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Journal of Bacteriology, August 2004, p . 5249-5257, Vol . 186,
No . 16
The
Escherichia coli GTPase CgtAE Cofractionates with the 50S
Ribosomal Subunit and Interacts with SpoT, a ppGpp Synthetase/Hydrolase
P . Wout, K . Pu, S . M . Sullivan, V . Reese, S . Zhou, B . Lin,
and J . R . Maddock*
Department of Molecular, Cellular and Developmental Biology, University of
Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109
Received 1 March 2004/ Accepted 18 May 2004
CgtAE/ObgE/YhbZ is an Escherichia coli guanine
nucleotide binding protein of the Obg/GTP1 subfamily whose members
have been implicated in a number of cellular functions including
GTP-GDP sensing, sporulation initiation, and translation . Here we
describe a kinetic analysis of CgtAE with guanine
nucleotides and show that its properties are similar to those of the
Caulobacter crescentus homolog CgtAC . CgtAE
binds both GTP and GDP with moderate affinity, shows high guanine
nucleotide exchange rate constants for both nucleotides, and has a
relatively low GTP hydrolysis rate . We show that CgtAE is
associated predominantly with the 50S ribosomal subunit .
Interestingly, CgtAE copurifies with SpoT, a
ribosome-associated ppGpp hydrolase/synthetase involved in the stress
response . The interaction between CgtAE and SpoT was
confirmed by reciprocal coprecipitation experiments and by two-hybrid
assays . These studies raise the possibility that the
ribosome-associated CgtAE is involved in the SpoT-mediated
stress response .
The Obg/GTP1 subfamily is a distinct group of monomeric GTP-binding
proteins originally characterized in bacteria but found in the
genomes of all organisms sequenced thus far . Bacterial proteins of
the Obg subfamily are typically essential for cell growth (26,
34, 47, 61), although
their precise function is unknown . Based on the evolutionary
relationship between these and other GTP-binding proteins, it has
been proposed that Obg GTPases act as translation factors (28) .
This is certainly the case for Nog1p, a eukaryotic Obg protein that
is associated with pre-60S ribosomal complexes (4,
12, 14, 18,
22, 40, 53) and
is critical for 60S assembly (25, 54) .
Although a direct role in translation has not been assigned to the
bacterial Obg proteins, accumulating evidence suggests that these
proteins are ribosome associated and play roles in stress response
and in stationary-phase survival .
The initiation of sporulation in Bacillus subtilis and Streptomyces
spp . is correlated with changes in cellular GTP-GDP pools (33,
42, 44, 45) . We,
and others, have proposed that the Obg proteins act as sensors of
these pools (29, 48) . Overproduction of
Obg, which leads to high levels of Obg-GTP, prevents spore
development in Streptomyces spp., suggesting that levels of
Obg-GDP are critical for this process (47,
48) . Increasing the levels of Obg-GDP in
Streptomyces coelicolor by decreasing the GTP/GDP ratio restores
spore development (48) . Similarly, the S . coelicolor
obgP168V mutant, which is predicted to be predominantly in the
GTP-bound state, inhibits sporulation (48) . In B .
subtilis, depletion of Obg also results in a sporulation defect (63) .
The Caulobacter crescentus Obg protein CgtAC binds
guanine nucleotides with modest affinity and displays rapid guanine
nucleotide exchange but relatively slow hydrolysis (29) .
Together with the sporulation data, these biochemical features are
consistent with a model whereby the nucleotide-bound state of the Obg
protein is determined by GTP-GDP pools and, in turn, affects
stationary-phase survival . This model is complicated, however, by the
discovery that the B . subtilis Obg protein cocrystallized with
the alarmone ppGpp (6) . Interestingly, the ppGpp
pools increase as cells enter stationary phase (43,
45) .
The bacterial Obg proteins have also been implicated in ribosome
function . The C . crescentus CgtAC protein cofractionates with
the 50S ribosomal subunit (32) . The B . subtilis
Obg protein also cofractionates with ribosomal proteins and interacts
specifically with the 50S ribosomal subunit protein L13 (56) .
Evidence for a role of the Escherichia coli Obg protein CgtAE
(also called YhbZ or ObgE) in ribosome function comes from
genetic interactions of CgtAE with RrmJ (also called
FtsJ), a methyltransferase that modifies uridine 2552 of the 23S rRNA
(7) . The
rrmJ
mutant grows slowly, has a significantly altered polysome profile,
displays an increase in unassembled 30S and 50S ribosomal subunits,
and shows a decrease in 70S ribosomes and polyribosomes (5,
8) . Overexpression of CgtAE suppresses
both the growth defect and the polysome profile defect of the
rrmJ
mutant, suggesting that CgtAE plays an active role in
ribosome assembly or stability (60) .
Interestingly, CgtAE was not associated with ribosomes
separated on standard sucrose gradients (26) .
