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Journal of Bacteriology, January 2004, p . 454-462, Vol . 186,
No . 2
The
acnD Genes of Shewenella oneidensis and Vibrio cholerae Encode
a New Fe/S-Dependent 2-Methylcitrate Dehydratase Enzyme That Requires prpF
Function In Vivo
Tracey L . Grimek and Jorge C . Escalante-Semerena*
Department of Bacteriology, University of WisconsinMadison, Madison,
Wisconsin
Received 24 July 2003/ Accepted 10 October 2003
The propionate utilization operons of several bacteria differ from
each other in the occurrence of two genes, acnD and prpF,
in place of or in addition to the prpD gene encoding an
Fe/S-independent 2-methylcitrate dehydratase enzyme . We cloned the
acnD and prpF genes from two organisms, Shewanella
oneidensis and Vibrio cholerae, and found that, together,
the AcnD and PrpF proteins restored the ability of a prpD
mutant strain of Salmonella enterica to grow on propionate as
a source of carbon and energy . However, neither acnD nor
prpF alone was able to substitute for prpD . The AcnD and
PrpF proteins were isolated and biochemically analyzed . The AcnD
protein required reconstitution of an Fe/S cluster for activity . All
detectable AcnD activity was lost after incubation with
iron-chelating agents, and no AcnD activity was observed after
attempted reconstitution without iron . Nuclear magnetic resonance
spectroscopy and in vitro activity assay data showed that AcnD
dehydrated 2-methylcitrate and citrate to 2-methyl-cis-aconitate
and cis-aconitate, respectively; AcnD also hydrated cis-aconitate .
However, 2-methylisocitrate and isocitrate were not substrates
for AcnD, indicating that AcnD only catalyzes the first half of the
aconitase-like dehydration reactions . No aconitase-like activity was
found for PrpF . It is hypothesized that, in vivo, PrpF is an
accessory protein required to prevent oxidative damage of the Fe/S
center of active AcnD enzyme or that it may be involved in synthesis
or repair of the Fe/S cluster present in AcnD .
First demonstrated in Yarrowia lipolytica and several other
filamentous fungi and yeast species (26, 32,
33), the 2-methylcitrate (2-MC) cycle was
subsequently shown to occur in the bacteria Salmonella enterica
serovar Typhimurium and Escherichia coli (20,
35) . Since the finding that prokaryotes can also utilize
the 2-MC cycle as their route of propionate catabolism, the
2-MC pathway was also demonstrated in other gram-negative bacteria
such as Ralstonia eutropha (8) and Burkholderia
sacchari (7) and in the gram-positive bacterium
Corynebacterium glutamicium (10) . Sequence
analysis of the completed genomes of several other bacteria indicates
that the 2-MC cycle may be widespread among bacteria; Vibrio
cholerae, Shewanella oneidensis, Neisseria spp.,
and several Pseudomonas species contain propionate utilization
(prp) operons (8, 17) (Fig.
1) .
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FIG . 1 . Structural variations on prp operons of several bacteria .
(A) S . enterica serovar Typhimurium and E . coli (E .
coli contains a 439-nt putative stem-loop region between prpB
and prpC) . (B) R . eutropha CH34, S . oneidensis
MR-1, Neisseria meningitidis, Neisseria gonorrhea (the
Neisseria spp . contain a 789-nt ORF of unknown function between
prpC and acnD, which has been designated yfcA, and an
ORF of 1,200 nt following prpF designated ackA that shows
sequence similarity to propionate kinase [tdcD] of E . coli),
and B . sacchari IPT101 (B . sacchari contains a putative
ORF of 366 nt between acnD and prpF and two putative ORFs
of 372 nt and 198 nt following prpF) . (C) R . eutropha
HF39, Bordetella pertussis, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, and
Pseudomonas putida KT2440 . (D) V . cholerae . (E) prpD2B2C2
operon of C . glutamicum . Putative regulators have been excluded
from Fig . 1C and D, and the spaces between ORFs are
not drawn to scale.
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The prp operons of S . enterica and E . coli comprise four
genes encoding structural proteins of the 2-MC cycle which have been
characterized (Fig . 1A) as follows: prpB encodes
2-methylisocitrate (2-MIC) lyase (13,
14, 17), prpC encodes 2-MC synthase
(17, 18, 35),
prpD encodes 2-MC dehydratase (9, 17),
and prpE encodes propionyl-coenzyme A synthetase (19) .
However, other prp operons have a gene organization that
differs greatly from that of these two enterics (8,
17) (Fig . 1) . Figure 1D
shows an operon structure that contains two genes, acnD (17)
and prpF, instead of prpD . In S . enterica, prpD
encodes an Fe/S-independent 2-MC dehydratase that generates 2-methyl-cis-aconitate
(2-MCA) from 2-MC but will not hydrate 2-MCA into 2-MIC (17) .
