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Journal of Bacteriology, January 2004, p . 473-480, Vol . 186,
No . 2
The
Sorbitol Phosphotransferase System Is Responsible for Transport of 2-C-Methyl-D-Erythritol
into Salmonella enterica Serovar Typhimurium
Charles A . Testa,
Rita M . Cornish, and C . Dale Poulter*
Department of Chemistry, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah 84112
Received 23 June 2003/ Accepted 8 October 2003
2-C-methyl-D-erythritol 4-phosphate is the first
committed intermediate in the biosynthesis of the isoprenoid
precursors isopentenyl diphosphate and dimethylallyl diphosphate .
Supplementation of the growth medium with 2-C-methyl-D-erythritol
has been shown to complement disruptions in the Escherichia coli
gene for 1-deoxy-D-xylulose 5-phosphate
synthase, the enzyme that synthesizes the immediate precursor of 2-C-methyl-D-erythritol
4-phosphate . In order to be utilized in isoprenoid biosynthesis, 2-C-methyl-D-erythritol
must be phosphorylated . We describe the construction of Salmonella
enterica serovar Typhimurium strain RMC26, in which the essential
gene encoding 1-deoxy-D-xylulose 5-phosphate
synthase has been disrupted by insertion of a synthetic mevalonate
operon consisting of the yeast ERG8, ERG12, and
ERG19 genes, responsible for converting mevalonate to isopentenyl
diphosphate under the control of an arabinose-inducible promoter .
Random mutagenesis of RMC26 produced defects in the sorbitol
phosphotransferase system that prevented the transport of 2-C-methyl-D-erythritol
into the cell . RMC26 and mutant strains of RMC26 unable to grow on
2-C-methyl-D-erythritol were incubated in
buffer containing mevalonate and deuterium-labeled 2-C-methyl-D-erythritol .
Ubiquinone-8 was isolated from these cells and analyzed for deuterium
content . Efficient incorporation of deuterium was observed for RMC26 .
However, there was no evidence of deuterium incorporation into the
isoprenoid side chain of ubiquinone Q8 in the RMC26 mutants .
With more than 33,000 different compounds known to date, isoprenoids
are among the most diverse groups of compounds found in nature (9) .
Isoprenoid molecules are important for a wide variety of cellular
functions, including electron transport (quinones), stabilization of
membranes (sterols), cell wall biosynthesis (dolichols), signaling
(prenylated proteins and hormones), photosynthesis (chlorophylls),
photoprotection (carotenoids), and protein synthesis (modified
tRNAs) . Despite a high degree of structural diversity, all
isoprenoids are derived from two simple five-carbon molecules,
isopentenyl diphosphate (IPP) and dimethylallyl diphosphate (DMAPP) .
Although all higher isoprenoid molecules are derived from IPP and
DMAPP, these fundamental building blocks are produced by two
different biosynthetic pathways .
In Archaea, Eukarya, and some gram-positive bacteria, IPP and
DMAPP are synthesized from acetyl coenzyme A by the mevalonate
(MVA) pathway (Fig . 1) . The first two steps of the MVA pathway
condense three molecules of acetyl coenzyme A to form
3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl-coenzyme A (HMG-CoA) (24,
33) . HMG-CoA is then reduced to MVA, which is
converted to MVA diphosphate in two steps (5, 8) .
IPP obtained by an ATP-dependent decarboxylation of MVA diphosphate
is then isomerized to DMAPP (1, 15) .
The 2-C-methyl-D-erythritol 4-phosphate
(MEP) pathway is orthogonal to the MVA pathway (Fig . 1) and
is found in most bacteria and plant chloroplasts . The first
step in the MEP pathway is the condensation of D-glyceraldehyde
3-phosphate and pyruvate to give 1-deoxy-D-xylulose
5-phosphate (DXP) (30) . MEP synthase then
catalyzes an NADPH-dependent rearrangement and reduction of DXP to
give MEP (27) . DXP is also a precursor for
biosynthesis of vitamins B1 and B6 . Thus, MEP is the first
committed precursor for biosynthesis of IPP and DMAPP . MEP is
converted to 2-C-methyl-D-erythritol
2,4-cyclodiphosphate (cMEPP) by the consecutive actions of
4-diphosphocytidyl-2-C-methyl-D-erythritol
synthase, 4-diphosphocytidyl-2-C-methyl-D-erythritol
2-phosphate synthase, and cMEPP synthase (22,
28, 29, 31,
39) . A reductive ring-opening of cMEPP produces
1-hydroxy-2-methyl-2-buten-4-yl diphosphate (4,
11, 21) . In the final step, the protein
encoded by ispH (formerly lytB) converts
1-hydroxy-2-methyl-2-buten-4-yl diphosphate to a mixture of IPP and
DMAPP (2, 3, 13,
32, 38) . The segregation of the
MVA and MEP pathways makes the latter an attractive target for
development of antibiotics and herbicides .
