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Journal of Bacteriology, August 2004, p . 4940-4950, Vol . 186,
No . 15
Two
Biosynthetic Pathways for Aromatic Amino Acids in the Archaeon Methanococcus
maripaludis
Iris Porat,1 Brian W . Waters,1,
Quincy Teng,2 and William B . Whitman1*
Department of Microbiology,1 Department of Chemistry, University
of Georgia, Athens, Georgia 306022
Received 12 March 2004/ Accepted 22 April 2004
Methanococcus maripaludis is a strictly anaerobic, methane-producing
archaeon . Aromatic amino acids (AroAAs) are biosynthesized in
this autotroph either by the de novo pathway, with chorismate as an
intermediate, or by the incorporation of exogenous aryl acids via
indolepyruvate oxidoreductase (IOR) . In order to evaluate the roles
of these pathways, the gene that encodes the third step in the de
novo pathway, 3-dehydroquinate dehydratase (DHQ), was deleted . This
mutant required all three AroAAs for growth, and no DHQ activity was
detectible in cell extracts, compared to 6.0 ± 0.2 mU mg–1
in the wild-type extract . The growth requirement for the AroAAs could
be fulfilled by the corresponding aryl acids phenylacetate,
indoleacetate, and p-hydroxyphenylacetate . The specific
incorporation of phenylacetate into phenylalanine by the IOR pathway
was demonstrated in vivo by labeling with [1-13C]phenylacetate.
M . maripaludis has two IOR homologs . A deletion mutant for one
of these homologs contained 76, 74, and 42% lower activity for
phenylpyruvate, p-hydoxyphenylpyruvate, and indolepyruvate
oxidation, respectively, than the wild type . Growth of this mutant in
minimal medium was inhibited by the aryl acids, but the AroAAs
partially restored growth . Genetic complementation of the IOR mutant
also restored much of the wild-type phenotype . Thus, aryl acids
appear to regulate the expression or activity of the de novo pathway .
The aryl acids did not significantly inhibit the activity of the
biosynthetic enzymes chorismate mutase, prephenate dehydratase, and
prephenate dehydrogenase in cell extracts, so the inhibition of
growth was probably not due to an effect on these enzymes .
Methanococcus maripaludis is a strictly anaerobic, methane-producing
archaeon . It is a mesophile that utilizes CO2 as the sole
carbon source during autotrophic growth in minimal medium but
assimilates acetate and some amino acids as carbon sources when they
are present (28, 46,
47, 66) . Regardless of the carbon source,
the reduction of carbon dioxide to methane by H2 or
formate is a required energy source for the growth of these obligate
lithotrophs .
Several lines of evidence suggest that the aromatic amino acids
(AroAAs) can be biosynthesized by the de novo pathway in methanogens
and other archaea (for a review, see reference 67) . The de
novo pathway starts from the common pathway leading to chorismate
and then splits to biosynthesize tryptophan, tyrosine, or phenylalanine
(Fig . 1) . This pathway is sufficient to explain the
pattern of isotope incorporation in the AroAAs in many methanogens (11,
12, 53) . Bioinformatic analyses of
genomic sequences further demonstrate homologs for the genes for the
de novo pathway in many archaea (44,
52, 67) . However, homologs have not been
found for the first two steps in the methanogens, which may utilize
different precursors (60) . A few enzymes in the pathway
have also been biochemically characterized . In the common pathway,
only shikimate kinase from Methanocaldococcus jannaschii has
been characterized in archaea (9) . From chorismate to
tyrosine and phenylalanine, chorismate mutase (CM) from M .
jannaschii, prephenate dehydratase (PDT) from Halobacterium
vallismortis, and aromatic aminotransferases (AroAT) from
Methanococcus aeolicus and Pyrococcus furiosus have been
characterized (27, 34, 62,
69) . Most of the enzymes for the biosynthesis of
tryptophan from chorismate have been characterized in archaea,
including some Methanococcus species (14,
24, 29, 38,
48, 55, 61) .
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FIG . 1 . Pathways for the biosynthesis of AroAAs in M . maripaludis.
