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Journal of Bacteriology, May 2003, p . 3031-3035, Vol . 185,
No . 10
S-Adenosylmethionine
Transport in Rickettsia prowazekii
Aimee M . Tucker, Herbert H . Winkler, Lonnie O . Driskell, and David O .
Wood*
Laboratory of Molecular Biology, Department of Microbiology and Immunology,
University of South Alabama College of Medicine, Mobile, Alabama 36688
Received 9 December 2002/ Accepted 28 February 2003
Rickettsia prowazekii, the causative agent of epidemic typhus,
is an obligate, intracellular, parasitic bacterium that grows within
the cytoplasm of eucaryotic host cells . Rickettsiae exploit this
intracellular environment by using transport systems for the
compounds available in the host cell's cytoplasm . Analysis of the
R . prowazekii Madrid E genome sequence revealed the presence of a
mutation in the rickettsial metK gene, the gene encoding the
enzyme responsible for the synthesis of S-adenosylmethionine
(AdoMet) . Since AdoMet is required for rickettsial processes, the
apparent inability of this strain to synthesize AdoMet suggested the
presence of a rickettsial AdoMet transporter . We have confirmed the
presence of an AdoMet transporter in the rickettsiae which, to our
knowledge, is the first bacterial AdoMet transporter identified . The
influx of AdoMet into rickettsiae was a saturable process with a KT
of 2.3 µM . Transport was inhibited by S-adenosylethionine and
S-adenosylhomocysteine but not by sinfungin or methionine .
Transport was also inhibited by 2,4-dinitrophenol, suggesting an
energy-linked transport mechanism, and by N-ethylmaleimide .
AdoMet transporters with similar properties were also identified in
the Breinl strain of R . prowazekii and in Rickettsia typhi .
By screening Escherichia coli clone banks for AdoMet transport,
the R . prowazekii gene coding for a transporter, RP076 (sam),
was identified . AdoMet transport in E . coli containing the R .
prowazekii sam gene exhibited kinetics similar to that seen
in rickettsiae . The existence of a rickettsial transporter for AdoMet
raises intriguing questions concerning the evolutionary relationship
between the synthesis and transport of this essential metabolite .
Rickettsia prowazekii, the etiologic agent of epidemic typhus,
is an obligate, intracellular, parasitic bacterium that grows within
the cytoplasm of the eucaryotic host cell rather than within an
intracytoplasmic vesicle . The rickettsiae exploit this environment by
expressing distinctive transport systems for the high-energy
intermediates available in the host cell cytoplasm . For example,
R . prowazekii can transport such highly charged molecules as
ATP/ADP, AMP, GMP, NAD, UMP, and UDPG (5,
6, 32-34) . Due to the
importance of transport systems in rickettsial intracellular
parasitism, the identification and characterization of rickettsial
transporters is critical to our understanding of how these unusual
bacteria grow and cause disease .
The search for rickettsial transporters has benefited from the
publication of the R . prowazekii Madrid E genome sequence (4) .
Many genes coding for putative membrane proteins can be identified
and are now available for further study . In addition, the genome
sequence identified mutations that point to the possible existence
of specific transporters . For example, analysis of the R . prowazekii
Madrid E genome sequence revealed the presence of numerous pseudogenes .
These genes code for proteins with high homologies to characterized
gene products of other organisms but contain mutations that
would presumably preclude expression of functional products (4) .
One such gene is metK, coding for methionine adenosyltransferase
(MAT) . In the Madrid E strain of R . prowazekii, this gene contains
a stop codon in the middle of the MAT coding sequence (1,
4) . Interestingly, the R . prowazekii Breinl
strain and a strain of Rickettsia typhi exhibit complete
metK open reading frames, while the metK genes of the
spotted fever group rickettsiae possess numerous stop codons and
frameshifts (2-4) . MAT, the
enzyme that catalyzes the synthesis of S-adenosylmethionine
(AdoMet), has been identified in a wide variety of species of the
bacterial, eucaryotic, and archaeal lineages (9,
27) . AdoMet is an essential metabolite in both
procaryotes and eucaryotes, where it serves as the primary methyl
donor in a variety of methylation reactions (18,
27) . In addition, the aminopropyl group of AdoMet
serves as a substrate in the polyamine biosynthetic pathway (7,
18) . Based on the facts that R . prowazekii has been
shown to synthesize but not transport polyamines and that the
R . prowazekii Madrid E strain contains a nonsense mutation within
the coding sequence of the metK gene, a rickettsial transport
system for AdoMet should be present (3,
26) .
