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Journal of Bacteriology, August 2004, p . 5400-5409, Vol . 186, No . 16
Isoleucine Biosynthesis in Leptospira interrogans Serotype lai Strain
56601 Proceeds via a Threonine-Independent Pathway
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| ABSTRACT |
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Three leuA-like protein-coding sequences were identified in
Leptospira interrogans . One of these, the cimA gene, was shown
to encode citramalate synthase (EC 4.1.3.-) . The other two encoded
-isopropylmalate
synthase (EC 4.1.3.12) . Expressed in Escherichia coli, the
citramalate synthase was purified and characterized . Although its
activity was relatively low, it was strictly specific for pyruvate as
the keto acid substrate . Unlike the citramalate synthase of the
thermophile Methanococcus jannaschii, the L . interrogans
enzyme is temperature sensitive but exhibits a much lower Km
(0.04 mM) for pyruvate . The reaction product was characterized as (R)-citramalate,
and the proposed ß-methyl-D-malate pathway was
further confirmed by demonstrating that citraconate was the substrate
for the following reaction . This alternative pathway for isoleucine
biosynthesis from pyruvate was analyzed both in vitro by assays of
leptospiral isopropylmalate isomerase (EC 4.2.1.33) and
ß-isopropylmalate dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.85) in E . coli
extracts bearing the corresponding clones and in vivo by
complementation of E . coli ilvA, leuC/D, and
leuB mutants . Thus, the existence of a leucine-like pathway for
isoleucine biosynthesis in L . interrogans under physiological
conditions was unequivocally proven . Significant variations in either
the enzymatic activities or mRNA levels of the cimA and
leuA genes were detected in L . interrogans grown on minimal
medium supplemented with different levels of the corresponding
amino acids or in cells grown on serum-containing rich medium . The
similarity of this metabolic pathway in leptospires and archaea is
consistent with the evolutionarily primitive status of the
eubacterial spirochetes .
| INTRODUCTION |
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The leptospires are a physiologically unique genus of spirochetes
that include the saprophyte Leptospira biflexa and the pathogen
Leptospira interrogans . The latter organism is the etiologic
agent of leptospirosis, a worldwide waterborne zoonosis that
constitutes a health threat not only in tropical and subtropical
countries but also in cities where sanitation is substandard and
where rats serve as reservoirs (16) .
Spirochetes are an evolutionarily primitive species of bacteria (8, 42) . As suggested by whole-genome sequencing, the metabolism of L . interrogans differs extensively from that of other well-studied bacteria and from that of two other obligatory parasitic spirochetes, Treponema pallidum (18) and Borrelia burgdorferi (17) .
The biosynthesis of isoleucine is a case in point . In most microorganisms,
isoleucine is synthesized from aspartate via threonine (38) .
L-Threonine dehydratase (deaminase, ilvA; EC
4.2.1.16) is the key enzyme in this pathway . However, alternative
routes to isoleucine from precursors other than threonine have been
reported . Some anaerobes can assimilate 2-methylbutyrate into
isoleucine (33) . In some pseudorevertants of
ilvA mutants,
-ketobutyrate
can arise from precursors other than threonine (3,
6, 9, 11,
13, 14, 15,
30, 39, 41) . Of the latter, the most
commonly observed was a route from pyruvate and acetyl coenzyme A
(acetyl-CoA) via citramalate (3, 9,
39, 41) . This "pyruvate pathway" was
initially proposed for the genus Leptospira (9,
41) because isotope-labeling experiments indicated
that in some leptospiral strains,
-ketobutyrate
was derived from pyruvate rather than threonine . Only a limited
number of leptospires possess catabolic threonine dehydratase (41) .
Later, a similar observation was made with a thermophilic archaeon,
Methanobacterium thermoautotrophicum, suggesting that
isoleucine biosynthesis involves pyruvate as a precursor (14) .
Recently, (R)-citramalate synthase (EC 4.1.3.-) activity was
demonstrated in the thermophilic archaeon Methanococcus jannaschii
(21) .
We were unable to identify an ilvA gene in L . interrogans
during genome annotation but found three putative leuA
protein-coding sequences (CDSs LA0469, LA2202, and LA2350) having
LeuA domains associated with isopropylmalate, homocitrate, and
citramalate synthases (see supplemental material) (32) .
Here, we demonstrate that LA2350 encodes a citramalate synthase
(CimA) while LA0469 encodes an
-isopropylmalate
synthase (EC 4.1.3.12) (LeuA) . In addition, we show that the
-isopropylmalate
isomerase (EC 4.2.1.33) (LeuC/D) and ß-isopropylmalate dehydrogenase
(EC 1.1.1.85) (LeuB) of L . interrogans are functional in the
biosynthesis of both leucine and isoleucine . Thus, L . interrogans
serotype lai strain 56601 uses a pyruvate pathway for isoleucine
biosynthesis (Fig . 1) .
