carbon E (NCE) medium (4)
supplemented with NH4Cl (50 mM), L-methionine
(0.5 mM), MgCl2 (1 mM), ethanolamine (50 mM),
adenosylcobalamin (AdoCbl; 0.2 µM), and hydroxycobalamin (HOCbl; 0.2
µM) . When added to the medium, L-(+)-arabinose
was at 0.2 mM . Trace mineral elixir was prepared as previously
described (1) and used at 5 ml/liter of medium .
Nutrient broth (NB; Difco) was used as rich medium . All chemicals
were of high purity and were used without further purification .
HOCbl, AdoCbl, and dicyanocobinamide [(CN)2Cbi] were
purchased from Sigma . Ethanolamine hydrochloride (99.9% purity) was
purchased from Aldrich .
| TABLE 1 . Strains and plasmids used in this studya
|
|
Genetic techniques . (i) Transductions. All of the crosses used
bacteriophage P22 double mutant HT105/1 int-201 (28,
29) . Transductions were performed as previously
described (8, 10) .
(ii) Isolation of a Tn10d(tet+) insertion
element near the eut*-1149 gain-of-function mutation. A
pool of
100,000
S . enterica strains carrying Tn10d(tet+)
elements inserted in their genome was obtained as previously
described (11) . Phage P22 grown on this pool of
strains was used as the donor to transduce strain JE3193 [metE205
ara-9
299(hisG-cobT)
902(cobA-trp)
eut*-1149] to tetracycline resistance, screening for
loss of the ability of the strain to grow on ethanolamine as an N
source in minimal medium supplemented with CNCbl .
(iii) Mapping of the eut*-1149 mutation. The
general location of the eut*-1149 mutation on the chromosome
was obtained by two different means . First, genetic crosses
with the Mud-P22 mapping kit of Benson and Goldman (3) were
performed . This method allows the location of mutations to regions
of the chromosome approximately 40 kb in size . For this purpose,
transducing lysates prepared on the set of lysogens in the mapping
kit were used as donors in crosses that selected for loss of
the Tn10d(tet+) element near the eut*-1149
mutation on Bochner plates (5, 21) .
Crude preparations of the phage P22 tailspike protein were obtained
as previously described (30, 39) .
Approximately 35 µg of protein of a crude extract containing P22
tailspike protein was routinely spread onto the plate prior to
dispensing Mud-P22 samples by means of a multiprong device . The
physical location of the Tn10d(tet+)
insertion element linked to the eut*-1149 mutation was
determined by sequencing the DNA flanking the insertion element by
protocols described elsewhere (6, 23) .
(iv) Chemical mutagenesis. The method described by Miller to
mutagenize cells with N-methyl-N'-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine
(NG) (22) was used to isolate derivatives of cobA
strain JE2257 that used ethanolamine as an N source . Briefly, strain
JE2257 was grown in NB overnight at 37°C with shaking . A fresh
culture of JE2257 was started by inoculating 0.1 ml of the overnight
culture into 5 ml of fresh NB; the culture was allowed to reach
mid-log phase ( 70
Klett units), and cells were washed twice with citrate buffer, pH
5.5, and resuspended in 5 ml of citrate buffer prior to the addition
of NG to a final concentration of 25 µg/ml . Cells and mutagen were
incubated at 37°C for 20 min; mutagenized cells were washed with
phosphate buffer (pH 7.0), resuspended in 5 ml of fresh NB, and
incubated at 37°C with shaking until the culture reached an A650
of 1.5 . The culture was diluted, plated for single colonies on NB
agar, and replica printed onto no-carbon, no-nitrogen minimal medium
supplemented with ethanolamine as an N source . Clones able to
grow on ethanolamine as an N source were restreaked on selection
plates .
(v) Recombinant DNA techniques. For construction of an
in-frame, nonpolar deletion of eutT, the eutT gene was
deleted by a previously described method (9) .
Briefly, primers EutTKOP1fwd
(5'-TCATACGCTCAGCGAAGGATCGGAGATCCATCAGCCCGCTGACGCACGACTGACGTGTAGGCTGGAGCTGCTTC-3')
and EutTP2KOrev
(5'-GGCGCGTACCGCCAGTTCGCGGGCGCGTTCAATGATCATGGCTTCTCTCCCAACCATATGAATATCCTCCTTAG-3')
were used to amplify the chloramphenicol cassette from plasmid
pKD3 such that the 5' and 3' tails were homologous to the 5' and 3'
regions of the S . enterica eutT gene . The linear PCR product
was electroporated into strain JE6692 (metE205 ara-9/pKD46
bla+) selecting for chloramphenicol resistance and
counterselecting against pKD46 by incubation at 37°C . The resulting
strain was JE7091 (metE205 ara-9 eutT1144::cat+) .