While AdoMet synthesis has been found in a wide variety of cells,
AdoMet transport has been identified in only a few eucaryotes,
including Saccharomyces cerevisiae, Pneumocystis carinii,
Trypanosoma brucei, Leishmania donovani, and rat liver
mitochondria (8, 11,
17, 19, 20,
22, 25) . In this paper we identify and
characterize a rickettsial AdoMet transporter, the first reported
bacterial transporter for this essential metabolite .
Bacterial strains and culture conditions. The rickettsial
strains used included the R . prowazekii Madrid E and Breinl
strains and the R . typhi Wilmington strain . Rickettsiae were
purified from the yolk sacs of embryonated hen eggs as described
previously (32) and were suspended in a
sucrose-phosphate-glutamate-magnesium solution (SPG-Mg; 0.218 M
sucrose, 3.76 mM KH2PO4, 7.1 mM K2HPO4,
4.9 mM potassium glutamate, and 10 mM MgCl2) . For uptake
assays, rickettsial suspensions were concentrated so that rickettsiae
derived from 8 g of infected yolk sac were present in 1 ml . The
concentrated suspensions ranged from 4 to 15 mg of protein per ml .
E . coli strain XL1-Blue (Stratagene, La Jolla, Calif.) was used
as the standard recipient in these studies . An R . prowazekii
cosmid clone bank constructed in E . coli DH1 was used in transport
screening experiments (14, 15) .
E . coli strains were cultured in Luria-Bertani (LB) medium at
37°C . Where appropriate for selection of E . coli
transformants, ampicillin was added to a final concentration of 50
µg/ml .
Transport assays. Rickettsial AdoMet uptake assays were
initiated by adding 1/10 the final volume of the concentrated
rickettsial suspension to SPG-Mg containing S-adenosyl-L-[methyl-14C]methionine
(Amersham Biosciences Corp., Piscataway, N.J.) at concentrations
ranging from 0.5 to 20 µM . For measuring the effect of substrate
concentration on AdoMet uptake, solutions were incubated at
34°C for 15 s and 0.1 ml aliquots were placed on prewetted membrane
filters (25 mm; Durapore PVDF; Millipore Corp.) and were washed with
5 ml of 0.25 M sucrose . Filters were dried, and radioactivity was
assayed by liquid scintillation . Intracellular accumulation of AdoMet
was measured by using a microspace technique as previously described
(31) . To determine specificity, unlabeled,
putative competitive inhibitors, at a final concentration of 25 µM,
were added to reaction mixtures containing 10 µM labeled AdoMet .
Sensitivity of transport to metabolic inhibitors was assayed
similarly but at a final concentration of 1 mM, and they were
preincubated with rickettsiae for 10 min . Assays were initiated by
the addition of labeled AdoMet . All inhibitors were purchased from
Sigma (St . Louis, Mo.) . For E . coli assays, an overnight
culture was used to inoculate fresh LB medium and the culture was
grown to exponential phase . Bacteria were harvested by
centrifugation, washed with 5 ml of 50 mM potassium phosphate buffer
(pH 7.0), and finally suspended in SPG-Mg to a calculated optical
density at 600 nm of 2.0 and assayed for AdoMet transport as
described above for the rickettsiae . Kinetic parameters for all
uptake experiments were calculated by nonlinear regression and were
plotted by using GraphPad Prism software (GraphPad Software, Inc.,
San Diego, Calif.) .
Clone bank screening and subcloning. A previously
established cosmid clone bank was replicated to 96-well microtiter
plates containing 100 µl of LB medium plus ampicillin . After
overnight incubation at 37°C, 100 µl of LB medium plus ampicillin
containing 20 µM [14C]AdoMet was added to each well . After
a 4-h incubation the cells were placed in a 96-well vacuum manifold
containing a nitrocellulose filter, the medium was removed, and the
cells were washed with two 500-µl aliquots of potassium phosphate
buffer . The filters were dried, and the radioactivity was visualized
by using a Cyclone Storage Phosphor System (PerkinElmer Life
Sciences Inc., Boston, Mass.) . Plasmid vectors used in the cloning of
specific rickettsial fragments included pBluescript SKII(+)
(Stratagene) and pSMART HCAmp (Lucigen Corp., Middleton, Wis.) .
