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Journal of Bacteriology, January 2004, p . 343-350, Vol . 186,
No . 2
Identification of the LIV-I/LS System as the Third Phenylalanine Transporter in
Escherichia coli K-12
Takashi Koyanagi, Takane Katayama, Hideyuki Suzuki, and Hidehiko
Kumagai*
Division of Integrated Life Science, Graduate School of Biostudies, Kyoto
University, Kyoto, Japan
Received 7 October 2003/ Accepted 21 October 2003
In Escherichia coli, the active transport of phenylalanine is
considered to be performed by two different systems, AroP and PheP .
However, a low level of accumulation of phenylalanine was observed in
an aromatic amino acid transporter-deficient E . coli strain ( aroP
pheP
mtr
tna
tyrP) .
The uptake of phenylalanine by this strain was significantly
inhibited in the presence of branched-chain amino acids . Genetic
analysis and transport studies revealed that the LIV-I/LS system,
which is a branched-chain amino acid transporter consisting of two
periplasmic binding proteins, the LIV-binding protein (LIV-I system)
and LS-binding protein (LS system), and membrane components, LivHMGF,
is involved in phenylalanine accumulation in E . coli cells .
The Km values for phenylalanine in the LIV-I and LS
systems were determined to be 19 and 30 µM, respectively . Competitive
inhibition of phenylalanine uptake by isoleucine, leucine, and valine
was observed for the LIV-I system and, surprisingly, also for the
LS system, which has been assumed to be leucine specific on the
basis of the results of binding studies with the purified LS-binding
protein . We found that the LS system is capable of transporting
isoleucine and valine with affinity comparable to that for leucine
and that the LIV-I system is able to transport tyrosine with affinity
lower than that seen with other substrates . The physiological
importance of the LIV-I/LS system for phenylalanine accumulation was
revealed in the growth of phenylalanine-auxotrophic E . coli
strains under various conditions .
It has been reported that Escherichia coli has five distinct
transport systems (AroP, Mtr, PheP, TnaB, and TyrP) for the
accumulation of aromatic amino acids (36) . A general amino
acid permease, encoded by the aroP gene, transports three
aromatic amino acids with high affinity (8,
11, 21, 36) . The
closely related PheP protein transports phenylalanine in preference
to tyrosine but does not exhibit tryptophan uptake activity (10,
34-36) . Mtr and TyrP are specific for
tryptophan and tyrosine, respectively (19,
36, 42, 51,
52), and TnaB is a low-affinity,
tryptophan-specific transporter encoded in the tryptophanase operon
together with the tnaA gene (13, 36,
43) .
In a previous study, we cloned the tyrosine transporter tutB
gene of Erwinia herbicola and used E . coli cells to
determine the properties of its product (23) . In
the course of that study, we found that the aromatic amino acid
transporter-deficient E . coli strain TK1135 ( aroP
pheP
mtr24
tna
tyrP)
(23) has the ability to accumulate phenylalanine
in an energy-dependent manner, although the initial rate of uptake,
as well as the steady-state level, was quite low . This finding
prompted us to examine the basis for this activity and whether this
transport activity is physiologically important in E . coli .
Here, we present evidence indicating that a branched-chain amino acid
transporter, the LIV-I/LS system (1-3,
18, 24, 28,
29, 32, 37,
38, 45, 50), acts
as the third phenylalanine transporter, plays a significant
role in the accumulation of phenylalanine, and has a broader
substrate specificity than previously reported .
Bacterial strains and plasmids. The bacterial strains used in
this study are derivatives of E . coli K-12 . The strains and
plasmids are listed in Table 1 with their
characteristics . The aroP, pheP, tna, and tyrP genes
were disrupted as described previously (23), and the
mtr gene was disrupted, using mtr-1 and mtr-2 (Table
1) as primers, by the method described by Datsenko
and Wanner (12) . Disruption of the brnQ
gene was carried out as follows . The brnQ gene was amplified
by PCR using KOD polymerase (Toyobo, Japan) with the genomic DNA of
MG1655 as the template and brnQ-F and brnQ-R (Table 1)
as the primer pair, and the amplified DNA fragment was ligated with
the 3.5-kb NsiI (blunt-ended)-NruI fragment of pACYC177
(6) . The internal region of the brnQ gene was then
removed by EcoRV-PvuII digestion and replaced with the Flp
recognition target (FRT)-flanked kanamycin resistance gene (FRT-kan+-FRT),
which was amplified by PCR using pKD13 (12) as the
template and pKD13-1 and pKD13-4 (Table 1) as the
primer pair . The resulting
brnQ::(FRT-kan+-FRT)
gene was introduced into strain MG1655 harboring pKD46 (12)
by electroporation and allowed to integrate into the chromosome
through a double-crossover event . Elimination of the kan gene
from the integrated locus was carried out as described previously (12),
with the aid of plasmid pCP20 carrying the Flp recombinase gene (7) .