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| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Bacterial strains, plasmids, and culture conditions. The
bacterial strains and plasmids used in this work are listed in Table
1 . L . interrogans (serogroup Icterohaemorrhagiae,
serovar lai, type strain 56601) was grown in EMJH or Korthof (37)
medium at 28°C . Only mid-log-phase cultures were used for gene
expression or enzyme analysis experiments . Cells used in gene
expression analysis were grown to a density of 108/ml in 100
ml of EMJH medium supplemented with 0.5, 2.0, or 5.0 mM isoleucine
or leucine . After around two generations (about 40 h), the cells
were harvested by centrifugation at 8,000 x
g for 5 min . Half of the cells were used to prepare extracts
for enzyme assays, while the remainder was used to prepare total RNA
for the real-time reverse transcription (RT)-PCR analysis . E . coli
was routinely grown in LB medium (35) at 37°C,
except where indicated otherwise . The solid medium used contained
1.0% agar . Antibiotics, when required, were used at the following
concentrations: ampicillin, 100 µg/ml; chloramphenicol, 35 µg/ml;
kanamycin, 50 µg/ml . Minimal medium M9 (35)
supplemented with the appropriate amino acids (histidine, methionine,
and arginine) and thiamine (each at 200 µg/ml) was used to cultivate
E . coli mutants . In complementation experiments, amino acids
(isoleucine, valine, and leucine) and
-ketobutyrate
were added to the minimal medium individually at 200 µg/ml .
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General molecular biology techniques. Bacterial genomic DNA was
prepared by a small-scale method (1) . Restriction
endonucleases, Taq DNA polymerases, EZ Spin Column DNA Gel
Extraction Kit, DNA Ligation Kit Ver.2 (from TaKaRa, Sangon, and
Promega Corp.) were used in accordance with the manufacturers'
protocols . Standard techniques were used for agarose gel
electrophoresis, small-scale plasmid isolation, and bacterial
transformation (26) . The DNA sequencing and analysis
methods used have been described previously (32) .
Cloning and heterologous expression of L . interrogans genes. The DNA of genes of interest was synthesized by PCR with genomic DNA of strain 56601 as the template . The design of the following primers was based on the genomic sequences of individual genes with the incorporation of NdeI/HindIII, NdeI/EcoRI, or NheI/HindIII restriction sites (underlined): LA2202, 5'-CATATGAGTGTTCGTTTAATTGATTG-3' and 5'-AAGCTTTGAGTTTCTTGAACGACCCA-3'; LA2350, 5'-CATATGGGACGTTCTCAAAAGGTATC-3' and 5'-AAGCTTATGCCGGTTGTGAACATATT-3'; LA0469, 5'-GCTAGCGAGAAAACAATGAAACAAGA-3' and 5'-AAGCTTACACAATAACTTGACTGGAG-3'; LA2095/LA2096, 5'-CATATGAATTCGATGAAGACAATGTT-3' and 5'-AAGCTTCGGTAGAATTATATGGCGTA-3'; LA2152, 5'-CATATGAGAATGAAGAATGTAGCAGT-3' and 5'-GAATTCCTACACCTGCTTTCATATTT-3' .
The resulting DNA fragments were inserted into pBluescript II KS that had been linearized with EcoRV . NdeI/HindIII, NdeI/EcoRI, or NheI/HindIII . Fragments harboring the desired genes were further cloned into pET28b and expressed in E . coli BL21(DE3) as previously described (27) . Protein expression was confirmed by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) (12.5% polyacrylamide) .
Plasmid constructions for complementation studies. The XbaI/HindIII fragments harboring L . interrogans gene LA2202, LA2350, LA2096, or LA2152 with ribosomal binding sites (probably from L . interrogans for LA2096 but from the E . coli vector for the others) were generated from the corresponding expression plasmids (pEX_2202, pEX_2350, pEX_2095&2096, and pEX_2152) . These fragments were inserted into psu2718 (25) to generate intermediate-copy-number expression plasmids psu_2202, psu_2350, psu_2096, and psu_2152 . Because there are XbaI sites within the LA0469 and LA2095 genes, the following primers were designed on the basis of the sequences of individual genes with additional KpnI/HindIII or SacI/HindIII cleavage sites (underlined): psu_0469, 5'-GGTACCGTTTAACTTTAAGAAGGAGA-3' and 5'-AAGCTTACACAATAACTTGACTGGAG-3'; psu_2095, 5'-GGTACCGTTTAACTTTAAGAAGGAGA-3' and 5'-AAGCTTCCTTTTTATTTCCAGTTTCG-3'; psu2095&2096, 5'-GAGCTCGTTTAACTTTAAGAAGGAGA-3' and 5'-AAGCTTGAATTATATGGCGTATAACC-3' .