The precursors for the de novo pathway in methanogens are not known, but
homologs for genes at all the steps after 3-dehydroquinate are present
in the genomic sequence (see the text) . After chorismate, the pathway
splits into three branches, one of which leads to tryptophan . At
prephenate, the branches leading to phenylalanine and tyrosine form . The
aryl acid pathway starts from phenylacetate, p-hydroxyphenylacetate,
and indoleacetate, precursors for phenylalanine, tyrosine, and
tryptophan, respectively . The enzymes shown are DHQ, CM, PDT, PDH,
AroAT, and IOR . Possible transcriptional regulation of DHQ is indicated
by double dashed lines . Inhibition (–) or activation (+) of the PDT and
PDH enzyme activities are indicated by single dashed lines.
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In addition to the de novo pathway, Methanothermobacter marburgensis
has been proposed to form the AroAAs from the corresponding
aryl acids (56) . In this pathway, the aryl acids are
activated to the coenzyme A (CoA) thioesters indoleacetyl-CoA,
phenylacetyl-CoA, and p-hydroxyphenylacetyl-CoA, which are
then reductively carboxylated by indolepyruvate oxidoreductase (IOR)
to indolepyruvate, phenylpyruvate or p-hydroxyphenylpyruvate,
respectively (Fig . 1) . These compounds are
substrates for the AroAA aminotransferases (69) . The presence
of this pathway in M . marburgensis is supported by characterization
of the key enzyme IOR and incorporation of radiolabeled phenylacetate
into phenylalanine (56) . In contrast, a similar pathway
in the hyperthermophilic peptide-fermenting archaeon P . furiosus
is involved in AroAA degradation to aryl acids (36) .
Thus, the presence of the enzymes of this pathway is not proof of its
physiological function .
The present work provides genetic and biochemical evidence for
both of these pathways for AroAA biosynthesis in M . maripaludis .
Bacterial strains, plasmids, media, and culture conditions. The
bacterial strains and plasmids used in this work are listed in Table
1 . Escherichia coli was grown in Luria-Bertani medium
with ampicillin (100 µg/ml) when needed . M . maripaludis
was grown with 276 kPa of H2-CO2 gas (80:20 [vol/vol]) at
37°C in the mineral medium McN, McNA (McN plus 10 mM sodium acetate),
or McC (McNA plus 0.2% [wt/vol] Casamino Acids and 0.2% [wt/vol]
yeast extract) as described previously (65) . Puromycin
(2.5 µg/ml) or neomycin (500 µg/ml) was added when needed .
Under these growth conditions, logarithmic growth is observed only at
low cell densities because the rate of transfer of H2 gas
to the liquid medium limits the rate of growth at even moderate cell
densities . For this reason, only linear growth curves are presented .
For preparation of the cell extracts, M . maripaludis was grown
in bottles with 100 ml of McNA medium and 138 kPa of H2-CO2
gas (80:20 [vol/vol]) at 37°C . The cells were harvested, and the cell
extract was prepared as previously described (33,
47) .
| TABLE 1 . Bacterial strains and plasmids
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Construction of mutants. The
aroD::pac
and
iorA2::pac
mutants were made by transformation with suicide vectors based upon
pIJA03 . Upon transformation and selection, these vectors exchange the
internal portion of the aroD or iorA2 gene with the
pac cassette, which encodes puromycin resistance in methanococci
(15, 54) . In pIJA03, the pac
cassette is flanked by two multicloning regions that allow directed
cloning of genomic DNA . The upstream and downstream regions of the
aroD gene were PCR amplified from genomic DNA using the primers
U1-U2 and D1-D2, respectively . pIJA03-aroD was constructed in E .
coli DH5
(19) by cloning the U1-U2 PCR products into the
BglII-XbaI sites and the D1-D2 products into the KpnI and NheI sites
of pIJA03 . Similarly, the plasmid pIJA03-iorA2 was constructed using
the primers U3-U4 and D3-D4 . Upon insertion into the genome, this
plasmid would be expected to delete the 3' end of iorA2, as
well as the first codon of iorB2 . The pIJA03-aroD or
pIJA03-iorA2 plasmid was transformed into M . maripaludis S2 by
the polyethylene glycol method (59) . After transformation,
cultures were plated on McC medium plus puromycin, random
puromycin-resistant colonies were restreaked, and representative
isolates were picked into tubes containing broth of the same
composition . After growth, 2.5 ml of the 5-ml culture was used for
determination of the genotype and phenotype . The remaining culture
was used for preparation of frozen stocks . First, the culture tube
was transferred to an anaerobic glove box, and the remaining culture
was centrifuged and resuspended in 0.4 ml of 30% glycerol plus McC
medium (58) . The suspension was distributed into
0.2-ml fractions, sealed in airtight cryogenic vials (Corning), and
stored at –70°C .
