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Journal of Bacteriology, January 2004, p . 270-277, Vol . 186,
No . 2
Isolation and Characterization of Burkholderia cenocepacia Mutants
Deficient in Pyochelin Production: Pyochelin Biosynthesis Is Sensitive to Sulfur
Availability
Kate L . Farmer
and Mark S . Thomas*
Division of Genomic Medicine, School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences,
University of Sheffield, Sheffield S10 2RX, United Kingdom
Received 4 August 2003/ Accepted 13 October 2003
The opportunistic pathogen Burkholderia cenocepacia produces
the yellow-green fluorescent siderophore, pyochelin . To isolate
mutants which do not produce this siderophore, we mutagenized B .
cenocepacia with the transposon mini-Tn5Tp . Two nonfluorescent
mutants were identified which were unable to produce pyochelin .
In both mutants, the transposon had integrated into a gene encoding
an orthologue of CysW, a component of the sulfate/thiosulfate
transporter . The cysW gene was located within a putative operon
encoding other components of the transporter and a polypeptide
exhibiting high homology to the LysR-type regulators CysB and Cbl .
Sulfate uptake assays confirmed that both mutants were defective in
sulfate transport . Growth in the presence of cysteine, but not
methionine, restored the ability of the mutants to produce pyochelin,
suggesting that the failure to produce the siderophore was the result
of a depleted intracellular pool of cysteine, a biosynthetic
precursor of pyochelin . Consistent with this, the wild-type strain
did not produce pyochelin when grown in the presence of lower
concentrations of sulfate that still supported efficient growth . We
also showed that whereas methionine and certain organosulfonates can
serve as sole sulfur sources for this bacterium, they do not
facilitate pyochelin biosynthesis . These observations suggest that,
under conditions of sulfur depletion, cysteine cannot be spared for
production of pyochelin even under iron starvation conditions .
The genus Burkholderia includes a number of gram-negative bacterial
species that are pathogenic to animals and/or plants . One group,
the B . cepacia complex (BCC), is noted for the ability to cause
opportunistic infections in humans, particularly in patients
with cystic fibrosis (CF) (33) . In addition, some members of
the BCC have attracted interest as antagonists of soilborne
plant pathogens and/or as plant growth-promoting agents and are
therefore under development as biocontrol agents . Furthermore, their
exceptional metabolic diversity has stimulated interest in their use
as agents of bioremediation (6) . The BCC contains
at least nine closely related but genetically distinct species (or
genomovars), of which members of genomovar III (recently designated
B . cenocepacia) are the most prevalent in CF infections (6,
35, 63) . The complete genome sequence has
recently been determined for a B . cenocepacia strain (http://www.sanger.ac.uk/Projects/B_cenocepacia/) .
B . cenocepacia (and some pseudomonads) produces the yellow-green
fluorescent siderophore pyochelin as a mechanism for acquiring
iron from the host (9, 10,
55, 56, 57) . Pyochelin is a
low-affinity but active tridentate siderophore which binds iron with
a stoichiometry of two pyochelin molecules per Fe(III) ion (7,
8) . This siderophore exists as two stereoisomers in
nature, pyochelin I and pyochelin II, and can also chelate Zn(II),
Cu(II), Co(II), Mo(VI), and Ni(II) (2,
45, 67) . Pyochelin is biosynthesized from
salicylate by the successive addition and cyclization of two
molecules of cysteine (41, 42,
44) . Salicylate also forms complexes with iron and
was identified as a siderophore in some members of the BCC and some
pseudomonads (38, 58, 68) .
In the first step in pyochelin biosynthesis, condensation of
salicylate with a molecule of L-cysteine,
followed by cyclization of the cysteine moiety to a thiazoline ring,
results in formation of an intermediate, dihydroaeruginoic acid (Dha)
(2, 3, 42,
50) . Condensation and cyclization of a second molecule of
L-cysteine generates the second thiazoline
ring, which is subsequently reduced and methylated (50) .
The genes required for the biosynthesis of salicylate from chorismate,
and for the biosynthesis of pyochelin from salicylate, have
been identified in Pseudomonas aeruginosa (43,
44, 49) . These include pchA
and pchB, which are required for conversion of chorismate into
salicylate via isochorismate (49), and pchE
and pchF, which encode nonribosomal peptide synthetases that
are required for the sequential formation of Dha and pyochelin (44) .