Plasmid pCP20 was electroporated into strain JE7091 selecting for
ampicillin resistance at 30°C . The resulting strain was incubated at
42°C to select against the plasmid . Clones sensitive to ampicillin
and chloramphenicol were analyzed further . PCR amplification of
the eutT gene was performed with primers Seeutup 500fwd
(5'-GCGGCTCTCAGTGAACAGGA-3') and Seeutdown 500rev
(5'-CGCTGCAATCGGCGAACC-3') . The DNA sequence of the amplified product
was determined by the nonradioactive ABI PRISM BigDye cycle
sequencing method (PE Life Sciences) in accordance with the
manufacturer's instructions with primers Seeutup 300seqfwd
(5'-GTCATTGACGGCAGCAGCG-3') and Seeutdown 300seqrev
(5'-CATCAGCGGATCGCTAAGC-3') . The DNA sequence was determined at the
Biotechnology Center of the University of Wisconsin—Madison . DNA
sequencing confirmed the deletion of bases 91 to 786 in the eutT
gene in strain JE7092 (metE205 ara-9
eutT1145) .
No polar effects were observed under the growth conditions tested .
(vi) Plasmid constructions. Plasmid pEUT7 was constructed by
amplifying the eutT gene from S . enterica genomic DNA
with primers EutTEcoRIf (5'-GTACGTCGCCTGGAATTCAAACTGGC-3') and
EutTXbaIr2 (5'-GCGCATCTAGAGAAAGACGACTCTGGC-3') . The 800-bp PCR
product was cloned into the EcoRI and XbaI sites of plasmid pBAD24 (17),
resulting in plasmid pEUT7 . The presence of the eutT+
allele in plasmid pEUT7 was confirmed by DNA sequencing with primers
pBADfwd (5'-CGCAACTCTCTACTGTTTCT-3') and pBADrev
(5'-GGCTGAAAATCTTCTCTCAT-3') .
Corrinoid adenosylation assays . (i) Preparation of cell extracts.
Strains JE7204 [metE205 ara-9 cobA366::Tn10d(cat+)
eutT1145/pBAD24]
and JE7205 [metE205 ara-9 cobA366::Tn10d(cat+)
eutT1145/pEUT7]
were grown in NCE minimal medium supplemented with ethanolamine
as a carbon and energy source, AdoCbl (1 µM), and L-(+)-arabinose
(0.2 mM) to activate transcription driven by the ParaBAD
promoter in the plasmids . Cultures of the above strains were grown
aerobically at 37°C for 22 h, cells we harvested by centrifugation at
4°C (12,096 x g for 10 min),
cell paste was placed in a serum vial, the headspace was flushed with
O2-free N2 gas for 15 min, and the vial was
stored at –80°C until used . Cells were resuspended inside the
anaerobic chamber in anoxic 0.2 M Tris Cl buffer (pH 8, 25°C)
containing phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride (1 µM) and 1x
BugBuster reagent (Novagen) and stirred for 30 min at room
temperature . Lysates were transferred into stainless steel tubes
fitted with caps with an expanding O ring to maintain anoxic
conditions; tubes were centrifuged at 43,667
x g and 4°C for 30 min in a Beckman
Avanti J25I centrifuge equipped with a JA 25.50 rotor . Clarified
extracts were placed into Pierce SnakeSkin 3.5-kDa MWCO bags and
dialyzed for 1 h against 750 ml of anoxic Tris-Cl buffer (pH 8,
25°C); six changes of dialysis buffer were performed . Dialyzed,
clarified cell extracts were transferred into serum vials,
pressurized to 102 kPa with O2-free N2,
and used within 24 h . Adenosylation assay conditions were as
previously described (14, 35), except
that 0.5 mM ATP was used .