In this study, we characterized the guanine nucleotide binding,
exchange, and GTP hydrolysis kinetics of the E . coli CgtAE
protein and show that they are similar to those of the C .
crescentus CgtAC protein . Further, CgtAE
was found to be in a large RNA-containing complex that was associated
predominantly with the 50S ribosomal subunit . Interestingly, CgtAE
copurified with SpoT, a ppGpp synthase/hydrolase important in the
stress response . The interaction with SpoT was confirmed by
reciprocal coprecipitation and yeast two-hybrid studies, raising the
possibility that these proteins are involved in the same cellular
function .
Cell growth and plasmid construction. E . coli cells were
grown at 37°C (unless otherwise indicated) in Luria-Bertani broth
(LB; 10 g of tryptone, 5 g of yeast extract, 10 g of NaCl/liter) or
LB agar containing 100 µg of ampicillin/ml or 30 µg of kanamycin/ml,
as required . Saccharomyces cerevisiae was grown at 30°C in
synthetic dropout (SD) medium (57) lacking Trp,
Leu, or both, as indicated .
E . coli genes were amplified using colony PCR with E . coli
W3110 cells (Table 1) as the source of template DNA
and Advantage cDNA polymerase (Clontech) on a PTC-100 programmable
thermal controller (MJ Research, Inc.) with the oligonucleotides
listed in Table 2 . The two-hybrid clones were
generated by PCR amplification (with the primers listed in Table
2), and the relevant DNA was cloned into the TOPO
shuttle vector and subcloned into pAS2-1 or pACT2, as indicated
(Table 1) . The identities of the clones were
confirmed by restriction mapping and verified by dideoxy sequencing .
| TABLE 1 . Strains and plasmids used in this study
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| TABLE 2 . Oligonucleotides used in this study
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Purification of E . coli CgtAE protein.
His-tagged CgtAE protein was overexpressed and purified from
E . coli BL21(DE3) cells (Table 1) containing
pJM1138 as previously described (58), with the
exception that cultures were grown at 30 instead of 37°C and that 1
mg of lysozyme/ml was added to the cell suspension and incubated for
30 min on ice prior to lysis with a French press . In addition, the
lysis buffer contained 20 mM, not 10 mM, imidazole, and protein was
eluted by a linear gradient of 20 to 300 mM imidazole . The mass of
the purified protein was determined by matrix-assisted laser
desorption ionization (MALDI)-time of flight mass spectrometry
(Protein and Carbohydrate Structure Facility, University of
Michigan) .
Guanine nucleotide binding studies. The guanine nucleotide
binding ability of CgtAE was confirmed, and the guanine
nucleotide dissociation rate constants and single turnover hydrolysis
rate constants of nucleotides were determined using the fluorescent
GDP and GTP analogs 2' or 3' mant-GDP and -GTP (mGDP and mGTP,
respectively) as previously described (29,
58) . The equilibrium binding constant (KD)
was determined using [ -32P]GTP
as described previously (29) . The binding buffer
for all assays was as follows: 10% glycerol, 50 mM Tris-Cl (pH 8.0),
50 mM KCl, 2 mM dithiothreitol, and 10 µM ATP . MgCl2 was
added to a final concentration of 5 to 12 mM unless otherwise
indicated; samples without exogenous MgCl2 also contained 1
mM EDTA . Data were curve fitted with GraphPad Prism version
3.00 for Windows (GraphPad Software, San Diego, Calif.) or Kaleidagraph
3.09 (Synergy Software) . Equilibrium binding constants were
determined by fitting the data to a hyperbolic binding function . For
dissociation rate constant determinations, the curves were fitted to
a single exponential decay equation . To obtain the rate constant of
hydrolysis, the decrease in fluorescence was fitted to a single
exponential decay equation of the form F = A0
+ A0e–kt; the half-life of hydrolysis, T1/2,
is calculated as ln2/k .
Gel filtration. His-tagged CgtAE was purified by
Ni-nitrilotriacetic acid (NTA) chromatography (as described above),
and 0.8 mg was loaded directly onto a 100-ml (1.5- by 70-cm)
Toyopearl HW 55S (TosoHaas) column with a flow rate of 0.4 ml/min .
When indicated, the sample was treated with 1 mg of RNase A/ml for 2
h at room temperature prior to loading on the column . Fractions of
1.5 ml beginning at 20 ml of elution were collected and separated by
sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE)
on an SDS-10% polyacrylamide gel, followed by silver staining .
Copurification. The BL21(DE3) E . coli strain was used
as the host strain for all protein fusion constructs, which include
pJM1138 (His-CgtAE), pMB24 (DsbC-His), pMBPSpoT (maltose
binding protein [MBP]-SpoT), and pMAL-c (MBP) . Cells were grown in LB
containing 0.2% glucose and the appropriate antibiotic . One-liter
cultures were grown to an optical density at 600 nm (OD600)
of 0.4 to 0.6, and protein expression was induced with 0.25 mM
isopropyl-ß-D-thiogalactopyranoside (IPTG) .
Cells expressing MBP fusions were induced at 23°C for 3 h . Cells
expressing histidine-tagged fusions were induced for 1 h . Preceding
inductions, cells were collected at 2,400
x g for 20 min and then resuspended
in 10 ml of binding buffer (100 mM NaCl, 50 mM NaPO4 [pH
8.0], 1 mM phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride) with the addition of 10 mM
imidazole when preparing for Ni-NTA column purification . Cells were
lysed by two passages through a French pressure cell, and cleared
lysates were obtained by centrifugation at 20,000
x g for 45 min .