First, PCRs with pEX_0469 or pEX_2095&2096 as the template were used to generate proper fragments for insertion into EcoRV-cleaved pBluescript II KS . From these newly generated plasmids, KpnI/HindIII and/or SacI/HindIII fragments harboring the LA0469, LA2095, and LA2095&2096 genes were generated and introduced into psu2718 to construct plasmids psu_0469, psu_2095, and psu_2095&2096 .
Enzyme purification and activity assays. For crude enzyme
preparation, extracts of E . coli cells bearing L .
interrogans genes were prepared by sonication of the cell pellets
(50 to 100 mg, wet weight) suspended in 500 µl of extraction buffers .
The sonication conditions were three bursts at a 50% duty cycle,
output 6, with a 30-s pause between bursts (Ultrasonic Homogenizer
4710 series; Cole-Parmer Instrument, Chicago, Ill.) . In assays of
citramalate synthase and
-isopropylmalate
synthase, the extraction buffer was 0.1 M TES [N-tris(hydroxymethyl)methyl-2-aminoethanesulfonic
acid], pH 7.5 . For assays of
-isopropylmalate
isomerase and ß-isopropylmalate dehydrogenase, potassium phosphate
buffer (pH 7.0, 300 µM) was used .
The CimA protein was purified in accordance with the recommendations of QIAexpressionist (The QIAexpressionist: a handbook for high-level expression and purification of 6xHis-tagged proteins, 5th edition, QIAGEN GmbH), with modifications . Specifically, crude extracts were prepared by sonication of 290 mg (wet weight) of BL21(pEX_2350) cells in 4 ml of lysis buffer containing 30 mM imidazole, pH 8.0 . After sonication, the sample was centrifuged at 16,000 x g for 5 min . Ni-nitrilotriacetic acid slurry (50%, 1 ml) was added to the supernatant and mixed gently by shaking (200 rpm on a rotary shaker) at 4°C for 90 min . We followed the manufacturer's protocol for the remaining steps, except that the optimal imidazole concentration was 60 mM for the washing buffer . The protein present in the elution buffer gave an apparent single band of about 60 kDa on SDS-PAGE, as predicted from the gene sequence (Fig . 2) . The elution buffer was replaced with TES buffer via three successive equal-volume washes with an Ultrafree-15 spin column . Protein concentrations were determined by the Bradford method (5), with bovine serum albumin as the standard . The purity of the protein was determined with an LKB Ultrascan XL densitometer after Coomassie blue staining of SDS-PAGE gels .
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Citramalate synthase was assayed as described by Howell et al . (21),
except that the assay mixtures were incubated at 37°C instead of
50°C.
-Isopropylmalate
synthase was assayed as described by Kohlhaw et al . (23) .
Threonine deaminase was assayed as described by Lawther and Hatfield
(24) . To determine the Km
values, the pyruvate and
-ketoisovalerate
concentrations were varied from 0.01 to 2 mM . The Km
values were determined graphically from a Lineweaver-Burk plot .
Activities of LeuC/LeuD or LeuB from products encoded by clones of
L . interrogans genes (pEX_2095&2096 or pEX_2152) expressed in
E . coli were assayed in accordance with the procedures used
for
-isopropylmalate
isomerase (10) or ß-isopropylmalate dehydrogenase
(29), respectively . The latter is a coupled reaction,
and thus, E . coli extracts with LeuC/LeuD activity (pEX_2095&2096,
150 µl) were added to the reaction mixtures composed of
extracts of the E . coli LeuB expression strain (pEX_2152, 30
µl) in a total volume of 1.0 ml . Dimethylcitraconate and citraconate
were used as the substrates in assays to detect either their
conventional functions in leucine biosynthesis (7)
or the proposed functions in the leucine-like pathway for isoleucine
biosynthesis, respectively .
Chirality of citramalate produced by citramalate synthase of L . interrogans (CimA, LA2350). The identity and chirality of citramalate were determined by gas chromatography with flame ionization detection (GC FID) and gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS) of its dimethyl ester derivative (20) .
Both crude cell extracts and purified enzymes were used to catalyze the reaction in TES buffer . For reactions catalyzed by crude extracts (100 µl, i.e., 0.283 mg of total proteins; specific activity, 0.18 µmol/min/mg of protein), 1 mM pyruvate and 1 mM acetyl-CoA were incubated in 1 ml of reaction mixture in TES buffer at 37°C for 2 h . For purified enzyme, the reaction mixture, containing 2 mM acetyl-CoA, 2 mM pyruvate, and the enzyme preparation (30 µl, i.e., 0.012 mg of enzyme protein; specific activity, 2.5 µmol/min/mg of protein), was brought to a final volume of 100 µl with TES buffer . Incubations were carried out at 37°C for 3 h . These reaction conditions were designed to allow the reaction to proceed nearly to completion; i.e., greater than 90% of the substrate was transformed to the product .