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FIG . 1 . MVA (left) and MEP (right) pathways.
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Disruptions of the genes encoding each of the proteins in the MEP
pathway are lethal (3, 4, 10,
11, 13, 20,
32) . Disruptions in dxs can be complemented
by supplementation of the growth medium with deoxyxylulose (DX) or 2-C-methyl-D-erythritol
(ME), while disruptions in dxr can be complemented with ME (6,
16, 19, 37,
40, 43) . In order to be utilized in the
MEP pathway, exogenous DX and ME must be transported into the cell
and phosphorylated . DX is converted to DXP by D-xylulokinase,
the enzyme that normally phosphorylates D-xylulose
(46), although at this point the transport
mechanism for uptake of DX is not known . Likewise, the mechanism for
uptake of ME had not been established .
Work from our laboratory (20) and by Boronat and
colleagues (10) demonstrated the ability of a
plasmid-encoded MVA operon to restore cell viability to strains of
Escherichia coli that had been disrupted in dxs . The
bacterium was blocked in de novo biosynthesis of IPP and DMAPP by the
MEP pathway but was able to synthesize both molecules from MVA . To
identify genes involved in the MEP pathway, the chromosomal copy of
dxs in Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium was
disrupted with our synthetic MVA operon (20) . For
the chromosomal disruption, the araBAD promoter from pBAD
was inserted upstream of the MVA pathway genes with a kanamycin
resistance (Kanr) cassette appended downstream to allow
easy detection of insertion mutants . To facilitate a correct
insertion, the MVA operon was flanked by regions of homology to
dxs . Boronat and colleagues (10) have described
a related construct in which the synthetic MVA operon was inserted
into the tryptophan biosynthetic operon in E . coli and chromosomal
dxs was disrupted with a chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT)
cassette . We now report work that implicates the sorbitol
phosphotransferase system (PTS) in the transport and phosphorylation
of ME (for a review of PTS, see reference 45) .
Materials. Restriction endonucleases, Klenow fragment, and T7
DNA polymerase were purchased from New England Biolabs . Ampicillin,
kanamycin (KAN), and chloramphenicol (CAM) were purchased from Sigma .
Shrimp alkaline phosphatase was purchased from U.S . Biochemical
Corp . Ampligase was purchased from Epicentre Technologies Corporation .
KlenTaq-LA DNA polymerase mix was purchased from Clontech . Taq/TaqStart
DNA polymerase, E . coli DH5
competent cells, and agarose were purchased from GIBCO .
Oligonucleotides used in this study are listed in Table
1 and were custom synthesized by the Protein/DNA Core Facility of
the Utah Regional Cancer Center .
| TABLE 1 . Oligonucleotide sequences used in this study
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Growth media and supplements. Luria-Bertani (LB) was used with
or without supplementation for all growth conditions (41) .
KAN was used at a concentration of 40 µg/ml, CAM was used at a
concentration of 20 µg/ml, and ampicillin was used at a concentration
of 100 µg/ml . ME and [1,1-2H2]2-C-methyl-D-erythritol
([1,1-2H2]ME) were synthesized as described by
Duvold et al . (16) and used at a concentration of
50 µg/ml . MVA was prepared by hydrolysis of 1 volume of 1 M MVA
lactone with 1.02 volumes of 1 M KOH followed by incubation of the
mixture at 37°C for 30 min . DX was prepared as previously described (7)
and used at a concentration of 2 mM . L-arabinose
(Ara) was used at a concentration of 0.02% .