Regulation of these genes in P . aeruginosa requires the Fur
protein, a repressor of transcription of the pchDCBA and
pchEF operons (44, 50), and PchR,
which activates the fptA gene encoding the ferri-pyochelin
receptor (18) . As part of our investigation into
iron regulated gene expression in B . cenocepacia we have used
several approaches to identify genes involved in pyochelin
biosynthesis . Here we describe a mutagenesis approach that resulted
in the isolation of mutants of B . cenocepacia deficient in the
production of pyochelin which were affected in sulfate transport . Our
results show that pyochelin production in this organism is crucially
dependent upon the availability of sulfur as well as iron .
Bacterial strains, plasmids, media, and growth conditions.
B . cenocepacia 715j is an isolate from a CF patient (10,
31, 36) and was maintained on
M9 minimal salts agar containing glucose (0.5%) as the carbon source
(5) . To adjust the sulfate content of this medium,
the concentration of MgSO4 (present at 1 mM in standard M9
medium) was reduced as required, and the balance of magnesium ions
was maintained at 1 mM by the addition of the appropriate amount of
MgCl2 . Sulfur-limited solid medium was made by solidifying
sulfate-free M9-glucose medium with 0.6% molecular-biology-grade
agarose (Gibco-BRL) . Cysteine or methionine was added to 100 µg/ml to
analyze the effect of each on pyochelin production . For analyzing
their efficiency as sulfur sources, cysteine, methionine,
ethanesulfonate, and taurine (2-aminoethanesulfonate) were used at
500 µM . Sulfite and sulfide were provided as sulfur sources in the
form of ethanesulfonate and potassium thiocyanate, respectively .
Where indicated, a mixture of 18 amino acids (excluding cysteine
and methionine) was added to liquid medium to a final concentration
of 20 µg/ml with respect to each amino acid . For measurement of
growth rates in the presence of different sulfur sources, cells from
overnight cultures were collected by centrifugation, the cell pellet
was resuspended in 0.5 vol of 0.85% saline, and the cell suspension
was used to inoculate fresh M9-glucose medium (50 ml) at a 200-fold
dilution . Cultures were grown in flasks at 37°C with vigorous
shaking .
Transposon mutagenesis. Mini-Tn5Tp is a derivative of
mini-Tn5Cm (11, 12) containing
the dfr (Tpr) gene from p34E-Tp (15)
and will be described elsewhere (C . A . Lowe, K . Agnoli, K . L . Farmer,
and M . S . Thomas, unpublished data) . This transposon was maintained
on plasmid pUT (12, 19) .
pUTmini-Tn5Tp was introduced into B . cenocepacia 715j by conjugal
transfer using the Escherichia coli strain BW19851 (37)
as the donor as described previously (12,
19), and transposon mutants (arising at a
frequency of
1.25
x 10-4 per recipient) were
selected on M9 minimal agar containing glucose (0.5%), trimethoprim
(40 µg/ml), and kanamycin (25 µg/ml) . Following incubation
at 37°C for 3 days, candidate pyochelin-deficient mutants were
identified by screening colonies for the absence of yellow-green
fluorescence on a long-wave UV transilluminator .
Analysis of pyochelin production. The analysis of pyochelin
production in liquid cultures was based on the method of Sokol (55)
and Visca et al . (67) . Cells were cultured in
M9-glucose minimal medium (10 to 30 ml) at 37°C with aeration for 24
to 48 h . The bacteria were collected by centrifugation, and the spent
culture supernatants were filtered, acidified, and extracted with 0.4
volume of ethyl acetate . Pyochelin was concentrated by evaporating
the organic phase to dryness and resuspending the residue in 50 to
100 µl of methanol . Pyochelin was analyzed by chromatography on a
thin (0.2-mm) layer of silica gel 60 (Merck) with chloroform-acetic
acid-ethanol (90:5:2.5 [vol/vol]) . After developing the plate, two
yellow-green fluorescent bands corresponding to two pyochelin
stereoisomers, pyochelin I and II (Rf, 0.35 and
0.37, respectively), and a blue fluorescent band corresponding to
salicylate (Rf, 0.74) were visualized under UV
light (2, 45) . In some cases, the precursor
of pyochelin, Dha, was also present as a yellow-green fluorescent
band migrating between pyochelin and salicylate (50) .