To stop the reaction, concentrated HCl was added to reaction mixtures to a final concentration of about 1 M . Precipitated proteins were removed by centrifugation . Samples were evaporated to dryness in a Savant Speed Vac Plus SC201A . The residue was dissolved in 1.0 ml of methanol (catalog no . 65543; Fluka, Buchs, Switzerland) . After sonication, the contents were transferred to a 2-ml sample vial and 500 µl of diazomethane was added (prepared in house, 98% pure) . The reaction mixture was held at room temperature for 1 h and occasionally stirred on a Vortex mixer . After centrifugation, 1 µl of the supernatant was injected onto a BGB-176 column for either GC-MS for identification of the citramalate diester or GC FID for quantification of the two isomers .
Standards for GC-MS were (R)-, (S)-, and (RS)-citramalate purchased from Aldrich and Sigma (catalog no . 32,914-2, 33,199-6, and C0634, respectively) . Standards were processed by the procedure described above .
All GC FID analyses were performed on an Agilent 6890 gas chromatograph (Agilent Schweiz AG, Mettmenstetten, Switzerland) with a BGB-176 chiral column (30 m by 0.25 mm [inside diameter], 0.25-µm-thick film; BGB Analytics, Boeckten, Switzerland) . The injector temperature was set to 200°C . The injection mode was splitless . The temperature gradient was 60 to 200°C at 3°C/min . The detector was held at 220°C . Hydrogen was used as the carrier gas at a pressure of 60 kPa .
Almost identical conditions were used for the GC-MS experiments . All experiments were carried out on a Hewlett Packard 5989 engine B equipped with an HP 5890 gas chromatograph . The injector temperature was set to 200°C . The split was set at 1:15 . The temperature gradient was 60 to 220°C at 3°C/min . The carrier gas was nitrogen . The interface was set to 250°C . The source temperature was 220°C . The mass spectrometer was operated in electron impact mode at 70 eV . The mass range was 33 to 700 atomic mass units in 1.5 s .
RNA extraction and RT-PCR analysis. The Trizol method (Gibco BRL) was used for cell lysis and total RNA extraction . The extracted RNA, dissolved in 30 µl of RNase-free water, was treated with RQ1 RNase-free DNase (Promega Corp.) . Treated RNA (2 µl) was processed with the Reverse Transcription System (20 µl; Promega Corp.) . After incubation for 10 min at room temperature, reactions were carried out at 42°C for 25 min, followed by enzyme inactivation at 95°C for 5 min . Real-time PCR was performed in accordance with the manufacturer's recommendations on the ABI Prism 7000 Sequence Detection System (Applied Biosystems) with the SYBR Green PCR Core Reagents (Applied Biosystems) in a 50-µl reaction mixture . The amount of template cDNA used was 10 to 15 ng per assay . For negative controls, the template cDNA was replaced with an RNA preparation without RT . The reaction was initiated by 2 min of incubation at 50°C, followed by AmpliTaq Gold activation for 10 min at 95°C . Amplification was achieved by 40 cycles of 15 s at 95°C and 1 min at 55°C . The cycle threshold parameters were normalized to that of 16S rRNA, which served as an internal standard . The following primers were used in real-time RT-PCR experiments: RT_2350, 5'-AGTCTTCAAGCGATTCGTGC-3' and 5'-GTGGTTACGAGTGCTTCCAA-3'; RT_0469, 5'-CTTCGATTGCACCGGATAAC-3' and 5'-AACCGTATCGCCTTCCAAGA-3'; RT_2202, 5'-GGTAATTGCAGCAGGAGCTA-3' and 5'-CTCCTCTTACGTTGCTGAGT-3'; RT_16S rRNA, 5'-CCTCAGTAACGAACCTAACG-3' and 5'-TCACTCTTGCGAGCATAGTC-3' .