General methods. Minipreparations of plasmid DNA for
restriction analysis were made using QIAprep Spin Miniprep kits
(Qiagen) . Large-scale plasmid preparations were made using Qiagen
Plasmid Midi Prep kits . PCR products were purified by QIAquick PCR
purification kits (Qiagen) or on agarose gels (GIBCO) with either
soaking of the band overnight in TE or purification using QIAquick
gel extraction kits (Qiagen) . Genomic DNA was isolated using Easy
DNA kits (Invitrogen) . Restriction digests, ligations, transformations,
and electroporations were performed as described by Sambrook et
al . (41) . PCRs were carried out using a Perkin-Elmer GeneAmp
PCR system 2400 DNA thermal cycler and KlenTaq LA polymerase
mix (Clontech), unless otherwise noted . Chain reaction cloning (CRC)
was performed as described by Pachuk et al . (34) . E . coli
DH5
(GIBCO) was used as a host for plasmid constructs . S . enterica
serovar Typhimurium strain TR6579 was used to shuttle plasmids
constructed in E . coli to S . enterica serovar Typhimurium .
Transductions were mediated by the high-frequency P22 mutant HT105/1
int-201 as previously described (42) . Phage
P22 lysates were prepared as previously described (14) .
Random mutagenesis was performed as described by Hughes and Roth (23)
using TE3461 (17) for Mud-Cam insertions by
selecting on LB-CAM-MVA-Ara or LB-CAM.
-Red-mediated
recombination was performed as described by Price-Carter et al .
(36) . DNA was sequenced at the Health Sciences Center
Sequencing Facility, Eccles Institute of Human Genetics, University
of Utah . Sequence searches were performed at the National Center
for Biotechnology Information and the WU GSC BLAST server, Genome
Sequencing Center, Washington University School of Medicine .
Plasmid and strain construction. Plasmids and bacterial
strains used in this study are listed in Table 2 .
All parental S . enterica serovar Typhimurium strains and
phages used were gifts of J . Roth (University of California—Davis) .
| TABLE 2 . Bacterial strains and plasmids used in this study
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Construction of pCAT53-3. The SalI fragment from pUC4K
containing the gene conferring Kanr was ligated into the
XhoI site of pFCO1 (20) to form pFCO1/kan .
Transformants bearing the ligated products were selected on LB-KAN .
The PBAD promoter and araC gene were excised from pBAD/gIII
(Invitrogen) by digestion with NsiI, treatment with Klenow to
blunt end, and digestion with SacI, followed by ligation of
the resulting fragment into pFCO1/kan, which had also been digested
with SapI, treated with Klenow, and digested with SacI to
form pCAT53-3 .
Construction of pRMC14. S . enterica serovar
Typhimurium dxs was PCR amplified from genomic template,
ligated directly into pGEM-T (Promega), digested with Bsu36I
and EcoRV and subsequently treated with Klenow to give a 4-kb
fragment . The 7-kb Klenow-treated BsrBI/PspOMI fragment
from pCAT53-3 was ligated into the 4-kb fragment from pRMC13 to
create pRMC14 using CRC . The bridge oligonucleotides crcDXSARA and
crcKANDXS were used with thermal cycler settings of denaturation at
94°C for 30 s, followed by an annealing cycle at 52°C for 30 s and
ligation at 66°C for 1 min for 30 cycles .
Construction of RMC26. An
8-kb
BsrBI/SpeI fragment from pRMC14 was electroporated into
TT22236 containing the
-Red
plasmid pTP223 (35) . Linear recombinants were
selected by plating to LB-KAN-ME . The correct insertion was initially
verified phenotypically by growth on LB-KAN-ME and LB-KAN-MVA-Ara and
by lack of growth on LB-KAN . Subsequent verification was accomplished
by PCR using primers nested in ispA (sISPA1) and araC
(asARAC1) for one end of the insertion and primers nested in yajO
(asYAJO1) and the Kan cassette (sKAN1) for the other end of the
insert followed by sequencing of the PCR products . The genes ispA
and yajO flank dxs . The strain was designated RMC25 .
The insertion was backcrossed into LT2 to result in RMC26, with the
disruption designated dxs::MVAoperon .
Random mutagenesis of RMC26. Mutagenesis experiments were
conducted using TE3461 as a donor strain in a standard P22
transduction with RMC26 as the recipient, resulting in random Mud-Cam
insertions (17, 23) . Mutants were
selected by plating transduction crosses directly to LB-CAM-MVA-Ara .