The hydration of 2-MCA is catalyzed by either aconitase AcnA or AcnB
(Fig . 2) (17) . All currently
sequenced prp operons that contain an acnD ortholog
also contain prpF and vice versa . The latter is an ortholog of
open reading frame 5 (ORF5) of R . eutropa (8) and E .
coli ybhH . The only work on acnD and prpF reported
to date was performed in R . eutropha (8) .
The R . eutropha prp operon, represented in Fig .
1C, contains both the acnD and prpF genes and prpD .
Brämer et al . recently reported that, in R . eutropha HF39,
prpD was not required for a functional 2-MC cycle, but acnD
and prpF (acnM and ORF5 in R . euthropha,
respectively) functions were needed . However, efforts to demonstrate
the conversion of 2-MC to 2-MIC by AcnM-enriched crude cell extracts
were inconclusive (8) .
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FIG . 2 . Conversion of 2-MC to 2-MIC in bacteria . 2-MC and 2-MIC are
drawn as Fischer projections; stereochemistry is based on intermediates
of the E . coli 2-MC cycle (9) . Se, S .
enterica; Vc, V . cholerae; So, S . oneidensis.
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In this paper we demonstrate that the acnD gene encodes an Fe/S-dependent
2-MC dehydratase enzyme that requires the prpF gene product
to function in vivo . The acnD and prpF genes from V .
cholerae and S . oneidensis were cloned independently or
together and were used to compensate for the lack of the
Fe/S-independent 2-MC dehydratase (PrpD) enzyme in S . enterica
during growth on propionate . The AcnD and PrpF proteins were
isolated . AcnD purified in the presence of air was inactive but was
reactivated by protocols reported for the reactivation of aconitase (22) .
Reactivated AcnD had 2-MC dehydratase activity but no measurable
2-MIC dehydratase activity . Even though aconitase-like activity
was not observed for PrpF in vitro, PrpF was required for the
conversion of 2-MC into 2-MCA in vivo . Possible roles for the PrpF
protein are discussed .
Chemicals and culture media. Cultures were maintained in
Luria-Bertani (LB) broth and solid media . No-carbon E medium
supplemented with MgSO4 (1 mM) and methionine (0.5 mM) was
used as minimal medium (5, 11) . Propionate
and pyruvate were used at concentrations of 30 mM . Antibiotic
concentrations in rich media were as follows (in µg/ml): ampicillin,
100; kanamycin, 25 (for plasmids, 50 µg/ml); tetracycline, 15; and
chloramphenicol, 20 . Bacterial strains harboring plasmids were grown
in minimal media containing ampicillin (50 µg/ml) and kanamycin (30
µg/ml) . Synthetic 2-MC was purchased from C/D/N Isotopes
(Pointe-Claire, Quebec, Canada) as a mixture of stereoisomers; [2 -13C]propionate,
100% deuterium oxide (D2O), and tetramethylsilane were
purchased from Cambridge Isotope Labs (Andover, Mass.) . The 2-MIC was
a gift from W . W . Cleland . All other chemicals were purchased from
Sigma (St . Louis, Mo.) unless otherwise stated . A list of the strains
and plasmids used and their genotypes is provided in Table
1 .
| TABLE 1 . Strains and plasmids used in this studya
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Recombinant DNA techniques. Restriction and modification
enzymes were purchased from Promega (Madison, Wis.) unless otherwise
stated and were used according to the manufacturer's specifications .
All DNA manipulations were performed in E . coli strain DH5 /F' .
Plasmids were transformed into S . enterica strains by a
quick-electroporation method as follows . Strains were grown to
approximately mid-exponential phase, and cells in 1.0 ml of culture
were pelleted at 10,000 x g
in a Microfuge 18 centrifuge (Beckman Coulter) . Cells were washed
once with 100 µl of cold H2O, resuspended in 100 µl of
cold H2O, and allowed to equilibrate on ice for 5 min .
Plasmids were electroporated into the competent cells with a Bio-Rad
Gene Pulser (Hercules, Calif.), according to the manufacturer's
recommendations .
Construction of plasmids. Plasmids containing S .
oneidensis or V . cholerae genes were constructed by PCR
amplification of genomic DNA of S . oneidensis MR-1 (a gift
from D . Saffarini, University of WisconsinMilwaukee) or V .
cholerae N16961 (a gift from Ron Taylor, Dartmouth Medical
School) . PCRs typically contained the following in a 100-µl reaction
mixture: 1.5 ng of genomic DNA, 50 pmol of each primer (IDTDNA,
Coralville, Iowa), and deoxynucleoside triphosphate and HiFi DNA
polymerase (Novagen, Madison, Wis.), each at a concentration of 0.2
µM, according to manufacturer's instructions . Reactions were
performed under the following conditions: 35 cycles at 95°C for 30 s,
at 50°C for 30 s, and at 72°C for 1 min per kb of target DNA . The PCR
fragment was purified with a QIAquick PCR purification kit (QIAGEN,
Chatsworth, Calif.) . The methods of constructing the plasmids used
are outlined in Table 2 . The primer sequences used
in plasmid constructions are available upon request .
| TABLE 2 . Construction of plasmids used in this work
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Sequence verification of plasmid constructs. All resulting
plasmid constructs were sequenced to verify that no mutations were
introduced into the genes of interest . PCR sequencing reactions were
prepared with Big Dye (Biotechnology Center, University of
WisconsinMadison) . Reactions were purified by means of the CleanSEQ
reaction clean-up protocol of Agencourt Bioscience Corporation
(Beverly, Mass.) and sequenced at the Biotechnology Center . Searches
for sequence similarity were performed by using the BLAST algorithm (1) .
