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Journal of Bacteriology, January 2004, p . 411-418, Vol . 186,
No . 2
Molecular and Functional Characterization of a Unique Sucrose Hydrolase from
Xanthomonas axonopodis pv . glycines
Hong-Suk Kim,1 Hyoung-Joon Park,1 Sunggi Heu,2
and Jin Jung1*
School of Agricultural Biotechnology, Seoul National University, Seoul
151-742,1 Plant Pathology Division, National Institute of
Agricultural Science and Technology, RDA, Suwon 441-707, South Korea2
Received 11 August 2003/ Accepted 20 October 2003
A novel sucrose hydrolase (SUH) from Xanthomonas axonopodis
pv . glycines, a causative agent of bacterial pustule disease on
soybeans, was studied at the functional and molecular levels . SUH was
shown to act rather specifically on sucrose (Km = 2.5
mM) but not on sucrose-6-phosphate . Protein analysis of purified
SUH revealed that, in this monomeric enzyme with an estimated
molecular mass of 70,223 ± 12 Da, amino acid sequences determined for
several segments have corresponding nucleotide sequences in
XAC3490, a protein-coding gene found in the genome of X .
axonopodis pv . citri . Based on this information, the SUH gene,
consisting of an open reading frame of 1,935 bp, was cloned by
screening a genomic library of X . axonopodis pv . glycines 8ra .
Database searches and sequence comparison revealed that SUH has
significant homology to some family 13 enzymes, with all of the
crucial invariant residues involved in the catalytic mechanism
conserved, but it shows no similarity to known invertases belonging
to family 32 . suh expression in X . axonopodis pv .
glycines requires sucrose induction, and insertional mutagenesis
resulted in an absence of sucrose-inducible sucrose hydrolase
activity in crude protein extracts and a sucrose-negative phenotype .
Recombinant SUH, overproduced in Escherichia coli and purified,
was shown to have the same enzymatic characteristics in terms
of kinetic parameters .
Plant-pathogenic bacteria grow in the intercellular spaces of plant
tissues, relying on nutrients available there . In higher plants,
sucrose ( -D-glucopyranosyl
ß-D-fructofuranoside) is the major
transportable product of photosynthesis that flows from the source
organs to the sink organs . The process of the source-sink flow
involves phloem loading, for which sucrose has to exit from the
mesophyll cell, and from the apoplasm, it enters the phloem . Sucrose
is naturally the predominant form of carbohydrate found in the
intercellular spaces of photosynthetically active tissues . Pathogens
with their habitats in mature leaves, therefore, may utilize sucrose
as the main, if not the only, source for carbon and energy and
possess systems for a sucrose utilization pathway . Nevertheless,
information on such systems in plant-associated bacteria is rather
scanty . To our knowledge, Erwinia amylovora, the causative
agent for fire blight of rosaceous plants, is the only phytopathogen
that has been studied at the molecular level in relation to sucrose
utilization (4) .
Many sucrose-positive bacteria have a phosphoenolpyruvate-dependent,
sucrose-specific phosphotransferase system (PTS) that promotes
sucrose translocation across the cytoplasmic membrane with concomitant
phosphorylation (27, 28) . The
resulting intracellular sucrose-6-phosphate (S-6-P) is then
hydrolyzed by S-6-P hydrolase to yield D-glucose-6-phosphate
and D-fructose . In some bacteria, however, sucrose
itself can be transported into the cytoplasm without phosphorylation
via a pathway independent of PTS . For instance, the Escherichia
coli strain EC3132, which is able to grow on sucrose, bears
a chromosomally located regulon with structural genes for a sucrose
hydrolase, a fructokinase, and a transporter, regulated by a
sucrose-specific repressor (3, 13) . Similar
pathways involving facilitated diffusion or active sucrose-ion
symport and intracellular invertase have also been invoked for
several other bacteria (11, 14,
35, 38) . Certain bacteria secrete enzymes
acting on sucrose, such as hexosyltransferase, levansucrase, and
levanase, which split sucrose in the culture medium (22,
25, 40): these microbes utilize
sucrose as an energy source for growth, as well as a substrate for
oligosaccharide synthesis . Some bacteria show more than one sucrose
hydrolysis activity (18, 25) .
The genus Xanthomonas is arguably one of the most ubiquitous
groups of plant-associated bacteria . Members of this group have
been shown to infect at least 124 monocotyledonous and 268 dicotyledonous
plants (6) . To gain insight into sucrose utilization by
Xanthomonas pathogens, a novel sucrose hydrolase from
Xanthomonas axonopodis was isolated and characterized at the
functional and molecular levels in the present study . This protein,
designated SUH, appears to be essential for sucrose metabolism in
X . axonopodis pv . glycines, a causative agent of bacterial
pustule disease on soybean . As a sucrose-specific enzyme, SUH is
unique in that not only does it have no structural similarity to
invertases (EC 3.2.1.26), the typical sucrose hydrolases, but it also
shows no significant sequence homology to
-glucosidases
(EC 3.2.1.20) with known functions .