After incubation for 2 days at 37°C, the plates were replica
printed to LB-CAM-ME and LB-CAM-MVA-Ara . Colonies exhibiting growth
on MVA-Ara but not on ME were then streaked to green-CAM-MVA-Ara
plates . Nonlysogenic colonies (white colonies on green plates) were
cross streaked against P22 (H5) to ensure phage sensitivity . When
phage-sensitive mutants were verified, single colonies were streaked
to LB-CAM-MVA-Ara plates . When the cells grew, the plates were
replica plated as described previously . Cells exhibiting the proper
phenotype were used to inoculate liquid cultures, and the insertion
point of the Cam cassette was determined by single-primer
(semirandom) PCR of the genomic DNA . Semirandom PCR (23)
was performed using Taq/TaqStart and the primers smud33,
smud54, smud59, and smud86 . Thermal cycler settings were as follows:
an initial denaturation at 94°C for 30 s, followed by 20 cycles of
high-stringency PCR in which the samples were heated to 94°C (with no
hold time) and cooled to 53°C (no hold time), followed by a 1-min
elongation step at 72°C . Thirty cycles of low-stringency PCR ensued,
where the samples were heated to 94°C (no hold time) and cooled to
40°C (no hold time), followed by a 1-min extension at 72°C . Thirty
additional cycles of high-stringency PCR followed as described
above .
Insertions identified by semirandom PCR were verified using
standard two-primer PCR . In the mutants, all MEP pathway genes were
probed for insertions using PCR .
Construction of directed knockouts of srlE, srlA,
srlB, ispD, ispE, ispF, and ispG in RMC26.
Disruptions of srlE, srlA, srlB, and MEP pathway genes from
ispD through ispG were constructed by insertion of a CAT
cassette using
-Red-mediated
linear recombination as described for disrupting dxs with the
MVAoperon . In all cases, the insertion of the CAT cassette
also resulted in a partial gene deletion . All primers were designed
to PCR amplify the CAT cassette of pACYC184 while incorporating
approximately 40 bp of homology to the target at either end of the
amplificate . The amplificate was then gel purified and used to
directly transform the recipient cells to CAM resistance . The srlE
and MEP pathway disruptions were constructed in RMC28 using the
primers sgutEFRT2 and asgutEFRT2, SygbPFRT2 and ASygbPFRT2,
sygbBcamPCR and asygbBcamPCR, sychBcamPCR and asychBcamPCR, and
sgcpEcam2 and asgcpEcam2 to yield CR3 (srlE::Cam), CR2 (ispD::Cam),
CT10 (ispE::Cam), CT11 (ispF::Cam), and CR20 (ispG::Cam),
respectively . When a correct insertion was verified by phenotype
(growth on MVA-Ara, no growth on ME), PCR analysis, and sequencing,
most disruptions were backcrossed into RMC26 . The primers SgutEseq
and ASgutEseq (srlE::Cam), sygbPseq and asygbPseq (ispD::Cam),
sychBCamseq2 and asychBCamseq2 (ispE::Cam), sygbBCamseq2 and
asygbBCamseq2 (ispF::Cam), and sgcpEseq and asgcpEseq (ispG::Cam)
with homology to regions flanking the disruptions were used for
sequencing . The CAT insertions in srlA and srlB were
initially constructed in TT22236 . After verification of the correct
recombination event by sequencing, the srlA and srlB
insertions were crossed into RMC26 by standard P22 transduction,
resulting in strains RMC78 and RMC79, respectively . The primers used
to construct the srlA insertion were SsrlACam and ASsrlBCam .
Primers SsrlBCam and ASsrlBCam were used for the srlB
insertion . The srlA insertion was verified using primers
SsrlAX and ASsrlAX . The analogous primers SsrlBX and ASsrlBX were
used to sequence the srlB insertion . Strains RMC26, CR5,
RMC78, and RMC79 were plated to LB-KAN-MVA-Ara and LB-KAN-ME to
verify phenotype .
