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Journal of Bacteriology, January 2004, p . 351-355, Vol . 186,
No . 2
Dihydropteridine Reductase as an Alternative to Dihydrofolate Reductase for
Synthesis of Tetrahydrofolate in Thermus thermophilus
Valérie Wilquet,1,
Mark Van de Casteele,2,
Daniel Gigot,1 Christianne Legrain,3 and Nicolas
Glansdorff2,3*
Microbiology, Université Libre de Bruxelles,1 Microbiology, Vrije
Universiteit Brussel,2 J . M . Wiame Institute for Microbiological
Research, B-1070 Brussels, Belgium3
Received 9 June 2003/ Accepted 10 October 2003
A strategy devised to isolate a gene coding for a dihydrofolate
reductase from Thermus thermophilus DNA delivered only clones
harboring instead a gene (the T . thermophilus dehydrogenase
[DHTt] gene) coding for a dihydropteridine reductase which
displays considerable dihydrofolate reductase activity (about 20% of
the activity detected with 6,7-dimethyl-7,8-dihydropterine in
the quinonoid form as a substrate) . DHTt appears to account
for the synthesis of tetrahydrofolate in this bacterium, since
a classical dihydrofolate reductase gene could not be found in the
recently determined genome nucleotide sequence (A . Henne, personal
communication) . The derived amino acid sequence displays most of the
highly conserved cofactor and active-site residues present in enzymes
of the short-chain dehydrogenase/reductase family . The enzyme has no
pteridine-independent oxidoreductase activity, in contrast to
Escherichia coli dihydropteridine reductase, and thus appears
more similar to mammalian dihydropteridine reductases, which do not
contain a flavin prosthetic group . We suggest that bifunctional
dihydropteridine reductases may be responsible for the synthesis of
tetrahydrofolate in other bacteria, as well as archaea, that have
been reported to lack a classical dihydrofolate reductase but for
which possible substitutes have not yet been identified .
Dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR; EC 15.1.3) catalyzes the synthesis of
tetrahydrofolate (FH4), a key metabolite involved in the
synthesis of several amino acids, purines, and deoxythymidylate . The
substrate of DHFR, dihydrofolate (FH2), is a product of
thymidylate synthase (TS; thyA gene), which uses N5,N10-methylene-FH4
as a substrate . Escherichia coli DHFR-null mutants (with a mutation
in dyrA or folA) appear to be nonviable, even on rich
medium, unless they are also TS deficient (1,
6); this finding suggests that TS activity is toxic
in a dyrA background because it exhausts residual FH4
production due to another enzyme proceeding at a slower pace than
DHFR (4) . This substitute enzyme could be a
dihydropteridine reductase (DHPR; EC 1.6.99.7), since E . coli
contains a DHPR able to catalyze the same reaction as DHFR at a
comparatively low rate (16, 17) . The
metabolic role of prokaryotic DHPR is not known; it is possible that
nonenzymatic oxidation of FH4 produces a quinonoid FH2
species which is regenerated to FH4 by DHPR but not by
DHFR (14) . In the few proteobacteria (but not
E . coli) in which aromatic amino acid hydroxylases have been
reported to occur, a DHPR regenerates the reduced cofactor
tetrahydropterin, which is oxidized during the hydroxylase reaction (21) .
The metabolic role of these hydroxylases, however, is not clear .
Trimethoprim (TMP) is a powerful inhibitor of prokaryotic DHFRs,
but when such a DHFR is overexpressed from a plasmid, it may confer
TMP resistance on an E . coli host (5, 13,
19, 20) . We have used this
approach in order to isolate a dyrA gene from Thermus
thermophilus . As described below, the gene selected in this way
proved, however, to code for a dehydrogenase (T . thermophilus
dehydrogenase [DHTt]) of the short-chain
dehydrogenase/reductase (SDR) family (12) with
both DHPR and DHFR activities . No T . thermophilus dyrA
homologue could be isolated by this approach; also, there appears to
be no DHFR gene in the Thermus genome (A . Henne, personal
communication) .
Culture conditions. E . coli strains were grown at 37°C
in rich liquid medium 853 (19) or in solid medium
with added 1.5% agar (Difco) . Kanamycin (KAN) at 50 µg ml-1
or KAN plus 10 mM TMP was added to the medium for bacteria harboring
recombinant plasmids . T . thermophilus HB27 was grown at 72°C
in a medium containing (per liter) 9 g of tryptic soy broth (Difco),
4 g of yeast extract (Difco), and 3 g of NaCl; the pH of this medium
was adjusted to 7.5 (11) .