Bacterial strains and culture conditions. Two strains of X .
axonopodis pv . glycines, the rifampin-resistant wild-type strain
8ra, obtained from E . J . Braun of the University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign, and a mutant constructed from strain 8ra, were
cultured at 28°C in either Luria-Bertani (LB) broth or minimal
medium . The basal composition of minimal medium was 20 mM NaCl, 10 mM
(NH4)2SO4, 5 mM MgSO4, 1 mM CaCl2,
0.32 mM K2HPO4, 0.16 mM KH2PO4,
0.01 mM FeSO4, 1% tryptone (Difco), and 1 to 10 mM
sucrose . When necessary, sucrose was replaced by glucose or fructose,
with tryptone deleted from the medium . E . coli DH5
(31) and E . coli BL21(DE3)/pLysS (Novagen) were
used as the hosts for plasmids and for suh gene expression,
respectively, and were grown at 37°C in LB broth . Antibiotics
were added to give the following concentrations: rifampin, 100 µg/ml;
tetracycline, 25 µg/ml; kanamycin, 50 µg/ml; ampicillin, 50 µg/ml .
Enzyme purification. Cells of strain 8ra were cultured in
minimal medium with 10 mM sucrose and 1% tryptone and harvested by
centrifugation . The biomass ( 26
g [wet weight]) was suspended in 200 ml of a suspension buffer (pH
7.5) containing 50 mM K-phosphate, 1 mM dithiothreitol (DTT), and 1.5
mM EDTA; sonicated on ice; and centrifuged at 20,000
x g for 20 min . The supernatant,
hereafter referred to as crude protein extract, was subjected to
ammonium sulfate (35 to 50% saturation) fractionation, and the
precipitate was solubilized in 50 ml of elution buffer A (20 mM
Tris-HCl [pH 7.5], 1 mM DTT, and 1% sucrose) and dialyzed against the
same buffer . The dialysate was applied to an anion-exchange
column (2 by 10 cm) packed with DEAE-Sepharose Fast Flow gel and
equilibrated with elution buffer A . The bound proteins were eluted
with a linear gradient of NaCl (0 to 0.3 M) in the same buffer . The
fractions showing sucrose-hydrolyzing activity were pooled and
dialyzed against elution buffer B (20 mM K-phosphate buffer [pH 7.5],
1 mM DTT, and 1% sucrose), which was then loaded onto a
hydroxyapatite column (2.5 by 2 cm) equilibrated with the same
buffer, and the flowthrough fraction was retrieved . This was
concentrated by precipitating the protein with ammonium sulfate (35
to 50% saturation) and redissolving it in 1 ml of elution buffer B
and was then applied to a Sephacryl S-100 HR gel permeation column (2
by 100 cm) equilibrated with elution buffer B supplemented with 0.25
M NaCl . The active fractions from the column were pooled, and
ammonium sulfate was added to the pool to a final concentration of
0.8 M . This was then loaded onto a hydrophobic interaction column (1
by 17 cm) filled with Butyl Sepharose Fast Flow gel and equilibrated
with elution buffer B containing 0.8 M (NH4)2SO4 .
Protein elution was done with a reverse linear gradient of (NH4)2SO4
(0.8 to 0.3 M) in the same buffer . The active fractions were pooled,
dialyzed against elution buffer A devoid of sucrose, and applied to a
Mono Q HR 5/5 column for fast protein liquid chromatography
(FPLC) as the final step of SUH purification . The elution was carried
out with a linear gradient of NaCl (0 to 0.3 M) in the same buffer .
All packing materials for the chromatographic columns and the
factory-packed FPLC column were purchased from Amersham Bioscience .
The purification procedures were performed at 4°C .
Recombinant SUH (rSUH) with a histidine tag at the C terminus was
isolated from transformed E . coli cells . Harvested cells ( 1g
[wet weight]) were suspended in 30 ml of a saline phosphate buffer
(50 mM Na-phosphate [pH 8.0] and 300 mM NaCl) and disrupted by
freezing and thawing . After a 30-min incubation at 30°C with
occasional shaking, the cell lysate was cleared by centrifugation,
and the supernatant was loaded onto a Ni-nitrilotriacetic acid
agarose (Qiagen) column . The column was washed thoroughly with the
saline phosphate buffer containing 20 mM imidazole, and then the
bound proteins were eluted with the same buffer containing 0.25 M
imidazole . The eluate was mixed with an equal volume of 1.6 M (NH4)2SO4 .
From this, rSUH was further purified by employing the same
hydrophobic interaction (Butyl Sepharose Fast Flow) chromatography
and ion-exchange (Mono Q HR 5/5) FPLC used for SUH purification from
the wild-type cells .