Lysates from cells expressing either His-CgtAE or DsbC-His (2
ml) were incubated with an equal volume of lysate from cells
expressing SpoT-MBP for 1 h at 4°C with constant mixing, after which
250 µl of prewashed Ni-NTA resin was added and the lysates were
incubated with mixing for another hour . The column was then placed
upright, and unbound protein was allowed to flow through . The column
was then washed sequentially with 1 ml of binding buffer, 1 ml of
wash buffer 1 (binding buffer with 20 mM imidazole), and 1 ml of wash
buffer 2 (binding buffer with 40 mM imidazole) . Finally the protein
was eluted with 1.5 ml of elution buffer (binding buffer with 150 mM
imidazole) .
Lysates from cells expressing either MBP-SpoT or MBP alone were
incubated with an equal volume of lysate from cells expressing CgtAE-His
as described above with the exception that 250 µl of prewashed
amylose resin was used, the resin was washed with 3 ml of binding
buffer, and protein was eluted with 1 ml of binding buffer containing
10 mM maltose .
Proteins were separated by SDS-PAGE and stained with Coomassie
blue or electroblotted onto nitrocellulose membranes for analysis by
immunoblotting . Blots were blocked with 10% skim milk in
phosphate-buffered saline-Tween overnight at 4°C . Primary antibodies
were incubated with membranes in the presence of 5% skim milk in
phosphate-buffered saline-Tween for 1 h at room temperature at
dilutions of 1:1,000 for anti-MBP (U.S . Biologicals) and 1:2,000 for
anti-CgtAE and anti-His (Sigma) . Detection of primary
antibody was conducted by addition of horseradish peroxidase-conjugated
anti-rabbit antibody (Pierce, 1:20,000 dilution) for the CgtAE
antibody or rabbit anti-mouse antibodies (Sigma, 1:10,000 dilution)
for both the His and the MBP antibodies . Antibodies were detected
by fluorography with ECL (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech) as recommended
by the manufacturer .
Preparation of ribosomal particles. E . coli ribosomal
particles were prepared as described previously (13)
with the following alterations . E . coli BL21(DE3) cells
containing pJM1138 were grown to an OD600 of 0.5 in the absence
of antibiotic . The cell pellet was resuspended in lysis buffer
consisting of 10 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.5), 10 mM MgCl2, 1.0 mM EDTA,
6 mM 2-mercaptoethanol, 30 mM NH4Cl, 100 µg of
chloramphenicol/ml, and 1 mg of lysozyme/ml . After two rounds of
freeze-thaw, deoxycholate, DNase I, and dithiothreitol were added, as
described previously (13) . Thirteen OD260
units of cleared lysate was loaded onto 15 to 45% sucrose gradients
(10 ml; 10 mM Tris-HCl [pH 7.5], 10 mM MgCl2, and 100 mM
NH4Cl), and the gradients were centrifuged in a Beckman
SW41 Ti rotor at 41,000 rpm for 3 h . The gradients were fractionated
as described previously (32) and analyzed at
254-nm UV absorbance . Each fraction (500 µl) was precipitated in the
presence of 15% trichloroacetic acid and 0.03% deoxycholate,
resuspended in SDS loading buffer, and analyzed by SDS-PAGE and
immunoblotting with CgtAE antibodies .
Sample preparation for peptide mass fingerprinting. Bands
were excised from Coomassie blue-stained gels and prepared for
peptide mass fingerprinting as described previously (49) .
Briefly, samples were washed in 50% (vol/vol) acetonitrile and
100 mM ammonium bicarbonate . Protein digestions were carried out
using 150 to 500 ng of modified porcine trypsin (Promega) in 10 µl of
ammonium bicarbonate (100 mM) at 37°C overnight . The peptides were
extracted in 60% (vol/vol) acetonitrile-1% (vol/vol) trifluoroacetic
acid (TFA), dried, resuspended in 8 µl of 3% (vol/vol) TFA, and
sonicated in a Branson 1200 bath for 10 min . Samples were loaded onto
a MALDI plate with an equal volume of 10-mg/ml (wt/vol)
-cyano-4-hydroxycinnamic
acid-50% (vol/vol) acetonitrile-1% (vol/vol) TFA . MALDI-time-of-flight
mass spectrometry was performed on a Voyager-DE STR instrument
(PerSeptive Biosystems, Framingham, Mass.) run in delayed extraction
reflector mode at the University of Michigan Proteome Consortium . The
resulting peptide mass fingerprints were searched using a local copy
of the program MS-Fit (part of the Protein Prospector package by P .
Baker and K . Clauser [http://prospector.ucsf.edu/]) .