Nucleotide sequence accession numbers. The L . interrogans genomic sequences reported here have been submitted to the GenBank database and assigned accession no . AE010300 for CI, the large chromosome of 4,332,241 bp, and AE010301 for CII, the small chromosome of 358,943 bp .
| RESULTS |
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The genome of L . interrogans has three CDSs highly similar to
leuA but none for ilvA. In direct enzyme assays, we failed
to detect any threonine deaminase activity in L . interrogans
strain 56601 (Table 2) . However, one of the three
leuA-like CDSs (LA2350) shows substantial homology to the
cimA genes of archaea, e.g., those of Methanopyrus kandleri
(32% identity, 51% similarity), M . thermoautotrophicum (33%
identity, 50% similarity), and M . jannaschii (32% identity,
52% similarity) (see supplemental material) . All of these genes
have a pyruvate carboxylase domain (PycA), and the one from M .
jannaschii (MJ1392) was experimentally proved a citramalate
synthase (21; see supplemental material) . On the other hand,
both CDSs LA2202 and LA0469 are more similar to LeuA than to
CimA, with the former bearing even higher homology than the latter .
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LA2350 encodes a citramalate synthase without detectable
-isopropylmalate
synthase activity. The three aforementioned L . interrogans genes
were cloned and expressed in E . coli . Activity assays
confirmed the differences in catalytic specificity predicted by
bioinformatics (Table 2) . Because the protein
encoded by LA2350 has high citramalate synthase activity but no
detectable
-isopropylmalate
synthase activity, this gene was designated cimA . Extracts of
E . coli expressing the LA2202 protein had very low
-isopropylmalate
synthase activity but no citramalate synthase activity (Table
2) . It was designated leuA1 . LA0469 was designated
leuA2 on the basis of its high
-isopropylmalate
synthase activity and relatively low citramalate synthase activity
(Table 2) .
The L . interrogans LA2350 protein, expressed in E . coli, was
purified to 92% homogeneity, as determined by SDS-PAGE (Fig .
2; Table 3) . The specific activity of the
purified citramalate synthase was 2.53 µmol/min/mg of protein under
standard assay conditions (see Materials and Methods); thus, the kcat
of the enzyme was 2.41 s–1 (Table 4) . The
Km values for proteins expressed in E . coli
were as follows: CimA (LA2350), 0.043 mM for pyruvate; LeuA2
(LA0469), 0.709 mM for pyruvate and 0.108 mM for
-ketoisovalerate
(Table 4) .
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The optimal reaction temperature and the thermostability of the L .
interrogans citramalate synthase were measured (Fig .
3) . Unlike its counterpart from M . jannaschii, the
L . interrogans CimA protein lost most of its enzymatic activity
at 50°C . Its optimal reaction temperature was very close to the
transition point of the thermostability curve . Thermostability is
thus likely to be the main factor determining the optimal reaction
temperature . Purified citramalate synthase was less thermostable
than the crude enzyme (Fig . 3) .
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The substrate specificity of the partially purified L . interrogans
citramalate synthase (CimA) was tested (Table 5) . The
activity toward pyruvate was high and very specific, with no
detectable activities toward any of the other keto acid substrates .
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The citramalate generated by L . interrogans CimA is of R
chirality. The identity of citramalate was proven by GC-MS of its
dimethyl ester (20) . The product was found to be (R)-citramalate
(Fig . 4) . This result not only is consistent with
the previously reported data for citramalate synthase from archaea (21)
but also indicates that of the two proposed pyruvate pathways for
isoleucine biosynthesis (9), the leucine-like
pathway is more likely to be used by L . interrogans than the
other (ß-methylaspartate) pathway . This experiment also showed that
imidazole inhibited citramalate synthase and altered the R/S
ratio of the products (Fig . 4) .
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The LeuC/LeuD and LeuB enzymes function in isoleucine biosynthesis in
L . interrogans. To complete the leucine-like pathway for isoleucine
biosynthesis in L . interrogans, both the heterodimeric enzyme,
LeuC/LeuD, catalyzing the interconversion of
-isopropylmalate
and ß-isopropylmalate via dimethylcitraconate, and ß-isopropylmalate
dehydrogenase, LeuB, catalyzing the NAD+-dependent
conversion of ß-isopropylmalate to
-ketoisocaproate,
could catalyze the conversion of (R)-citramalate to
-ketobutyrate,
in parallel with their functions in leucine biosynthesis . The L .
interrogans leuC (LA2095) and leuD (LA2096) genes were
cloned and expressed in E . coli . The activity of the product
of these gene was assayed (Table 2) . Because mesaconate,
a stereoisomer of citraconate, failed to serve as a substrate,
the ß-methylaspartate pathway is unlikely to be used for isoleucine
biosynthesis in L . interrogans .
Mixed extracts of E . coli expressing the L . interrogans
LeuC/LeuD (pEX_2095&2096) and LeuB (pEX_2152) enzymes catalyzed the
formation of
-ketobutyrate
from citraconate or
-ketoisocaproate
from dimethylcitraconate (Table 2) . Thus, there exists a
set of genes of L . interrogans that are functional in
isoleucine biosynthesis via a leucine-like pathway .