Disruption of the livHMGF region and the livJ-yhhK-livKHMGF
gene cluster was performed similarly . In these cases, primer pair
livH-F and livF-R and primer pair liv-F1 and liv-R1 (Table
1) were used for amplification of the livHMGF
and livJ-yhhK-livKHMGF genes, respectively . The internal
2.9-kb BglII-PvuII region in the livHMGF cluster and the
6.4-kb PvuII region within the livJ-yhhK-livKHMGF
cluster were deleted and replaced with the FRT-kan+-FRT
gene . Integration into the chromosome and subsequent elimination of
the kan+ gene were carried out as described above .
| TABLE 1 . Strains, plasmids, and oligonuclotides used in this work
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After confirmation of the correct recombination event by Southern
hybridization analysis (41) and/or genomic PCR analysis with
primers designed to anneal external regions that had been used
for the homologous recombination event, the disrupted gene was
transferred to other strains by P1 transduction (26) .
Media and chemicals. Luria-Bertani (LB) (26)
broth was routinely used for the cultivation of E . coli
strains . M63-glucose (26) was used as the minimal
medium, and, when necessary, phenylalanine and pantothenate were
added as growth requirements to final concentrations of 10 µM to 1 mM
and 5 µg/ml, respectively . Ampicillin, tetracycline, and kanamycin
were used at final concentrations of 100, 15, and 30 µg/ml for LB
medium and 50, 7.5, and 15 µg/ml for the minimal medium,
respectively . For the disk inhibition assay, disks were impregnated
with 1 mM concentrations of various amino acids and then put onto the
plates . L-(U-14C)-isoleucine (314
mCi/mmol, 0.05 mCi/ml), L-(U-14C)-leucine (306
mCi/mmol, 0.05 mCi/ml), L-(U-14C)-valine
(256 mCi/mmol, 0.05 mCi/ml), and L-(U-14C)-tyrosine
(434 mCi/mmol, 0.05 mCi/ml) were purchased from Amersham Pharmacia
Biotech . L-(U-14C)-phenylalanine (496
mCi/mmol, 0.1 mCi/ml) and L-(side chain-3-14C)-tryptophan
(58.1 mCi/mmol, 0.02 mCi/ml) were from Perkin-Elmer Life Sciences
Inc . The chemicals were all obtained commercially and not purified
further .
Genetic techniques. Standard genetic techniques were used
essentially as described by Sambrook and Russell (41) .
The method used for generalized transduction involving the P1 phage
was that described by Miller (26) .
Cloning of the liv gene cluster. The chromosomal
locus including the liv gene cluster consists of the livJ,
yhhK, livK, livH, livM, livG, and livF
genes in that order . While the livJ and livK genes
encode periplasmic binding proteins, the livH, livM,
livG, and livF genes specify membrane channel components (1,
45) . The function of the yhhK gene has not
been clarified yet . The DNA fragment containing the livJ-yhhK-livK
region was amplified by high-fidelity PCR using KOD polymerase
(Toyobo, Japan) with the genomic DNA of MG1655 as the template and
liv-F1 and liv-R2 (Table 1) as the primer pair . To
clone the livJ gene, the amplified fragment was digested with
AatI to remove the yhhK and livK genes and then
inserted into the SalI (blunt-ended) site of pYG249 . The
livK gene was recovered by BglII digestion of the amplified
fragment, blunt ended, and then inserted into the SalI
(blunt-ended) site of pYG249 . The amplified livK and livJ
genes were entirely sequenced to ensure that no misincorporation of
nucleotides had occurred during the PCR amplification .