Yeast two-hybrid analysis. Full-length CgtAE,
SpoT, and SpoT fragments were cloned into pAS2-1 (GAL4-BD) and pACT2
(GAL4-AD) and coexpressed in Y190 and a diploid from the mating of
Y187 and Y190 . Primers used to PCR amplify the relevant genomic DNA
are listed in Table 2 . Protein expression of each
fusion protein in yeast was monitored by immunoblotting with
antibodies to the hemagglutinin tag .
ß-Galactosidase assays. For the filter lift assays, yeast
two-hybrid strains were patched or spotted on SD-Trp-Leu plates and
grown overnight at 30°C . Nitrocellulose filters (BA-S 85; Schleicher
and Schuell) were overlaid on the cells, removed, and placed in
liquid nitrogen (5 to 10 s) to permeabilize the cells . The filters
were placed (cell side up) in petri dishes containing 3MM
chromatography paper soaked with Z buffer (60 mM Na2HPO4,
35 mM NaH2PO4, 10 mM KCl, 1 mM l MgSO4,
pH 7.0) containing 18 mM ß-mercaptoethanol and 1 mg of X-Gal
(5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indolyl-ß-D-galactopyranoside)/ml
and incubated at 30°C .
For the o-nitrophenyl-ß-D-galactopyranoside
assays, yeast two-hybrid strains were grown overnight in 5 ml of
liquid SD-Trp-Leu medium . Triplicate independent cultures were
diluted to an OD600 of 0.2 to 0.3 and incubated for 3 to 5
h with shaking (230 to 250 rpm) until the cells doubled at least
twice . Cells from 1.5 ml of each culture were harvested by
centrifugation (16,000 x g,
30 s), washed once with Z buffer, and resuspended in 200 or 300 µl of
Z buffer . One-hundred-microliter samples were lysed by three
freeze-thaw cycles in liquid nitrogen, diluted with 700 µl of Z
buffer with 18 mM ß-mercaptoethanol, and incubated with 160 µl of
4-mg/ml o-nitrophenyl ß-D-galactopyranoside
(Sigma; catalog no . N-1127) in Z buffer at 30°C . After color
development, reactions were stopped by addition of 400 µl of 1 M Na2CO3,
cell debris was removed by centrifugation (16,000
x g, 10 min), and the OD420
of the supernatants was recorded . ß-Galactosidase units are as in the
Clontech manual .
The E . coli CgtAE protein is ribosome associated.
We were intrigued by the observation that the E . coli CgtAE
protein did not appear to be associated with ribosomes (26),
whereas the B . subtilis and C . crescentus proteins do
associate with ribosomes (32, 56) .
Since overexpression of CgtAE suppresses the ribosome
assembly-stability defect of an rrmJ deletion mutant (60),
we felt that it was possible that, in vivo, CgtAE is ribosome
associated . We speculated that perhaps the association of CgtAE
was not stable under the conditions used during the published
sucrose density centrifugation (26) . To reexamine the
relationship between CgtAE and the ribosome, His-CgtAE
was purified on a Ni-NTA column followed by fractionation by gel
filtration chromatography . CgtAE eluted over an extensive
range of sizes from a very large complex to smaller states (Fig.
1A) as had been previously noted for the B .
subtilis Obg protein (56) . One possibility is that
the CgtAE protein eluting in the intermediate ranges resulted
from disassociation of CgtAE from the large complex during
either purification step .
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FIG . 1 . Purified CgtAE fractionates with an RNase-sensitive
complex . His-tagged CgtAE purified from a Ni-NTA column was
separated by gel filtration chromatography and not treated (A) or
treated (B) with RNase prior to separation by gel filtration
chromatography . Fractions were subjected to SDS-PAGE, and the position
of the proteins was detected by silver staining . The column was
calibrated with blue dextran (2,000 kDa, peak at fraction 9), catalase
(232 kDa, peak at fraction 19), alkaline dehydrogenase (141 kDa, peak at
fraction 22), and albumin (44 kDa, peak at fraction 33).
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We predicted that the large CgtAE-associated complex was the
ribosome . To provide evidence for this model, we treated the
cell extracts with RNase A prior to separation by gel filtration
(Fig . 1B) under conditions that should digest the vast
majority of the rRNA . This method was previously used to show a
ribosome association of the E . coli GTPase Era (36) .
As seen with Era (36), the majority of the higher
complex CgtAE was diminished and the vast majority of CgtAE
eluted from the column in later fractions . Thus, in vivo, a
significant amount of CgtAE is associated with an RNase
A-sensitive complex, and we propose that this complex is the large
ribosomal subunit . Interestingly, either with or without RNase A,
CgtAE did not elute at the predicted monomer size, perhaps
due to its elongated structure (6) or because it
exists as a stable multimer .
Next, we directly addressed whether CgtAE cofractionated with
the ribosomes after ultracentrifugation through sucrose gradients .
We previously showed that the ribosome association of the C .
crescentus CgtAC protein detected after sucrose density
centrifugation is affected by the divalent cations used in the buffer
(32) . Therefore, here we used buffer conditions
optimized for retaining the ribosome association of CgtAC .