(ii) Preparation of cob(II)alamin. Cob(II)alamin was
generated with the Fpr [ferredoxin (flavodoxin) NADP+
oxidoreductase] FldA system . HOCbl (25 µmol) was placed into a serum
vial to which 30 ml of anoxic 0.2 M Tris Cl (pH 8, 37°C) was added
under a stream of O2-free N2 gas; NADPH (50
µmol), Fpr (75 nmol), and FldA (25 nmol) were added anoxically . The
reaction mixture was incubated for 1.5 h at 37°C in a water bath
outside the anaerobic chamber . Cob(II)alamin was purified inside the
chamber by binding to a deoxygenated C18 SepPak cartridge
(Millipore), washing it with water, and eluting it with previously
degassed 100% methanol . Samples were dried outside the chamber under
a stream of O2-free nitrogen gas . Dried cob(II)alamin was
placed in a serum vial pressurized at 100 kPa and maintained inside
the anaerobic chamber until redissolved in the above-mentioned
reaction buffer containing MnCl2 (0.8 mM) .
Spectrofluorimetric ß-galactosidase activity assays.
Whole-cell ß-galactosidase assays were performed in 96-well
microtiter dishes with the fluorogenic substrate 3-carboxyumbelliferyl-ß-D-galactopyranoside
(Molecular Probes) in accordance with the manufacturer's instructions .
Two milliliters of NCE medium supplemented with glycerol, MgCl2,
L-methionine, NH4Cl, and trace minerals
was inoculated with 100 µl of an overnight NB culture of the
appropriate strain . Cultures were grown at 37°C until the A650
was between 0.2 and 0.3 ( 2
h) . At this time, 1 ml of the culture was centrifuged (18,000
x g, for 2 min) and cells were
resuspended in 300 µl of sterile saline . A 10-µl sample was removed,
diluted 1:100 in sterile saline, and used for viable counts . The
remaining 290 µl was treated with chloroform (30 µl) to permeabilize
the cell membrane . A 50-µl sample of cell suspension was used
per well of a 96-well microtiter dish; measurement of ß-galactosidase
activity in each culture was performed in triplicate .
A 100-µl sample of the fluorogenic substrate 3-carboxy-umbelliferyl-ß-D-galactopyranoside
working solution (includes phosphate buffer, pH 7.3) was added,
and the reaction mixture was incubated at room temperature for 30
min . The reaction was stopped by addition of stop buffer (50 µl), and
the fluorescence was read at 460 nm (excitation at 390 nm) .
Fluorescence values in each well were normalized to a reference
standard and compared to a standard curve to determine the number of
picograms of ß-galactosidase per well . The number of molecules of
ß-galactosidase (46.5 kDa) per cell was determined by taking into
consideration that active ß-galactosidase is a tetramer . Viable
counts were used to calculate the number of active ß-galactosidase
tetramers per cell .
Expression of the eut operon requires AdoCbl. The EutR
protein activates transcription of the eut operon in response
to ethanolamine and cobalamin in the environment (25,
26) . To determine the form of cobalamin sensed by EutR,
we blocked the conversion of cobalamin to AdoCbl by the housekeeping
CobA adenosyltransferase . A null allele of the cobA gene was
introduced into strain JE7145 (metE205 ara-9 eutE18::MudJ)
by phage P22-mediated transduction, resulting in strain JE7179 [metE205
ara-9 eutE18::MudJ cobA366::Tn10d(cat+)] .
We measured expression of the eut-lacZ reporter in
strains JE7145 and JE7179 as a function of the corrinoids used to
supplement the medium . When nonadenosylated cobinamide or cobalamin
was added to the culture medium, expression of the eut-lacZ
reporter was five to eight times higher in strain JE7145 (cobA+)
than in strain JE7179 (cobA) (Table 2) . These
results indicated that AdoCbl eut operon expression required
AdoCbl as a coinducer . The need for CobA activity during ethanolamine
utilization was confirmed by growth studies . A culture of a
cobA strain displayed a long lag (>60 h) before the onset of
logarithmic growth, and the final density of the culture was low when
CNCbl was in the medium . Addition of AdoCbl in lieu of CNCbl
abolished the lag, and the culture reached a cell density similar to
that of a cobA+ strain (data not shown) .
| TABLE 2 . In vivo transcription evidence that EutT synthesizes AdoCbl
|
|
The eut operon encodes a corrinoid adenosyltransferase.
The existence of an alternative ATP:co(I)rrinoid adenosyltransferase
was suggested by the slow but reproducible growth of the cobA
strain on ethanolamine in medium supplemented with CNCbl . To
investigate this possibility we performed NG mutagenesis (22)
of strain JE2257 [ 299(hisG-cobT)
902(cobA-trp)]
searching for gain-of-function derivatives able to degrade
ethanolamine . Strain JE2257 was used in this study to avoid dealing
with the two known adenosyltransferases, i.e., CobA and PduO (19,
35) . NG mutagenesis of strain JE2257 yielded a
derivative (JE3193) with improved growth on ethanolamine as an N
source in medium supplemented with CNCbl (data not shown) . Hereafter
we refer to this gain-of-function mutation as eut*-1149 .