Transport of radiolabeled AdoMet in R . prowazekii Madrid E.
Figure 1 shows the kinetics of radioactive AdoMet (10 µM)
uptake as a function of time . Uptake was linear for the first
minute and reached a steady state within 8 min . A microspace assay
was used to examine the accumulation of AdoMet by the rickettsiae at
steady state (31) . In two independent experiments,
accumulation ratios (the ratio of the concentration inside to that
outside) of 13 and 28 were obtained . Since uptake was linear for the
first minute, subsequent uptake experiments were sampled at periods
of less than 1 min to minimize the possible effect of downstream
processes on transport kinetics . The effect of substrate
concentration on AdoMet uptake can be seen in Fig . 2 .
In contrast to nonspecific interactions that occur in the presence of
2,4-dinitrophenol (DNP) or when the rickettsiae are assayed at 4°C,
accumulation of AdoMet by R . prowazekii at 34°C was a
saturable process (Fig . 2A) . A composite of R .
prowazekii AdoMet uptake experiments that used four independent
R . prowazekii preparations and that were normalized to a standard
Vmax revealed a KT of AdoMet transport
of 2.3 µM (range of 0.9 to 4.2 µM) (Fig . 2B) . Due
to the variability between rickettsial preparations it was impossible
to determine the Vmax for rickettsial AdoMet
transport . In the series of experiments described above, the Vmax
spanned a range of 11 to 95 pmol mg-1 min-1 after
background subtraction .
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FIG . 1 . Time course of AdoMet transport in R . prowazekii Madrid
E . The uptake of AdoMet (10 µM) was measured at 34°C (filled circles) or
at 4°C (open circles).
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FIG . 2 . Effect of substrate concentration on AdoMet transport in
rickettsiae . KT values were obtained by nonlinear
regression analysis with GraphPad Prism software . (A) Transport of
AdoMet by R . prowazekii Madrid E at 34°C ( ),
at 4°C ( ),
and in the presence of DNP (•) . Nonspecific background binding of
labeled AdoMet to filters is also shown (*) and is subtracted
from experimental values in panels B to D . (B) A composite of four
independent R . prowazekii Madrid E AdoMet transport assays
normalized to a Vmax of 100 pmol min-1 mg-1 .
(C) A composite of two independent R . prowazekii Breinl AdoMet
transport assays normalized to a Vmax of 100 pmol min-1
mg-1 . (D) A composite of two independent R . typhi
Wilmington AdoMet transport assays normalized to a Vmax
of 100 pmol min-1 mg-1.
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The specificity of transport was examined by measuring rickettsial
AdoMet transport in the presence of various AdoMet analogues (Table
1) . The most effective inhibitor, comparable to that
of unlabeled AdoMet, was S-adenosylethionine, which differs
from AdoMet in the substitution of an ethyl group for the donor
methyl group . S-adenosylhomocysteine, a byproduct of AdoMet
methylation reactions, also inhibited uptake to a lesser extent,
while sinfungin, an effective inhibitor of some eucaryotic AdoMet
transporters (8, 11, 17),
exhibited no significant inhibition . With inhibitor concentrations of
12.5, 25, 50, and 100 µM, the calculated Ki values
for S-adenosylethionine and S-adenosylhomocysteine were
6.4 ± 1.0 and 14.3 ± 6.9 µM, respectively . Additional potential
inhibitors (methionine, ethionine, adenosine, and
methylthioadenosine) did not inhibit rickettsial AdoMet transport
(data not shown) .
| TABLE 1 . Effect of inhibitors on AdoMet uptake by R . prowazekii
Madrid E and E . coli MOB 1402a
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The sensitivity of the R . prowazekii AdoMet transporter to metabolic
inhibitors was also assessed (Table 1) . DNP
significantly inhibited accumulation of AdoMet, suggesting that
AdoMet transport is an energy-dependent process . Rickettsial AdoMet
transport was also sensitive to N-ethylmaleimide (NEM), a
sulfhydryl group blocking agent .
AdoMet transport by other rickettsiae. The Breinl strain of
R . prowazekii and the Wilmington strain of R . typhi do
not have stop codons within their metK genes and thus may be
able to synthesize AdoMet (2) . In order to evaluate
their transport capabilities, the kinetics of AdoMet transport were
determined . The kinetics of uptake were found to be similar to those
of the R . prowazekii Madrid E strain (Fig . 2C and D) .