Production of pyochelin by bacteria grown on M9 minimal agar was
evident by the yellow-green fluorescence produced by colonies after
2 to 3 days of incubation at 37°C . This occurred on standard M9
medium and did not require addition of an iron chelator .
Identification of transposon insertion sites. B .
cenocepacia genomic DNA was purified using the Genomix DNA
extraction kit (Talent), digested overnight with appropriate
restriction enzymes, fractionated in an 0.8% agarose gel, and
transferred to Hybond-N+ nylon membrane (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech)
by Southern blotting (47), following which hybridization
was carried out under normal-stringency conditions using probe
DNA labeled by the ECL Direct Nucleic Acid Labeling and Detection
System (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech) . The probe DNA used contained the
dfr gene from p34E-Tp . Genomic DNA fragments corresponding in
size to the fragment hybridizing to the probe were eluted from gel
slices using the freeze-thaw method of Seth (51) or
the QIAquick Gel Extraction kit (Qiagen), ligated to plasmid
pHG165 (60) or pUC19 (72), and used to
transform E . coli NM522 (17) or MC1061 (4) .
Selection of transformants was made on Iso-Sensitest agar (Oxoid,
Basingstoke, United Kingdom) containing ampicillin (100 µg/ml) and
trimethoprim (20 µg/ml) .
Sulfate transport assays. Cultures of cells were grown
overnight at 37°C in 20 ml of M9-glucose minimal medium supplemented
with 1 mM djenkolic acid and 1 mM MgCl2 (in place of MgSO4) .
A further 20 ml of the same medium was added, and incubation
continued until the culture reached an A600 of 0.5
to 0.8, whereupon the cells were collected by centrifugation and
resuspended in 0.5 ml of the same medium . A 0.1-ml aliquot of cell
suspension was mixed with 2 ml of the same medium containing
chloramphenicol (50 µg/ml) and then transferred to an oxygen
electrode . After the addition of 1 µCi of sodium [35S]sulfate
(1,050 to 1,600 Ci/mmol; New England Nuclear), 200-µl amounts were
removed at regular intervals and mixed with 5 ml of stop buffer
(M9-glucose minimal medium containing 2 mM MgSO4 and 2 mM
sodium thiosulfate) . Radiolabeled cells were filtered through
0.45-µm-pore-size nitrocellulose filters, washed with 5 ml of stop
buffer, dried, and counted .
Nucleotide sequence accession number. The GenBank accession
number for the sequence reported in this paper is
AF374458 .
Isolation of B . cenocepacia mutants which fail to produce
pyochelin. Tn5 derivatives have been shown to be useful for
genetic analysis of members of the genus Burkholderia (1,
13, 14) . Due to the high
intrinsic resistance of B . cenocepacia clinical isolates to
most of the antibiotics commonly used to select for plasmids and
transposons, we employed a mini-Tn5 derivative, mini-Tn5Tp,
which contains a trimethoprim resistance cassette (11;
C . A . Lowe, K . Agnoli, K . L . Farmer, and M . S . Thomas, unpublished
data) to generate mutants of B . cenocepacia 715j deficient in
pyochelin production (Pch-) . As this strain has been shown to
produce two siderophores, ornibactin and pyochelin, Pch-
mutants were identified by screening for transconjugant colonies
which failed to exhibit the characteristic yellow-green fluorescence
associated with the production of pyochelin on iron-limited M9
minimal agar . Of a total of 15,000 trimethoprim-resistant mutants,
arising from three independent experiments, two were identified in
which the yellow-green fluorescence was completely absent . Pyochelin
was not detectable in culture supernatants from either of these two
mutants, KLF2 and KLF3, following growth for up to 72 h in minimal
medium (Fig . 1) . Production of the pyochelin
precursor, salicylic acid, was also reduced but not abolished (Fig.
1) . However, production of the other siderophore
biosynthesized by 715j, ornibactin (10, 39,
59), remained unaffected in the mutants, as judged
by isoelectric focusing followed by chrome azurol S overlay analysis
of culture supernatants (26) (results not shown) .