The genes for the livHMGF cluster were cloned as follows . The
DNA fragment containing the livJ-yhhK-livKHMGF gene cluster
was amplified by high-fidelity PCR with the genomic DNA of MG1655
as the template and liv-F1 and liv-R1 (Table 1) as the
primer pair . After insertion of the fragment into the PvuII
site of pMW118 (Nippon Gene, Tokyo, Japan), the 2.3-kb EcoRV
fragment containing the livJ-yhhK-livK genes was removed and
the remaining large fragment carrying the livHMGF genes was
circularized by self-ligation . Although the livKHMGF genes
constitute an operon and are usually transcribed in one unit, it has
been shown that a weak internal promoter present just upstream of the
livH gene can direct synthesis of the downstream genes (1) .
Sequence analysis of the amplified fragment revealed a two-base
discordance compared to data reported by Blattner et al . (4)
at a locus downstream of the stop codon of the livF gene,
which would have no substantial effect on the properties of the
LIV-I/LS system . The resulting plasmid, pYG218, was introduced into
strain YG201 ( aroP
brnQ
livHMGF
pheP)
and examined for the ability to complement the chromosomal livHMGF
lesion with respect to phenylalanine transport .
Transport assays. Transport assays were performed as
described previously (23, 51),
with slight modifications as follows . Cells grown in minimal medium
were harvested at mid-exponential phase and then washed twice with
M63-glucose containing 60 µg of chloramphenicol/ml to stop protein
synthesis . The assay was initiated by adding the cell suspension to
the reaction mixture containing various concentrations of labeled
substrates in the presence or absence of cold competitive inhibitors .
The rate of nonspecific diffusion was determined using energy-starved
cells that had been prepared by incubating cells in the presence of
100 µM carbonylcyanide-m-chlorophenylhydrazone (CCCP) for 30
min prior to starting the assay . The uptake of substrates was
expressed as picomoles per milligram of dry cells as a function of
time .
It has so far been considered that in E . coli, the active transport
of aromatic amino acids across the inner membrane is mediated
by five distinct permeases, AroP, Mtr, PheP, TnaB, and TyrP (8,
10, 11, 13,
19, 21, 34-36,
42, 43, 51,
52) and that among them, the AroP and PheP systems
are responsible for the accumulation of phenylalanine in cells .
However, as described above, in the course of studying tyrosine
transporter TutB of E . herbicola through the use of E . coli
cells (23), a low level of accumulation of
phenylalanine was observed in the aromatic amino acid transporter-deficient
strain TK1135 ( aroP
pheP
mtr24
tna
tyrP)
(data not shown) . At first we speculated that this activity might be
due to altered specificity of the mutant Mtr protein, i.e., Mtr24 (20),
although the nature of the mtr24 allele has not been
elucidated . This possibility, however, was ruled out by the
observation that an E . coli strain, TK1170 ( aroP
pheP
mtr
tna
tyrP),
accumulated as much phenylalanine (Fig . 1B) as
strain TK1135 in an energy-dependent manner . Even though the initial
rate of uptake and the steady-state level of phenylalanine in cells
were not so high compared to those with known phenylalanine transport
systems, AroP and PheP, reported previously (5,
49) (Fig . 2), this activity seems to
be important for cells to accumulate phenylalanine because a
phenylalanine-auxotrophic (Phe-) strain could be obtained by
transducing TK1170 ( aroP
pheP
mtr
tna
tyrP)
with a P1 phage lysate prepared from strain NK6024 (pheA18::Tn10)
(PheA, chorismate mutase-prephenate dehydratase) and subsequent
selection with Tn10 as a marker . These findings suggested that
E . coli might have at least one additional phenylalanine
transporter .
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FIG . 1 . Inhibition of phenylalanine uptake by branched-chain amino
acids . (A) Growth inhibition of phenylalanine-auxotrophic (Phe-)
E . coli strain TK1173 ( aroP
mtr
pheP
tna
tyrP
pheA18::Tn10) in the presence of branched-chain amino acids,
as observed on disk assaying . Cells were grown in LB medium, washed
twice with M63 minimal buffer, mixed with the top agar, and then
overlaid on M63 minimal solid medium containing 100 µM phenylalanine .
Disks were impregnated with 1 mM concentrations of various amino acids
(indicated by a one-letter code) . (B) Phenylalanine uptake activity of
E . coli strain TK1170 ( aroP
mtr
pheP
tna
tyrP).
L-Phenylalanine was added to cell suspensions to
a final concentration of 50 µM in either the absence ( )
or presence of 5 µM glutamate ( ),
leucine ( ),
or valine (•) . Samples were withdrawn at the indicated times . The
experiments were repeated three times with essentially the same results;
the data for a representative experiment are shown.