We used two nonbiased genetic approaches to locate the eut*-1149
mutation . First we used the Mud-P22 mapping kit of Benson and
Goldman as previously described (3) . Crude preparations of P22
tailspike protein were prepared (30, 39),
sterilized, and spread onto selection plates to increase transduction
efficiency (5, 21) . By this
method, the eut*-1149 mutation was located to the
region of
50
centisomes, near the eut operon .
Second, we isolated a transposition-deficient Tn10d(tet+)
element (37) near the eut* mutation . For
this purpose we screened a pool of
100,000
strains carrying Tn10d(tet+) elements randomly
inserted into the chromosome (11) . The chromosomal
location of the Tn10d(tet+) element was
determined by sequencing the DNA flanking it . The latter was
amplified by arbitrary PCR protocols (6,
23) . The Tn10d(tet+) element near
the eut* mutation was inserted into open reading frame STM2478
(unknown function;
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/genomes/altvik.cgi?gi=202&db=g&gene=stm2478),
which is 7 genes from the 5' end of the eut operon . Phage P22
grown on strain JE3193 carrying an insertion in open reading
frame STM2478 was used to move the eut* mutation back into strain
JE2257 (resulting in strain JE3604) . The Tn10d(tet+)
element and the eut*-1149 mutation were 80%
cotransducible by phage P22, confirming that the eut*-1149
mutation was located in proximity to the eut operon .
The nature of the eut*-1149 mutation was not established, but
we hypothesized that it increased the expression of the eut
operon, resulting in higher levels of a corrinoid adenosyltransferase
encoded by the operon . Alternatively, the gain-of-function mutation
could have improved the catalytic ability of the adenosyltransferase
encoded by the operon . We focused our attention on the eutT
gene (Fig . 2), which was annotated as encoding a
putative cobalamin adenosyltransferase (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sutils/blink.cgi?pid=16765787&cut=95)
on the basis of the fact that eutT function was not required
for ethanolamine catabolism (20) . As shown below,
deleting the eutT gene had no effect on the ability of the
strain to grow on ethanolamine as long as the cell had a functional
cobA gene (Fig . 3, solid triangles) .
|
FIG . 2 . The ethanolamine utilization (eut) operon of S .
enterica.
|
|
|
FIG . 3 . In vivo evidence that eutT encodes a cobalamin
adenosyltransferase enzyme . Strains were grown in NCE minimal medium
supplemented with ethanolamine as a carbon and energy source and CNCbl
(200 nM) at 37°C . Cultures of cobA+ strains reached
stationary phase approximately 22 h after inoculation . VOC, vector-only
control; peutT+, pEUT7.
|
|
Phenotypic analysis of eutT strains. The growth behavior
of strain JE1293 [metE205 ara-9 cobA366::Tn10d(cat+)]
on ethanolamine as an N source is shown in Fig . 3
(inverted open triangles) . A nonpolar, in-frame deletion of eutT
in strain JE1293 was constructed by using previously described
protocols (9) . The resulting strain, JE7180 [metE205
ara-9 cobA366::Tn10d(cat+)
eutT1145],
failed to grow on ethanolamine even after 96 h of incubation (Fig.
3, open circles), suggesting that EutT was the
alternative cobalamin adenosyltransferase . The eutT+ allele
was placed under the control of the arabinose-inducible promoter
(ParaBAD) in vector pBAD24, resulting in plasmid pEUT7
(ParaBAD-eutT+) . Expression of
eutT+ from plasmid pEUT7 in strain JE7205 [metE205
ara-9 cobA366::Tn10d(cat+)
eutT1145/pEUT7
ParaBAD-eutT+] abolished the lag
and increased the cell density of the culture to almost wild-type
levels (Fig . 3, solid diamonds) . These results indicated
that the chromosomal deletion of eutT in the strains did not
have deleterious effects on the expression of genes downstream
of it . The lack of eutT function had a strong negative effect
on the ability of S . enterica to grow on ethanolamine only in
a cell devoid of the ATP:co(I)rrinoid adenosyltransferase (CobA)
enzyme (Fig . 3, compare solid triangles with open circles) .