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FIG . 1 . Analysis of pyochelin and salicylate production by KLF2 and
KLF3 . Bacteria were grown with aeration in M9-glucose minimal medium for
24 h at 37°C . Pyochelin and salicylate were extracted from culture
supernatants with ethyl acetate, resuspended in methanol following
evaporation of ethyl acetate, and subjected to thin-layer chromatography
in silica gel . Siderophores were visualized under UV light . Lane 1,
715j; lane 2, KLF2; lane 3, KLF3 . Abbreviations: P, pyochelin
(stereoisomers I and II); S, salicylate.
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Genomic loci of mini-transposons in pyochelin-deficient mutants.
KLF2 and KLF3 chromosomal DNA was digested with the restriction
enzymes PvuII and XhoI (which do not cut within mini-Tn5Tp)
and SalI (which cuts adjacent to the O end of the transposon)
and probed with a DNA fragment containing the dfr (Tpr)
gene following Southern blotting . The probed digests revealed that
in both mutants mini-Tn5Tp had inserted into chromosomal PvuII
and XhoI fragments of the same size (12.0 and 2.0 kb, respectively)
(results not shown) . The probed SalI digests gave rise to
hybridizable fragments of 1.8 and 1.6 kb for KLF2 and KLF3,
respectively (results not shown), indicating that although the
insertion sites of the mini-transposons in the two mutants may have
been at the same genomic locus, they were nonidentical . The
chromosomal XhoI and SalI fragments containing the
integrated mini-Tn5Tp in KLF2 were cloned into plasmid pHG165,
giving rise to pKF001 and pKF002, respectively . The complete sequence
of the cloned B . cenocepacia DNA flanking the transposon on
both plasmids was determined (total of 1.926 kb of contiguous
sequence) . In addition, the SalI fragment containing the
mini-Tn5Tp integrated in KLF3 was cloned into plasmid pUC19,
and the sequence of the genomic DNA adjacent to the I end of the
transposon was determined . Database searches and alignment tools
revealed that, in both mutants, mini-Tn5Tp had inserted at
separate sites (250 bp apart) within a gene encoding a putative
orthologue of the E . coli CysW protein (48% amino acid
identity) (Fig . 2) . The translated product of B .
cenocepacia cysW exhibits stronger homology to the putative CysW
proteins from members of the
(Mesorhizobium loti and Caulobacter crescentus; 70 and
61% identity, respectively) and ß (Neisseria meningitidis; 59%
identity) subdivisions of the Proteobacteriaceae, as well as
CysW of P . aeruginosa (60% identity) (23,
40, 61, 62) . Putative
orthologues of the E . coli cysT and cysA genes were
identified upstream and downstream, respectively, from B .
cenocepacia cysW and were present in the same orientation . The
cysW translation initiation codon overlaps the termination codon
for cysT translation, and the cysA translation
initiation codon is located only 13 bp downstream from the cysW
termination codon (not shown), suggesting that these three genes
form part of a single operon . In E . coli, CysT, CysW, and CysA
form the cytoplasmic membrane component of an ATP-binding cassette
(ABC) transporter required for sulfate and thiosulfate import
(the sulfate/thiosulfate permease), and the respective genes are
organized similarly as part of the cysPTWA operon, where
cysP encodes a periplasmic thiosulfate binding protein (20,
28, 53, 54) .
However, examination of the region around cysW of B .
cenocepacia, using data from the B . cenocepacia genome
sequencing project, revealed that upstream of cysT and in the
same orientation is a gene encoding a putative orthologue of the
E . coli sulfate binding protein (Sbp), the periplasmic component
of the sulfate permease (Fig . 2) (28) .
Downstream of cysA is an open reading frame encoding a
polypeptide that exhibits high homology to the two LysR-type
regulators of sulfur assimilation in E . coli, CysB and Cbl (22,
27, 34, 65) .
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FIG . 2 . Organization of the cysA locus of B . cenocepacia .