Partial purification of ubiquinone Q8. Ubiquinone-8 (Q8) was
purified as described by Charon et al . (12) with
minor modifications . Mass spectrometry was performed using positive
ion atmospheric pressure chemical ionization mass spectrometry (APCI)
and positive ion liquid secondary ion mass spectrometry (LSIMS) . APCI
was performed by direct injection of the sample dissolved in 1:4:1:1
chloroform-methanol-n-butanol-water . A mobile phase of 1:1
water-acetonitrile was used at a flow rate of 1 ml/min . LSIMS was
performed using m-nitrobenzyl alcohol as the matrix and argon .
Disruption of chromosomal dxs in S . enterica serovar
Typhimurium. A dxs mutant of S . enterica serovar
Typhimurium was constructed by disruption of the gene with a
synthetic operon containing the three genes from Saccharomyces
cerevisiae responsible for converting MVA to IPP (20)
under the control of the PBAD promoter (10)
(Fig . 2) . pCAT53-3 was constructed from plasmid pFCO1 by
adding a Kanr cassette to the 3' end of yeast ERG8
(phosphomevalonate kinase), ERG12 (MVA kinase), and ERG19
(MVA diphosphate decarboxylase) and adding the araC gene and PBAD
promoter to the 5' end . The modified operon (MVAoperon)
was excised from pCAT53-3 and used to disrupt plasmid-encoded dxs
using CRC to form pRMC14 . The traditional blunt-end ligation of the
MVA operon into dxs was attempted but was not successful . The
ligation most likely failed due to the size of the MVAoperon
( 7
kb) . A stable integration into the S . enterica serovar
Typhimurium chromosome was generated by
-Red-mediated
homologous recombination (23) . Selection was
performed using KAN resistance as well as ME auxotrophy . Homologous
recombination was facilitated using pTP223, which carries the phage
genes encoding a 5'-3' exonuclease (exo) to facilitate
interstrand invasion of DNA (bet) and a host cell RecBCD-inactivating
protein (gam) . This construct synthesizes IPP from MVA, when
supplemented with Ara, or from ME .
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FIG . 2 . Diagram of the MVA operon inserted into dxs . araC and PBAD
are upstream of the yeast ERG genes, and the Kanr
cassette is located downstream.
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Random mutagenesis of RMC26. Mutagenesis was performed by
phage-mediated random "hopping" of a Mud-Cam element, which contains
a CAT cassette, into the RMC26 genome . Mutants that exhibited the
desired phenotype of growth on MVA and no growth on ME were isolated,
and the disrupted gene was identified by semirandom PCR using primers
nested in the CAT cassette . A total of nine mutants exhibiting this
phenotype were isolated, out of approximately 200,000 screened .
Disruption of srlE, srlA, srlB, and MEP pathway
genes (ispD and ispG) in RMC26 and LT2. BLAST searches on
the sequences obtained from the semirandom PCR products of the nine
mutants returned four sequences from srlE . The gene encoding
the SrlE protein in RMC28 was disrupted by homologous recombination
and subsequently transduced into RMC26 to give CR5 . In addition to
exhibiting the phenotype of growth on MVA-Ara and no growth on ME,
CR5 was viable when supplemented with DX . Restoration of growth by DX
supplementation indicated that the endogenous MEP pathway remained
intact and suggested that the mechanism for DX utilization is
different from that for ME . The srlE::CAT disruption was also
successfully crossed into wild-type LT2 . The resulting strain, CR24,
was viable on LB-CAM, indicating that srlE is not an essential
gene . The srlA and srlB genes were also disrupted in
RMC26, and the resulting strains, RMC78 and RMC79, exhibited the
phenotype of growth on MVA-Ara and no growth on ME . Figure
3 displays the growth patterns of RMC26, CR5,
RMC78, and RMC79 when they were plated to LB-KAN-MVA-Ara and
LB-KAN-ME . Each of the strains was viable when the medium was
supplemented with MVA-Ara, but only RMC26 was viable with ME
supplementation, indicating that SrlA, SrlB, and SrlE are all
involved in ME utilization . All of the directed knockouts in RMC26 of
MEP pathway genes resulted in the desired phenotype of growth on
MVA-Ara and no growth on ME (unpublished results) .
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FIG . 3 . Genetic evidence that SrlE, SrlA, and SrlB are involved in the
utilization of exogenous ME . Growth patterns of RMC26, CR5, RMC78, and
RMC79 on LB-KAN-ME (left) and LB-KAN-MVA-Ara (right) are shown.