Protein sequence alignments were conducted with the ClustalW multiple
alignment tool (36) .
Complementation analysis. Plasmids were introduced into
S . enterica strains as described above . The resulting strains
were grown overnight in LB broth containing appropriate antibiotics .
Four microliters of each overnight culture was used to inoculate 200
µl of fresh no-carbon E minimal medium supplemented with propionate
(30 mM) and glycerol (1 mM) or acetate (30 mM), the appropriate
antibiotic, and various amounts of L-(+)-arabinose
(0, 100, or 500 µM) . Medium was placed into the wells of a 96-well
Falcon (Beckton Dickinson, Franklin Lakes, N.J.) microtiter
dish, and the density of the cultures was monitored at 650 nm with a
SpectraMAX Plus high-throughput spectrophotometer (Molecular Devices,
Sunnyvale, Calif.) . The plate chamber in the spectrometer was
maintained at 37°C . Absorbance measurements were taken every 15 min
for 72 h with agitation (for 780 s) between reads .
Anaerobic growth analysis. For anaerobic growth experiments,
LB plates containing 10 mM sodium tetrathionate as a terminal
electron acceptor (27) were patched with the
strains of interest and introduced into an anoxic environment with
Gas-Pak jars (Bethesda Research Laboratories, Gaithersburg, Md.) .
Plates were incubated at 37°C for 24 h and then transferred into an
anaerobic chamber, where they were replica printed onto minimal
propionate medium plates supplemented with 10 mM tetrathionate and
various concentrations of arabinose . Plates were incubated anoxically
for 3 days at 37°C and growth was assessed .
Purification of Shewanella AcnD and PrpF proteins.
Plasmids pPRP152 (S . oneidensis prpF+) and pPRP156 (S .
oneidensis acnD+) were introduced into E . coli
BL21( DE3)
by the CaCl2 heat shock method described elsewhere (30) .
Cells (20 ml of an overnight culture) were inoculated into 2 liters
of LB broth supplemented with 100 µg of ampicillin/ml and grown with
shaking at 37°C . Cells were grown to an A600 of
approximately 0.6, and the overproduction of proteins was induced
with 0.3 mM isopropyl-ß-D-thiogalactopyranoside
(IPTG) . The cultures were harvested 3 h after induction for 10
min at 4°C and 11,700 x g . The cell
pellets were frozen at -20°C for later use .
Cell pellets were resuspended in 25 ml of 20 mM (pH 7.5)
4-(2-hydroxyethyl)-1-piperazineethanesulfonic acid (buffer A) (HEPES;
Fisher Biotech, Itasca, Ill.), containing 100 mM KCl, 0.1% (vol/vol)
Triton X-100, and 0.1 mM EDTA . The cell suspensions were broken at 104
kPa in a chilled French pressure cell . Cell debris was removed by
centrifugation at 31,000 x g
for 30 min at 4°C . Crude cell extracts were filtered through a
0.2-µm-pore-size filter and passed through a 5-ml column of chitin
beads (New England Biolabs, Beverly, Mass.) . The column was washed
with buffer A according to the manufacturer's instructions and then
quickly washed with 15 ml of buffer A containing 50 mM 1,4-dithio-DL-threitol
(DTT; Promega, Madison, Wis.) . The column flow was stopped, and the
column was kept at 4°C for 96 h . Purified, untagged proteins were
eluted off the column with buffer A containing 50 mM DTT and were
visualized with sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel
electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) (23) . Fractions
containing protein were pooled and dialyzed overnight into 20 mM
HEPES (pH 7.5), 100 mM KCl, 0.1 mM EDTA, and 5 mM DTT (buffer B) .
After dialysis for 2 h, the buffer was changed to buffer B lacking
EDTA . The remaining part of the dialysis period was performed with
buffer B containing 5% (vol/vol) glycerol . The protein was
flash-frozen in liquid nitrogen and stored at -80°C .
Reactivation of purified proteins. Purified AcnD was
reactivated according to the method of Kennedy and Beinert (22) .
All reagents were prepared under strict anaerobic conditions (3,
15) . Purified H6AcnA (17) was
reactivated by the same procedure and was used as a positive control
in the aconitase assays .
In vitro aconitase assays. Aconitase assays were performed
as described (17) . Reaction mixtures contained 90
mM Tris (Tris-HCl) buffer (pH 8.0) and 20 mM citrate, isocitrate,
2-MC, 2-MIC, or 2 mM cis-aconitate in a 1-ml quartz cuvette .