Both citramalate synthase and
-isopropylmalate
synthase activities were detected in extracts of E . coli K-12 .
However, the ratio of these two activities was the same as that of
either the LA0469 clone or an E . coli leuA clone expressed in
E . coli BL21(DE3) (Table 2) .
Complementation analysis of the leucine-like pathway for isoleucine
biosynthesis. Because there is no system of genetic manipulation
available for L . interrogans, mutants of E . coli with
lesions in ilvA and other genes (e.g., leuA, leuB,
and leuC/leuD) were used for complementation analysis .
The results (Table 6 and 7) indicated
that expression of the L . interrogans cimA gene (LA2350) was
able to relieve the isoleucine requirement of an E . coli ilvA
mutant (AB1255), but not the leucine requirement of the E . coli
leuA mutant (CV512) . This result not only confirms the reaction
specificity of the L . interrogans CimA protein but also indicates
that the E . coli LeuC/LeuD and LeuB proteins are functional
in the subsequent reactions of the pathway leading to
-ketobutyrate
formation . This is the first direct in vivo evidence for the
operation of a threonine-independent pathway of isoleucine biosynthesis
under physiological conditions .
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LA0469 is a bona fide leuA gene since it only complements the
leucine requirement of leuA tester strain CV512 . It failed to
relieve the isoleucine requirement of an E . coli ilvA mutant,
although it has low citramalate synthase activity . The leucine
complementation effect of LA2202 is marginal, consistent with its low
catalytic activity in vitro (Table 2) .
Together, LA2095 and LA2096 can complement a leuC mutant (CV522) or a leuD mutant (CV524) . However, neither of the genes alone is functional in this regard . Finally, LA2152 was able to complement a leuB E . coli mutant (CV516) .
The expression of cimA and leuA in L . interrogans is transcriptionally regulated by isoleucine and leucine, respectively. Both citramalate synthase and isopropylmalate synthase were readily detected in L . interrogans grown on synthetic minimal (EMJH) medium . However, these activities were significantly reduced in cells grown on serum-containing Korthof medium (Table 2) . When 5 mM isoleucine or leucine was present in minimal medium, neither CimA nor LeuA activity was detected . These results were supported by Western blot analysis with CimA-specific antibodies (data not shown) .
The results of a real-time PCR assay with total RNAs extracted from L . interrogans cells grown in EMJH medium supplemented with isoleucine or leucine, as well as cells grown on Korthof medium, indicated that the expression of cimA (LA2350) was repressed by isoleucine but not by leucine (Fig . 5) . On the other hand, the expression of the leuA genes (LA0469 and LA2202) was repressed not only significantly by leucine but also moderately by isoleucine . Thus, leucine and isoleucine are capable of crossing the L . interrogans cell membrane and exerting their regulatory effects on the transcription of the corresponding biosynthetic genes .
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| DISCUSSION |
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Charon et al . (9) first proposed the pyruvate pathway for
isoleucine biosynthesis in L . interrogans on the basis of
their studies with 14C-labeled carbon dioxide and other
tracers . They suggested that isoleucine might be synthesized from
-ketobutyrate
via citramalate, formed in turn from pyruvate and acetyl-CoA, which
was very similar to that of leucine biosynthesis . This report
not only fully supports this hypothesis but is also the first
description of the citramalate pathway leading to de novo isoleucine
synthesis under normal conditions of bacterial physiology .
Early suggestions regarding alternative pathways for the formation
of
-ketobutyrate
were mainly based on reversion studies of an E . coli ilvA
mutant (30) . Later reversion experiments with enteric
bacteria (22) and yeasts (34)
offered further support for the involvement of the enzymes of leucine
biosynthesis in an alternative isoleucine pathway, although the
physiological significance of these observations was unknown . In the
1980s, radioactive labeling studies revealed that isoleucine was
probably synthesized from pyruvate and acetyl-CoA via citramalate in
M . thermoautotrophicum, where the conventional pathway
involving threonine was missing (14) . Howell et
al . (21) cloned the cimA gene of M . jannaschii
and expressed citramalate synthase in E . coli . The characterization
of this enzyme further supported a role for CimA in a novel
pyruvate pathway for isoleucine biosynthesis . However, direct
evidence for a complete alternative pathway under normal conditions
of bacterial physiology was not provided .
The recently available genomic sequence of L . interrogans serotype lai confirmed that this strain lacks an ilvA gene but contains three CDSs that are homologous to leuA (32) . In this report, we have characterized these CDSs and confirmed that LA2350 encodes citramalate synthase while the other two (LA0469 and LA2202) are leuA genes .