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Q8 isolation and analysis. Feeding experiments with [1,1-2H2]ME
established that SrlE is required for uptake and utilization of ME by
the cell . Q8 was partially purified from the following cultures: LT2
grown in LB, RMC26 grown in LB-KAN-[1,1-2H2]ME,
RMC26 grown in LB-KAN-[1,1-2H2]ME-MVA-Ara, and
CR5 grown in LB-CAM-[1,1-2H2]ME-MVA-Ara . LT2 grown in LB
was used as a control for Q8 isolation . Q8 derived from unlabeled
isoprene units has a molecular weight (MW) of 726, whereas Q8
derived from [1,1-2H2]ME has a MW of 742 (Fig.
4) . Q8 was isolated from LT2 and analyzed by
positive-ion APCI and positive-ion LSIMS . In APCI, a peak at m/z
727 was observed corresponding to M + H+ for Q8 (MW =
726) . The LSIMS spectrum had a peak at m/z 729, reflecting
reduction of the quinone to the corresponding quinol during mass
spectral analysis, as was previously reported (12) .
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FIG . 4 . Q8 derived from MVA (left) and from [1,1-2H2]ME
(right) . MW.
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Purified samples of Q8 from the following incubations were analyzed
by LSIMS to demonstrate that ME utilization is compromised when
srlE is disabled: (i) LT2 was incubated in LB; (ii) RMC26 was
incubated with [1,1-2H2]ME; (iii) RMC26 was incubated with
[1,1-2H2]ME and MVA-Ara; and (iv) CR5 was
incubated with [1,1-2H2]ME and MVA-Ara . The
LSIMS spectra are shown in Fig . 5 . APCI spectra for
Q8 isolated from incubation ii had a peak at m/z 743, and the
LSIMS peak was at m/z 745, indicating complete incorporation
of deuterium into the isoprenoid side chain of Q8 . Incubation iii
also gave an APCI peak at 743 and an LSIMS peak at 745, indicating
that deuterium-labeled IPP was incorporated exclusively into the Q8
side chain . Q8 isolated from incubation iv gave an APCI peak at 727
and an LSIMS peak at 729, demonstrating no deuterium incorporation
into Q8 when srlE is disrupted .
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FIG . 5 . LSIMS spectra of Q8 isolated from feeding experiments: (A)
wild-type LT2 without supplementation; (B) RMC26 supplemented with [1,1-2H2]ME;
(C) RMC26 supplemented with [1,1-2H2]ME-MVA-Ara;
(D) CR5 supplemented with [1,1-2H2]ME-MVA-Ara.
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Characterization of the remaining insertion mutants. Four of
the isolated insertion mutations in RMC26 mapped to srlE . The
remaining five have been resistant to semirandom PCR and subsequent
sequencing . None of the remaining five mutants have insertions in the
known genes of the MEP pathway as probed by two-primer PCR . Initial
attempts to complement these mutations with an S . enterica
serovar Typhimurium genomic library have been unsuccessful .
Random mutagenesis of RMC26 generated four mutants with the desired
phenotype that had disruptions in srlE, which encodes a
protein in the sorbitol PTS . PCR using genomic DNA from the mutants
as a template confirmed an insertion in the srlE region .
Insertion of a CAT cassette into srlE produced a MVA-Ara-dependent
phenotype in RMC26, confirming its involvement in ME utilization .
During PTS-mediated phosphorylation, a phosphate group from PEP
is first transferred to the N1 position of a histidine residue of EI
and subsequently transferred to the N1 position of a histidine in
HPr, with neither of these steps being sugar specific . The phosphate
is then transferred from HPr to a histidine N3 of EIIA in the
sugar-specific transport complex, followed by transfer to a cysteine
residue of EIIB and finally to the sugar molecule (45) .
Because of the coordinated mechanism of the EIIA, EIIB, and EIIC
subunits in a PTS system, srlA and srlB were also implicated
along with srlE in ME utilization . Insertions of CAT cassettes
into srlA and srlB gave a MVA-Ara-dependent phenotype
similar to that seen for srlE, confirming the role of all
three genes in ME utilization .