The plasmid pMEV2-iorAB2 for complementation of the IOR mutant was
constructed by cloning the iorAB2 genes into the NsiI and XbaI
sites of the methanococcal expression vector pMEV2 (32) .
The iorAB2 genes were PCR amplified from genomic DNA using the
primers E1 and E2 . The plasmid pMEV2-iorAB2 was constructed in
E . coli DH5
(19) and transformed into M . maripaludis S122
(59) . Transformants were screened on McC plates
containing neomycin . Isolated colonies were restreaked and stored as
described above . All subcultures of this strain also contained
neomycin .
The sequences of the primers used in this work will be provided
upon request .
Southern hybridization. Southern hybridizations were
performed using the DIG High Prime DNA Labeling and Detection Starter
Kit I (Roche, Mannheim, Germany) . The probe for aroD was made
by PCR amplification with primers U1 and U2 . The probe for the
iorA2 gene was made by PCR amplification using primers U3 and U4 .
Enzymatic assays. The activity of 3-dehydroquinate
dehydratase (DHQ) was assayed by monitoring the formation of
3-dehydroshikimate at 234 nm (
= 12 x 103 M–1 cm–1)
at 37°C . The standard assay mixture (1 ml) contained potassium-PIPES
[piperazine-N,N'-bis(2-ethanesulfonic acid)] buffer (50
mM; pH 7.0) and 10 mM 3-dehydroquinate (6) .
Dehydroquinate was prepared by the oxidation of quinic acid (Sigma,
St . Louis, Mo.) with nitric acid and separation of the products by
ion-exchange chromatography on Dowex 1 (Sigma) resin (17) .
The fractions that contained dehydroquinate were collected, and the
dehydroquinate was precipitated as previously described (22) .
Pyruvate oxidoreductase (POR) activity was assayed anaerobically
as pyruvate- and CoA-dependent methyl viologen reduction, as
previously reported (33) . IOR activity was assayed similarly,
except that pyruvate was replaced with phenylpyruvate (1 mM),
indolepyruvate (0.5 mM), or p-hydroxyphenylpyruvate (1 mM) as
the substrate of the reaction . Stock solutions of the last two
substrates were prepared in ethanol . An ethanol-only control had no
activity .
CM activity was assayed by measuring the transformation of chorismate
to prephenate after the chemical conversion of prephenate to
phenylpyruvate in acid (1) . Unless otherwise stated, the
concentration of chorismate was 1 mM . PDT was assayed by measuring
the conversion of prephenate to phenylpyruvate as previously
described (16), except that the enzymatic reaction
was performed for 10 min with 0.5 mM prephenate . For the kinetics
experiments for PDT, the concentrations of KCl, phenylalanine, and
tyrosine were 725, 0.1, and 0.1 mM, respectively . Prephenate
dehydrogenase (PDH) activity was assayed by following the formation
of NADH upon the oxidative decarboxylation of prephenate (10) .
The concentration of prephenate was 1 mM .
All specific activities are given in milliunits per milligram (or
nanomoles per minute per milligram of protein) . Protein
concentrations were determined using the bicinchoninic acid protein
assay kit (Pierce, Rockford, Ill.) after incubation at 90°C in 0.1 M
NaOH for 30 min .
13C labeling and isolation of amino acids from M .
maripaludis proteins. The AroAA auxotroph S87 was grown in 6.5
liters of modified McNA medium in H2-CO2 gas as
previously described (46) . In addition to the
usual components, the McNA medium contained 0.1 mM [1-13C]phenylacetate
and p-hydroxyphenylacetate and 0.02 mM indoleacetate . The aryl
acids were flushed with N2 gas and sterilized by filtration .