Cell lysates were separated by ultracentrifugation through sucrose
gradients and the polyribosome profiles . The majority of the cellular
proteins were in the top of the gradient followed by the peaks for
the 30S and 50S subunits, the 70S monosome, and the polyribosomes, as
indicated in Fig . 2 . Immunoblot analysis with
anti-CgtAE antibodies revealed that the majority of CgtAE
cosedimented with free 50S ribosomal subunits with a reduced, but
significant, association with the 70S monosome peak (Fig.
2) . Longer exposures also reveal CgtAE
throughout the polysome fractions (data not shown) . In this study, we
used cells that were also expressing His-CgtAE . The
profile of this fusion protein was identical to that of the native
protein, demonstrating that the tagged variant also associates with
ribosomes and behaves similarly to the wild-type protein in respect
to ribosome association (Fig . 2) .
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FIG . 2 . CgtAE cofractionates primarily with the large
ribosomal subunit . E . coli cell lysate from BL21(DE3) cells
containing pJM1138 was sedimented through a 15 to 45% sucrose gradient
at 207,000 x g for 3 h .
During fractionation the samples were monitored with UV at 254 nm . The
subsequent fractions were analyzed by immunoblotting with anti-CgtAE
antibodies . Both the His-tagged and wild-type protein sediment primarily
in the 50S fractions . L, load.
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The E . coli CgtAE protein has kinetic properties
similar to those of the C . crescentus CgtAC protein.
An N-terminally polyhistidine-tagged CgtAE protein was stably
overexpressed and purified from E . coli BL21(DE3) cells . His-CgtAE
migrated on SDS-PAGE as a 50-kDa protein, 5 kDa larger than the
predicted value of 45.4 kDa . The mass of the protein as determined by
electrospray mass spectrometry, however, was within 0.05% of the
expected value (45,470 Da; data not shown) . The soluble protein was
purified by affinity chromatography through Ni-NTA resin and eluted
as a single peak .
The C . crescentus CgtAC protein binds guanine nucleotides
with modest affinity (1.2 and 0.5 µM for GTP and GDP, respectively
[29]) . The Km for GTP for CgtAE
was reported to be 18 µM (60), whereas that of
B . subtilis Obg was 5.4 µM (64) . We determined
the equilibrium binding constant (KD) of CgtAE
for [ -32P]GTP
using an equilibrium centrifugal ultrafiltration assay (29) .
At 30°C, CgtAE displayed a KD of 7.9 ±
1.5 µM, a number similar to that of the other characterized Obg
proteins . It appears, therefore, that a hallmark feature of the Obg
proteins is their modest affinity for guanine nucleotides .
In order to investigate the kinetic properties of CgtAE in detail,
we took advantage of the fluorescent properties of N-methyl-3'-O-anthranoyl
(mant) guanine nucleotide analogs . The intensity of mant fluorescence
reflects the hydrophobicity of the environment of the nucleotide
analog and, therefore, can be used as an indicator of the interaction
between protein and ligand (23, 39,
41, 51) . Binding of CgtAE
to mGTP and mGDP nucleotides led to a substantial increase in
mantnucleotide fluorescence (Fig . 3A, compare black lines to
gray line), confirming that CgtAE is a guanine nucleotide
binding protein . Peak fluorescence emission for free and bound
nucleotides occurs at an excitation wavelength of 361 nm . CgtAE-mGDP
and CgtAE-mGTP displayed a 1.3- and 2.1-fold fluorescence
increase over unbound nucleotide, respectively, when excited at 361
nm (Fig . 3A) .
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FIG . 3 . The E . coli CgtAE protein binds mGDP and mGTP
with nucleotide-specific Mg2+ dependence . (A) Excitation
spectra from 310 to 410 nm were recorded at an emission wavelength of
446 nm in the presence of 5 mM MgCl2 . The fluorescence
intensity of the mant moiety in the absence of protein is identical
whether mant is coupled to GDP or to GTP (represented by superimposed
gray line) . Upon addition of CgtAE, the fluorescence
intensity of both mGDP and mGTP increases . The fluorescence signal from
protein-mGDP is shown by the black dotted line, and the fluorescence
signal from protein-mGTP is shown by the black solid line . (B) Binding
of mGDP (circles) and mGTP (squares) to CgtAE was assayed
(excitation, 361 nm; emission, 446 nm) in the presence of various
concentrations of MgCl2 . Binding of CgtAE to mGDP
was unaffected by the presence or absence of Mg2+, whereas
CgtAE bound mGTP in a Mg2+-dependent manner . Data
shown reflect the averages of three trials.
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The C . crescentus CgtAC protein binds mGTP and, to a lesser
degree, mGDP in an Mg2+-dependent manner (29) .
To investigate whether this is also true of CgtAE, we
examined the change in fluorescent signal upon incubation with mGTP
and mGDP in the presence of various amounts of Mg2+ . CgtAE
binds mGDP equally well in the presence and absence of Mg2+,
whereas the binding to mGTP is enhanced in the presence of Mg2+
(Fig . 3B) .
We used the difference in fluorescence between bound and free mGDP
and mGTP to determine the guanine nucleotide exchange rates kd
of CgtAE for GDP and GTP (Table 3; Fig.