Reactivated enzyme was transferred to the cuvette with a 25-µl
Hamilton syringe . No detectable loss of activity was observed during
the duration of the assays (2 h) . Reactions were monitored for 10 min
at 240 nm in a Perkin-Elmer Lambda 40 spectrophotometer (Norwalk,
Conn.) equipped with a circulating water bath, which maintained the
temperature at 37°C . Specific activities were reported in micromoles
per minute per milligram of protein and calculated from the
extinction coefficients of 3,600 M-1 cm-1 for
the cis-aconitate (21) and 4,500 M-1
cm-1 for the 2-methyl-cis-aconitate (2) .
Requirement of an Fe/S cluster for AcnD activity. To
determine if iron was required for AcnD activity, AcnD was
reactivated according to the protocol of Kennedy and Beinert (22)
with iron excluded from the reactivation mixture . To determine the
magnitude of inactivation of AcnD in the presence of iron-chelating
agents, reactivated AcnD was incubated with EDTA and ferricyanide in
the molar ratios of 1:50:20 (enzyme:EDTA:ferricyanide) as described
by Kennedy and Beinert (22) . Protein activity was
assayed as described above .
H6PrpC, H6PrpD, and PrpE proteins. The
S . enterica H6PrpC and H6PrpD proteins were
overproduced and purified as previously described (17,
20) . The propionyl-coenzyme A synthetase (PrpE)
enzyme was provided by V . J . Starai .
13C-NMR spectroscopy. Peak assignments were
compared to those previously reported (20) .
Glycerol was present in all protein samples and observed in the
spectra due to the natural abundance of 13C (17).
13C-nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectra were obtained
at the National Magnetic Resonance Facility at the University of
WisconsinMadison by means of a Bruker Instruments DMX-400 Avance
console with a 9.4-T wide-bore magnet at 100.6 MHz .
In vitro enzymatic synthesis of [2-13C]MC. [2-13C]MC
was generated in vitro (17) in 0.5-ml reaction mixtures
that contained potassium phosphate buffer (pH 7.5; 50 mM), ATP
(2.5 mM), MgCl2 (5 mM), coenzyme A (2.5 mM), [2-13C]propionate
(2.5 mM), oxaloacetate (5 mM), and homogeneous PrpE and H6PrpC
proteins (75 µg each) . To each sample, 0.1 ml of 100% D2O
was added, and the reactions were transferred to 5-mm NMR tubes
(Wilmad Glass, Buena, N.J.) . A sealed tetramethylsilane capillary was
added as an external reference .
Conversion of [2-13C]MC to [2-13C]MCA.
[2-13C]MC ( 2.5
mM) synthesized as described above was used as substrate for PrpF and
reactivated AcnD or for H6PrpD . Reaction mixtures (0.5 ml)
contained [2-13C]MC, H6PrpD, PrpF, or reactivated
AcnD (25 µg each) or PrpF and reactivated AcnD (25 µg each) .
The reaction mixtures were allowed to incubate for 1 h at 37°C and
were prepared for 13C-NMR analysis as described above .
Other procedures. Protein concentrations were determined
from a standard curve generated with bovine serum albumin by the
method of Bradford (6) with the Bio-Rad protein
reagent . Proteins were separated by SDS-12% PAGE and stained with
Coomassie blue (28) . Novagen Perfect Protein
markers (Madison, Wis.) were used as standards for SDS-PAGE .
S . oneidensis and V . cholerae acnD and prpF gene
product functions restore growth of a S . enterica prpD mutant strain on
propionate. As pointed out above, prp loci from various
prokaryotes contain two genes (acnD and prpF) in lieu
of prpD (Fig . 1) . The acnD and
prpF genes from S . oneidensis and V . cholerae were cloned
and used to determine whether they would compensate for the
lack of PrpD function during growth of an S . enterica prpD mutant
strain on propionate . The acnD and prpF genes were cloned
into plasmids under the control of arabinose-inducible promoters
either as a pair or individually on compatible plasmids . Plasmids
carrying these genes were introduced into S . enterica strain
JE3909 (prpD), and growth on propionate was assessed . Table
3 shows the doubling times of all strains tested . Both
S . oneidensis acnD+prpF+ and
V . cholerae acnD+prpF+ constructs complemented
strain JE3909 (Fig . 3A) . When the acnD and
prpF genes were carried in separate plasmids, however, growth on
propionate was observed only when both genes were present in the
cell . In all cases when S . oneidensis and V . cholerae
genes were mixed, strain JE3909 was able to grow on propionate (Fig.
3B) . This result was not surprising considering
that the S . oneidensis and V . cholerae AcnD and PrpF
share 76 and 73% identity, respectively . These results indicate that
both acnD and prpF are required to complement a prpD
strain of S . enterica .
| TABLE 3 . Heterologous complementation of S . enterica prp mutant
strains
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FIG . 3 . Heterologous complementation studies . All curves shown are
strain JE3909 (S . enterica prpD) with plasmids in trans .