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FIG . 2 . The LIV-I/LS system as the third phenylalanine transporter in
E . coli . L-Phenylalanine uptake was measured
in various E . coli cells, including YG74 ( aroP
livHMGF
pheP)
(BrnQ) ( ),
YG106 ( aroP
brnQ
pheP)
(LIV-I/LS) ( ),
YG108 ( aroP
brnQ
livHMGF)
(PheP) (•), YG109 ( brnQ
livHMGF
pheP)
(AroP) ( ),
and YG201 ( aroP
brnQ
livHMGF
pheP)
( )
cells, and compared to that in wild-type strain MG1655 ( ) .
Cell suspensions were incubated in the presence of 1 µM
L-(U-14C)-phenylalanine, and samples were withdrawn at
the times indicated . The experiments were repeated three times with
essentially the same results; the data for a representative experiment
are shown.
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Inhibition of phenylalanine uptake by branched-chain amino acids.
The question is what system is involved in this transport: a protein
encoded by an undefined open reading frame (function unknown ORF) or
a defined small molecule transporter with broad substrate
specificity? We found by using a disk inhibition assay (Fig.
1A) that the growth of the aromatic transporter-negative
Phe- strain TK1173 ( aroP
pheP
mtr
tna
tyrP
pheA18::Tn10) in minimal medium supplemented with
phenylalanine was severely inhibited in the presence of isoleucine
and leucine . In this assay, valine and serine were omitted since both
cause a serious growth defect by blocking the synthesis of
intermediates required for the synthesis of other amino acids (17,
25, 44) . While large clear
zones of inhibition were observed around the disks impregnated with
isoleucine and leucine, a small inhibition zone was also observed
around the disk impregnated with threonine (Fig . 1A),
which is discussed later . No significant inhibition zones appeared
around the other 15 amino acids tested . The results in Fig .
1A suggested that phenylalanine might be accumulated in cells
through a branched-chain amino acid transport system . This notion
was further supported by a transport assay with L-(U-14C)-phenylalanine .
Whereas the presence of glutamate (Fig . 1B) in the assay
mixture did not affect phenylalanine uptake, the addition of valine
and leucine decreased the phenylalanine uptake activity even
with a low concentration (5 µM valine and leucine each versus 50 µM
phenylalanine) . These results strongly suggested that the active
transport of phenylalanine into E . coli cells with the
aroP
pheP
mtr
tna
tyrP
background could be dependent on a system that transports
branched-chain amino acids .
Identification of the LIV-I/LS system as the third phenylalanine
transporter in E . coli. Branched-chain amino acids are
transported into E . coli cells by an osmotic-shock-sensitive
system designated LIV-I/LS (1-3,
18, 24, 28,
29, 32, 37,
38, 45, 50) and by an
osmotic-shock-resistant system, BrnQ (15,
16, 31, 45,
53, 54), formerly called LIV-II
(3, 31, 37,
38, 45, 50) . Whereas
transport by the BrnQ system is mediated by a single membrane protein
(38, 45, 50), uptake
by the LIV-I/LS system depends on two substrate-binding proteins
(BP), LIV-BP and LS-BP, located in the periplasm (2,
14, 24, 33,
38, 45, 50) . Previous
studies involving purified BPs showed that LIV-BP, encoded by the
livJ gene, binds isoleucine, leucine, and valine with Kd
values of 10-6 to 10-7 M and threonine, serine,
and alanine with lower affinity and that LS-BP, encoded by the
livK gene, binds leucine with a Kd value of approximately
10-6 M (24) . To enable the ATP-hydrolysis-coupled
transport of their substrates into the cytoplasm, LIV-BP and LS-BP
interact with the common inner-membrane components LivHMGF, which
constitute the LIV-I and LS systems, respectively (1,
28, 29, 45,
50) . These six liv genes are clustered at
77 min on the chromosome (45) and divided into two
transcription units, one for livJ and the other for
livKHMGF (1, 18, 45) .
In the region between livJ and livK there is the
yhhK gene; the deletion of this region results in pantothenate
auxotrophy (1) .