4) as we have done previously (29-31,
58) . CgtAE was prebound to mGDP or mGTP until
apparent saturation was achieved . Excess unlabeled nucleotide
was then added, and the rate of fluorescence decrease was measured
over time . In the absence of Mg2+, the release of mGDP and mGTP
at 37°C occurred with average rate constants of 1.1 and 0.57 s–1,
respectively . In the presence of 5 mM Mg2+, the rates of
nucleotide exchange at 37°C were modestly lower (0.65 and 0.21 s–1,
respectively) . Similar rates were observed when the assay was
performed at 30°C (Table 3) . There were no
significant differences in the observed dissociation rate constants
whether GDP or GTP was used as the competing nucleotide (data not
shown) . These rates are comparable to those of the C . crescentus
CgtAC protein (29), indicating that rapid
exchange of guanine nucleotides may be a common feature of the
Obg family of GTPases .
| TABLE 3 . Nucleotide exchange rate constants, kd
(second–1), of E . coli CgtAE
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FIG . 4 . mGTP hydrolysis by CgtAE . Hydrolysis of mGTP by CgtAE
was monitored by saturating CgtAE with mGTP and observing the
decrease in fluorescence over time as CgtAE-mGTP was
converted to CgtAE-mGDP . Data (black circles) were fitted to
a single exponential decay equation (gray line).
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We also determined the hydrolysis rate of GTP by CgtAE by monitoring
the reduction in fluorescence that accompanies the single turnover
conversion of bound mGTP to bound mGDP (29) . At 37°C,
we obtained a T1/2 of 42 ± 5 min corresponding to a
single turnover rate constant of 0.017 ± 0.002 min–1 (Fig .
2B), a rate similar to that previously reported for CgtAE
(0.02 min–1 [60]), B . subtilis
(0.006 min–1 [64]), and C .
crescentus (0.03 min–1 [29]) .
CgtAE and SpoT are interacting proteins. We
observed that several additional faint bands coeluted with His-CgtAE
during purification with a Ni-NTA column (Fig . 5) .
Many of these bands appeared to be coeluting with the E . coli
CgtAE protein specifically, as we did not observe them during
the purification of other E . coli His-tagged GTPases such as
Era (58), HflX, YchF, and YfgK (data not shown) . To
determine the identity of some of these coeluting proteins, we
purified His-CgtAE on a Ni-NTA column, excised bands from
SDS-polyacrylamide gels, subjected them to trypsin digestion,
determined the masses of the resulting peptides, and identified the
corresponding proteins by mass fingerprinting as indicated (Fig.
5) . Several of these proteins were CgtAE .
In addition, two additional proteins copurified with CgtAE,
CsdA/DeaD and SpoT . CsdA is a DEAD-box helicase important for
assembly of the 30S ribosomal subunit (38) and is
a major ribosome-associated protein in cells grown at 15°C (24) .
SpoT is a bifunctional enzyme that has both (p)ppGpp synthetase and
hydrolase activity (21) . Bacteria other than the
-
and ß-proteobacteria possess only one RelA/SpoT protein, called Rel (37) .
In these bacteria, the ribosome-associated Rel protein is responsible
for both (p)ppGpp synthetase and (p)ppGpp hydrolase activity (2,
35) . It should be noted that, due to the large
number of CgtAE degradation products, our analysis was
restricted to bands that migrated more slowly than CgtAE;
therefore, we would not have identified any of the smaller ribosomal
proteins, if present .
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FIG . 5 . CgtAE copurifies with SpoT and CsdA . E . coli
extracts expressing His-tagged CgtAE were subjected to Ni-NTA
chromatography, and the His-CgtAE eluting fractions were
pooled and separated by SDS-PAGE and visualized by Coomassie blue
staining . Several protein bands were subjected to mass fingerprinting
and identified, as indicated . The size of the molecular weight (MW)
markers is indicated on the left (in thousands).
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To determine whether SpoT and CgtAE interact directly, we expressed
in E . coli, individually, His-CgtAE and MBP-SpoT; mixed
the resulting cell lysates; and subjected them to purification by
Ni-NTA or amylose chromatography . Purification of His-CgtAE
on Ni-NTA resin results in a major His-CgtAE band, a band
migrating at the size of MBP-SpoT, and several additional bands (Fig .
6A, lane 2) . Immunoblot analysis with antibodies to MBP
confirmed that a significant amount of MBP-SpoT was immobilized on
the Ni-NTA column with His-CgtAE (Fig . 6B,
lane 2) . As a negative control, we also mixed cell lysates from
DsbC-His (DsbC is an E . coli periplasmic disulfide-bond
isomerase [3]) and MBP-SpoT and subjected them to
Ni-NTA chromatography . As predicted, DsbC-His was found in the eluate
whereas MBP-SpoT was not, indicating that MBP-SpoT did not associate
nonspecifically with the Ni-NTA column or with DsbC-His (Fig.
6) .
|
FIG . 6 . Copurification of MBP-SpoT and His-CgtAE by Ni-NTA
and amylose columns . (A) Coomassie blue-stained SDS-polyacrylamide gel .
