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Journal of Bacteriology, February 2004, p . 767-776, Vol . 186,
No . 3
Direct
Glutaminyl-tRNA Biosynthesis and Indirect Asparaginyl-tRNA Biosynthesis in
Pseudomonas aeruginosa PAO1
Pierre-Marie Akochy, Dominic Bernard, Paul H . Roy, and Jacques
Lapointe*
Département de Biochimie et de Microbiologie, Faculté des Sciences et de
Génie, Université Laval, Québec, Canada G1K 7P4
Received 18 July 2003/ Accepted 20 October 2003
The genomic sequence of Pseudomonas aeruginosa PAO1 was searched
for the presence of open reading frames (ORFs) encoding enzymes
potentially involved in the formation of Gln-tRNA and of Asn-tRNA . We
found ORFs similar to known glutamyl-tRNA synthetases (GluRS),
glutaminyl-tRNA synthetases (GlnRS), aspartyl-tRNA synthetases
(AspRS), and trimeric tRNA-dependent amidotransferases (AdT) but none
similar to known asparaginyl-tRNA synthetases (AsnRS) . The absence of
AsnRS was confirmed by biochemical tests with crude and fractionated
extracts of P . aeruginosa PAO1, with the homologous tRNA as
the substrate . The characterization of GluRS, AspRS, and AdT
overproduced from their cloned genes in P . aeruginosa and
purified to homogeneity revealed that GluRS is discriminating in the
sense that it does not glutamylate tRNAGln, that AspRS is
nondiscriminating, and that its Asp-tRNAAsn product is transamidated
by AdT . On the other hand, tRNAGln is directly glutaminylated by
GlnRS . These results show that P . aeruginosa PAO1 is the first
organism known to synthesize Asn-tRNA via the indirect pathway and to
synthesize Gln-tRNA via the direct pathway . The essential role of AdT
in the formation of Asn-tRNA in P . aeruginosa and the absence
of a similar activity in the cytoplasm of eukaryotic cells identifies
AdT as a potential target for antibiotics to be designed against this
human pathogen . Such novel antibiotics could be active against other
multidrug-resistant gram-negative pathogens such as Burkholderia
and Neisseria as well as all pathogenic gram-positive
bacteria .
The formation of correctly aminoacylated tRNAs is the central step of
the faithful translation of the genetic code . Some organisms use at
least a distinct aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase (aaRS) for each amino acid
species to be charged on the cognate tRNA(s) . This is the case in the
cytoplasm of eukaryotic cells and in some eubacteria such as
Escherichia coli, which in addition to its basic set of 20 aaRSs,
has an additional lysyl-tRNA synthetase (12) . On
the other hand, many organisms lack one or several aaRSs (35)
and correctly aminoacylate the corresponding tRNA(s) via multistep
pathways, such as the transamidation pathway for Gln-tRNAGln
formation present in all archaea and in most bacteria (37,
38); the first step of this pathway is the misacylation
of tRNAGln with glutamate, catalyzed by a nondiscriminating
glutamyl-tRNA synthetase (GluRS-ND) (20), followed by
the transamidation of Glu-tRNAGln into Gln-tRNAGln,
catalyzed by a tRNA-dependent amidotransferase (AdT) (5) .
The presence of such alternate pathways for the correct
aminoacylation of certain tRNAs reflects the formation of the extant
20 aaRSs by the divergent evolution of the ancestors of the two
unlinked classes of aaRSs; for instance, glutaminyl-tRNA synthetase
(GlnRS) evolved from a GluRS-ND in primitive eukaryotes that used the
transamidation pathway for Gln-tRNAGln formation (18,
30) . There may be physiological reasons for the
conservation of such ancestral pathways by some organisms . In some
cases, pathways may be redundant; when AdT and asparaginyl-tRNA
synthetase (AsnRS) are present (as in gram-positive bacteria),
aspartyl-tRNA synthetases (AspRS) could be either discriminating
(AspRS-D) or nondiscriminating (AspRS-ND) . Similarly, when AdT and
GlnRS are present (as in Pseudomonas aeruginosa), glutamyl-tRNA
synthetase (GluRS) could be either discriminating or nondiscriminating .
In certain archaea (7) and in the gram-negative bacterium
Chlamydia trachomatis (25), the AsnRS is
missing and Asn-tRNAAsn is synthesized by a transamidation
pathway involving an AspRS-ND and a heterotrimeric AdT (10) .