Filled squares, pPRP21 (S . enterica prpD+); open
triangles, pPRP123 (V . cholerae acnD+ prpF+);
open circles, pPRP140 (S . oneidensis acnD+ prpF+);
filled inverted triangles, pPRP138 (S . oneidensis acnD+);
X, pPRP153 (S . oneidensis prpF+); open diamonds,
pPRP121 (V . cholerae acnD+) + pPRP153 (S .
oneidensis prpF+); filled circles, pPRP138 (S .
oneidensis acnD+) + pPRP153 (S . oneidensis prpF+);
open inverted triangles, pPRP138 (S . oneidensis acnD+)
+ pPRP155 (V . cholerae prpF+); filled triangles,
pPRP121 (V . cholerae acnD+) + pPRP155 (V . cholerae
prpF+); plus signs, pPRP163 (E . coli ybhJ+)
+ pPRP154 (E . coli ybhH+).
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To determine whether PrpF function was required along with AcnD
function to complement an S . enterica prpD mutant grown on a
propionate medium anaerobically, these strains were replica printed
onto a propionate medium containing tetrathionate as a terminal
electron acceptor . Only the positive control (prpD+)
and strains containing both the acnD+ and prpF+
plasmids grew anaerobically on propionate . These data indicate that
even under anaerobic conditions, both AcnD and PrpF functions are
required to complement an S . enterica prpD mutant .
The possibility that the E . coli ybhJ and ybhH genes could
restore the growth of strain JE3909 on propionate was also assessed .
The E . coli YbhJ protein is an AcnA homolog that shares 22%
identity (37% similarity) with S . oneidensis AcnD; the YbhH
protein shares 34% identity (47% similarity) with S . oneidensis
PrpF . The E . coli ybhJ and ybhH genes were cloned
individually and as an operon (ybhHIJ) under the control of an
arabinose-inducible promoter . None of the plasmids tested restored
the growth of strain JE3909 on propionate (Table 3) .
Strain JE3909 failed to grow on propionate when E . coli ybhJ
was introduced with S . oneidensis or V . cholerae prpF
or when E . coli ybhH was added with S . oneidensis or
V . cholerae acnD . These data indicated that the ybhHIJ
operon of E . coli did not convert the 2-MC generated by S .
enterica into 2-MCA or at least did not convert enough to
complement the growth phenotype on propionate . The role of the
ybhHIJ operon in E . coli remains unclear .
S . oneidensis PrpB (2-MIC lyase) and PrpC (2-MC synthase)
restore growth of S . enterica prpB and prpC mutant strains on
propionate. It was of interest to determine whether S . oneidensis
prpB (a 2-MIC lyase ortholog) and prpC (a 2-MC synthase
ortholog) could complement S . enterica prpB or prpC
mutant strains . S . oneidensis prpB and prpC were cloned
as a pair into plasmid pBAD18Kan and introduced into strains JE3946 (prpB)
and JE3907 (prpC) (Table 3) . The resulting
S . enterica strains (JE7253 and JE7255, respectively) grew on
propionate, suggesting that the same stereoisomer of 2-MC was
synthesized in S . enterica and S . oneidensis and that
the PrpB enzymes from both organisms most likely use the same
stereoisomer of 2-MIC . It has been shown that E . coli only synthesizes
the 2S,3S isomer of 2-MC and generates the 2R,3S
isomer of 2-MIC (9), and because S . enterica
PrpB and PrpC are greater than 91 and 96% identical, respectively, to
the corresponding proteins in E . coli, it is inferred that the
same stereoisomers of the 2-MC cycle intermediates are produced in
these organisms . The same results were obtained when S . oneidensis
prpB or prpC were cloned individually and introduced into
S . enterica JE3946 (JE7252) and JE3907 (JE7254), respectively
(Table 3) .
AcnD and PrpF do not substitute for TCA cycle aconitase. It
was also tested whether AcnD could substitute for S . enterica
AcnA or AcnB during growth conditions that demanded a functional
tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle . S . oneidensis or V . cholerae
acnD individually or in combination with prpF were introduced
into strain JE5993 (acnA acnB) (17) . The
resulting strains (JE6504, JE6506, JE7235, and JE7236) failed to grow
on pyruvate and various concentrations of arabinose (as inducer) .
Only the control strains JE6502 (JE5993/pACN9 S . enterica acnA+)
and JE6503 (JE5993/pACN10 S . enterica acnB+) grew
on pyruvate under the conditions tested . Hence, it was concluded that
the acnD and prpF genes cannot compensate for the lack
of aconitase activity required for a functional TCA cycle of S .
enterica, at least not to the level required for growth on
pyruvate . No growth on pyruvate was observed when the E . coli ybhJ
and ybhH genes or the complete ybhHIJ operon were
introduced into strain JE5993 .