Cloning the DHTt gene. Restriction enzymes
and T4 ligase were purchased from Boehringer Mannheim . T .
thermophilus HB27 genomic DNA partially digested with the enzyme
Sau3A was used to construct a genomic
ZAP
DNA library in the pBK-CMV vector (Stratagene) according to the
manufacturer's instructions . This library was used for the transformation
of E . coli strain XL1-Blue MRF (Stratagene) as described in
Results .
Enzyme assays. DHFR activity was assayed as described in
reference 19 except that the buffer was 50 mM
potassium phosphate (pH 6.5) and the temperature was as indicated in
the text . The DHPR assay was run with 50 mM potassium phosphate
buffer at pH 7.0 and at 35°C with a 0.1 mM concentration of the
cofactor (NADPH or NADH), 0.1 mM pteridine, and
6,7-dimethyl-7,8-dihydropterine in the quinonoid form (qPtH2),
which was obtained from the 5,6,7,8-tetrahydro form and an equimolar
amount of 2,6-dichloroindophenol . One unit of reductase activity was
defined as the amount of activity required to convert 1 nmol of NADPH
per min .
SDS-PAGE. Sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel
electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) was performed by using a Pharmacia
PhastSystem with a discontinuous buffer system and a continuous 8 to
25% gradient gel . Gels were stained with Coomassie brilliant blue .
Protein standards (0.5 µg each on the gel; Pharmacia) used for the
estimation of subunit molecular masses were phosphorylase b
(94 kDa), albumin (67 kDa), ovalbumin (43 kDa), carbonic anhydrase
(30 kDa), trypsin inhibitor (20.1 kDa), and
-lactalbumin
(14.4 kDa) .
Native gel electrophoresis for enzyme activity staining. The
Bio-Rad Prep-Cell system was used at a basic pH . The running buffer
was Tris-HCl at pH 10.0 . The gel (about 5 ml) was composed of 1
volume of solution A (running buffer supplemented with 0.46 ml of
N,N,N',N'-tetramethylethylenediamine/100 ml), 2 volumes
of solution B (10% acrylamide, 2.5% N,N-methylene
bisacrylamide), and 4 volumes of solution C (0.14% ammonium
persulfate) . The loading buffer contained 25 mM Tris, 100 mM glycine,
0.1% bromophenol blue, and 10% saccharose . About 5 µg of protein was
loaded on the gel and run for 1 h at 150 V .
Isolation of the DHTt gene and analysis of the
nucleotide sequence. The
ZAP
T . thermophilus genomic library was plated for titration on
rich medium containing KAN and for selection on plates containing KAN
and TMP . For ca . 4,000 colonies screened (with a mean insert size of
2.8 kb and thus a fragment sampling covering six times the T .
thermophilus genome), there were 20 colonies on the KAN-TMP
plates (with insert sizes ranging from 1.5 to 4.0 kb) . Crude extracts
from overnight cultures of these recombinant strains were cleared by
centrifugation, treated for 20 min at 70°C to inactivate resident
E . coli DHFR activity, and assayed for DHFR activity at 50°C as
described previously (19) . All of these extracts
displayed similar thermoresistant DHFR activities (on average, 2.5
U/mg of protein), whereas neither the extract from the control E .
coli dyrA+ strain nor that from E . coli
transformed with a plasmid carrying an unrelated gene (pTAD1GDH [3])
displayed measurable activity .
The smallest DNA insert that could be recovered from the cognate
phagemids (pDAT1-20) by EcoRI/PstI digestion and that proved
to be able to confer resistance to TMP was 1.7 kb long . It contained
only one 702-bp open reading frame (ORF) encoding a putative
polypeptide of 234 amino acids, named DHTt . This ORF was found
by PCR amplification to be present in all recombinant pDATs .
The GC content was high (69%), as expected for a Thermus gene .
Surprisingly, the DHTt sequence showed no similarity to that
of any DHFR but instead with sequences from representatives of
the SDR family (Fig . 1) . The sequence contains residues that
are highly conserved throughout the SDR family, such as the NAD+/NADP+
cofactor-binding motif (GXXXGXG, positions 8 to 14), the NNAG motif
(NNVG in DHTt, positions 85 to 88), and the YXXXK
motif (residues 153 to 157), claimed to be crucial for substrate
binding and catalysis by SDR family proteins (Fig . 1) (7,
8) .