Such AdTs, encoded by the gatA, gatB, and gatC genes,
are present in archaea, some bacteria, and most organelles and
can transamidate both Glu-tRNAGln and Asp-tRNAAsn (3,
5, 6, 25,
27) . Heterodimeric AdTs, encoded by the gatD and
gatE genes, are present in some archaea and transamidate only
Glu-tRNAGln (35) .
By searching through the complete genomic sequence of the pathogenic
bacterium P . aeruginosa PAO1 (33) for genes
encoding enzymes potentially involved in the formation of Gln-tRNA
and of Asn-tRNA, we found those encoding a GluRS, a GlnRS, an AspRS,
and an AdT (Fig . 1), but none were similar to the
genes encoding known AsnRSs . We report here that P . aeruginosa
contains a discriminating GluRS, an AspRS-ND, a heterotrimeric AdT,
and no AsnRS activity (Fig . 2) . It is the first
organism where this set of enzymes is shown to be used for the
formation of Gln-tRNA and Asn-tRNA . More recently, gatCAB has
been found to be present and asnS was absent in other beta-
and lower gamma-proteobacteria such as Neisseria meningitidis
(24) and Pseudomonas putida (23) .
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FIG . 1 . Multiple-sequence alignments of P . aeruginosa PAO1 GluRS,
GlnRS, GatC, GatA, GatB, and AspRS with a few respective orthologs from
other bacterial species, created by using the Pileup program . The
organisms were as follows: P_aeru, P . aeruginosa PAO1; T_ther,
T . thermophilus; B_subt, B . subtilis; E_coli, E . coli;
D_radi, Deinococcus radiodurans; C_trac, C . trachomatis.
The GluRS sequences used were as follows: P_aeru, PA3134; T_ther,
P27000; B_subt, P222450; E_coli, P04805 . The aligned residues Arg358 of
T . thermophilus GluRS-D, Arg358 of P . aeruginosa PAO1, and
GluRS and Gln358 of B . subtilis GluRS-ND are boxed . The GlnRS
sequences used were as follows: P_aeru, Q9I2U8; D_radi, P56926; E_coli,
BAA35328 . The GatC, GatA, and GatB sequences used were, respectively, as
follows: P_aeru, AAG07870, AAG07871, AAG07872; C_trac, NP_219504,
NP_219505, NP_219506; B_subt, O06492, CAB12488, O30509 . The AspRS
sequences used were as follows: P_aeru, NP_249654; C_trac, O84546;
D_radi_D, NP_295070; T_ther_D, P36419; E_coli_D, NP_288303 . Residues
which were identical in all sequences of each multiple alignment are
printed in white on black, and those conserved in at least three of the
four GluRS sequences, two of three sequences (GlnRS, GatC, GatA, and
GatB), or three or four of the five AspRS sequences are shaded.
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FIG . 2 . Putative pathways for Gln-tRNAGln and Asn-tRNAAsn
synthesis in P . aeruginosa PAO1 based on the genes identified in
its complete genomic sequence and without excluding the possibility that
an atypical AsnRS is present.
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Nucleotide and amino acid sequence analyses. The gapped BLAST
algorithm (1) was used for nucleotide sequence
analyses of the complete genome of P . aeruginosa PAO1 accessible
at ftp://www.pseudomonas.com (33) .
The multiple alignments of amino acid sequences of homologous
proteins were made with ClustalX (16) and the
Pileup program of Genetics Computer Group, version 10.3 (Accelrys
Inc., San Diego, Calif.), with the blosum 62 matrix, a gap weight of
10, and a gap length weight of 2 .
Bacterial strains and plasmids. P . aeruginosa PAO1
(ATCC 15692), kindly provided by Ann Huletsky (Université Laval,
Québec, Canada), was used to purify DNA for gene cloning by PCR .
P . aeruginosa ADD1976, carrying the mini-D180 fragment containing
the T7 RNA polymerase gene controlled by the isopropyl-ß-D-thiogalactopyranoside
(IPTG)-inductible UV-5 promoter (4), was kindly provided
by John Mattick (University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia) .
The E . coli-P . aeruginosa shuttle vectors pUCPSK and pUCPKS
were used for protein overproduction . They contain a multiple
cloning site, allowing the transcription of the cloned gene from a T7
promoter, and encode a ß-lactamase which confers resistance to
ampicillin (120 µg/ml) in E . coli and to carbenicillin (500
µg/ml) in P . aeruginosa (36) . The
preparation and transformation of competent cells were conducted as
described by Irani and Rowe (15) .