The fermentor was inoculated with 400 ml of culture grown in
the same medium with unlabeled phenylacetate . The cells were
harvested by centrifugation as previously described (46) . The
proteins from the cell pellets were extracted as described previously
(64), except that the cell paste (8.2 g [wet weight])
was suspended in 326 ml of ice-cold 5% (wt/vol) trichloroacetic acid
and the protein pellet was washed twice with acetone before being
dried in a vacuum desiccator . For acid hydrolysis, the dried proteins
were suspended in 6 N HCl (40 µl/mg of dry protein) in an
acid-cleaned, anaerobic glass culture tube (51) . The tube
was sealed with a butyl rubber stopper and aluminum seal, and
the solution was frozen in an ethanol-dry ice bath . The tube was
flushed with N2 gas for 15 min and incubated in a sand bath
at 110°C for 20 h . Then, the acid was diluted with an equal
volume of water . Rotary evaporation was used for removing the acid,
and the amino acid mixture was concentrated to 0.5 ml by
lyophilization . The concentrated mixture of amino acids was then
diluted to 1.5 ml in water, and multivalent cations were removed
during passage through a 3-ml column of iminodiacetic acid chelating
resin (Sigma) . The column was treated with 500 ml of 1 N HCl and 500
ml of water before the sample was loaded . After the sample was
loaded, the column was eluted with distilled water . The amino acids
were detected by spotting drops from the column on filter paper .
After the drops dried, a drop of ninhydrin reagent (100 ml of
butanol, 3 ml of acetic acid, and 0.3 g of ninhydrin) was added and
dried . The formation of an orange color indicated the presence of
amino acids . The amino acids eluted within 13 ml and were taken to
dryness by lyophilization .
NMR experiment. 1H-decoupled 13C
nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) data were acquired at 20°C on a
400-MHz spectrometer (399.8 MHz; 1H), while 1H
detected spectra were recorded on a 500-MHz spectrometer (499.8 MHz;
1H) . 1H chemical shifts at 20°C were referenced
to 2,2-dimethyl-2-silapentane-5-sulfonic acid via the HDO resonance
frequency at 4.76 ppm, and 13C chemical shifts were referenced
to tetramethylsilane at 0.0 ppm . All 2D phase-sensitive gradient-enhanced
and 1D version 1H-13C HMQC-clean-TOCSY (HMQC,
heteronuclear multiquantum coherence; TOCSY, total correlation
spectroscopy) (31) experiments were acquired with
GARP decoupling (45) during acquisition . For all
2D experiments, quadrature detection in the indirectly observed
dimensions was obtained using the time-proportional phase increment
method (37) . The 2D data were acquired with an
acquisition time of 100 ms, with four scans for each of 256 free
induction decays . The 1D HMQC-clean-TOCSY data were recorded with 64
scans .
Phylogenetic analysis. The genes encoding the
subunits of the two IORs from M . maripaludis were used for a
BLASTP search of the National Center for Biotechnology Information
(National Institutes of Health) database . The amino acid sequences
were aligned using Clustal X (57) . This alignment
was manually edited prior to construction of the phylogenetic trees
with PHYLIP (13) . Evolutionary distances were determined
with PROTDIST, and the neighbor-joining and Fitch-Margoliash
dendrograms were generated with NEIGHBOR and FITCH, respectively .
Parsimony analysis was performed with PROTPARS . The SEQBOOT program
was used to calculate bootstrap values based upon 100 replicate
trees .
Biosynthesis of AroAAs by the de novo pathway. The genome of
M . maripaludis possesses homologs for five of the seven genes of
the de novo pathway of AroAA biosynthesis up to chorismate (J . Leigh,
personal communication) . The ORF MMP1394 is the homolog to aroD,
which encodes the third enzyme in the pathway, DHQ . This is the first
step for which a homolog has been identified . MMP1394 shows
30%
amino acid identity to the bacterial type I DHQs . Because there is no
direct biochemical evidence for the identity of aroD in the
archaea, a deletion strain of MMP1394 was constructed to confirm its
role in AroAA biosynthesis (Fig . 2A) . The genotypes
of the resulting mutants, S83 and S87, were confirmed by Southern
blotting . The replacement of an internal portion of MMP1394 with the
pac cassette resulted in an increase in size of the BglII
fragment from 4.2 kb in the wild type to 5.1 kb in the mutants (Fig.
2B) . The mutants were auxotrophic for all three
AroAAs (Fig . 3A and data not shown) . In cell
extracts of the mutant S87, the DHQ activity was below the limit of
detection, or <0.5 mU mg–1 . In contrast, the specific
activity in the wild-type strain was 6.0 ± 0.2 mU mg–1 .