(B) Analysis of the samples from panel A by immunoblotting with anti-MBP
(MBP), anti-histidine (His), and anti-CgtAE antibodies . Lanes
1 and 3 are lysates expressing either His-CgtAE ( 50
kDa) or DsbC-His ( 26
kDa) incubated with MBP-SpoT ( 115
kDa)-expressing lysate, respectively, and the resultant eluates after
Ni-NTA affinity purification are shown in lanes 2 and 4, respectively .
Lanes 5 and 7 are lysates expressing His-CgtAE or MBP ( 50
kDa) incubated with MBP-SpoT-expressing lysates, respectively, and the
resultant eluates after amylose column purification are shown in lanes 6
and 8, respectively . The protein molecular weight standards are labeled
"M." The asterisks indicate breakdown products of DsbC-His and MBP in
lanes 3 and 4 and lanes 7 and 8, respectively.
|
|
Next, we asked whether His-CgtAE copurified with MBP-SpoT on
an amylose column . Mixed-cell lysates of strains expressing
His-CgtAE and MBP-SpoT were mixed and applied to an amylose
column . In addition to the major MBP-SpoT band, many other bands
including one migrating at the size of His-CgtAE were observed
(Fig . 6A, lane 6) . Immunoblot analysis revealed that a
significant amount of His-CgtAE also eluted with MBP-SpoT
(Fig . 6B, lane 6) . As a negative control, we
performed the same experiment with His-CgtAE and MBP . The
Coomassie blue-stained gel of the eluting fraction was uninformative,
as His-CgtAE and MBP migrate at similar positions (Fig.
6A, lane 8) . Immunoblot analysis revealed, however,
that very little His-CgtAE was in the eluate (Fig.
6B, lane 8) and represented a contaminating association
of His-CgtAE that we also observed with passage of His-CgtAE
lysates over amylose resin alone (data not shown) .
To confirm that the interaction between CgtAE and SpoT was direct,
we assayed their interactions in vivo using the yeast two-hybrid
method . Full-length (FL) CgtAE was expressed as a GAL4-binding
domain fusion, GAL4-BD, and full-length SpoT was expressed as a
GAL4-activating domain fusion, GAL4-AD . The presence of the
GAL4-BD-CgtAE(FL) alone resulted in modest expression of the
reporter genes (Fig . 7) . Coexpression of the CgtAE(FL)
and SpoT(FL) fusion constructs resulted in enhanced activation of the
lacZ reporter gene (10-fold; Fig . 7),
indicating that these two fusion proteins interact as analyzed by the
yeast two-hybrid system . CgtAE(FL) also showed an
interaction with the N-terminal ppGpp synthetase/hydrolase domain of
SpoT (amino acids 1 to 374) as well as the putative regulatory domain
at the C terminus (the ACT domain; amino acids 625 to 702) (Fig.
7) . Thus, CgtAE appears to make
extensive contacts with SpoT that include the catalytic domains as
well as the potential regulatory domain . Reciprocal fusion proteins
were also examined, as yeast two-hybrid analysis often shows reporter
gene expression in only one direction . In this case, interactions
between CgtAE and SpoT(FL) or SpoT(N) were detected but an
interaction with SpoT(C) was not (data not shown) .
|
FIG . 7 . Domain structure of SpoT and interaction with CgtAE
by the yeast two-hybrid assay . The overlapping ppGpp degradation and
synthesis domains (16), the TGS domain (65),
and the ACT domain (1) are indicated for the
full-length SpoT [SpoT(FL)] protein . Also shown are cartoons of the
SpoT(N) and SpoT(C) subclones used in this study . For each GAL4-AD
fusion, the amino acids of SpoT expressed are indicated . The levels of
ß-galactosidase observed (± standard deviations) from cells coexpressing
the GAL4-BD-CgtAE(FL) and the indicated GAL4-AD-SpoT fusion
constructs or empty pACT2 vector ("None") are given.
|
|
In this report we show that CgtAE is associated predominantly
with the 50S ribosomal subunit . Prior to this report, the ribosome
association of E . coli CgtAE was of some controversy .
CgtAE has been previously implicated in 50S ribosomal
subunit assembly and/or stability based on the ability of
high-copy-number CgtAE to suppress the ribosome defect of
an rrmJ mutant (60) . CgtAE was
reported, however, to be associated with the cell membrane and not
with ribosomes (26), although the conditions used to
pellet the membrane were also sufficient to pellet the ribosomes .
Moreover, CgtAE did not cofractionate with ribosomes separated
by sucrose density centrifugation (26) . We have noted
that the ribosome association of the C . crescentus CgtAC
protein following sucrose density centrifugation is sensitive to the
divalent anions used in the buffer (32) . Here we
show that, under the conditions that revealed cosedimentation of CgtAC
with the 50S subunit, the majority of CgtAE also
associated with the 50S subunit . In addition, a small but
reproducible amount of CgtAE cofractionated with the 70S
particle and polyribosomes .
CgtAE also interacts with the stress response protein SpoT .