Cloning of P . aeruginosa PAO1 gltX and aspS
genes and of the gatCAB operon. The gltX gene (1.48 kb)
was amplified by PCR from P . aeruginosa genomic DNA with the
following upstream and downstream oligonucleotides, respectively:
5'-CGCCCCTGAATTCCCGTTTTAACTTCC-3' and
5'-CCCGGATCCTTATTAGTGGTGGTGGTGGTGGTGGCTGCTGCCGCGGCCCTCGGCGCCGGGAATGGCGTCGCG-3' .
It was then inserted into pUCPSK (Fig . 3D) . The aspS
gene (1.77 kb) was similarly amplified by PCR with the following
oligonucleotides: 5'-GGCAGCCGGGAGCTCCACAGAA-3' and
5'-GCTCTTTGCGAAGCTTGATGTTGG-3' . It was then inserted into pUCPKS
(Fig . 3E) . The gatCAB operon was cloned in
three steps . First, gatB (1.44 kb) was PCR amplified with the
oligonucleotides
5'-CCCGGTACCAGGAGGTCTCCATGGGCAGCAGCCACCACCACCACCACCACCACCACAGCAGCGCCGAGGGCCGCATGCAATGGGAAACCG-3'
and 5'-CGAACCCGGC GTCAAGCTTTGACTCACGCTTC-3' and cloned into
pUCPSK (Fig . 3A) . Second, gatCA (1.72 kb) was PCR
amplified with the oligonucleotides
5'-CGCCCAAGCTTAGGAGGTCTCCATGGGCAGCAGCCACCACCACCACCACCACCACCACAGCAGCGCCGAGGGCCGCATGGCGCTTGAACGCTCCGAC-3'
and 5'-GCTCTAGAGCTTATTAGAAGCCGGCCGGGG-3' and cloned into pUCPSK
(Fig . 3B) . Finally, the KpnI-HindIII fragment of
pUCPSK/gatB was inserted upstream of gatC in pUCPSK/gatCA,
generating the gatBCA operon (3.2 kb) (Fig . 3C) .
The integrity of the cloned genes was checked by sequencing .
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FIG . 3 . P . aeruginosa PAO1 genes amplified by PCR and inserted
into the multiple cloning site of the E . coli-P . aeruginosa
shuttle vector pUCPSK or pUCPKS, which differ only by the orientation of
their multiple cloning sites (36) . The resulting
vectors, identified on the right, express the inserted gene(s) from a
proximal T7 promoter . The letters K, H, X, E, and S represent the KpnI,
HindIII, XbaI, EcoRI, and SacI restriction
sites, respectively . Upstream of gatB and gatC, we
inserted by PCR the Shine-Dalgarno sequence AGGAGG frequently found in
P . aeruginosa, 8 His codons (CAC), and a sequence encoding the
factor Xa digestion site Arg-Glu-Gly-Arg (with codons preferentially
used in P . aeruginosa) . Downstream of gltX and aspS,
we inserted a sequence encoding the factor Xa digestion site, 6 His
codons, and two stop codons.
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Enzyme purification. P . aeruginosa was grown with strong
agitation in modified Luria-Bertani medium (2.5 g of NaCl per liter)
(C . Hancock, personal communication) to reduce the synthesis of
alginate, which interferes with enzyme purification . The overproduced
P . aeruginosa GluRS and AspRS, carrying C-terminal His tags,
were purified to homogeneity by affinity chromatography on nickel
nitrilotriacetate (Ni-NTA) superflow agarose (Qiagen) . P .
aeruginosa AdT was overproduced in P . aeruginosa ADD1976
carrying the plasmid pUCPSK/gatBCA, with His tags on the C and
B subunits but none on the A subunit . The AdT purified by Ni-NTA
affinity chromatography contains equimolar amounts of each of the
three subunits . These purified enzymes were concentrated by
filtration on Centricon membranes (YM-5, -10, or -30) . P .
aeruginosa GlnRS was partially purified from a clarified (S-10)
crude extract of P . aeruginosa PAO1 by partition in a
polyethylene glycol-dextran two-phase system, as previously used for
E . coli GlnRS (17), followed by chromatography
on a Q-Sepharose column (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech) .
Purification of unfractionated tRNA from P . aeruginosa PAO1.
Cells were grown as described above to reduce the synthesis of
alginate, which strongly interferes with phenol extraction of tRNA .