Measurements of enzyme activity. Sucrose reactions catalyzed
by SUH or rSUH in 20 mM K-phosphate buffer (pH 7.5) at 30°C were
assayed primarily by the dinitrosalicylic acid (DNSA) method (23),
which is based on color development as a result of the reaction of
DNSA with reducing groups produced . The DNSA color reaction was
calibrated under the assay conditions with defined amounts of glucose
and fructose (the same amounts of these monosaccharides resulted in
almost identical increases in the 575-nm absorption) . One unit of
enzyme activity was defined as the amount of protein hydrolyzing 1
µmol of sucrose per min . In cases where direct sugar analysis was
necessary, either high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) or
thin-layer chromatography (TLC) was performed to simultaneously
measure the changes in both sucrose and the reaction products in
enzyme reaction mixtures . For the HPLC analysis, a polyamine column
(YMC Europe GmbH) was used with acetonitrile-water (3/1 [vol/vol])
as the mobile phase, and sugars were detected by differential
refractive index and quantified from the respective peak areas . TLC
was conducted using three ascents of the solvent system
(ethylacetate-pyridine-H2O [100/35/25 {vol/vol/vol}]) on Merck
silica 60 F254 gel plates as described by Liebl et al . (20),
and sugars were visualized by dipping the plates into 5% (vol/vol)
H2SO4 in ethanol containing 0.5% (wt/vol)
-naphthol,
followed by heating them at 110°C for 10 min .
Protein analysis. The homogeneity of the enzyme preparations
was assessed by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel
electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) on acrylamide (10%) gels in the
discontinuous buffer system of Laemmli (16) . The
molecular mass of SUH was determined by matrix-assisted laser
desorption- ionization mass spectrometry using a Perspective
Biosystems Voyager-DE STR mass spectrometer in reflector mode with
sinapinic acid as the matrix . The isoelectric point of SUH was
measured by isoelectric focusing on polyacrylamide gels with a pH
gradient developed by Ampholine carrier ampholites (Amersham
Bioscience) . The N-terminal amino acid sequence was determined using
an Applied Biosystems Procise 491 automatic sequencer . For this, SUH
on an SDS-PAGE gel was electroblotted onto a polyvinyldifluoride
membrane in CAPS (3-cyclohexylamino-1-propanesulfonic acid) buffer
and stained with Coomassie brilliant blue, and then the transferred
protein band was excised and subjected to N-terminal sequencing based
on Edman degradation . Meanwhile, the internal sequencing was done by
electrospray ionization tandem mass spectrometry . For this, the
stained SUH band on SDS-PAGE was excised and treated with trypsin for
in-gel protein digestion . The resulting tryptic peptides were
extracted and then subjected to amino acid sequencing in a Micromass
Q-Tof2 mass spectrometer .
Gene identification. Homology searches in the GenBank
database using the BLAST algorithm (1) led to the
finding that amino acid sequences determined for four segments of SUH
match four nucleotide sequence segments of a protein-coding gene,
XAC3490, found in the X . axonopodis pv . citri genome,
which has recently been sequenced (7) . Furthermore,
the measured molecular mass of SUH was found to be almost identical
to the predicted molecular mass of the XAC3490 gene product
with an amino acid sequence deduced from the open reading frame .
These findings allowed us to assume that the genes suh and XAC3490
are virtually the same . Based on the nucleotide sequence of
XAC3490 compared with the partial amino acid sequences of SUH, a
pair of oligonucleotide primers (forward, 5'-AGCACCTGCCCGATCGATTC-3',
and reverse, 5'-CCGCTGCTCTGGAAACTCTC-3') were designed . These were
used to amplify a 1.3-kb DNA by PCR (94°C for 1 min, 59°C for 2 min,
72°C for 3 min; 35 cycles) with genomic DNA from X . axonopodis
pv . glycines 8ra as the template . The PCR product was cloned into
pGEM-T Easy (Promega), yielding a plasmid called pGSC1 . The insert in
this plasmid was then used as a probe to screen an X . axonopodis
pv . glycines genomic library that was constructed with the
broad-host-range cosmid vector pLAFR3 (39) by
cloning of total DNA partially digested with Sau3AI and
transformed into E . coli DH5 .
The positive recombinant clone from this library was subcloned into
the Ampr-carrying vector pBluescript II SK(-) (Stratagene)
through EcoRI-BamHI treatment . One of the resulting
plasmids, pBSEB3, harboring a 3.7-kb EcoRI-BamHI
fragment, was determined to contain suh by Southern
hybridization using the insert DNA in pGSC1 as a probe, followed by
DNA sequencing .