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FIG . 1 . Multiple alignment of amino acid sequences of selected
reductases belonging to the SDR family, in order of similarity: D .
radiodurans 3-oxoacyl-(acyl-carrier-protein) reductase (DrOAR), the
homologous protein from E . coli (EcOAR), T . thermophilus
DHPR (TtDH), DHPR 1 (nonquinonoid) from L . major (LmPTR1),
quinonoid DHPR from L . major (LmqDPR), and rat DHPR . Bold type
indicates identical residues in at least four of the six sequences .
Sites conserved in the SDR family are underlined.
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Overexpression and characterization of the DHTt gene
product. The DHTt-encoding gene was subcloned from
pDAT5 into pET24a, an IPTG (isopropyl-ß-D-thiogalactopyranoside)-inducible
expression vector, yielding plasmid pTTDH . The ORF was amplified
by PCR by using oligonucleotides designed to bring the ATG start
codon in frame with the vector NdeI cloning site . The highest
DHFR specific activity was obtained from cells grown at 37°C up
to a density of 4 x 108 cells/ml
and then induced by 1 mM IPTG and further incubated at 22°C for 4 h .
The specific activity after 15 min of incubation of the extract at
50°C was 14.9 U/mg of protein at 35°C in E . coli pTTDH,
compared to 2.9 U/mg of protein in pDAT5 . This activity proved
insensitive to 600 µM methotrexate and 10 µM TMP, concentrations
which are fully inhibitory for E . coli DHFR (5) .
Attempts at purifying the protein were hampered by low solubility,
probably due to the high content of hydrophobic residues (50%
L+V+I+M+F+A+P+W) . E . coli pTTDH extracts kept for a few hours
at 4°C formed a white precipitate that contained the activity and
could be partly solubilized at pH 10; further dilution of such
preparations under assay conditions fully solubilized them . SDS-PAGE
of the cold precipitate gave a major band (Fig . 2)
with a molecular mass of about 23 ± 3 kDa, consistent with the
25.4-kDa value calculated from the sequence . Moreover, Edman
degradation showed this band to consist of only one protein with an
N-terminal amino acid sequence exactly like that deduced from the
gene: MRTALVTGSAK . Fast protein liquid chromatography (data not
shown) gave a broad estimate of 50 to 90 kDa for the native protein;
the high pI (>8.9) of this protein prevents quantitative
electrophoresis by standard methods . The native enzyme is probably a
dimer (like rat DHPR and several other members of the SDR family [15]),
but the possibility of the occurrence of tetramers cannot be
excluded .
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FIG . 2 . Partial purification of DHTt after cold
precipitation, as shown by SDS-PAGE . Lane 1, molecular weight (MW)
markers (in thousands, indicated on the left); lane 2, E . coli
(pTTDH) clarified crude extract; lane 3, cold precipitate resuspended in
25 mM Tris-HCl (pH 10).
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Enzymatic specificity of the DHTt protein.
The enzyme (cold precipitate) exhibited no detectable activity with
either 6-biopterin (the best substrate for Leishmania PTR1 [10])
or DL-6-methyl-7,8-dihydropterine (a substrate for E .
coli DHPR [16]) under all conditions tested (pHs
5.5 to 8.5 with different buffers in the presence of salts) (Table
1) . Activity could be detected only with qPtH2 .
The enzyme was active with NADPH . With NADH, the background oxidation
was too elevated for the detection of activity (but see the
discussion of the next experiment) . In contrast to E . coli
DHPR, which is a flavoprotein (16) and exhibits
pteridine-independent oxidoreductase activity with potassium
ferricyanide, the Thermus enzyme did not exhibit such activity
(Table 1); it thus appears similar to mammalian
DHPRs, which do not contain a flavin prosthetic group . When assayed
under the same conditions, the activities of FH2 (DHFR)
and qPtH2 (DHPR) in the presence of NADPH are present at an
1:5
ratio (Table 1) .
| TABLE 1 . Specific activity of DHPR from T . thermophilus with
various substratesa
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Activity staining on native gel electrophoresis gels. The
activity staining method used 3-(4,5-dimethylthiazolyl-2)-2,5-diphenyl
tetrazolium bromide (MTT), which is reduced by the product of
the enzymatic reaction to a formazan with a maximum
of 560 nm . To allow the migration of the solubilized protein, basic
gels were prepared (see Materials and Methods) . Thermotoga maritima
DHFR was used as a control, since it also has a high pI, has a
rather similar Mr, and possesses DHFR activity but no DHPR
activity . One gel was loaded with DHTt in lane 1 and
with T . maritima DHFR in lanes 2 to 8; the second gel was
loaded inversely . After the electrophoresis of both gels in parallel,
gel pieces corresponding to the different lanes were cut (Fig.