All the operations were conducted at 4°C . The cell pellet was
suspended in 20 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.9) and shaken with an equal volume
of phenol previously equilibrated with Tris-HCl (pH 7.9) . After
separation of the phases by centrifugation, the aqueous phase was
submitted to a second phenol extraction . Nucleic acids were
precipitated from the resulting aqueous phase by the addition of 0.1
volume of 20% potassium acetate (pH 5.0) and 3 volumes of 95%
ethanol . The precipitate was resuspended in 1 M NaCl, which allowed
the small RNAs to be solubilized but kept the large ribosomal RNAs as
the precipitate . Unfractionated tRNA was then precipitated from the
supernatant in the presence of 3 volumes of 95% ethanol at -20°C for
at least 30 min, solubilized in sterilized distilled and deionized
water, and purified from remaining traces of rRNA by filtration
through Centriplus 100,000-molecular-weight membranes (Millipore) .
Purification of P . aeruginosa tRNAAsp, tRNAAsn,
and tRNAGln. The P . aeruginosa genome contains a
single species of each of tRNAAsp, tRNAAsn, and
tRNAGln, encoded by four, two, and one genes, respectively
(http://rna.wustl.edu/GtRDB/Paer/Paer-summary.html) .
Each of these tRNA species was purified to homogeneity, as a
complex with a complementary oligonucleotide (24-mer), by polyacrylamide
gel electrophoresis under nondenaturing conditions and recovered
by electroelution (the choice of the complementary oligonucleotides
and the detailed experimental conditions will be described elsewhere) .
P . aeruginosa tRNA aminoacylation. Unfractionated
tRNA, isolated as described above, was aminoacylated with [14C]glutamate,
[14C]aspartate, or [14C]glutamine with pure
GluRS or AspRS or partially purified GlnRS, respectively . [14C]asparagine
was used to search for the presence of an AsnRS . The aminoacylation
reactions were conducted at 37°C in 50 mM Na HEPES (pH 7.2), 25 mM
MgCl2, 15 mM KCl, 5 mM dithiothreitol, 1 mM ATP, 50 µM
unfractionated tRNA, 125 µM amino acid substrate ([14C]glutamate,
238 mCi/mmol; [14C]glutamine, 244 mCi/mmol; [14C]aspartate,
216 mCi/mmol; or [14C]asparagine, 210 mCi/mmol), and the
enzyme (4.2 µg of pure GluRS or AspRS/ml or 12.5 µg of partially
purified GlnRS/ml) . The 14C-labeled amino acids were purchased from
Amersham Pharmacia Biotech .
Asp-tRNAAsn and Glu-tRNAGln transamidation
reactions. The transamidation reactions were conducted at 37°C in 50
mM Na HEPES (pH 7.2), 25 mM MgCl2, 15 mM KCl, 5 mM
dithiothreitol, 1 mM ATP, 50 µM unfractionated tRNA, and 125 µM
[14C]glutamate or [14C]aspartate, as described by
Curnow et al . (5) and Raczniak et al . (25) .
In a preliminary step, the aminoacyl-tRNA substrates for AdT were
prepared by adding either AspRS or GluRS to this mixture and
incubating it for 15 min at 37°C, which led to plateaux of Asp-tRNA
and Glu-tRNA . The transamidation reaction was then started by the
addition of 320 µg of pure AdT/ml and 5 mM unlabeled glutamine .
The reaction was carried out for 30 min at 37°C and was stopped
by the addition of 2.5 M Na acetate (pH 5.2) to a final concentration
of 0.3 M . This reaction mixture was shaken with 1 volume of phenol at
pH 5.2 and 1 volume of chloroform . After centrifugation, tRNA was
ethanol precipitated from the aqueous phase, washed with 70% ethanol,
dried and solubilized in 50 µl of 25 mM KOH, and incubated for 1 h at
65°C to deacylate aminoacyl-tRNAs . This solution was then neutralized
by the addition of 1.3 µl of 100 mM HCl and dried under vacuum .
The residue was solubilized in 10 ml of distilled and deionized
water, and 2 µl of this solution was analyzed for its amino acid
content by ascending chromatography on microcrystalline cellulose
thin-layer plates (Whatman) with ammonia-water-chloroform-methanol
(2:1:6:6) as described by Curnow et al . (5) . The thin-layer
chromatography (TLC) plate was then dried at room temperature,
and the position and radioactivity of the spots were measured and
analyzed with a Fuji BAS 1000 phosphorimager, with the Image gauge,
version 4.0 software .