Sites of insertion of mini-Tn5Tp giving rise to KLF2 and KLF3 are
shown . Cleavage sites for restriction endonucleases used to clone
cysA operon DNA from the mutants are also shown . The direction of
transcription of the cysA operon genes and the dfr gene in
mini-Tn5Tp are indicated by arrows . I and O represent the I and O
ends of mini-Tn5Tp . The transcription terminators present in the
progenitor of mini-Tn5Tp (mini-Tn5Cm) were removed along
with the Cmr cassette during construction of mini-Tn5Tp
(11; C . A . Lowe, K . Agnoli, K . L . Farmer, and M . S .
Thomas, unpublished data).
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Transposon insertion mutants KLF2 and KLF3 are defective in sulfate
uptake. To examine whether the transposon insertions in KLF2 and KLF3
had resulted in impaired sulfate transport, we carried out sulfate
uptake assays . Our results showed that whereas the wild-type
strain, 715j, imports sulfate at a rate of 11.8 fmol/min/mg of cell
protein, the rate of accumulation of sulfate by the mutants is 0.25
and 0.24 fmol/min/mg of cell protein for KLF2 and KLF3, respectively;
i.e., the mutants accumulate sulfate at only 2% of the rate of the
parent strain .
Growth of KLF2 is impaired under conditions of sulfate depletion, but
not under conditions of sulfite or sulfide depletion. Despite the large
decrease in the rate of sulfate uptake by KLF2 and KLF3, both mutants
appeared to grow normally on M9-glucose minimal agar, the medium on
which these mutants were originally selected . Standard M9 medium
contains 1 mM sulfate, added in the form of MgSO4 .
Therefore, we examined the effect of decreasing the concentration of
sulfate on the growth of the mutant strains . The wild-type strain
grew normally on plates containing sulfate concentrations as low as
0.1 mM, whereas growth of both mutant strains was retarded at a
concentration of 0.5 mM sulfate and inhibited in the presence of 0.1
mM sulfate (results not shown) . The effect of sulfate limitation on
the growth of KLF2 was also monitored in liquid medium . The growth
rate and growth yield of the wild-type strain were not significantly
affected by decreasing the exogenous sulfate concentration from 1.0
to 0.1 mM (Fig . 3) . However, although growth of
KLF2 occurred at the same rate as growth of the wild-type parent in
medium containing
0.5
mM sulfate, it was impaired in the presence of 0.2 mM sulfate
and severely retarded in the presence of 0.1 mM sulfate (Fig .
3) . Similar experiments were performed in which the sole
sulfur source present was ethanesulfonate or thiocyanate, which enter
the sulfur assimilatory pathway at the level of sulfite or sulfide,
respectively, and therefore do not require the sulfate transport
system (24, 25, 28) .
These experiments showed that KLF2 grows at the same rate as the
wild-type strain at all concentrations of ethanesulfonate and
thiocyanate tested (0.1 to 1.0 mM) (results not shown) . These results
suggest that the defect in sulfur acquisition is restricted to the
sulfate uptake system and does not affect assimilatory steps
subsequent to the reduction of sulfate to sulfite (the first step in
the assimilation of sulfur from inorganic sulfate) .
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FIG . 3 . Effect of sulfate concentration on the growth of 715j and KLF2 .
Cells were grown at 37°C with aeration in M9-glucose minimal medium
containing various concentrations of sulfate (provided as MgSO4)
as indicated . The total concentration of magnesium ions was maintained
at 1 mM, with the balance being provided in the form of MgCl2.
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KLF2 and KLF3 produce pyochelin in the presence of exogenous cysteine.
Pyochelin contains two sulfur atoms, each derived from separate
cysteine moieties (42) . To test the hypothesis that the
defect in sulfate uptake in the mutants restricts pyochelin
biosynthesis by limiting the intracellular sulfur (i.e., cysteine)
pool, we analyzed the ability of KLF2 to produce pyochelin during
growth in medium containing L-cysteine . The results
show that the presence of cysteine in the medium restored the ability
of this strain to produce normal amounts of pyochelin and salicylate
(Fig . 4) . On the other hand, addition of methionine did
not facilitate the production of pyochelin by KLF2, although it
did appear to stimulate increased salicylate production . Cysteine
had no significant stimulatory effect on pyochelin production
by the wild-type strain .