The full-length suh gene was amplified by PCR (94°C for 1
min, 67.5°C for 2 min, 72°C for 3 min; 25 cycles) using DNA from
pBSEB3 as the template . For this, a pair of oligonucleotide primers
(direct primer, 5'-ATATCGGACATATGAGCACCTGCCCGATC-3',
with the NdeI site in boldface and the authentic start codon
underlined, and reverse primer, 5'-CTCACTCGAGTTCAGGCGCATGCTCAGT-3',
with the XhoI site in boldface) were designed . The reaction
was carried out in the presence of 10% dimethyl sulfoxide to
avoid nonspecific hybridization of the primers . The PCR product was
cut with NdeI and XhoI and ligated to the corresponding
sites of the Kanr-carrying expression vector pET41b (Novagen),
yielding a plasmid called pETSC3 . The insert in pETSC3 was found
to contain no mutations .
The nucleotide sequences of the constructed plasmids were determined
according to the dideoxy chain termination method of Sanger et
al . (32) using a Prism dye primer cycle-sequencing kit and
a Prism model 3700 automated DNA sequencer (Applied Biosystems) .
Sequencing was done for the entire length of both strands .
SUH expression in E . coli. The plasmid pETSC3 was
introduced into E . coli BL21(DE3)/pLysS . The transformed cells
were grown in LB medium at 37°C to an optical density at 600 nm (OD600)
of 0.6, and protein expression was induced by 1 mM IPTG (isopropyl-ß-D-thiogalactopyranoside)
at 20°C for 12 h . The cultured bacteria were harvested and used
to purify rSUH .
Construction of suh mutant. The plasmid pBSEB3 was
mutagenized by using an in vitro Tn5 (Kanr)
transposition system, EZ::TN <KAN-2> (Epicentre), following the
protocol of the manufacturer . The transposon insertion site was
identified by sequence determination using the KAN-2 FP-1 and KAN-2
RP-1 primers (Epicentre) . The insertion derivative was then
introduced into X . axonopodis pv . glycines 8ra by electroporation,
and selection was performed on LB plates supplemented with rifampin,
ampicillin, and kanamycin . Cells of the transformant were cycled
more than four times in LB broth containing rifampin and kanamycin
to maintain selection for the presence of the transposon . A
putative marker exchange mutant was screened by testing kanamycin
resistance and ampicillin sensitivity and verified by Southern
hybridization .
Measurement of sucrose uptake by cells. The wild-type strain
8ra and the suh mutant were cultured in minimal medium
containing 1 mM sucrose and 1% tryptone, harvested at mid-exponential
phase, washed with 100 mM K-phosphate buffer (pH 6.6), and suspended
in the same buffer to an OD600 of 3 . To 1.0 ml of these
suspensions, 0.5 ml of sucrose solution (3 mM) charged with 0.3 µCi
of [U-14C]sucrose was added with shaking . Then, aliquots
(0.2 ml each) were taken from the suspensions at 30-s intervals and
filtered rapidly through Millipore membrane filters . The filters with
collected cells were placed on paper towels to soak up the remaining
solution, dried under a hot air stream, and then subjected to
radioactivity counting in a liquid scintillation counter .
Bacterial inoculation and measurement of multiplication in planta.
Soybean plants grown in a greenhouse were inoculated with X .
axonopodis pv . glycines by infiltrating cell suspensions into the
fully expanded trifoliate leaves using a 1-ml syringe (the
inoculation was successful when it was performed on rainy days) . Cell
suspensions to
105
CFU in 10 mM MgCl2 were prepared from 2-day-old bacterial
plates . Six leaf disks (6-mm diameter) were taken at 1-day intervals
after inoculation and ground in a microtube containing 200 µl of 10
mM MgCl2 . Sample aliquots (100 µl each) were serially
diluted and spread on LB agar plates . Colonies were counted after the
plates were incubated for 48 h at 28°C .
Nucleotide sequence accession number. The nucleotide
sequence of suh has been submitted to the GenBank database
under accession number
AY359289 .
General and enzymatic properties. The overall purification
schemes for SUH and rSUH are compiled in Table 1
(the average production levels of the enzyme in the Xanthomonas
and Escherichia cells were
20
and 1,500 U/liter of culture, respectively, with crude protein
extracts) . The isolated SUH showed a single band on SDS-PAGE
corresponding to
64
kDa, as well as a single protein peak corresponding to
54
kDa on size exclusion chromatography under nondenaturing conditions,
indicating that the functioning SUH is a monomeric protein, probably
with a highly compact structure . These estimated molecular mass
values appeared considerably smaller than the molecular mass of
70,216 Da predicted from the deduced amino acid sequence . However,
matrix-assisted laser desorption-ionization mass spectrometry of
purified SUH revealed a molecular mass of 70,223 ± 12 Da (an average
of three measurements), which agrees well with the predicted
molecular mass . A measured pI of ca . 5.7 for SUH is also close to the
theoretical pI of 5.5 . Together with these observations (Fig.