Purification of AcnD and PrpF proteins. The putative
biochemical activity of the AcnD and PrpF proteins was investigated
in vitro . For this purpose, the S . oneidensis acnD and prpF
genes were cloned and their products produced with an N-terminal
chitin-binding tag (plasmids pPRP152 and pPRP156, respectively) . Both
proteins were purified by chitin affinity chromatography, and the tag
was cleaved at the intein site according to the manufacturer's
recommendations (New England Biolabs) . Each protein was >95% pure as
judged by scanning densitometry (Fig . 4) . The
relative mobility of both proteins was consistent with their
predicted molecular masses, i.e., AcnD was observed at
94
kDa, and PrpF was observed at
42
kDa .
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FIG . 4 . SDS-PAGE of purified S . oneidensis AcnD and PrpF
proteins . Lane 1, MW standards (Novagen); lane 2, purified PrpF; lane 3,
purified AcnD.
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Enzymatic activity of AcnD. Purified AcnD and H6AcnA
(17) were reactivated as described in Materials
and Methods and assayed spectrophotometrically for activity with
various substrates (Table 4) . AcnD used citrate,
cis-aconitate, and 2-MC as substrates but not 2-MIC or isocitrate,
indicating that, like PrpD (17), AcnD only catalyzes
the first half of the aconitase-like reaction . The specific activity
of AcnD for 2-MC was approximately 2.5-fold higher than that for
citrate . The specific activity measured with 2-MC as substrate
may be an underestimate of AcnD activity since commercially available
2-MC contained a mixture of stereoisomers, some of which may be
inhibitory to the enzyme . On the other hand, AcnA used as positive
control readily dehydrated 2-MIC, isocitrate, and citrate and
hydrated cis-aconitate . In agreement with previous work, AcnA
did not use 2-MC as substrate (17) .
| TABLE 4 . Specific activities of AcnD and AcnAa with
different substrates
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AcnD is an Fe/S 2-MC dehydratase. AcnD activity was only
observed after anoxic reactivation with iron, sulfide, and reductant .
When reactivation was attempted in the absence of iron, no enzymatic
activity was observed . The activity of reconstituted AcnD was lost
over time in the presence of air . Also, when ferricyanide and EDTA
were added to the enzyme after reactivation, all detectable activity
was lost within 15 min of incubation . The primary amino acid sequence
of AcnD contains 22 of the 23 residues found at the active site
of mitochondrial aconitase (mAcn), including the three cysteine
residues that coordinate the 4Fe/4S cluster of mAcn (24) .
Taken together, these data indicated that in its active form AcnD
contains an Fe/S center .
13C-NMR analysis of the AcnD reaction product.
[2-13C]MC was synthesized in vitro as described (17) .
Reactivated AcnD was added to this reaction, incubated for 1 h, and
analyzed by 13C-NMR spectroscopy . Peak assignments were
based on those identified previously (17) .
Excluding two glycerol peaks (glycerol was added to the enzyme as
cryoprotectant), only three peaks were observed: for [2-13C]propionate
(30.8 ppm), [2-13C]MC (47.5 ppm), and [2-13C]MCA
(141.5 ppm) (Fig . 5C) . A positive control
experiment for [2-13C]MCA production was performed with H6PrpD
(Fig . 5B) . The peaks observed with the H6PrpD-catalyzed
reaction matched exactly the shifts of those seen with the AcnD
reaction . The reaction mixture containing only [2-13C]MC
had peaks at 30.8 and 47.5 ppm (Fig . 5A) . These
data indicated that both AcnD and PrpD had 2-MC dehydratase activity .
To test whether the PrpF protein had aconitase-like enzymatic
activity, PrpF was added to the [2-13C]MC reaction mixture
and incubated for 1 h at 37°C . No peak shift or decrease in the 2-MC
signal at 47.5 ppm was observed (Fig . 5D) . PrpF was
also added to the reaction mixture containing reactivated AcnD . No
peak shift or decrease in the 2-MCA signal at 141.5 ppm was observed
relative to the signal observed in the reaction mixture containing
only AcnD (Fig . 5E) . These results indicated that
PrpF did not convert 2-MCA into 2-MIC or catalyze the conversion of
2-MC into 2-MCA under the assay conditions tested .
|
FIG . 5 . 13C-NMR spectra of in vitro reactions . The
composition of the reaction mixtures is described under Materials and
Methods . Reaction A contained the S . enterica PrpE and PrpC
enzymes; reaction B contained the S . enterica PrpE, PrpC, and
PrpD enzymes; reaction C contained the S . enterica PrpE, PrpC,
and reactivated S . oneidensis AcnD enzymes; reaction D contained
the S . enterica PrpE and PrpC enzymes and the S . oneidensis
PrpF protein; reaction E contained the S . enterica PrpE and PrpC
enzymes and the S . oneidensis AcnD enzyme and PrpF protein .
Chemical shifts expressed in parts per million are as follows: [2-13C]propionate
30.8 ppm; [2-13C]MC, 47.5 ppm; and [2-13C]MCA,
141.5 ppm . The portion of the spectra removed contained two glycerol
peaks as previously described (17).
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Probing for a role for the PrpF protein in propionate metabolism.