Unlike the LeuA enzymes, CimA (LA2350) exhibits strict substrate
specificity catalyzing the condensation of acetyl-CoA and pyruvate to
form an isomer of citramalate . However, it failed to utilize
-ketoisovalerate,
-ketobutyrate,
-ketoisocaproate,
or
-ketoglutarate
(Table 5) . This may reflect the structure of the enzyme
and the molecular size of the substrate . Pyruvate is the smallest
of the substrates tested . Therefore, if CimA has a tight binding
pocket for pyruvate (supported by the low Km value of 43
µM), other substrates larger than pyruvate are likely to be excluded .
On the other hand, because the LeuA enzymes are able to bind
-ketoisovalerate
(Km = 108 µM for LA0469), pyruvate may also be
accommodated, leading to detectable citramalate synthase activity (Km
= 709 µM for LA0469) . To further clarify this issue, we studied the
leuA gene product from E . coli K-12 . This protein also
utilizes both substrates with a ratio basically the same as that of
LA0469 . Previously, it was reported that the
-isopropylmalate
synthase of Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium had an
affinity for pyruvate, but with a Km value about
twofold higher than that of its physiological substrate (23) .
Citramalate was reported to be formed from pyruvate by a Serratia
marcescens mutant having a form of
-isopropylmalate
synthase that was insensitive to feedback inhibition (22) .
A similar phenomenon was observed in a respiration-deficient yeast
mutant (34) . However, under normal physiological
conditions, the use of pyruvate for isoleucine biosynthesis does not
occur because of the very low affinity of
-isopropylmalate
synthase toward pyruvate . Moreover, all of these microorganisms are
different from L . interrogans by virtue of having a complete
pathway from threonine to isoleucine . It is likely, therefore, that
LA0469 is primarily responsible for leucine biosynthesis in L .
interrogans . Since the expression of LA2202 (leuA1) in
E . coli was very low, it was not further characterized .
The citramalate synthase CDS MJ1392 of M . jannaschii was the first to be characterized and, as expected, was thermostable . However, the L . interrogans CimA enzyme lost most of its activity at 50°C or above . At 37°C, the specific activity of the purified L . interrogans citramalate synthase was low (2.53 µmol/min/mg of protein) but was similar to that of the thermostable M . jannaschii enzyme measured at 50°C (2.87µmol/min/mg), as well as other, similar, enzymes . In addition, because the Km value for pyruvate of the L . interrogans enzyme (43 µM) is almost 20 times less than that of the M . jannaschii enzyme (0.85 mM), LA2350 should be appropriate for the metabolic needs of this slow-growing bacterium .
Charon et al . (9) proposed that the condensation of
acetyl-CoA with pyruvate might yield either (S)- or (R)-citramalate,
and two possible pathways were postulated . (S)-citramalate
might be fed into the ß-methylaspartate pathway of
-ketobutyrate
biosynthesis via mesaconate . Alternatively, (R)-citramalate
might eventually yield
-ketobutyrate
via citraconate—a leucine-like pathway . Our experiments indicated
that the majority of the citramalate was of R chirality (Fig.
4), thus supporting the leucine-like pathway . It is
interesting that high concentrations of imidazole may significantly
alter both the chirality of the product and the enzyme activity .
We were able to demonstrate that two leucine biosynthetic enzymes
encoded by L . interrogans genes, isopropylmalate isomerase
(LA2095/LA2096, i.e., leuC/leuD) and ß-isopropylmalate
dehydrogenase (LA2152, i.e., leuB), catalyzed the conversion
of (R)-citramalate to
-ketobutyrate .
Mesaconate, an intermediate of the proposed ß-methylaspartate
pathway, was not a substrate . Thus, the in vitro enzymatic data
support the operation in L . interrogans of an alternative
pathway of isoleucine biosynthesis, the leucine-like pyruvate
pathway .
These conclusions were further supported by in vivo complementation
experiments conducted with E . coli . The rationale for these
experiments was as follows . First, except for CimA, the enzymes
of leucine biosynthesis and isoleucine biosynthesis via the pyruvate
pathway are shared . Second, the enzymes of leucine biosynthesis in
L . interrogans have the same function as their E . coli
counterparts, as confirmed by previous work (12) . We
first confirmed that the cimA gene of L . interrogans was
able to reverse the isoleucine requirement of an E . coli ilvA
mutant, AB1255 . Because AB1255 requires either
-ketobutyrate
or isoleucine for growth, the complementation is certainly isoleucine
specific . The growth of cimA transformants on minimal medium
was inhibited by valine but not by isoleucine (Table 7) .
Similarly, ilvA mutants were able to grow on
-ketobutyrate-supplemented
minimal medium but not on medium containing both
-ketobutyrate
and valine . The first step of valine biosynthesis in E . coli
is the condensation of pyruvate with active acetaldehyde derived from
pyruvate to yield
-acetolactate .