1), the partial sequencing data from the natural
SUH, i.e., STCPIDPPAL (positions 1 to 10), YEATLGQV (positions 213 to
220), AEAIVP (positions 320 to 325), and GESFQSSG (positions 431 to
438), strongly suggest that the Xanthomonas sucrose hydrolase
is indeed encoded by suh .
| TABLE 1 . Purification of natural and recombinant SUH
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FIG . 1 . SDS-PAGE (A) and isoelectric focusing (B) of SUH . Lanes P,
natural protein; lane rP, recombinant protein; lanes M, markers for
molecular size (A) and pI (B) . In SDS-PAGE, the natural protein was
loaded at high and low levels, ca . 0.4 and 3 µg, respectively, while the
recombinant protein was loaded at a high level only.
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Upon incubation of sucrose at various concentrations (10 to 200 mM)
with the preparations of either natural or recombinant SUH in
reaction buffer, glucose and fructose were released at equal molar
ratios, and the amounts of sucrose consumed appeared identical with
the amounts of the respective monosaccharides produced at molar base
(Fig . 2) . Consistent with this, no production of
other saccharides, such as smaller maltosaccharides and sucrose
isoforms, was detected on HPLC . The presence of high concentrations
(up to 10 mg/ml) of glycogen or soluble starch affected neither the
rate of sucrose consumption nor the ratio of glucose to fructose
produced . Furthermore, under the same reaction conditions (in terms
of enzyme and sugar concentrations, buffer composition and pH, and
reaction temperature) as for sucrose hydrolysis (see the legend to
Fig . 2), no hydrolytic reaction products were
detected by the HPLC and DNSA methods in 24-h incubations of SUH with
the following sugars: disaccharides having an
-D-glucopyranosyl
moiety, such as maltose [ -D-glucopyranosyl-(1 4)-D-glucopyranose],
isomaltose [ -D-glucopyranosyl-(1 6)-D-glucopyranose],
and trehalose ( -D-glucopyranosyl
-D-glucopyranoside),
and the typical substrates for fructofuranosidases, such as raffinose
[ -D-galactopyranosyl-(1 6)- -D-glucopyranosyl-(1
2)-ß-D-fructofuranoside] andstachyose [ -D-galactopyranosyl-(1 6)- -D-galactopyranosyl-(1 6)- -D-glucopyranosyl-(1 2)-ß-D-fructofuranoside] .
These results may indicate that among reactions involving sugars,
sucrose hydrolysis is virtually the only reaction catalyzed by
SUH, at least, under our assay conditions . Some bacterial sucrose
hydrolases have been shown to hydrolyze not only sucrose but also
S-6-P (4, 43) . However, SUH apparently did
not act on S-6-P, as no reducing group was released from S-6-P even
in a prolonged (>2-day) incubation in the presence of the
enzyme under optimal reaction conditions . Despite the inability to
hydrolyze the
-D-glucopyranosyl-containing
disaccharides tested, except for sucrose, SUH was thought to be
-glucosidase
recognizing the glucose moiety, because p-nitrophenyl
-D-glucopyranoside,
a typical chromogenic substrate for
-glucosidases,
was shown to undergo SUH-catalyzed hydrolytic cleavage, as monitored
by the absorbance of p-nitrophenolate at 405 nm, although the
reaction rate was very low . We estimated that the rate of p-nitrophenolate
production by SUH was lower by at least 3 orders of magnitudes
than that by brewer's yeast
-glucosidase
under the same reaction conditions .
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FIG . 2 . Time courses of sucrose consumption and glucose-fructose
production by SUH . To 1.0 ml of 50 mM sucrose in 20 mM K-phosphate
buffer (pH 7.5) kept at 30°C, 10 µl of the enzyme preparation (1.2
µg/µl) in the same buffer was added, and the reaction mixture was
incubated at 30°C . Aliquots (0.1 ml each) were drawn at the time
intervals shown, immediately boiled for 2 min, filtered through
Millipore membranes (0.2-µm pore size), and then subjected to HPLC
analysis . Squares, sucrose; triangles, glucose; circles, fructose . The
inset shows the representative HPLC chromatograms of samples taken 0
(solid line), 60 (broken line), and 180 (dotted line) min after the
start of the reaction, respectively . The peaks are fructose (F), glucose
(G), and sucrose (S) following the solvent peak.
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The initial rates of sucrose hydrolysis were determined by measuring
the amounts of reducing group produced for the first 2 min of
reaction using the DNSA method . The double-reciprocal plot revealed
that sucrose hydrolysis by SUH follows the Michaelis-Menten kinetics,
with a Km of 2.4 mM and a Vmax of 65 µmol
min-1 mg of protein-1 at 30°C and pH 7.5 . Virtually the
same values for enzyme kinetic parameters were determined for the
reaction catalyzed by rSUH . The enzyme remained active over a neutral
pH (6.5 to 8.5) range, with a pH optimum of 7.5 . The temperature-activity
profile, constructed from measurements of the initial rates,
showed the maximal activity at ca . 40°C . At this temperature,
however, the enzyme was thermally inactivated with a rather short
halftime, i.e.,
3.5
h . Therefore, it would be practical to work with SUH at ca . 30°C, at
which the enzyme was shown to retain as much as 85% of the maximal
activity with a thermal inactivation halftime of
14
h .