P . aeruginosa genes encoding enzymes potentially involved in the
formation of Gln-tRNA and Asn-tRNA. Analysis of the complete genomic
sequence of P . aeruginosa PAO1 (33) (ftp://www.pseudomonas.com)
by gapped BLAST (1), ClustalX (16),
and version 10.3 of the Genetics Computer Group (Accelrys Inc.)
revealed the presence of open reading frames (ORFs) similar to known
GluRSs, GlnRSs, AspRSs, and trimeric AdT (Fig . 1 )
but none similar to known AsnRSs . As trimeric AdT characterized in
other bacteria can transamidate both Glu-tRNAGln and Asp-tRNAAsn
(3, 5, 25), this
set of genes suggests the existence of two pathways of Gln-tRNAGln
formation (direct, via GlnRS; indirect, via GluRS-ND and AdT) and of
only the indirect pathway for Asn-tRNAAsn formation . However, firm
conclusions about the pathways used in P . aeruginosa for the
formation of Glu-tRNAGln and Asp-tRNAAsn cannot rely only
on the presence of these genes, first because it is not possible at
this point to determine from its amino acid sequence whether a GluRS
is discriminating or nondiscriminating and second because the absence
of a gene similar to the known asnS genes does not imply that
P . aeruginosa has no AsnRS activity . Indeed, some aaRSs such
as class I Lys-tRNA synthetase of Methanococcus maripaludis (13)
and Cys-tRNA synthetase of Methanococcus jannaschii and
Methanobacterium thermoautotrophicum (9, 32)
are too different from their cognate aaRSs in other organisms to be
identified by sequence comparisons . The same set of genes encoding
enzymes potentially involved in the formation of Gln-tRNA and
Asn-tRNA (Fig . 2) is also present in all beta- and
some gamma-proteobacteria whose complete genomes have been reported:
P . aeruginosa (gamma), P . putida (gamma),
Pseudomonas syringae (gamma), Neisseria gonorrhoeae
(beta), N . meningitidis (beta), Nitrosomonas europaea (beta),
Bordetella pertussis (beta), Ralstonia solanacearum (beta),
and Burkholderia pseudomallei (beta) . No biochemical
characterization of these enzymes has been reported . Therefore, we
undertook the search for AsnRS activity in P . aeruginosa and
the biochemical characterization of its AspRS, GluRS, GlnRS, and AdT .
Absence of an AsnRS in P . aeruginosa. To detect AsnRS
activity in crude extracts of P . aeruginosa, we measured the
incorporation of [14C]asparagine into homologous
unfractionated tRNA and observed the incorporation of the 14C
label into this tRNA fraction, even in the presence of unlabeled
aspartate; however, identification of the charged amino acid by
TLC, following the deacylation of the charged tRNAs, revealed that it
was [14C]aspartate . This result does not rule out the
presence of AsnRS activity, since very active asparaginases in the
crude extract could rapidly transform [14C]asparagine into
[14C]aspartate (31) . We thus fractionated P .
aeruginosa PAO1 extracts by several chromatographic steps,
selecting the fractions endowed with the above-mentioned activity . We
found that the purest active fraction contained AspRS and the GatA
and GatB subunits of the heterotrimeric AdT . In the presence of
this fraction and of [14C]asparagine, only [14C]aspartate
was found acylated to tRNA, indicating that aspartate was formed
by an asparaginase activity, and charged on tRNA by the copurified
AspRS . No AsnRS activity was detected in pure AspRS nor in pure
AdT . Therefore, we conclude that P . aeruginosa does not contain
an AsnRS .
Cloning and (over)expression of the P . aeruginosa genes
encoding GluRS, AspRS, and AdT in E . coli and P . aeruginosa.
The P . aeruginosa PAO1 gltX and aspS genes, flanked at
their 3' ends by His tag-encoding extensions, have been amplified
by PCR from genomic DNA and cloned into the P . aeruginosa-E .
coli multicopy (about 14 copies per cell) shuttle vector pUCPSK
(36) under the control of a T7 promoter (Fig.
3A and B) . The E . coli thermosensitive
strain JP1449 altered in gltX (19, 26),
which does not contain the T7 RNA polymerase gene, grows at
restrictive temperature (42°C) when transformed with pUCPSK/gltX
but does not grow under these conditions when transformed with
pUCPKS alone . This result shows that even in the absence of T7 RNA
polymerase, the level of expression of P . aeruginosa gltX
provides enough GluRS to complement the temperature-sensitive
character of this E . coli mutant and suggests that P . aeruginosa
GluRS is discriminating . On the other hand, no transformants of
E . coli BL21(DE3) (which carries an IPTG-inducible T7 RNA
polymerase gene) with pUCPSK/gltX were obtained, indicating
the toxicity for E . coli of high levels of P . aeruginosa GluRS .