The Breinl strain exhibited a KT of 7.8 µM while the
R . typhi KT was 5.2 µM . Both substrate
specificity and the sensitivity of these transporters to poisons were
comparable to those of the R . prowazekii Madrid E strain (data
not shown) .
Identification of the AdoMet transporter gene. Since none of
the genes contained in the R . prowazekii genome exhibited
homology to any of the known eucaryotic AdoMet transporters, a genome
screening method was used to identify the rickettsial transporter . A
previously established cosmid clone bank (14,
15) was screened for clones that demonstrated uptake of
radiolabeled AdoMet . One such clone that was identified contained a
rickettsial Sau3A fragment encompassing the RP075-RP084 gene
region (Fig . 3) . A SnaBI-HpaI
fragment containing the complete gene sequence of the RP076 gene and
partial sequences of the RP075 and proP1 genes was
subsequently identified as the region imparting AdoMet transport to
E . coli clones (Fig . 3) .
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FIG . 3 . Schematic maps of the cosmid insert containing the R .
prowazekii RP075-RP084 gene region and subsequent recombinants . The
orientation of the genes is indicated by open arrows . Dashed lines
identify the regions cloned to generate specific recombinants . The
indicated SnaB1-HpaI fragment was cloned into pBluescript
SKII(+) to generate pMW1377 . Small arrows represent primers used to
amplify the RP076 gene . The amplified gene was cloned into pSMART to
generate pMW1402 . All the constructs shown transport AdoMet in E .
coli . H, HpaI; S, SnaBI; Amp, ampicillin resistance
gene; Ori, origin of replication.
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In order to conclusively prove that only the RP076 gene is necessary
for AdoMet transport, the coding region of RP076, flanked by 56 bp
upstream and 32 bp downstream, was PCR amplified and ligated into the
blunt cloning vector pSMART, generating plasmid pMW1402 . Originally,
the pSMART vector was chosen to eliminate possible toxicity problems
during the initial cloning of the RP076 PCR product . However, it was
discovered that insertion of the RP076 coding region into pSMART in
one orientation (pMW1402) resulted in constitutive AdoMet transport .
Thus, this construction was used to investigate transport kinetics in
E . coli (Fig . 4) . The fragment inserted into
the vector in the opposite orientation (pMW1410) served as a negative
control . AdoMet uptake in E . coli cells containing pMW1402
remained linear over the 20-min assay, presumably due to the rapid
metabolism of AdoMet within E . coli . To minimize the effect of
downstream processes on the kinetics of transport, samples for
determining the effect of substrate concentration on transport were
taken at 30 s . A KT of 4.7 µM, similar to that
found for rickettsial transport, was found under these conditions . In
addition, the sensitivity of the cloned transporter to the inhibitors
S-adenosylethionine and S-adenosylhomocysteine and to
the metabolic inhibitors DNP and NEM was similar to that found for
rickettsial transport (Table 1) . Based on this
data, we have assigned the gene designation sam to RP076 .
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FIG . 4 . Kinetics of AdoMet transport in MOB1402 . (A) Time course of
AdoMet uptake in E . coli MOB1402 and MOB1410 . (B) Effect of
substrate concentration on AdoMet transport in MOB1402 . The data
represent a composite of two independent bacterial preparations . The
KT value was obtained by nonlinear regression analysis
with GraphPad Prism software.
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The R . prowazekii sam gene exhibits a G+C content (32.4%) typical
of R . prowazekii protein-coding genes (4) . The
transporter encoded by sam possesses characteristics of an
integral membrane protein . The 294-amino-acid deduced protein has a
calculated Mr of 33,092 and a pI value of 9.98 . A
Kyte-Doolittle hydrophobicity analysis (16)
revealed a hydrophobic protein with 10 potential membrane-spanning
regions (data not shown) . Several topology models for transmembrane
proteins also predicted 10 membrane-spanning regions (10,
13, 30) . A homolog to sam
(RC0106) with 90.5% identity at the amino acid sequence level can be
identified in the Rickettsia conorii genome sequence (21) .