Sequence comparison of SUH with related enzymes. From
database searches, the deduced sequence of SUH with 644 amino acid
residues (or 643 residues with the terminal Met deleted, as confirmed
by the N-terminal sequencing data and molecular mass determination)
was found to be, among structurally characterized proteins, the most
similar to amylosucrase from Neisseria polysaccharea (NpAS),
with 36% identity and 57% similarity . In addition, the genomes of
bacteria from different genera, such as Caulobacter crescentus
(26), Deinococcus radiodurans (45),
and Pirellula sp . (10), predicted the
possible existence of proteins that also show high degrees of
sequence homology (36 to 43% identity) to SUH . These proteins,
designated RB5196, CC1135, and DR0933, whose expression and functions
have yet to be tested (although their functions were assigned as
-amylase
or amylosucrase, amylosucrase, and
-amylase,
respectively), have been placed in family 13, together with NpAS (http://afmb.cnrs-mrs.fr/CAZY/) .
Since the Xanthomonas enzyme was regarded as
-glucosidase,
known-function
-glucosidases
available from databases were subjected to a similarity test,
revealing that the 31 different sequences tested have only low
degrees of sequence homology to SUH, with identities ranging from 9
to 19% .
Family 13 enzymes share a common catalytic domain in the form of
the (ß/ )8
barrel (8, 41) . This characteristic domain
was predicted in the primary structure of SUH by using Pfam (http://pfam.wustl.edu/hmmsearch.shtml) .
Multiple sequence alignment using the CLUSTAL W program version 1.8 (42)
(http://www.ebi.ac.uk/clustalw/)
revealed that two catalytic carboxylic (aspartate and glutamate)
residues and three other active-site residues (i.e., the second
aspartate and two histidines), identified in NpAS (30,
33, 37) and long-recognized as
being conserved in family 13 proteins (21), are
all conserved in the sequence of SUH (Fig . 3) . That
is, D279 and E321 of SUH correspond to the critical
residues D294 (the catalytic nucleophile) and E336
(the proton donor) situated right after the ends of the fourth and
fifth ß-sheet strands in NpAS, respectively, while H179, H390,
and D391 of SUH correspond to the active-site residues H195,
H400, and D401 situated near the ends of the third (for H195)
and seventh (for H400 and D401) ß-sheet strands
in NpAS . The short sequence segments involving these invariant
residues appeared to be rather highly conserved in the family 13
proteins examined .
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FIG . 3 . Sequence alignment for SUH and related proteins . The residues in
solid boxes are similar in all five sequences, whereas the residues in
shaded boxes are similar to those of SUH in at least three of the four
other sequences . ß1 to ß8 and
1
to
8
indicate the positions of the (ß/ )8
barrel elements as determined for NpAS (37) . Two
catalytic carboxylic (aspartate and glutamate) residues (*) and three
active-site (the second aspartate and two histidine) residues ( )
conserved in family 13 enzymes are indicated . The sequences are those of
X . axonopodis SUH (accession number
AY359289), a putative C . crescentus amylosucrase (CC1135;
accession number
AAK23119), a putative D . radiodurans
-amylase
(DR0933; accession number
AAF10510), a putative Pirellula sp.
-amylase
or amylosucrase (RB5196; accession number
CAD78342), and NpAS (accession number
CAA09772).
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Bacterial multiplication in culture media and in planta. Strain
8ra and the suh mutant were cultured in minimal medium with
tryptone deleted and with different carbon sources . When glucose or
fructose was provided, the mutant grew as well as did 8ra, with
doubling times only slightly different from each other, indicating
that the glucose- and fructose-utilizing systems of strain 8ra were
not affected by the mutation . In the presence of sucrose as the sole
carbon source, however, the suh mutant, unlike the wild-type
strain, was not able to grow (Fig . 4) . These
results appeared to be consistent with in vivo bacterial
multiplication data: that is, the population size of the suh
mutant in the inoculated soybean leaves was only about one-fourth of
that of the wild-type strain when estimated on the seventh day after
inoculation (Fig . 5) . The multiplication of the mutant
in soybean plants could be due to the presence of some carbon
sources other than sucrose in the intercellular spaces of leaf
tissues, the natural habitats of the phytopathogen . The mutant was
shown to be pathogenic, and yet disease symptom development on leaves
was delayed to some extent (estimated roughly, by 1 day) .
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FIG . 4 . Growth of X . axonopodis pv . glycines on different sugars .
Cells of strain 8ra (solid circles) and the suh mutant (open
circles) were pregrown in LB broth, washed with 100 mM K-phosphate
buffer (pH 6.6), and then inoculated into minimal medium with tryptone
deleted containing 20 mM glucose (A), 20 mM fructose (B), or 10 mM
sucrose (C) as the sole carbon source . Cell multiplication was monitored
by measuring the OD600 . The data presented are from one
representative experiment, which was confirmed twice in additional
independent experiments.