To determine whether BrnQ or LIV-I/LS carries out the uptake of
phenylalanine, a series of E . coli strains expressing individual
transport systems was constructed and assayed for transport:
AroP-expressing strain YG109 ( brnQ
livHMGF
pheP),
BrnQ-expressing strain YG74 ( aroP
livHMGF
pheP),
LIV-I/LS-expressing strain YG106 ( aroP
brnQ
pheP),
and PheP-expressing strain YG108 ( aroP
brnQ
livHMGF) .
The transport activity was measured in the presence of 1 µM labeled
phenylalanine and compared to that of wild-type strain MG1655 and
strain YG201 lacking portions of the aroP, brnQ,
livHMGF, and pheP genes .
As shown in Fig . 2, neither BrnQ-expressing strain YG74 ( aroP
livHMGF
pheP)
nor strain YG201 ( aroP
brnQ
livHMGF
pheP)
could accumulate phenylalanine . A sodium gradient made by adding NaCl
(final concentration, 1 mM) to the assay mixture did not have
any effect on the uptake activity of these strains . On the other
hand, LIV-I/LS-expressing strain YG106 ( aroP
brnQ
pheP)
was able to accumulate phenylalanine, demonstrating the involvement
of the LIV-I/LS system, but not BrnQ, in phenylalanine transport,
although the initial rate and the steady-state level were considerably
lower than those in the strains expressing AroP and PheP . It
seemed likely that the small inhibition halo observed around the disk
impregnated with threonine shown in Fig . 1A reflected
the substrate preference of LIV-BP (24) . Despite the
low phenylalanine transport activity, the LIV-I/LS system alone could
support the growth of Phe- strain YG210 ( aroP
brnQ
pheP
pheA18::Tn10) in minimal medium supplemented with 10 µM
phenylalanine, indicating the participation of the LIV-I/LS system in
the accumulation of phenylalanine . The Km value for
phenylalanine in the LIV-I/LS system was determined to be 30 µM,
which is considerably higher than those for AroP (0.4 µM) and PheP (2
µM) (36) .
AroP-expressing strain YG109 ( brnQ
livHMGF
pheP)
exhibited the highest uptake activity, and its activity was
essentially equal to that of wild-type strain MG1655, suggesting that
the AroP protein ordinarily acts as the major phenylalanine transport
system in wild-type cells . As for PheP-expressing strain YG108
( aroP
brnQ
livHMGF),
more than 40 pmol of phenylalanine/mg (dry weight of cells) was
accumulated in the cells, which was comparable to the steady-state
level in the case of the AroP system, although the initial rate of
uptake was significantly lower than that for AroP .
Next, we tested which binding protein, LIV-BP or LS-BP, participates
in the transport of phenylalanine . For this end, LIV-BP and
LS-BP were expressed in E . coli cells individually in the presence
of membrane machinery components LivHMGF . Strain YG228 [ aroP
brnQ
(livJ-yhhK-livKHMGF)
pheP]
was transformed with two compatible plasmids; one was a
pSC101-derived vector carrying the genes for membrane components
LivHMGF (pYG218), and the other was a Mini-F-derived plasmid carrying
either the livJ gene (LIV-I) (pYG237; Fig . 3A)
or the livK gene (LS) (pYG239; Fig . 3B) . These
strains were used for uptake assay in the presence of 10 to 300
µM phenylalanine (Fig . 3A and B) . The results clearly
show that both BPs are capable of effecting transport of the
substrate . The amounts of phenylalanine accumulated in the cells
significantly differed between them, but we cannot comment about this
difference because the organization of the liv genes on
plasmids was different from that on the chromosome . In the absence of
BP, no accumulation was observed in the cells (Fig . 3A and B) .
Considering that the disruption of livHMGF, the genes encoding
the membrane components, completely abolished phenylalanine
transport (Fig . 2), it can be concluded that both BPs interact
only with LivHMGF .
|
FIG . 3 . Uptake studies of various amino acids with E . coli cells
expressing the LIV-I (A) and LS (B) systems . (A) Strain YG228 [ aroP
brnQ
(livJ-yhhK-livKHMGF)
pheP]
carrying pYG218 (pSC101 replicon bla+ livH+M+G+F+)
(membrane components) was transformed with either pYG237 (Mini-F
replicon kan+ livJ+) (LIV-I; open
symbols) or pYG249 (Mini-F replicon kan+) (control;
filled symbols) . For the tyrosine transport assay, YG256 [ aroP
brnQ
(livJ-yhhK-livKHMGF)
pheP
tyrP]
was used instead of YG228 . Cell suspensions were incubated in the
presence of 10 to 300 µM L-phenylalanine ( ,
)
and 25 to 300 µM L-tyrosine ( ,
) .