This conditionality indicated functional redundancy, yet no
evidence of a shared lineage was detectible by nucleotide or primary
amino acid sequence comparisons of the EutT and CobA proteins or the
eutT and cobA genes (data not shown) . The observed lack
of homology between CobA and EutT suggests that although these
enzymes generate the same product, they probably do so through
different mechanisms .
In vitro evidence supporting the synthesis of AdoCbl by EutT.
We obtained cell extracts of strains JE7204 [metE205 ara-9 cobA366::Tn10d(cat+)
eutT1145/pBAD24
ParaBAD] and JE7205 [metE205 ara-9 cobA366::Tn10d(cat+)
eutT1145/pEUT7
ParaBAD-eutT+] grown aerobically at 37°C
for 22 h in NCE minimal medium supplemented with ethanolamine
(as a carbon and energy source), MgSO4, NH4Cl,
L-methionine, trace minerals,
L-(+)-arabinose (as an inducer), and AdoCbl .
ATP:cob(I)alamin adenosyltransferase activity (6.1 ± 0.3 nmol of
AdoCbl min–1 mg–1 of protein) was detected in
strains carrying the complementation plasmid (eutT+) but
not in the vector-only control strain (Fig . 4) . Assay
results were reproducible when the amount of KBH4 used to
reduce cob(III)alamin to cob(II)alamin was 3 µmol . To eliminate the
need for a reductant, subsequent reactions were performed with
cob(II)alamin as the substrate . AdoCbl was detected when CobA or EutT
extract was added (Fig . 5) but not when ATP was
present alone in the reaction mixture . The yield of AdoCbl was half
of the starting cob(II)alamin in the reaction mixture, and increasing
the reaction time or the amount of protein did not improve the
product yield . This result was not unexpected, since cob(II)alamin is
known to be disproportionate to cob(I)alamin and cob(III)alamin (38) .
We posit that cob(I)alamin generated by cob(II)alamin disporportionation
is used by CobA or EutT as a substrate . Taken together, the
data indicate that EutT is an ATP:cob(I)alamin adenosyltransferase .
|
FIG . 4 . Corrinoid adenosyltransferase activity is detectable in cobA
cell lysates . Strains JE7204 (cobA eutT/pBAD24) and JE7205 (cobA
eutT/pEUT7) were grown on ethanolamine as the sole C source in
minimal medium supplemented with AdoCbl . Cells were harvested and lysed
anoxically with 0.2 M Tris Cl (pH 8.0) in 1x
BugBuster reagent (Novagen) containing protease inhibitor . Protein
content was normalized with fresh buffer . The KBH4 corrinoid
adenosylation procedure was followed (35), except
that the amount of reductant was reduced to 3 µmol per reaction mixture .
Reactions were allowed to proceed for 1 h at 37°C, and the AdoCbl
concentration was determined by photolysis . Lysate containing EutT by
overexpression from the pEUT7 plasmid produced AdoCbl at levels
dependent on the amount of protein added per reaction mixture . Only a
background level decrease in absorbance was detected from the
vector-only negative control . Each data point represents the average of
at least three reactions.
|
|
|
FIG . 5 . EutT adenosyltransferase activity is sensitive to air and metal
chelation . Substrates and protein were added, and the reaction was
initiated by a shift to 37°C . EutT-dialyzed extract was prepared as
described in Materials and Methods . ATP, 500 µM; CobA, 40 µg of protein;
EutT+, 100 µg of protein (EutT-enriched extract); Batho., 10
or 100 µM bathophenanthroline; air, EutT-enriched extract exposed to air
for 20 min and then flushed with O2-free N2 gas
before addition to the reaction mixture . AdoCbl production was
determined by comparing the A525 after 30 min with
that after 10 min of photolysis . Each data point represents the average
of at least two reactions . ND, not detected.
|
|
In vivo evidence that AdoCbl is the product of the EutT reaction.
To confirm that the product of the EutT reaction was AdoCbl, we used
a sensitive fluorimetric method to measure expression of the eut-lacZ
operon fusion as a function of EutT activity . Expression of the
reporter was measured in strains JE7202 [metE205 ara-9
cobA366::Tn10d(cat+) eutE18::MudJ/pBAD24]
and JE7203 [metE205 ara-9 cobA366::Tn10d(cat+)
eutE18::MudJ/pEUT7 ParaBAD-eutT+] .