The mechanism responsible for this toxicity is yet unknown . On
the other hand, no transformants by the pUCPSK/aspS of E .
coli DH5
or CS89 (29), which carries a thermosensitive AspRS,
were obtained, suggesting that P . aeruginosa AspRS is
nondiscriminating . Therefore, we overproduced P . aeruginosa
GluRS and AspRS in P . aeruginosa ADD1976 and purified these
His-tagged enzymes to near homogeneity by affinity chromatography
(Fig . 4A and C) . As removing His tags from the
purified GluRS or AspRS did not significantly affect the activity, we
used the His-tagged forms in the work described below .
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FIG . 4 . SDS-PAGE characterization of P . aeruginosa PAO1 GluRS
(A), the three subunits of the heterotrimeric AdT (B), and AspRS (C)
overproduced in P . aeruginosa ADD1976 and purified by affinity
chromatography on Ni-NTA . (A) Lanes: 1, protein standard; 2 to 8, wash
with 30 mM imidazole; 9 to 10, GluRS elution with 90 mM imidazole . (B)
Lanes: 1 to 9, amidotransferase elution with 100 mM imidazole, after an
initial wash with 30 mM imidazole; 10, protein standard . (C) Lanes: 1,
protein standard; 2, AspRS elution with 85 mM imidazole, after an
initial wash with 30 mM imidazole; 3 and 4, contaminant and pure AspRS,
respectively, removed after Superdex 200 chromatography . Numbers
indicate the molecular mass (in kilodaltons) of protein standards . The
gels (8% polyacrylamide) are stained with Coomassie blue.
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We did not succeed in cloning gatCAB in the same vector after
its amplification by PCR, probably because of the large size of this
operon (3.5 kbp) . Independent clonings of gatCA and gatB
were successful (Fig . 3A and B) and allowed the overproduction
in P . aeruginosa ADD1976 of the His-tagged B subunit of AdT
and its purification by affinity chromatography . However, the
untagged A subunit, overproduced in the same cells as the His-tagged
C subunit, was not retained during the affinity chromatography . This
indicates that the interaction between A and C is weak, at least in
the absence of B . Therefore, we inserted gatB upstream of
gatC in the pUCPSK/gatCA (see Materials and Methods) to overproduce
the three subunits in the same cell (Fig . 3B) . Although
the expression of this artificial gatBCA operon in E . coli(DE3)
did not affect the growth of this host, we conducted gatBCA
overexpression in P . aeruginosa ADD1976; purification of the
overproduced P . aeruginosa AdT by affinity chromatography yielded
equimolar ratios of the three subunits (Fig . 4B) .
P . aeruginosa has GlnRS activity, and its GluRS is
discriminating. The presence of GlnRS activity was detected in the
supernatant of a crude extract (centrifugation at 10,000
x g) . This GlnRS was
partially purified by Q-Sepharose chromatography and used to charge
unfractionated tRNA from P . aeruginosa with [14C]glutamine
(Fig . 5A) . From the value of the plateau obtained, we
calculated that 2.4% of these tRNA molecules accept glutamine .
Moreover, we verified by chromatography that glutamine, and not
glutamate, was acylated to tRNA (Fig . 5D) . This
result excludes the possibility that tRNAGln was
glutaminylated via the transamidation pathway involving a GluRS-ND
and AdT, because in that case both glutamate and glutamine would have
been found to be acylated to unfractionated tRNA . This control was
made to exclude the possibility that the 14C-labeled amino
acid measured in this experiment is glutamic acid . This could have
happened by the conversion of [14C]glutamine into [14C]glutamate
by a glutaminase in the partially purified GlnRS fraction followed by
the charging of [14C]glutamate on tRNA . The presence in
the P . aeruginosa genome of an ORF similar to known glnS
genes is not sufficient to conclude that this ORF encodes a GlnRS
because GluRSs and GlnRSs are closely related (11,
39), and some bacteria have no GlnRS and two GluRSs (one
is discriminating and the other is nondiscriminating) (34) .