(B) Strain YG228 carrying pYG218 was transformed with either pYG239
(Mini-F replicon kan+ livK+) (LS;
open symbols) or pYG249 (control; filled symbols) . Cell suspensions were
incubated in the presence of 10 to 300 µM L-phenylalanine
( ,
),
0.4 to 70 µM L-leucine ( ,
),
L-isoleucine ( ,
•), or L-valine ( ,
) .
All experiments were repeated three times with essentially the same
results; the data for a representative experiment are shown.
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Recently, using NMR with fluorine-labeled LS-BP, Salopek-Sondi and
Luck revealed that LS-BP binds phenylalanine in addition to leucine
and that the phenylalanine-binding ability is specific for LS-BP but
not for LIV-BP (39) . Our transport studies corroborated
the ability of LS-BP to bind phenylalanine but contradicted the
results obtained for LIV-BP .
Taken together, these results led us to the conclusion that in
E . coli, there are three phenylalanine uptake systems, AroP,
PheP, and LIV-I/LS, all of which may allow phenylalanine accumulation .
Kinetic studies of the LIV-I and LS systems. To further
characterize the LIV-I and LS systems, kinetic constants for both
systems were determined by monitoring phenylalanine uptake in the
absence or presence of probable competitive inhibitors, branched
amino acids . The Km values for phenylalanine in the
LIV-I and LS systems were determined to be 19 and 30 µM,
respectively, by double-reciprocal plotting of the data in Fig .
3 (Table 2) . In inhibition assays, as
expected from the substrate specificity of LIV-BP, phenylalanine
uptake by the LIV-I system was found to be decreased in a
concentration-dependent manner upon the addition of isoleucine,
leucine, and valine (data not shown), the Ki values
for them having been determined to be 2.3, 1.7, and 1.5 µM,
respectively (Table 2) . These Ki
values were comparable to the respective Km values determined
by means of transport assays with LIV-I-expressing cells incubated
in the presence of 0.4 to 70 µM labeled branched-chain amino
acids (Table 2) . The Ki values for valine
and phenylalanine inhibition of leucine uptake were also determined
by incubating cells under conditions of 0.4 to 20 µM labeled leucine
in the presence of cold valine (0.5 to 20 µM) and phenylalanine
(15 to 50 µM) . The values obtained (Ki = 1.4 µM for
valine and 30 µM for phenylalanine) were in good agreement with the
Km values (2.4 µM for valine and 19 µM for
phenylalanine) (Table 2) .
| TABLE 2 . Kinetic constants (Km and Ki)
for various substrates in the LIV-I and LS systems as determined by in
vivo uptake assays
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The finding that phenylalanine is a good substrate prompted us to
examine the possibility of other aromatic amino acids being
transported by the LIV-I system . We found that the uptake of
phenylalanine by the LIV-I system was inhibited in the presence of
tyrosine with a Ki value of 120 µM (Table 2),
suggesting the ability of the system to transport tyrosine.
tyrP
YG228 was constructed (YG256), similarly transformed with pYG218 (livHMGF)
and pYG237 (livJ), and then examined for transport . Low-level
accumulation of labeled tyrosine was observed (Fig . 3A)
but not in the strain carrying the empty vector . The Km
value for tyrosine (230 µM) in the LIV-I system was comparable to
the Ki value (200 µM) determined by its inhibition of
leucine uptake . Although the accumulation of tyrosine was appreciable,
the presence of the LIV-I/LS system alone could not support the
growth of a tyrosine-auxotrophic strain ( aroP
brnQ
mtr
pheP
tna
tyrP
tyrA::kan+)
in minimal medium even in the presence of 100 µM tyrosine, maybe due
to the low affinity for tyrosine . Therefore, it seems likely that the
LIV-I/LS system is not a physiologically important tyrosine
transporter in E . coli . As for tryptophan, neither inhibition
of leucine uptake nor accumulation in the cells by the LIV-I system
was observed (10 to 300 µM) (data not shown) . Alanine, serine, and
threonine acted as inhibitors of phenylalanine transport by the
LIV-I system (data not shown), as expected from the results obtained
in binding studies with LIV-BP by Rahmanian et al . (38) .