The universal cellular response to stress is through the synthesis
of the alarmone (p)ppGpp . In E . coli, during amino acid starvation,
(p)ppGpp is synthesized by RelA, a ribosome-associated enzyme (50)
activated by uncharged tRNAs (20) and controlled, in part,
by the 50S subunit protein L11 (66) . SpoT is a
bifunctional enzyme that has both (p)ppGpp synthetase and hydrolase
activity and is 50% similar in sequence to RelA (21) .
The intracellular location of SpoT has historically been
controversial . SpoT purifies with crude ribosomal fractions (21,
52, 59) but is not found
associated with ribosomes separated by sucrose density centrifugation
(15) . Given that SpoT interacts with CgtAE, a
ribosome-associated protein, we predicted that SpoT is also ribosome
associated but not detected on sucrose gradients under the conditions
used previously (15) . Recent work from our
laboratory reveals that SpoT is, in fact, associated with ribosomes
(P . Wout, M . J . Jiang, and J . Maddock, unpublished data) .
Interestingly, a connection among ribosomes, Obg, and stress
response has been recently suggested for B . subtilis . In addition
to the nutritional stress response pathway mediated by RelA, a
limited number of gram-positive bacteria, such as B . subtilis,
respond to physical stress through RsbW-mediated activation of the
transcription factor
B .
RsbW is an anti- B
protein controlled by a regulatory cascade that involves the RsbT,
RsbS, RsbR, and RsbV proteins (see reference 56) .
Interestingly, Obg interacts with several of these Rsb proteins and
is necessary for activation of the stress response (55) .
Obg also copurifies with ribosomes and is specifically associated
with the ribosomal protein L13 (56) . It is not
clear whether Obg communicates a signal to the ribosomes or whether
the ribosomal state acts as an Obg effector . Recently, it was shown
that RelBsu also plays a role in the
B
activation that does not appear to involve ppGpp (67),
raising the possibility that Obg and RelBsu are
functionally related in B . subtilis .
Several lines of evidence have implicated ribosomes in direct or
indirect roles in the stress response in E . coli . First, amino
acid starvation induces ribosome-mediated activation of RelA (50) .
Second, addition of ribosome-specific antibiotics increases the
expression of heat and cold shock proteins in a manner similar to
that resulting from stress conditions (62) .
Finally, a variety of heat shock proteins, such as Hsp15, Hsp70,
RrmJ, DnaK/J, and GrolEL/S, have been found either to bind to
ribosomes (27, 46) or to be involved in
rRNA modification during ribosome biogenesis (5,
7, 11) .
It is becoming widely appreciated that bacteria contain a number
of essential bacterial GTP-binding proteins, including the Obg
proteins, that are likely to be involved in ribosome function (9,
28, 37) . An interesting feature of the Obg
proteins is their relatively modest affinity for guanine nucleotides
(29, 60, 64),
rapid exchange kinetics for both GTP and GDP (29), and
relatively low hydrolysis rates (29, 60,
64) . These biochemical features are also seen with
the 30S ribosome-associated GTPase, Era (58) . It
has previously been proposed that these proteins are controlled, in
part, by the relative levels of GTP-GDP in the cell (29,
48) . An additional possibility is that the association
with the ribosome or other interacting partners effects guanine
nucleotide binding and/or GTP hydrolysis, as has been shown for the
30S binding GTPase YjeQ (10) .
We report here that CgtAE is associated with the 50S ribosomal
subunit and the SpoT protein . Since CgtAE interacts with SpoT,
it is possible that the downstream effector of CgtAE is SpoT .
Interestingly, based on our two-hybrid studies, CgtAE interacts
with both the catalytic and putative regulatory (ACT) domains
of SpoT . Thus, CgtAE is well poised to be involved in the control
of SpoT function . An alternate possibility is that SpoT could
affect the activity of CgtAE . SpoT is a binding partner of CgtAE
but also catalyzes the synthesis of ppGpp . Moreover, the B .
subtilis Obg protein cocrystallized with ppGpp (6), and
this alarmone, therefore, should be considered a bona fide substrate
of CgtAE in vivo . Through its interaction with SpoT, CgtAE
is well positioned to receive the ppGpp nucleotide, which could
affect the activity of CgtAE . In E . coli, and perhaps
other bacteria, it is likely that SpoT, CgtAE, the 50S
ribosomal subunit, and ppGpp are functionally intertwined . Unraveling
their relationships is critical to completely understanding their
respective functions .
We are grateful to the University of Michigan Proteomics Consortium
and Nikhil Phadke for MALDI mapping, to Jim Hernandez and James
Bardwell for the MBP-SpoT and DsbC-His constructs, respectively, and
to Marcelo Cuoto for technical assistance .
This work was supported by grant GM-55133 from the National
Institutes of Health .
* Corresponding author . Mailing address: Department of
Molecular, Cellular and Developmental Biology, University of Michigan, 830 North
University, Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1048 . Phone: (734) 936-8068 . Fax: (734)
647-0884 . E-mail: maddock@umich.edu.
Present address: NABI Biopharmaceuticals, Rockville, MD 20852 .
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J . Bacteriol . 185:5714-5721 .
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