These strains were grown in medium containing ethanolamine and
either (CN)2Cbi or HOCbl . Expression of the fusion in strain
JE7203 was about sixfold higher than in control strain JE7202
when either (CN)2Cbi or HOCbl was added . However, in strain
JE7203 the level of expression of the fusion was much higher
when HOCbl was added to the medium (Table 2) . These results
confirmed that AdoCbl was the product of the EutT reaction and
suggested that EutT may have higher affinity for a complete corrinoid
substrate . It is unclear why the presence of CobA resulted in an
increase in transcription of the eut operon even when no
ethanolamine or corrin was added to the medium . The increase in
eut expression in a cobA/peutT+ strain versus a
cobA+ strain when ethanolamine and hydroxycobalamin are
added to the medium likely reflects the effect of arabinose on
eutT+ expression and the fact that eutT+
was present in a multicopy plasmid .
Evidence suggesting the involvement of Fe. Like CobA, EutT
adenosylates cob(I)alamin with ATP as a cosubstrate . Unlike CobA,
EutT does not have an ATP-binding P-loop motif (2,
31), and the amino acid sequence of EutT is distinct from
that of CobA and PduO cobalamin adenosyltransferases . Close
examination of the primary amino acid sequence of EutT revealed a
cysteine-rich region reminiscent of the conserved S-adenosylmethionine
Fe-S cluster motif identified by Sofia et al . (32) .
Two results suggested that Fe-S centers might be present in the
S . enterica EutT protein . First, EutT activity was lost upon
exposure to oxygen . Second, EutT activity was lost as a function of
the concentration of bathophenanthroline (an Fe2+ chelator) (16)
in the reaction mixture (Fig . 5) . Addition of 10 µM
bathophenanthroline to the reaction mixture resulted in a 40% loss of
EutT-dependent activity despite the presence of 0.8 mM MnCl2
in the reaction mixture . Attempts to substitute S-adenosylmethionine
for ATP as a substrate for EutT did not yield any product (data not
shown) . Electron paramagnetic resonance experiments aimed at
confirming the presence and determining the type of Fe-S centers in
EutT await isolation of the enzyme .
In summary, we have provided in vivo and in vitro evidence to
support the previous proposal by Kofoid et al . (20) that EutT
is a corrinoid adenosyltransferase . We have also shown that
EutT uses ATP as a donor of the adenosyl moiety and that it contains
a metal ion that can be chelated by bathophenanthroline . We suggest
that oxidation of the latter may cause the loss of activity observed
upon exposure of the enzyme to air . The sensitivity of EutT to air
and metal chelation set it apart from the other two known
ATP:corrinoid adenosyltransferases described in S . enterica,
CobA and PduO . These observations further support the idea that EutT
catalyzes the synthesis of AdoCbl via a mechanism different from the
one used by CobA and probably PduO . The isolation and
characterization of the EutT enzyme are in progress .
EutT homologs. The eutT gene from S . enterica
is 88% identical and 93% similar to its homolog in E . coli .
The predicted sequences of these EutT proteins contain the same
cysteine-rich sequence we think may play a role in metal ligation .
Other members of the COG4812 family (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/COG/new/release/cow.cgi?cog=COG4812)
are 30 to 27% identical and 48 to 51% similar to the S . enterica
EutT protein, but a cysteine-rich sequence is not obvious in
these orthologs .
Why is a corrinoid adenosyltransferase encoded by an operon
requiring AdoCbl for expression? There is no clear answer to this
question . Cells are able to grow on ethanolamine in the absence of
the housekeeping adenosyltransferase (CobA) enzyme after a long lag
(Fig . 3, open triangles), suggesting that there is
a low basal level of transcription of the eut operon . We
propose that the lag is a period of time during which sufficient
levels of EutT accumulate to synthesize enough AdoCbl for EutR to
fully activate expression of the operon . It is possible that EutT is
encoded by the eut operon because EutT needs to be localized
to the carboxysome-like structure, where ethanolamine degradation is
thought to occur (20, 33) . Whether EutT is
localized within the carboxysome-like structure remains an open
question .
This work was supported in part by NIH grant GM40313 to J.C.E.-S .
N.R.B . was a Howard Hughes Medical Institute predoctoral fellow .
* Corresponding author . Mailing address: 264 Enzyme Institute,
1710 University Ave., Madison, WI 53726-4087 . Phone: (608) 262-7379 . Fax: (608)
265-7909 . E-mail:
escalante@bact.wisc.edu .
- Balch, W . E., and R . S . Wolfe. 1976 . New approach to the
cultivation of methanogenic bacteria: 2-mercaptoethanesulfonic acid
(HS-CoM)-dependent growth of Methanobacterium ruminantium in a
pressurized atmosphere . Appl . Environ . Microbiol . 32:781-791.