The presence of only glutamine acylated to tRNA (Fig . 5D)
in that experiment demonstrates the existence of a GlnRS activity
in P . aeruginosa. Finally, tRNAGln purified to
homogeneity by gel electrophoresis (see Materials and Methods) is
glutaminylated by this GlnRS fraction (Fig . 5B) .
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FIG . 5 . Aminoacylation of unfractionated tRNA, pure tRNAGln,
tRNAAsp, and tRNAAsn from P . aeruginosa
PAO1 . The reactions shown in panels A, C, and E were conducted in the
presence of unfractionated tRNA and catalyzed by partially purified
GlnRS, pure GluRS, and pure AspRS from P . aeruginosa PAO1,
respectively . Panel B shows the glutaminylation of pure tRNAGln
by partially purified GlnRS, and panel F shows the aspartylation of pure
tRNAAsp and tRNAAsn by pure AspRS . (D)
Identification by TLC (see Methods) of the amino acid charged on tRNA by
GluRS in the reaction shown in panel C (lane 1) and by GlnRS in the
reaction shown in panel A (lane 2) . Shown are complete reactions (filled
circles) and controls without either tRNA (X) or enzyme (empty circles).
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The pure GluRS charges 6.4% of unfractionated tRNA from P . aeruginosa
with [14C]glutamate (Fig . 5C) . When this [14C]glutamyl-tRNA
was incubated in the presence of pure AdT from P . aeruginosa,
no [14C]glutaminyl-tRNA was formed (Fig . 6A) .
Moreover, P . aeruginosa GluRS does not aminoacylate pure tRNAGln
from P . aeruginosa (results not shown) . These results
demonstrate that P . aeruginosa GluRS is discriminating .
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FIG . 6 . Activity of P . aeruginosa PAO1 heterotrimeric AdT . (A)
P . aeruginosa Glu-tRNA . Lanes: 1, with (+) AdT; 2, without (-) AdT;
3 and 4, glutamine and glutamate, respectively, as standards . (B) B .
subtilis Glu-tRNA . Lanes: 1, with AdT; 2, without AdT . (C) P .
aeruginosa Asp-tRNA . Lanes: 1, with AdT for 30 min; 2, with AdT for
15 min; 3, without AdT . These panels show phosphorimages of TLC of the
14C-labeled amino acids after their removal from these tRNAs
(see Materials and Methods) or free glutamine and glutamate as standards
(panel A, lanes 3 and 4).
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P . aeruginosa AspRS is nondiscriminating. The pure AspRS
charges 6.9% of unfractionated tRNA from P . aeruginosa with [14C]aspartate
(Fig . 5E) . When this [14C]aspartyl-tRNA
was incubated in the presence of pure AdT from P . aeruginosa,
about 34% was transformed into [14C]asparaginyl-tRNA (Fig.
6C) . This result demonstrates that P . aeruginosa
AspRS is nondiscriminating and indicates that the 6.9% of the tRNA
molecules charged with aspartate correspond to about 4.6% tRNAAsp
and 2.3% tRNAAsn . These proportions are consistent with
the presence of 4 tRNAAsp genes and 2 tRNAAsn genes in the
genome of this bacterium (http://rna.wustl.edu/GtRDB/Paer/Paer-summary.html)
and with the observation that the levels of individual tRNA
genes in bacteria are generally controlled by gene dosage (8,
14) . Finally, the nondiscriminating character of P .
aeruginosa AspRS is demonstrated directly by its capacity to
aspartylate efficiently both pure tRNAAsp and tRNAAsn
from P . aeruginosa (Fig . 5F) .
The heterotrimeric AdT of P . aeruginosa has no Glu-tRNAGlnsubstrate
in its host, but it can transamidate heterologous Glu-tRNAGln.
The pure heterotrimeric AdT of P . aeruginosa transamidates its
homologous Asp-tRNAAsn into Asn-tRNAAsn (Fig.
6C) . The characterized heterotrimeric AdTs can use
both Asp-tRNAAsn and Glu-tRNAGln, even if the
latter substrate is lacking in P . aeruginosa because of the
discriminating character of its GluRS (Fig . 6A), its
AdT has kept its capacity to transamidate Glu-tRNAGln, as shown
with the corresponding tRNA of Bacillus subtilis (Fig.
6B) .