The possibility that the PrpF protein could catalyze the dehydration
of citrate, isocitrate, 2-MC, or 2-MIC or the hydration of cis-aconitate
was investigated . Even though PrpF does not contain an apparent
Fe/S cluster binding motif, anoxic reconstitution of an Fe/S center
was attempted . The PrpF protein with or without anoxic iron and
sulfide reactivation did not have any detectable amounts of
dehydratase or hydratase activities . PrpF was also added in twofold
molar excess to AcnD in the cis-aconitate hydratase assay . No
increase in the AcnD-catalyzed rate or in the overall conversion of
substrate was observed .
We also tested whether AcnD required PrpF to catalyze the second
half of the aconitase-like reaction, i.e., the conversion of 2-MCA to
2-MIC . PrpF was added to AcnD under anoxic and oxic conditions and
was tested in the 2-MIC dehydratase assay . No 2-MIC dehydratase
activity was observed .
We also looked into the possibility that PrpF could stabilize AcnD
activity in the presence of oxygen . A twofold molar excess PrpF
protein was added to anoxic AcnD . The mixture was incubated for 5 min
before the seal was removed . Assays were performed, along with the
control experiment with a reaction mixture that lacked PrpF protein .
No significant differences in AcnD activity were observed over 2 h,
and approximately 75% of AcnD (cis-aconitate hydratase)
activity was lost over this period of time (data not shown) . Work is
currently being conducted to elucidate the role of PrpF in the 2-MC
cycle .
This study established, both in vitro and in vivo, the biochemical
activity of a new enzyme involved in the 2-MC cycle of several
prokaryotes . The genes acnD and prpF of S . oneidensis and
V . cholerae, when concurrently expressed, compensate for the
lack of the Fe/S-independent PrpD enzyme in S . enterica prpD
mutant strains during growth on propionate . The AcnD protein from
S . oneidensis was isolated and shown to have a new activity for
an enzyme containing an Fe/S center . AcnD catalyzes the dehydration
of 2-MC and citrate but does not catalyze the dehydration of
2-MIC or isocitrate (Table 4) . 13C-NMR spectroscopy
of reactivated AcnD with [2-13C]MC revealed that AcnD
could utilize the 2-MC generated by S . enterica PrpC and that
the product of the AcnD reaction matched that produced by S .
enterica PrpD (2-MCA) (Fig . 5) . To our
knowledge, this is the first report of an Fe/S-dependent 2-MC
dehydratase .
To date, the only reported work on an AcnD homolog was performed
with the acnM gene from R . eutropha (R . eutropha AcnM
shares 83% identity with S . oneidensis AcnD) expressed in a
crude extract system in E . coli . E . coli crude extracts
containing R . eutropha AcnM protein were found to have cis-aconitate
hydratase activity, but the data were inconclusive as to whether AcnM
could dehydrate 2-MC . It was concluded, however, that AcnM may
catalyze the hydration of 2-MCA into 2-MIC (8) . In
contrast, the data reported in this paper indicate that AcnD (and by
extrapolation, AcnM) most likely does not catalyze the hydration of
2-MCA to 2-MIC because the enzyme will not dehydrate 2-MIC, and
aconitases are known to catalyze freely reversible reactions .
Additional support for this conclusion comes from NMR experiments
where no evidence was obtained to indicate that active AcnD protein
can convert 2-MC into 2-MIC . The only signal observed in the
experiments was that of 2-MCA .
Studies on mammalian aconitases (mAcn) and AcnA and AcnB from both
S . enterica and E . coli have demonstrated that these enzymes
will not catalyze the dehydration of 2-MC; however, they will
dehydrate 2-MIC and catalyze the full conversion of citrate into
cis-aconitate into isocitrate (4, 9,
17, 29) . The mechanism of
aconitases is known to proceed by the binding of cis-aconitate
in two ways to achieve the trans elimination or addition of
water across the double bond (29) . For this to occur, the
substrate (cis-aconitate) must rotate 180° . The crystal
structure of mAcn bound with 2-MIC allowed the prediction that if
2-MCA were rotated into the analogous 2-MC position, 2-MC would not
be able to bind in the active site due to a steric clash of the
methyl group with residue Asp165 (25) . Interestingly, when
aligned with mAcn, AcnD also contains this conserved aspartate
residue, along with 21 of the other 22 active site residues of mAcn (24) .
It has been noted that all sequenced acnD homologs contain an
Asn residue directly following one of the Cys residues that is likely
to coordinate the Fe/S cluster, while in aconitases of the
tricarboxylic acid cycle an Ile residue is found at this position (7) .
Experiments to test whether this residue plays a role in the
substrate specificity of the AcnD enzyme are in progress .
It has been reported that horse heart aconitase can catalyze the
formation of 2-MC and 2-MIC from 2-MCA (12) . These data
are in contradiction to the present information on aconitases,
but the possibility exists that one enzyme may catalyze the complete
conversion of 2-MC to 2-MIC . In Y . lipolytica, two enzymes, a
2-MC dehydratase and a 2-MIC dehydratase, have been implicated in its
2-MC cycle; both of these enzymes were found not to contain an Fe/S
cluster or to be inactivated by iron-chelating agents (31,
34) . To our knowledge, an Fe/S-independent 2-MIC
dehydratase has not been identified in any other organism .