- Bauer, C . B., M . V . Fonseca, H . M . Holden, J . B . Thoden, T .
B . Thompson, J . C . Escalante-Semerena, and I . Rayment. 2001 .
Three-dimensional structure of ATP:corrinoid adenosyltransferase from
Salmonella typhimurium in its free state, complexed with MgATP, or
complexed with hydroxycobalamin and MgATP . Biochemistry 40:361-374.
- Benson, N . R., and B . S . Goldman. 1992 . Rapid mapping in
Salmonella typhimurium with Mud-P22 prophages . J . Bacteriol .
174:1673-1681.
- Berkowitz, D., J . M . Hushon, H . J . Whitfield, J . Roth, and B .
N . Ames. 1968 . Procedure for identifying nonsense mutations . J . Bacteriol.
96:215-220.
- Bochner, B . R., H.-C . Huang, G . L . Schieven, and B . N . Ames.
1980 . Positive selection for loss of tetracycline resistance . J . Bacteriol .
143:926-933.
- Caetano-Annoles, G. 1993 . Amplifying DNA with arbitrary
oligonucleotide primers . PCR Methods Appl . 3:85-92.
- Castilho, B . A., P . Olfson, and M . J . Casadaban. 1984 .
Plasmid insertion mutagenesis and lac gene fusions with mini-Mu
bacteriophage transposons . J . Bacteriol . 158:488-495.
- Chan, R . K., D . Botstein, T . Watanabe, and Y . Ogata.
1972 . Specialized transduction of tetracycline resistance by phage P22 in
Salmonella typhimurium . II . Properties of a high transducing lysate .
Virology 50:883-898.
- Datsenko, K . A., and B . L . Wanner. 2000 . One-step
inactivation of chromosomal genes in Escherichia coli K-12 using PCR
products . Proc . Natl . Acad . Sci . USA 97:6640-6645 .
- Davis, R . W., D . Botstein, and J . R . Roth. 1980 . A
manual for genetic engineering: advanced bacterial genetics . Cold Spring
Harbor Laboratory Press, Cold Spring Harbor, N.Y.
- Elliott, T., and J . R . Roth. 1988 . Characterization of
Tn10d-Cam: a transposition-defective Tn10 specifying
chloramphenicol resistance . Mol . Gen . Genet . 213:332-338.
- Escalante-Semerena, J . C., S.-J . Suh, and J . R . Roth.
1990 . cobA function is required for both de novo cobalamin biosynthesis
and assimilation of exogenous corrinoids in Salmonella typhimurium . J .
Bacteriol . 172:273-280.
- Fonseca, M . V., N . R . Buan, A . R . Horswill, I . Rayment, and
J . C . Escalante-Semerena. 2002 . The ATP:co(I)rrinoid adenosyltransferase
(CobA) enzyme of Salmonella enterica requires the 2'-OH group of ATP
for function and yields inorganic triphosphate as its reaction byproduct . J .
Biol . Chem . 277:33127-33131 .
- Fonseca, M . V., and J . C . Escalante-Semerena. 2001 . An
in vitro reducing system for the enzymic conversion of cobalamin to
adenosylcobalamin . J . Biol . Chem . 276:32101-32108 .
- Fonseca, M . V., and J . C . Escalante-Semerena. 2000 .
Reduction of cob(III)alamin to cob(II)alamin in Salmonella enterica
serovar Typhimurium LT2 . J . Bacteriol . 182:4304-4309 .
- Graham, G., R . S . Nairn, and G . W . Bates. 1978 .
Polyacrylamide gel staining with Fe2+-bathophenanthroline
sulfonate . Anal . Biochem . 88:434-441.
- Guzman, L.-M., D . Belin, M . J . Carson, and J . Beckwith.
1995 . Tight regulation, modulation, and high-level expression by vectors
containing arabinose PBAD promoter . J . Bacteriol . 177:4121-4130.
- Havemann, G . D., E . M . Sampson, and T . A . Bobik. 2002 .
PduA is a shell protein of polyhedral organelles involved in coenzyme B12-dependent
degradation of 1,2-propanediol in Salmonella enterica serovar
Typhimurium LT2 . J . Bacteriol . 184:1253-1261 .
- Johnson, C . L., E . Pechonick, S . D . Park, G . D . Havemann, N .
A . Leal, and T . A . Bobik. 2001 . Functional genomic, biochemical, and
genetic characterization of the Salmonella pduO gene, an
ATP:cob(I)alamin adenosyltransferase gene . J . Bacteriol . 183:1577-1584 .