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FIG . 4 . Effect of cysteine and methionine on production of pyochelin and
salicylate by 715j and KLF2 . Cells were grown in M9-glucose minimal
medium (containing 1 mM magnesium sulfate) at 37°C with aeration for 24
h . Medium contained no additions, or an 18-amino-acid mixture (18AA;
concentration of each amino acid, 20 µg/ml) with or without cysteine or
methionine (100 µg/ml each) . Pyochelin and salicylate were extracted
from culture supernatants as described above and analyzed by thin-layer
chromatography . Lanes 1 to 4, 715j grown in medium with no supplements,
18AA, 18AA plus cysteine, or 18AA plus methionine, respectively; lanes 5
to 8, KLF2 grown in medium with no supplements, 18AA, 18AA plus
cysteine, or 18AA plus methionine, respectively . Abbreviations: P,
pyochelin (stereoisomers I [migrating as a doublet] and II); S,
salicylate.
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We could also assess the ability of exogenous cysteine or methionine
to suppress the defect in pyochelin production by examining colonies,
grown under iron-limited conditions, for the restoration of
yellow-green fluorescence . Colonies of both KLF2 and KLF3 exhibited
the characteristic yellow-green fluorescence associated with
pyochelin on standard M9 medium containing cysteine at a
concentration of 100 µg/ml but not on medium containing cysteine at
20 µg/ml or methionine at 100 µg/ml (results not shown) .
B . cenocepacia does not produce pyochelin under conditions of
low sulfate availability. The observation that sulfate concentrations
which support normal growth of a B . cenocepacia cysW mutant do
not result in production of the siderophore pyochelin under
iron-limiting conditions implies that the synthesis of certain
secondary metabolites containing sulfur may be particularly sensitive
to sulfur availability . To test this, we examined the effect of
inorganic sulfate concentration on the ability of the wild-type B .
cenocepacia strain, 715j, to produce pyochelin . We found that
halving the normal concentration of sulfate in M9 minimal medium
(i.e., 0.5 mM sulfate) led to a large decrease ( 70%)
in the amount of pyochelin produced by this strain, with little or no
change in the amount of salicylic acid produced (Fig . 5) .
Pyochelin production was essentially abolished when the mutant was
grown in the presence of 0.25 mM sulfate . Salicylate production was
slightly reduced, but not abolished, when cells were grown in the
presence of
0.25
mM sulfate . Thus, in the absence of alternative sources of sulfur,
optimal production of pyochelin by B . cenocepacia requires
extracellular concentrations of sulfate far greater than is required
to sustain normal growth under laboratory conditions .
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FIG . 5 . Effect of sulfate concentration on production of pyochelin by
715j . Strain 715j was grown at 37°C with aeration for 24 h in M9-glucose
minimal medium containing various concentrations of sulfate (provided as
MgSO4) . The total concentration of magnesium ions was
maintained at 1 mM, with the balance being provided in the form of MgCl2 .
Pyochelin and salicylate were extracted from culture supernatants as
described above and analyzed by thin-layer chromatography . Lanes 1 to 5,
siderophores produced by bacteria growing in medium containing 1.0, 0.5,
0.25, 0.1, and 0.05 mM sulfate, respectively . Abbreviations: P,
pyochelin (stereoisomers I and II); S, salicylate.
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As expected, colonies of 715j were nonfluorescent when grown on M9
agar devoid of added sulfate (the ability of solidified medium to
support bacterial growth is largely the result of sulfate residues in
the agar, estimated to be
0.015%
[28]) . Addition of cysteine at 1,000 µM (but not
at 200 µM) to these plates facilitated the production of the
yellow-green fluorescence associated with pyochelin production,
whereas addition of methionine (750 µM) did not restore pyochelin
production (results not shown) .