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FIG . 5 . Multiplication of X . axonopodis pv . glycines in planta .
Cells of strain 8ra (solid circles) and the suh mutant (open
circles) were infiltrated into fully matured soybean leaves . Leaf disks
taken at 1-day intervals after inoculation were ground in 10 mM MgCl2,
serially diluted, and spread on LB plates . Colonies were counted after
the plates were incubated for 48 h at 28°C . The data are means of
triplicate measurements with standard deviations shown as vertical bars.
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Sucrose uptake and hydrolysis by cells. When harvested cells of
X . axonopodis pv . glycines were exposed to sucrose labeled
with a radioisotope, rapid sucrose uptake took place . The initial
uptake rates were more or less the same for both strain 8ra and the
suh mutant, indicating that the sucrose transport activity of
the bacterial membrane remained intact in the suh mutant .
Therefore, the inability of the mutant to grow on sucrose was thought
to be due to an essential lack of intracellular metabolic activity
for sucrose . Such an inference appeared to conform to the observation
that, when crude protein extracts of X . axonopodis pv .
glycines cells were incubated with sucrose, the production of glucose
and fructose was detected in incubations containing the extracts of
the wild-type cells only, but not those of the mutant cells . A lower
sucrose saturation level in the suh mutant than in the 8ra
strain, as noted from the sucrose uptake kinetics, may also be
connected to the absence of intracellular sucrose metabolism in the
mutant . Intriguingly, no significant sucrose hydrolase activity was
seen in crude protein extracts from the wild-type cells when they had
been cultured in medium containing carbon sources other than sucrose,
such as glucose, fructose, and succinate . This may be taken as
an indication that suh gene expression in X . axonopodis requires
sucrose induction . The relevant data are presented in Fig . 6 .
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FIG . 6 . Uptake and hydrolysis of sucrose by X . axonopodis pv .
glycines . (A) Time courses of sucrose uptake by strain 8ra (solid
circles) and the suh mutant (open circles) . Sucrose uptake was
monitored by measuring the radioactivity of cells exposed to [U-14C]sucrose
at ambient temperature . The data are expressed as amounts of sucrose (in
nanomoles) taken up by cells in 0.2 ml of suspension at an OD600
of 2 . (B) TLC profiles of sugars contained in 18-h incubations of
sucrose (50 mM) with crude protein extracts (0.6 mg of protein/ml) at
30°C . The extracts were from the 8ra cells grown on glucose (lane 1),
fructose (lane 2), and sucrose (lane 3) and from suh mutant cells
grown on sucrose (lane 4) . A mixture of sugar standards (F, fructose; G,
glucose; S, sucrose; 0.1 µmol each) was also developed (lane S).
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Through protein purification and analysis, gene identification and
characterization, mutant construction and phenotype examination, and
recombinant-protein production, we have described a new enzyme, SUH,
that is solely responsible for intracellular sucrose hydrolysis and
thus is essential for growth of X . axonopodis on sucrose .
There can be little doubt that SUH is rather specific for sucrose,
promoting hydrolytic cleavage of the disaccharide probably as the
only reaction, and yet the enzyme is not structurally similar to any
known sucrose hydrolase . Most of the typical sucrose hydrolases are
invertases that are ß-fructosidases, although some
-glucosidases
also possess sucrose-hydrolyzing activity (2,
15, 36) . The invertases whose primary
structures have been characterized, such as those from Klebsiella
pneumoniae (44), Bacillus
stearothermophilus (19), Bacillus subtilis (9),
Zymomonas mobilis (11), Streptococcus mutans
(34), and Thermotoga maritima (20),
have been classified into glycoside hydrolase family 32 (12)
(http://afmb.cnrs-mrs.fr/CAZY/) . The
sequences of these proteins show strong similarity to each other in
several regions . The amino acid residues are particularly conserved
in the N terminus, with an identical segment of five residues,
NDPNG, found throughout family 32 enzymes . The so-called "sucrose
box," which has been suggested to be important for catalysis of the
transfer of fructose from sucrose (34), is also conserved .
Such primary structural characteristics of those invertases,
however, were not seen in SUH . Rather, a strong structural similarity
to SUH is seen in NpAS and several hypothetical proteins, all of
which are categorized in family 13 . Such sequence homology with
similar lengths (seen, in particular, between NpAS and SUH) and
carrying many conserved sequences, especially the crucial invariant
residues believed to be involved in catalytic activity, leads to a
conclusion that SUH, together with NpAS, may be placed in the same
family .