3) . For each gel, pieces 1 and 2 were stained with
Coomassie blue and pieces 3 to 8 were incubated at 37°C in a solution
containing 50 mM phosphate buffer (pH 7.0), 0.5 mM NADH or NADPH, and
5 mg of MTT/ml . In addition, incubation solutions for lanes 5
and 6 contained 0.5 mM FH2, but lanes 7 and 8 contained 0.5
mM qPtH2 (formed from 0.5 mM PtH4 and 0.5 mM
2,6-dichloroindophenol) . After 30 min of incubation, an intensely
stained band appeared for T . maritima DHFR (Fig .
3A) incubated with FH2 and NADPH (lane 6) . Two hours
later, a faint T . maritima DHFR band appeared on the gel
pieces incubated with FH2 and NADH (lane 5) . At that time,
bands were also detectable on the gel pieces containing DHTt
and incubated either with FH2 and NADH or NADPH (Fig .
3B, lanes 5 and 6) or with qPtH2 and NADH or NADPH
(Fig . 3B, lanes 7 and 8) . DHTt
exhibited DHFR and DHPR activities with both NADH and NADPH, but no
preference for one of the cofactors was detectable under these
conditions .
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FIG . 3 . Activity staining of DHTt (A) and T .
maritima DHFR (B) on electrophoresis gels . After electrophoresis of
the proteins (see the text), gel pieces were either stained with
Coomassie blue (lanes 1 and 2) or incubated as described in the text and
as indicated above the lanes in the presence of substrates and/or
cofactors and 5 mg of MMT/ml.
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The main points of this study can be summarized as follows . The T .
thermophilus genome harbors a gene coding for a reductase (DHTt)
which displays both DHPR and DHFR activities with NADH and NADPH as
cofactors and possesses specific features of members of the SDR
protein family . The DHFR activity of this reductase is considerable,
i.e., about 20% of the DHPR activity detected with qPtH2
as the substrate . DHTt has no pteridine-independent
oxidoreductase activity and is insensitive to concentrations of
methotrexate and TMP that fully inhibit E . coli DHFR . Moreover,
none of the clones that we could isolate from an apparently
representative Thermus library expressed a true DHFR, and most
significantly, no corresponding dyrA gene appears to exist in
the T . thermophilus genome; indeed, BLAST probing of the complete
genome (A . Henne, personal communication) did not reveal any
sequence homologous to the corresponding genes from T . maritima
and Deinococcus radiodurans (which is the closest known relative
of Thermus [18]) . It seems that the essential
role of DHFR in cellular metabolism is challenged by our findings,
since an unrelated dehydrogenase of the SDR family may fulfill the
function classically assumed by a DHFR . It has already been reported
that a number of bacteria and some archaea appear to lack a
DHFR gene (9), but the substitute function had not yet been
identified in any of these organisms . A bifunctional DHPR/DHFR
such as DHTt is clearly a good candidate for the agent
responsible for this substitute function . Moreover, just as
thymidylate may be synthesized by a classical ThyA protein or by a
quite unrelated ThyX flavoprotein (9), it appears
that the concomitant reduction of FH2 or various
pteridines may be carried out by an enzyme without a flavin
prosthetic group (like DHTt or the nonquinonoid
pteridine reductase PTR1 of Leishmania major [2])
or by an unrelated flavoprotein, as in E . coli . The evolutionary
origin of these functional redundancies is an intriguing question;
temperature by itself is not likely to be the discriminating
evolutionary factor, since T . maritima DHFR and DHTt
are both thermophilic enzymes .
The role of DHTt as dihydropteridine reductase in
Thermus is not known . In particular, whether Thermus
possesses aromatic amino acid hydroxylases using a tetrahydropterin
as a cofactor (see the introduction and reference 21)
remains to be investigated .
This work was supported by concerted actions of the Belgian State and
the Free University of Brussels .
We thank J . Van Beeumen (University of Ghent) for DHPR N-terminal
sequence determination and A . Henne for a personal communication . We
also thank Jean-Pierre ten Have for the layout of the figures .
* Corresponding author . Mailing address: Microbiology, Vrije
Universiteit Brussel, B-1070 Brussels, Belgium . Phone: 32 2 526 72 75 . Fax: 32 2
526 72 73 . E-mail: nglansdo@vub.ac.be.
Present address: Department of Human Genetics, KULeuven/VIB, B-3000
Leuven, Belgium .
Present address: Diabetes Research Center, Vrije Universiteit
Brussel, B-1090 Brussels, Belgium .
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