A BLAST search revealed that the rickettsial transporter exhibits a
small but significant relationship (23 to 28% identity) to
hypothetical proteins from a wide range of bacterial genera . The only
annotated genes identified in the BLAST search, from Brucella
melitensis and Vibrio vulnificus, are members of the DMT
superfamily of drug/metabolite transporters . The Brucella
transporter is also annotated as a member of the DME family, a
subgroup of the DMT superfamily that contains integral membrane
proteins with sizes ranging from 246 to 353 amino acids and having 10
membrane-spanning regions (12) .
As obligate intracellular bacteria growing within the cytoplasm of
the eucaryotic host cell, the rickettsiae are immersed in pools of
metabolic intermediates . The rickettsiae have evolved to exploit this
rich environment by expressing transport proteins specific for these
metabolites . Consequently, the capability of rickettsiae to
synthesize many of these compounds has been lost . Upon publication of
the R . prowazekii genome sequence, an example of this
reductive evolution process was encountered with the identification
of a translational stop codon within the metK gene of R .
prowazekii (1, 4) . Since this gene codes
for the enzyme responsible for synthesizing the essential metabolite
AdoMet, the identification of a translational stop within this
gene led to the hypothesis that R . prowazekii Madrid E should
transport AdoMet (3) .
Our data demonstrate that rickettsiae transport AdoMet via a
high-affinity system . This is the first bacterial AdoMet transporter
identified, and the 2 to 8 µM KT values for the rickettsial
transporters are comparable to the values for the S . cerevisiae
transporter (3.3 µM), the high-affinity transporter of P .
carinii (4.5 µM), and the transporter found in rat liver
mitochondria (8.9 µM) (11, 19,
20) . In sensitivity to inhibitors, the rickettsial
transporter is comparable to that of S . cerevisiae . However,
there is no significant homology between any eucaryotic AdoMet
transporter and the rickettsial transporter identified in this study .
Thus, the rickettsial transporter offers a unique model for examining
the transport of this essential metabolite .
Uptake of AdoMet by E . coli expressing the cloned transporter
remained linear over 20 min, while rickettsial uptake reached a
steady state within 8 min . This difference is likely due to a much
lower metabolic demand for AdoMet in the rickettsiae . In rickettsiae,
the only known use for AdoMet is in the synthesis of polyamines (26) .
AdoMet-dependent rickettsial methylation reactions have not been
characterized . In addition, preliminary experiments examining the
intracellular presence of AdoMet in rickettsiae by thin-layer
chromatography identified AdoMet as the major labeled compound,
suggesting a slower rate of AdoMet metabolism within the time frame
of the experiments .
The existence of an AdoMet transporter in rickettsiae raises
questions about the contribution of AdoMet synthesis in those
rickettsiae containing an intact metK gene . Since AdoMet is an
essential metabolite, it is obvious that a transporter must exist
before the ability to synthesize this compound is lost completely .
Thus, the hypothesis that the R . prowazkeii Madrid E strain
must have a transporter was logical when coupled to the fact that the
Madrid E metK gene has a nonsense mutation within the coding
sequence . However, the Breinl strain of R . prowazekii and the
Wilmington strain of R . typhi possess complete open reading
frames of the metK gene . While this does not preclude the
existence of missense mutations within these metK genes, the
presence of complete open reading frames raises the question of
whether these strains would need to transport AdoMet in a comparable
manner . Our data demonstrated that both strains transported AdoMet
with kinetics similar to that seen for the Madrid E strain . While the
KT values of these strains were found to be slightly
higher than that of Madrid E, this is insignificant considering
the variability of rickettsial preparations . Obviously, the next step
is to determine whether these rickettsial strains possess active MAT
enzymes and how these rickettsial enzymes compare in activity with
the well-studied MAT enzyme of E . coli . Preliminary data from
whole-cell assays suggest that both the Breinl and Wilmington strains
are expressing active enzyme, and analysis of the protein sequences
reveals that both exhibit conservation of the active-site residues
identified in E . coli (23,
24, 28, 29) . Studies are under way to
purify the MAT enzymes from the Breinl and Wilmington strains in
order to directly compare and contrast the activities of these
enzymes with those of the E . coli standard .
This work was supported by National Institutes of Health grant
AI44997 .
We thank Robin Daugherty and Rose Robertson for assistance in
developing the transport assay and in rickettsial isolations .
* Corresponding author . Mailing address: Department of
Microbiology and Immunology, Laboratory of Molecular Biology, University of
South Alabama, Mobile, AL 36688-0002 . Phone: (251) 460-6324 . Fax: (251)
460-7269 . E-mail:
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