Methionine can serve as a sole source of sulfur for growth of B .
cenocepacia but not for pyochelin biosynthesis. One reason for the
failure of methionine supplementation to compensate for the defect in
pyochelin biosynthesis under conditions of sulfur limitation is that
methionine cannot be used as a sulfur source by this organism . To
test this possibility, we grew strain 715j in M9-glucose minimal
medium containing different sulfur sources at a concentration of 500
µM . We found that the growth rate of this strain in medium containing
methionine is similar to the growth rate in the presence of cysteine
or inorganic sulfate (which are nearly identical) . The cysW
mutant strains also grew as efficiently as the wild-type strain with
methionine as the sole sulfur source (data not shown) . The growth
rate of the wild-type strain in the presence of either of the
alkyl sulfonates, ethanesulfonate or taurine, was also similar to
that of cells grown in the presence of inorganic sulfate (data not
shown) . 715j formed colonies of similar size on M9-glucose agarose in
the presence of each of these sulfur sources, but whereas colonies
produced a strong yellow-green fluorescence in the presence of
cysteine or sulfate as the sole sulfur source, they did not
fluorescence on medium containing methionine and were only weakly
fluorescent in the presence of the alkanesulfonates (results not
shown) . These results indicate that methionine, ethanesulfonate, or
taurine can act as an efficient source of sulfur for B .
cenocepacia .
We have identified two pyochelin-deficient mutants of B . cenocepacia
in which transposon insertions have disrupted an operon encoding
the CysT, CysW, and CysA proteins . In E . coli these proteins
comprise the membrane component of an ABC transporter for the
import of sulfate and thiosulfate (the sulfate/thiosulfate permease)
(28, 53) . ABC transporters are comprised
of two ATP-binding domains (also known as ABC domains), which are
located on the inner face of the cytoplasmic membrane in bacteria,
and two channel-forming transmembrane domains, each of which has six
segments that span the cytoplasmic membrane (32,
48) . Their role is to couple the energy of ATP
hydrolysis to the movement of substrates across membranes . In the
E . coli sulfate/thiosulfate permease, a CysA homodimer provides
the two ATP-binding domains, while the two transmembrane domains are
provided separately by CysT and CysW (25,
28, 32) . Accordingly, the CysW protein
of B . cenocepacia is also homologous to the CysT protein of
E . coli (31% identity) and other bacteria (not shown) . The
ATP-binding subunit consensus region of bacterial ABC transporters
comprises a segment of approximately 215 residues near the N terminus
of the polypeptide and is followed by a variable C-terminal
region (48) . The consensus region contains a number of
strongly conserved motifs, all of which are found within the
N-terminal 264 residues of B . cenocepacia CysA . These include
the Walker box motifs, which are proposed to form the ATP binding
pocket and are present in many other ATP-binding proteins (69);
the linker peptide, which is unique to and diagnostic of the ABC
transport family (signature sequence); and a recently recognized
switch region (32, 48) .
It is intriguing that the transposon insertions in cysW did
not result in a cysteine-requiring auxotrophy . In organisms as
diverse as E . coli and Mycobacterium tuberculosis, mutations
in the cysTWA gene cluster confer a requirement for cysteine
(28, 71) . Our results show that
sulfate uptake by either of the B . cenocepacia cysW mutants is
50-fold
less efficient than that by the wild-type strain . However, in the
presence of
0.5
mM sulfate, this rate of transport is able to sustain normal growth
of the mutants, although the intracellular sulfur pool must clearly
be depleted . A TBLASTN search of the B . cenocepacia genome
sequence using CysW as the query did not reveal additional copies of
cysW-like genes . Therefore, we may be able to explain the low
level of sulfate uptake by the mutants by proposing that the CysT
gene product can partially substitute for CysW . Furthermore, the
orientation of the inserted transposon in both mutants is such that
the strong dfr gene promoter (15,
30) is driving transcription of cysA (and cysB),
as there is no transcription terminator within mini-Tn5Tp .
This hypothesis may explain why only mutations in cysW were
obtained (and not in cysT or cysA) .
In both E . coli and P . aeruginosa the internalized sulfate is
activated and reduced to sulfite and then to sulfide, which is
subsequently transferred either to O-acetylserine to produce
cysteine or, in an alternative pathway occurring in P . aeruginosa,
to O-succinylhomoserine to generate homocysteine (24,
28, 66) . In both species, most
other forms of exogenous sulfur, such as organic sulfonates and
sulfate esters, feed into this pathway and are also assimilated into
cysteine and homocysteine (24), although
thiosulfate reacts directly with O-acetylserine to give S-sulfocysteine,
catalyzed by the cysM gene product (52) .