Possible roles for PrpF in propionate catabolism. The
possibility that PrpF may be an isomerase of one of the intermediates
of the 2-MC cycle was considered . However, it is unlikely that PrpF
is a 2-MIC isomerase because the prpB gene from S .
oneidensis complemented a prpB mutant strain of S .
enterica, and NMR and spectrophotometric data suggested that AcnD
only catalyzed the conversion of (2S,3S)-MC into 2-MCA .
It was also possible that PrpF could be a 2-MC isomerase . However,
our data showed that the S . oneidensis prpC+ allele
complemented an S . enterica prpC mutant strain, suggesting
that the PrpC protein from S . oneidensis generated the same
stereoisomer of 2-MC as that generated by the S . enterica PrpC
enzyme . If the S . oneidensis PrpC protein generated a
different 2-MC stereoisomer, it would be unlikely that the S .
enterica PrpD enzyme would be able to use it as substrate . In
support of this hypothesis, Brock et al . showed that the true
substrate of the E . coli PrpD protein is most likely (2S,3S)-MC,
and a 10-fold decrease in PrpD activity was observed when a racemic
mixture of 2-MC stereoisomers was used (9) . To
further test these ideas, the stereochemical configuration of the
reaction product of S . oneidensis PrpC must be determined .
Brämer et al . observed that PrpF was weakly similar (24%) to the
pduG gene product of S . enterica, the proposed reactivation
factor of diol dehydratase (7) . Although this similarity
is very weak, PrpF may be involved in AcnD Fe/S cluster formation
or repair . As shown above, in vivo, PrpF must accompany AcnD to
compensate for the lack of the PrpD enzyme during growth of a prpD
mutant strain of S . enterica on propionate . If PrpF is
required to stabilize AcnD in the presence of air, then growth under
anoxic conditions should bypass the need for PrpF . However, PrpF was
required even under anoxic growth conditions, suggesting that PrpF
may not be needed to protect the AcnD Fe/S cluster from oxidation,
but it could be involved in the formation, insertion, or
stabilization of the Fe/S cluster . At present, the role of PrpF in
propionate metabolism remains to be determined .
Bacteria use different strategies to convert 2-MC into 2-MIC.
It is interesting that the sequenced prp operons of several
bacteria contain both prpD and the acnD/prpF genes . Since
these gene products catalyze the same reaction, i.e., the conversion
of 2-MC into 2-MCA, they would appear to perform redundant functions
in these organisms . Why would these organisms employ this strategy?
Perhaps PrpD, the Fe/S-independent 2-MC dehydratase, is needed
by these organisms at times when oxygen levels are high in the cell
and may be deleterious to AcnD . Then why do these organisms retain
the acnD/prpF pair of genes? Maybe having both of these
ways to convert 2-MC into 2-MCA allows for more efficient growth on
carbon sources that require the 2-MC cycle as a route of metabolism .
Or perhaps the acnD/prpF gene products do carry out the
second half of the aconitase-like reaction and convert 2-MCA into
2-MIC, which may not have been apparent in vitro in this study, in
addition to the AcnD 2-MC dehydratase activity observed . If these
gene products only function to convert 2-MC into 2-MCA, then an
enzyme outside of the prp operons, most likely one of the
aconitases of the cell (most bacteria contain more than one
aconitase), must catalyze the conversion of 2-MCA into 2-MIC . It has
been described for Y . lipolytica that an Fe/S-independent
enzyme catalyzes the conversion of 2-MCA into 2-MIC (34) .
Perhaps some bacteria that utilize the 2-MC cycle also contain a gene
encoding an Fe/S-independent 2-MIC dehydratase . Elucidating the
function of PrpF both in vivo and in vitro may provide the answers to
some of these questions .
This work was supported by grant GM62203 from the NIGMS to J.C.E.-S .
NMR spectroscopy studies were performed at the National Magnetic
Resonance Facility at Madison, which is supported by the NIH
Biomedical Technology Program (RR02301), with additional equipment
funding from the University of Wisconsin, NSF Academic Infrastructure
Program (BIR-9214394), NIH Shared Instrumentation Program (RR02781,
RR08438), NSF Biological Instrumentation Program (DMB-8415048), and
U.S . Department of Agriculture .
We thank A . R . Horswill for the AcnA protein, V . J . Starai for the
PrpE protein, and W . W . Cleland for 2-MIC . We thank D . Saffarini and
R . Taylor for their gifts of DNA .
* Corresponding author . Mailing address: Department of
Bacteriology, University of Wisconsin, 264 Enzyme Institute, 1710 University
Ave., Madison, WI 53726-4087 . Phone: (608) 262-7379 . Fax: (608) 265-7909 .
E-mail: escalante@bact.wisc.edu.
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