Although SUH is similar to amylosucrase in terms of not only the
primary structure but also substrate specificity, the main function
of the latter is glucosyltransferase (EC 2.4.1.4) activity that
catalyzes the transfer of an
-D-glucopyranosyl
moiety from sucrose to an acceptor molecule, synthesizing
-1,4-linked
glucan (5, 29) . Nevertheless, it
is not unusual that amylosucrase can promote sucrose hydrolysis to a
certain extent when sucrose is the sole substrate in reaction
systems . The hydrolytic products, glucose and fructose, by themselves
may then be used as the glucosyl acceptors for the glucosyl transfer
reaction, resulting in production of di- and trisaccharides, such as
maltose, maltotriose, trehalose, and turanose, as seen in NpAS (29) .
Sucrose hydrolysis by amylosucrase may be a natural consequence of
the catalytic reaction that has been proposed to proceed via a
double-displacement mechanism, in which a covalent glucosyl enzyme
intermediate (Gl-Ez) is first formed (24) . This
glucosyl moiety could then be transferred either onto a water
molecule, resulting in sucrose hydrolysis, or onto a hydroxyl group
of a saccharide molecule, finally leading to transglucosylation .
Between these two reactions that share Gl-Ez as the common reactant
there would be competition . In most cases, the Gl-Ez reaction with
glucosyl acceptors prevails over the reaction with water, as
amylosucrase activity is principally manifested by
transglucosylation . However, it would not be unreasonable to
hypothesize that in certain amylosucrases a water molecule might
compete strongly with an acceptor molecule for the reaction with
Gl-Ez . An extreme case could be that the rate of the "Gl transfer to
water" reaction far exceeds the rate of the "Gl transfer to acceptor"
reaction; SUH might be such a case . To our knowledge, if hydrolytic
activity toward sugars is considered the major function, the
Xanthomonas enzyme is the first enzyme found to be specific for
sucrose among the proteins in family 13, to which it belongs .
It is unlikely that PTS is involved in the process of sucrose
uptake by X . axonopodis cells . If sucrose is transported across
the bacterial membranes by the action of a sucrose-specific
PTS, the transported form of sucrose is S-6-P, which should then be
cleaved into glucose-6-phosphate and fructose to be metabolized in
cells . However, the observed inability of SUH to hydrolyze S-6-P
despite its indispensability for sucrose utilization by the bacterial
cells conforms to the notion that sucrose itself is transported by a
system independent of PTS . In this regard, it is noteworthy that
X . axonopodis pv . citri and X . campestris pv . campestris,
two Xanthomonas pathogens whose genomes have been sequenced (7),
carry a structural gene designated suc1 and annotated as a
sugar transporter gene . The nomenclature SUC1 was originally given to
a transmembrane sucrose carrier found in Arabidopsis thaliana .
Many plant species have also been shown to contain sucrose
transporters homologous to SUC1, with different nomenclatures, in
their plasma membranes (17) . Because the predicted
gene products of suc1 from X . axonopodis pv . citri and
X . campestris pv . campestris show sequence homology to some
extent (19 and 20% identity, respectively) to plant SUC1 and because
no sucrose-specific PTS genes are found in the genomes of those
bacteria, Xanthomonas suc1 could be the PTS-independent
transporter responsible for sucrose uptake by the Xanthomonas
cells . This concept seems to be supported by our preliminary results
from a study in progress of the sucrose utilization pathway in
Xanthomonas bacteria . Briefly, we cloned an X . axonopodis
pv . glycines gene extensively similar to suc1 of X .
axonopodis pv . citri, constructed a knockout mutant by
insertional mutagenesis targeting that gene, and tested the mutant
for its phenotype on sugars . It turned out that the mutant suffered a
complete loss of sucrose uptake activity, being unable to grow on
sucrose, while it grew on other carbon sources like glucose and
fructose as well as did the wild-type strain .
The SUH gene of X . axonopodis pv . glycines is nearly identical
with a structural gene, XAC3490, on the chromosome of X .
axonopodis pv . citri . In the amino acid sequences of both gene
products, deduced from open reading frames with the same length of
1,935 bp, differences are found only in 11 positions that are
significantly separated from each other . That is, the residues 7P,
16G, 88P, 209V, 275A, 296S,
505D, 533K, 574A, 591L, and 601V
in SUH are replaced by 7S, 16A, 88Q,
209L, 275T, 296P, 505H, 533N,
574V, 591P, and 601I in the XAC3490
product . The chromosome of X . campestris pv . campestris bears
a structural gene, XCC3359, coding for a protein with a
similar length (637 amino acid residues) that also appears
extensively similar (77% identical) to SUH . In this context, it might
be suggestive that SUH is a homologous protein promoting
intracellular sucrose hydrolysis throughout Xanthomonas
bacteria .
This work was supported in part by the Brain Korea21 project .
We thank Choonki Sung for technical assistance in protein purification
work .
* Corresponding author . Mailing address: School of Agricultural
Biotechnology, Seoul National University, Kwanak-ku, Seoul 151-742, South Korea .
Phone: (82) 2 880 4648 . Fax: (82) 2 873 3112 . E-mail: jinjung@snu.ac.kr .
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