This reaction is strongly inhibited by valine and because the same
enzyme catalyzes the conversion of
-ketobutyrate
to
-acetohydroxybutyrate
in isoleucine biosynthesis, valine blocks the biosynthesis of
isoleucine (4, 28) . These
observations confirmed that the metabolic intermediate supplied
during cimA complementation is
-ketobutyrate .
Although the L . interrogans leuA2 gene (LA0469) has traces of
citramalate synthase activity in vitro, this gene only reversed the
leucine requirement of an E . coli leuA mutant but not the
isoleucine auxotrophy of an ilvA mutant .
Complementation studies of the three genes encoding the two leucine biosynthetic enzymes responsible for the succeeding steps, isopropylmalate isomerase (leuC/leuD, LA2095/LA2096) and isopropylmalate dehydrogenase (leuB, LA2152), clearly indicate that these genes function in vivo in isoleucine biosynthesis via the threonine-independent pathway . LeuC and LeuD are the large and small subunits of isopropylmalate isomerase, respectively . In most microorganisms (including L . interrogans), these two genes are cotranscribed (19) . Thus, the initial complementation experiment was performed with the cistronic leuCD construct . However, when these two genes were tested individually, no complementation was observed . This suggests that the LeuC subunit of L . interrogans cannot form a functional enzyme with the E . coli LeuD subunit and vice versa .
When the leucine-like pyruvate pathway was originally proposed, Charon et al . (9) and Westfall et al . (41) indicated that feedback inhibition of the pyruvate pathway was occurring in L . interrogans . They were puzzled to notice that the pyruvate pathway was not controlled by leucine (41) . In other words, isoleucine synthesis and leucine synthesis appear to be independently regulated despite the fact that the same enzyme system is used . This study experimentally proved, at three different levels (Table 2 and Fig . 5), that the expression of either the cimA or the leuA gene was regulated by the corresponding amino acid end products . In particular, the regulation of cimA expression is very strict; i.e., it only responds to isoleucine but not to leucine . On the other hand, the regulation of leuA expression was relatively less stringent, i.e., isoleucine moderately regulated leuA expression . This regulatory mechanism, together with other amino acid biosynthetic pathways in L . interrogans, remains to be clarified . In this connection, as shown in previous publications (2, 31), this study points to the presence of specific amino acid transporters in L . interrogans, despite the fact that the annotation of the genome failed to identify any of these systems .
Finally, except for S . marcescens (22), cimA genes were mainly thought to be present in the genomes of archaea . Among bacteria, spirochetes are evolutionarily primitive . Significant portions of the genomes of L . interrogans are more similar to those of either archaea or eukaryotes than to those of bacteria (32) . It has been known that the biosynthesis of methionine in L . interrogans corresponds to the pathways of both bacteria and yeast (31) . The leucine-like pyruvate pathway for isoleucine biosynthesis might be rare in bacteria but common in archaea (43) .
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
|---|
This work was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of
China, the State Key Laboratory of Microbial Technology of Shandong
University, and the Chinese National High Technology Development
Program (863) .
We thank R . L . Somerville for helpful comments on our research strategy and for manuscript preparation . We thank Junsong Han and Yaozhou Shi of Shanghai Biochip Center for help in carrying out the real-time PCR experiments . We thank Robert H . White for suggestions about the preparation of methyl esters from the reaction mixture and Sophie Brogly and Christine Tournoux for determination of citramalate chirality . We appreciate the assistance of Hai-Gang Zhu in preparing the drawings, as well as Bao-Yu Hu, Pin He, Yang Yang, and Xiang-Yan Zhang in bacterial culture preparation . We are grateful to Mary Berlyn and the E . coli Genetic Stock Center for the generous gift of the E . coli ilvA, leuA, leuB, leuC, and leuD mutants . We particularly thank the members of the Laboratory of Microbial Molecular Physiology, IPPE, SIBS, CAS, for strong support and encouragement .
| FOOTNOTES |
|---|
* Corresponding author . Mailing address: Laboratory of
Microbial Molecular Physiology, Institute of Plant Physiology and Ecology,
Shanghai Institutes for Biological Sciences, Chinese Academy of Sciences, 300
Fenglin Rd., Shanghai 200032, China . Phone: 86-21-64042090 . Fax: 86-21-64042385 .
E-mail: gpzhao@sibs.ac.cn.
Supplemental material for this article may be found at http://jb.asm.org/ .
Dedicated to late professor emeritus H . E . Umbarger (Purdue
University, Lafayette, Ind.) in recognition of his long-time
education, care, and help to G.P.Z . while he was studying at Purdue
University during the 1980s and for his lifetime contributions to the
study of branched-chain amino acid biosynthesis in bacteria .
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