By analyzing the genome of P . aeruginosa and characterizing
several enzymatic activities potentially involved in the formation of
Gln-tRNA and of Asn-tRNA, we have found that it does not have an
AsnRS and that it is the first known organism to synthesize Gln-tRNA,
via the direct pathway (GlnRS), and Asn-tRNA, via the transamidation
pathway . Up to now, the absence of AsnRS was correlated to the
absence of GlnRS in archaea (7) and in Chlamydia
(25) . Genomic data indicate that all beta- and some
gamma-proteobacteria have a GlnRS and lack an AsnRS .
The presence of a GlnRS in P . aeruginosa is consistent with
the biochemical evidence for the discriminating character of its
GluRS (Fig . 6A) . Moreover, structural evidence for this
character comes from the presence of an Arg residue at the position
corresponding to Arg 358 of domain 4 of Thermus thermophilus
discriminating GluRS (GluRS-D) (Fig . 1), which interacts
with the third nucleotide anticodon (C-36) of tRNAGlu,and
whose replacement by a Gln residue makes this a GluRS-ND (28) .
Finally, physiological evidence for the discriminating character of
P . aeruginosa GluRS is that its production at a low level in
E . coli JP 1449 allows this strain carrying a thermosensitive
GluRS to grow at a restrictive temperature . On the other hand,
stronger expression is toxic for this heterologous host (see above) .
The mechanism for the toxicity for E . coli of higher levels of
this GluRS-D is unknown .
All of the characterized trimeric AdTs from microorganisms or
organelles catalyze in vitro the transamidation of Glu-tRNAGln and
Asp-tRNAAsn (10) . Even in the organisms where only
one of these substrates is present in vivo, the trimeric AdT has not
lost the property of transamidating the other substrate provided
by another organism, in vitro or in vivo (3,
5, 25) . This is also the case
for P . aeruginosa AdT, which finds in its host only Asp-tRNAAsn
but which can transamidate B . subtilis Glu-tRNAGln (Fig.
6B) .
The C subunit of T . thermophilus AdT interacts weakly with the
A and B subunits, and the A-B interaction is strong, as evidenced
by the fact that only the A-B heterodimer was obtained at the
end of several steps of purification from a crude extract of normal
cells (2) . In the P . aeruginosa AdT, there is also a
weak interaction between the C and A subunits, since following
the overproduction of the His-tagged C subunit together with the
untagged A subunit (Fig . 3B), the only peptide retained
on the affinity column was the C subunit (see above) . To purify
this enzyme by affinity chromatography, we overproduced the
His-tagged C and B subunits together with the untagged A subunit
(Fig . 3C), counting on the strong A-B interaction to retain
A on the column . This strategy led to a pure and active AdT,
with stoichiometric amounts of the three subunits (Fig . 4B) .
In some organisms lacking an asnA or asnB gene encoding
asparagine synthetase, AdT participates in asparagine biosynthesis
via Asp-tRNAAsn transamidation (21,
30) . As P . aeruginosa has an asnB
gene, the only function of AdT in its host appears to be its
participation in the formation of Asn-tRNAAsn involved in
ribosomal protein biosynthesis .
AdT is present in all archaea, most bacteria, and all known
organelles, with the exception of Leishmania tarentolae mitochondria
(22) . On the other hand, it is absent from the
cytoplasm of eukaryotes, so inhibitors of bacterial AdT are expected
to have a low toxicity . Therefore, the essential role of AdT reported
here for the formation of Asn-tRNA in P . aeruginosa identifies
this enzyme as a potential target for antibiotics to be designed
against this and other pathogenic gram-negative bacteria that
lack asnS, such as Moraxella, Neisseria, and
Burkholderia, and all gram-positive bacteria that lack glnS.
This work was supported by grant OGP0009597 from the Natural Sciences
and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC) to J.L . and grant
2003-ER-2481 from the "Fonds pour la Formation de Chercheurs et
l'Aide à la Recherche du Québec" (FCAR) to P.H.R . and J.L . P.M.A . was
a doctoral fellow from the "Ministère de l'Enseignement Supérieur et
de la Recherche Scientifique de Côte d'Ivoire." D.B . was an
FCAR-FRSQ doctoral fellow .
We thank Ann Huletsky and John Mattick for the gift of P . aeruginosa
strains and plasmids .
* Corresponding author . Mailing address: Département de
Biochimie et de Microbiologie, Faculté des Sciences et de Génie, Université
Laval, Pavillon Marchand, Local 3211, Québec G1K 7P4, Canada . Phone: (418)
656-2131, ext . 3411 . Fax: (418) 656-3664 . E-mail: Jacques.Lapointe@bcm.ulaval.ca.
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