- Kofoid, E., C . Rappleye, I . Stojiljkovic, and J . Roth.
1999 . The 17-gene ethanolamine (eut) operon of Salmonella
typhimurium encodes five homologues of carboxysome shell proteins . J .
Bacteriol . 181:5317-5329 .
- Maloy, S . R., and W . D . Nunn. 1981 . Selection for loss
of tetracycline resistance by Escherichia coli . J . Bacteriol . 145:1110-1112.
- Miller, J . H. 1972 . Experiments in molecular genetics .
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, Cold Spring Harbor, N.Y.
- O'Toole, G . A., and R . Kolter. 1998 . Initiation of
biofilm formation in Pseudomonas fluorescens WCS365 proceeds via
multiple, convergent signalling pathways: a genetic analysis . Mol . Microbiol.
28:449-461.
- Ratzkin, P., and J . R . Roth. 1978 . Cluster of genes
controlling proline degradation in Salmonella typhimurium . J .
Bacteriol . 133:744-754.
- Roof, D . M., and J . R . Roth. 1992 . Autogenous regulation
of ethanolamine utilization by a transcriptional activator of the eut
operon in Salmonella typhimurium . J . Bacteriol . 174:6634-6643.
- Roof, D . M., and J . R . Roth. 1988 . Ethanolamine
utilization in Salmonella typhimurium . J . Bacteriol . 170:3855-3863.
- Roth, J . R., J . G . Lawrence, M . Rubenfield, S .
Kieffer-Higgins, and G . M . Church. 1993 . Characterization of the cobalamin
(vitamin B12) biosynthetic genes of Salmonella typhimurium .
J . Bacteriol . 175:3303-3316.
- Schmieger, H. 1971 . A method for detection of phage
mutants with altered transduction ability . Mol . Gen . Genet . 100:378-381.
- Schmieger, H., and H . Bakhaus. 1973 . The origin of DNA
in transducing particles of P22 mutants with increased transduction
frequencies (HT-mutants) . Mol . Gen . Genet . 120:181-190.
- Schwarz, J . J., and P . B . Berget. 1989 . The isolation
and sequence of missense and nonsense mutations in the cloned bacteriophage
P22 tailspike protein gene . Genetics 121:635-649 .
- Smith, C . A., and I . Rayment. 1996 . Active site
comparisons highlight structural similarities between myosin and other P-loop
proteins . Biophys . J . 70:1590-1602.
- Sofia, H . J., G . Chen, B . G . Hetzler, J . F . Reyes-Spindola,
and N . E . Miller. 2001 . Radical SAM, a novel protein superfamily linking
unresolved steps in familiar biosynthetic pathways with radical mechanisms:
functional characterization using new analysis and information visualization
methods . Nucleic Acids Res . 29:1097-1106 .
- Stojiljkovic, I., A . J . Bäumler, and F . Heffron. 1995 .
Ethanolamine utilization in Salmonella typhimurium: nucleotide
sequence, protein expression, and mutational analysis of the cchA cchB eutE
eutj eutH gene cluster . J . Bacteriol . 177:1357-1366.
- Suh, S.-J. 1994 . The role of CobA in adenosylation of
corrinoids in Salmonella typhimurium . Ph.D . University of Wisconsin,
Madison.
- Suh, S.-J., and J . C . Escalante-Semerena. 1995 .
Purification and initial characterization of the ATP:corrinoid
adenosyltransferase encoded by the cobA gene of Salmonella
typhimurium . J . Bacteriol . 177:921-925.
- Warren, M . J., E . Raux, H . L . Schubert, and J . C .
Escalante-Semerena. 2002 . The biosynthesis of adenosylcobalamin (vitamin B12) .
Nat . Prod . Rep . 19:390-412.
- Way, J . C., M . A . Davis, D . Morisato, D . E . Roberts, and N .
Kleckner. 1984 . New Tn10 derivatives for transposon mutagenesis and
for construction of lacZ operon fusions by transposition . Gene 32:369-379.
- Yamada, R.-H., S . Schimizu, and S . Fukui. 1968 .
Disproportionation of vitamin B12r under various mild conditions .
Biochemistry 7:1713-1719.
- Youderian, P., P . Sugiono, K . L . Brewer, N . P . Higgins, and
T . Elliott. 1988 . Packaging specific segments of the Salmonella
chromosome with locked-in Mud-P22 prophages . Genetics 118:581-592 .
Free Online Full-text Article
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
|