Similar experiments were performed with LS-expressing cells, and
not only leucine but also isoleucine and valine were found to inhibit
phenylalanine uptake . This was surprising, because it has been shown
that purified LS-BP preferentially binds leucine (0.4 µM) but not
isoleucine or valine (>1 mM each) (24) . We carried
out transport assays with labeled substrates (Fig . 3B)
and found that the LS system was able to transport isoleucine and
valine in addition to leucine . The DNA sequence of the livK
gene on pYG239 was again analyzed, but no difference was found from
the results reported by Blattner et al . (4) . The
Km values for isoleucine, leucine, and valine in the LS
system were determined to be 5.0, 2.3, and 9.2 µM, respectively .
There are apparent contradictions between the results of binding
studies (14, 33, 40)
and transport studies; is an auxiliary protein involved in the
recognition of substrates by LS-BP or does the presence of membrane
components LivHMGF alter the substrate specificity of LS-BP? In vitro
uptake studies with the LS system reconstituted in liposomes are
necessary to explain this discrepancy .
Of the aromatic amino acids tested (10 to 300 µM), only
phenylalanine acted as a substrate for the LS system . Phenylalanine
inhibited leucine uptake with a Ki value of 74 µM, which
was comparable to the Km value of 30 µM . Likewise, the
Ki values estimated for isoleucine (6.6 µM), leucine
(2.1 µM), and valine (2.7 µM) in inhibition assays of
phenylalanine uptake were in good accordance with the Km
values obtained for them (5.0, 2.3, and 9.2 µM, respectively) .
The presence of alanine, serine, and threonine (each at 100 µM)
did not affect phenylalanine uptake by the LS system at the
saturating concentration .
Thus, consistent results were obtained in our transport studies,
which revealed new aspects of the substrate specificity of the LIV-I
and LS systems . The neutral amino acid ATP-binding cassette-type
transport system (Nat) of Synechocystis sp . strain PCC 6803
has been identified by means of insertional mutagenesis, and it was
shown that the strain inactivated for NatB, a periplasmic binding
protein, leaked significant amounts of amino acids alanine,
isoleucine, leucine, valine, and phenylalanine into the medium (27),
indicating a role of the Nat system in the recapture of these amino
acids . Although the LivJ (LIV-BP) and LivK (LS-BP) proteins of E .
coli exhibit low levels (16%) of identity with NatB with respect
to amino acid sequences, a similar substrate specificity was
suggested, which may help us understand the mechanism underlying the
substrate recognition by these proteins .
Functional distinction among the three phenylalanine uptake systems
AroP, PheP, and LIV-I/LS. To obtain a better understanding of the
LIV-I/LS system as the phenylalanine transporter, the physiological
significance of the AroP, PheP, and LIV-I/LS systems was evaluated . A
strain expressing one of the three transport systems was made Phe-
(pheA18::Tn10) by P1 transduction and then streaked onto an
M63-glucose minimal medium plate containing phenylalanine (MMF)
and onto an MMF plate including isoleucine, tryptophan, or tyrosine
(MMF+I, MMF+W, or MMF+Y) (Fig . 4A) . In parallel, a Phe-
strain possessing either all or none of the phenylalanine
transporters was constructed and streaked onto similar plates . A
phenylalanine transport-deficient Phe- strain was obtained
by spreading the transductants [YG201 and P1(NK6024)] on LB plates
containing 1 mM phenylalanine . Since phenylalanine accumulation could
not be detected in the YG74 ( aroP
livHMGF
pheP)
cells, even in the presence of 100 µM phenylalanine (data not shown),
it seems likely that nonspecific diffusion of phenylalanine at
the high concentration (1 mM) can support the growth of the
strain .
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FIG . 4 . Physiological role of each phenylalanine transport system in
E . coli cells grown under various conditions . (A) AroP-, BrnQ-,
LIV-I/LS-, and PheP-expressing Phe- strain YG208 (All),
LIV-I/LS-expressing Phe- strain YG210 (LIV-I/LS),
PheP-expressing Phe- strain YG211 (PheP), AroP-expressing Phe-
strain YG212 (AroP), and Phe- strain YG213 not carrying any
of these transport systems (None) were streaked on M63-glucose minimal
medium plates containing 100 µM phenylalanine (MMF) and on MMF
supplemented with 1 mM isoleucine (MMF+I), tryptophan (MMF+W), or
tyrosine (MMF+Y) . (B) Accumulation of phenylalanine in E . coli
cells with various phenylalanine transport systems in the presence of 1
mM tyrosine . Strains MG1655 ( ),
YG106 (LIV-I/LS) ( ),
YG108 (PheP) (•), and YG109 (AroP) ( )
were grown in MMF+Y, and after the optical density at 600 nm had reached
0.5, the cells were harvested and suspended in MMF+Y containing 60 µg of
chloramphenicol/ml . Cell suspensions were incubated in the presence of
100 µM labeled phenylalanine, and samples were withdrawn at the times
indicated . The experiments were repeated three times with essentially
the same results; the data for a representative experiment are shown.