The biosynthesis of pyochelin in P . aeruginosa (and presumably
in B . cenocepacia) essentially involves the successive condensation
and cyclization of two molecules of cysteine with salicylic
acid (42) . Thus, the biosynthesis of cysteine can be viewed
as an upstream extension of the pyochelin biosynthetic pathway .
Our observations suggest that the biosynthesis of pyochelin in B .
cenocepacia is particularly sensitive to the availability of
assimilatable sulfur, most probably due to knock-on effects on the
intracellular cysteine pool, and may indicate another level of
regulation of pyochelin biosynthesis in this organism in addition to
regulation by iron (16, 68) . Therefore, it
is likely that a regulatory hierarchy exists whereby, under
conditions of sulfur limitation, bacteria channel the available
sulfur into essential metabolites, with the consequential curtailment
of the biosynthesis of nonessential secondary metabolites . Our
results also reinforce the idea that the ability to synthesize a
secondary metabolite under laboratory conditions should not
necessarily be taken as evidence for the production of this compound
in the natural environment of the organism .
One important difference between the sulfur assimilatory pathways
of E . coli and P . aeruginosa is the fact that methionine can
be converted to cysteine via the reverse transsulfuration pathway
in P . aeruginosa but not in E . coli . Thus, methionine can be
efficiently used as the sole sulfur source by P . aeruginosa,
whereas for E . coli, which can only use the sulfur moiety of
methionine as a sulfur source by an alternative pathway, growth
is poor with methionine as the sulfur source (21,
66) . The inability of exogenous methionine to
facilitate pyochelin biosynthesis in B . cenocepacia cysW
mutants suggested that, as in E . coli, methionine may not be
efficiently converted into cysteine in this bacterium . However,
growth rate measurements indicated that B . cenocepacia
utilizes methionine as efficiently as cysteine as a sulfur source for
the biosynthesis of central metabolites necessary for growth .
Nevertheless, it is possible that the sulfur pool is sufficiently
restricted during growth on methionine so as to mitigate against the
biosynthesis of certain secondary metabolites, including pyochelin .
Another possible reason for the different efficiencies of pyochelin
production observed in the presence of different sulfur sources is
that certain sulfur sources may exert a negative regulatory effect on
pyochelin biosynthesis .
Surprisingly, we were only able to isolate two mutants out of
15,000
in which pyochelin was not produced under the conditions used for the
screen . Curiously, neither of the transposon insertion events giving
rise to the pyochelin-deficient phenotype had occurred within genes
specific to the biosynthesis of this siderophore . There are two
possibilities which might explain this observation: either there is
genetic redundancy with respect to pyochelin biosynthetic genes in
the B . cenocepacia strain we used for these experiments or the
screen adopted for the identification of pyochelin-deficient mutants
was too stringent . Although members of the BCC are renowned for their
large genome size (29, 46,
64), we believe the first possibility to be less likely, as
this would involve duplication of a large repertoire of genes (43) .
Furthermore, in the genome sequence of B . cenocepacia strain
J2315, only single copies of genes homologous to those required for
pyochelin biosynthesis in P . aeruginosa appear to be present .
Members of the BCC are noted for the large number of secondary
metabolites they produce, some of which also contain sulfur (70) .
In our screen to identify Pch- mutants, we investigated
only mutants which were completely nonfluorescent and avoided mutants
which exhibited weak fluorescence . It is possible that, in some
members of the latter class, the residual fluorescence was
contributed either by a fluorescent intermediate in the pyochelin
biosynthetic pathway, such as Dha, or some other unrelated
sulfur-containing secondary metabolite . Thus, in effect, we may have
been looking for mutants which failed to produce both pyochelin and
one or more additional fluorescent compounds which require an
adequate supply of sulfur for their biosynthesis .
We are grateful to the University of Sheffield School of Medicine and
Biomedical Sciences for the award of a postgraduate studentship to
Kate Farmer .
* Corresponding author . Mailing address: Division of Genomic
Medicine, F Floor, School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, University of
Sheffield, Beech Hill Rd., Sheffield S10 2RX, United Kingdom . Phone: 44 114
2712834 . Fax: 44 114 2739926 . E-mail:
m.s.thomas@shef.ac.uk .
Present address: Research Support and Commercialisation Office,
University of Nottingham, University Park NG7 2RD, United Kingdom .
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