Incorporation of ME and DX into isoprenoids was reported before
many of the steps in the MEP pathway had been discovered (6,
19, 37, 40,
43) . It is now clear that both compounds must be
phosphorylated before they are utilized as substrates in the MEP
pathway . The sorbitol PTS provides a mechanism for import and
phosphorylation of ME . In vitro experiments have demonstrated that
D-xylulokinase (encoded by xylB), the enzyme
responsible for phosphorylating D-xylulose,
also phosphorylates DX (46), although the
transport mechanism for uptake by cells has not been reported . The
viability of CR5 when DX is present in the growth medium indicates
that the mechanism for utilization of DX in the MEP pathway is
different from that for ME . One could presumably identify the gene
(or genes) responsible for transporting exogenous DX by performing a
similar set of experiments described in this work except using DX
instead of ME in the screening process .
Involvement of the srlE gene product in the utilization of exogenously
supplied ME for isoprenoid biosynthesis was verified biochemically
by analysis of Q8 . S . enterica serovar Typhimurium strain RMC26
readily incorporated the deuterium label from ME into the isoprenoid
side chain of Q8 . Interestingly, RMC26, which synthesizes isoprenoids
from either ME or MVA, had a substantial preference for utilization
of ME when incubated with a mixture of MVA-Ara and deuterium-labeled
ME . In contrast, incubation of CR5, where SrlE in the sorbitol
PTS system is disabled, with the same mixture of substrates produced
Q8 with no deuterium in the side chain . Thus, a functional copy of
the SrlE protein is required for ME utilization .
The sorbitol PTS complex also appears to be responsible for
phosphorylation of ME . In particular, the SrlE protein is the EIIB
subunit of the sorbitol PTS and is analogous to protein that
transfers phosphate to the sugar in the glucose PTS (18) .
Although D-sorbitol and ME are polyhydroxyl
compounds, the absolute stereochemistries of their chiral centers do
not precisely map onto one another, and it is not clear why the
operon responsible for the utilization of sorbitol is also
responsible for the transport and phosphorylation of ME .
In some cases overproduction of enzymes in the MEP pathway stimulates
the synthesis of isoprenoids (25, 26) .
For example, higher levels of lycopene are obtained when isopentenyl
diphosphate isomerase is overexpressed (25) . The
level of lycopene can also be increased when DXP synthase and MEP
synthase are overproduced (44) . It might be
possible to further stimulate the synthesis of lycopene from ME by
overproduction of the SrlA, SrlE, and SrlB proteins along with DXP
synthase and MEP synthase .
It is notable that no insertions were seen in known biosynthetic
genes in the MEP pathway even though directed knockouts of the genes
in RMC26 gave strains with the same phenotype as CR5 (unpublished
results) . We were able to specifically disrupt each of the MEP
pathway genes beyond MEP synthase in RMC26, with each exhibiting the
phenotype of growth on MVA-Ara and no growth on ME . This would imply
that we should be able to identify mutations that render each of the
genes inactive, yet all of the isolated mutants appear to be involved
in ME uptake and phosphorylation . In addition to the four srlE
mutants, the five unknown mutants do not have an absolute requirement
for the MVAoperon and readily lose it through
recombination when crossed with a tightly linked marker, such as
thiI::Tn10d-Tet . If the random insertions were in MEP pathway
genes, the MVA operon would be essential to provide cellular
isoprenoids, as demonstrated by the inability of CR4 to lose the MVA
operon in the same cross . If it is assumed that there are 1,000 genes
encoded by the S . enterica serovar Typhimurium chromosome,
with five being potential MEP pathway targets in our screen (ispD
through ispH) and five belonging to the proposed ME transport
system (srlA, srlB, srlE, and the genes encoding
HPr and EI), an estimated 100 mutants exhibiting the phenotype of
growth on MVA-Ara and no growth on ME would be expected for
completely random insertions . Our finding of only nine mutants out of
200,000 is low . We have no evidence to explain this discrepancy .
We thank John Roth for helpful discussions, Lisa Eubanks for
providing DXP synthase, and David Fox for MEP synthase .
R.M.C . was an NIH trainee supported by grant GM 08537 . This
project was supported by NIH grant GM 25521 .
* Corresponding author . Mailing address: Department of
Chemistry, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT 84112 . Phone: (801) 581-6685 .
Fax: (801) 581-4391 . E-mail:
poulter@chem.utah.edu .
Present address: Echelon Biosciences, Inc., Salt Lake City, UT 84108 .
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