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As shown in Fig . 4A, growth of the Phe- strain in
the presence of phenylalanine was dependent on the presence of any
one of the AroP, PheP, or LIV-I/LS systems and no growth was observed
for the Phe- strain lacking them . The same results were
obtained regardless of the presence or absence of the BrnQ system
(data not shown) . The growth rates of the strains carrying the
respective phenylalanine transporters did not differ significantly .
These results confirm the physiological importance of these three
transporters in phenylalanine accumulation .
The addition of isoleucine, which is a good substrate for both the
LIV-I and LS systems, to the MMF medium severely inhibited the growth
of LIV-I/LS-expressing Phe- strain YG210 ( aroP
brnQ
pheP
pheA18::Tn10), whereas the growth of the AroP- and PheP-expressing
Phe- strains was not affected . Likewise, the presence of
tryptophan or tyrosine, either of which acts as a competitor for
phenylalanine transport in the AroP system, caused significant
retardation of the growth of AroP-expressing Phe- strain
YG212 ( brnQ
livHMGF
pheP
pheA18::Tn10) on the MMF+W or +Y medium . The inhibitory
effect was greater for tryptophan than for tyrosine . The same results
were obtained for five independently constructed strains . This was
surprising, because the expression of the aroP gene is known
to be strongly repressed by tyrosine but not by tryptophan (9,
22, 36, 46-48,
55) and the AroP system is known to exhibit almost
equal affinity for the three aromatic amino acids (5,
36) . At present, the reason for this phenomenon is
unclear . PheP-expressing Phe- strain YG211 ( aroP
brnQ
livHMGF
pheA18::Tn10) grew well under all conditions tested
(PheP) . Although the PheP and LIV-I systems are capable of
transporting tyrosine, no inhibitory effect was observed in the
presence of tyrosine (MMF+Y), reflecting the high Km
values for tyrosine compared to those for phenylalanine in these
systems .
Transport studies were carried out using these cells grown under
the same conditions, and the results were consistent with the growth
behavior shown in Fig . 4A . It is notable that when cells
expressing the individual phenylalanine transport systems were
grown in MMF+Y and then assayed for transport (Fig . 4B), the
LIV-I/LS-expressing cells exhibited the highest phenylalanine
uptake activity, which was almost the same as that of wild-type
strain MG1655 . Similar results were obtained when these cells were
grown in MMF+W (data not shown) . Thus, in the presence of tryptophan
or tyrosine, the LIV-I/LS system plays a major role in phenylalanine
accumulation in E . coli cells .
In conclusion, the LIV-I/LS system was identified as the third
phenylalanine transporter in E . coli, which plays a significant
role in the accumulation of phenylalanine in cells, especially
when grown in the presence of tryptophan or tyrosine . The substrate
specificities of the LIV-I and LS systems revealed by transport
studies contradicted those found previously in binding studies; the
reason for this contradiction remains to be elucidated .
This work was partly supported by a Grant-in-Aid for Scientific
Research (B), no . 14360056, from the Ministry of Education, Culture,
Sports, Science, and Technology, Japan, by a Grant-in-Aid for Fine
Enzymatic Synthesis of Useful Compounds from Research for the Future
(RFTF) of the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science, and by a
Grant-in-Aid for Aromatic Amino Acid Metabolism in Bacteria from the
Noda Institute for Scientific Research . T . Koyanagi is supported by
the 21st Century COE Program of the Ministry of Education, Culture,
Sports, Science and Technology .
* Corresponding author . Mailing address: Division of Integrated
Life Science, Graduate School of Biostudies, Kyoto University, Kitashirakawa,
Sakyo-ku, Kyoto 606-8502, Japan . Phone: 81-75-753-6276 . Fax: 81-75-753-6275 .
E-mail: hidekuma@kais.kyoto-u.ac.jp.
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