These results confirmed the identity of MMP1394 as aroD and
its role in the pathway of AroAA biosynthesis .
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FIG . 2 . Construction of the
aroD::pac
mutation . (A) M . maripaludis aroD (MMP1394) gene region . The ORFs
MMP1396, MMP1395 and MMP1391 were annotated as aminotransferase,
DEAD/DEAH box helicase and aspartate-semialdehyde dehydrogenase,
respectively . The ORFs MMP1393 and MMP1392 were annotated as
hypothetical proteins (J . Leigh, personal communication) . The locations
of the primers U1, U2, D1, and D2 used to clone the upstream and
downstream regions flanking MMP1394 are shown . (B) Confirmation of the
genotypes of the wild-type S2 and mutants S83 and S87 by Southern
hybridization . The genomic DNA (3.2 µg) was digested with BglII prior to
hybridization with the probe indicated in panel A . Lanes 1, 2, and 3,
genomic DNAs of S2, S83, and S87, respectively, digested with BglII .
Lane 4, pJA03-aroD digested with PvuII and NheI as a positive
control.
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FIG . 3 . Growth requirement of the auxotroph S87 for AroAAs . The McNA
medium contained 1 mM AroAAs or aryl acids, except when otherwise
indicated . (A) Growth in the presence of AroAAs or aryl acids . The
inoculum was 105 cells . Shown are growth of the wild-type S2
with or without acids ( )
and growth of S87 with all three aryl acids ( ),
with all three AroAAs ( ),
and without any addition (•) . (B) Assimilation of phenylalanine and
tyrosine limit the growth rate of the mutant S87 . The inoculum was 107
cells washed in McNA medium . Shown are growth of S87 without any
addition (•); with all three aryl acids ( );
with phenylalanine, indoleacetate, and p-hydroxyphenylacetate ( );
with tyrosine, indoleacetate, and phenylacetate ( );
with indoleacetate and p-hydroxyphenylacetate alone ( );
and with indoleacetate and phenylacetate alone ( ) .
(C) Growth yield of the mutant S87 with limiting concentrations of
indoleacetate ( ),
p-hydroxyphenyacetate ( ),
and phenylacetate (•) . The inoculum was 107 cells washed in
McNA medium.
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Biosynthesis of AroAAs from the aryl acids. The three aryl
acids, phenylacetate, p-hydroxyphenylacetate, and
indoleacetate, fulfilled the AroAA requirement for growth of the
aroD mutant S87 (Fig . 3A) . These results suggested that
M . maripaludis was also able to biosynthesize the AroAAs from
the aryl acids using the IOR pathway .
Aryl acids are readily available in typical methanogenic environments,
where they are formed from the AroAAs by anaerobic heterotrophs
(3, 4) . In contrast, strains of M .
maripaludis poorly assimilate low concentrations of the AroAAs
themselves, as well many other amino acids (66) .
The rapid growth of the auxotroph with aryl acids suggested that
these acids might be assimilated at environmentally relevant
concentrations (Fig . 3A) . In fact, replacement of
phenylacetate and p-hydroxyphenylacetate with phenylalanine
and tyrosine, respectively, actually inhibited growth, confirming
that the aryl acids were assimilated more readily than the amino
acids (Fig . 3B) . The aryl acids were assimilated
quantitatively . For instance, the concentrations of indoleacetate,
phenylacetate, and p-hydroxyphenylacetate required for growth
of S87 were close to the values expected from the abundance of the
AroAAs in proteins (Fig . 3C) . The cellular yields
for phenylacetate, p-hydroxyphenylacetate, and indoleacetate
were 3.7, 4.2, and 23 g (dry weight) mmol–1, respectively .
From the compositions of AroAAs in E . coli, the expected
yields were very similar: 5.7, 7.6, and 19 g (dry weight) mmol–1
(39) . These results demonstrated that low concentrations
of aryl acids could fulfill the growth requirement for AroAAs .
In bacteria, chorismate is an intermediate in the biosynthesis of
p-aminobenzoate, quinones, and the catechol siderophores (5) .
Although methanogens are not known to possess the last two compounds,
p-aminobenzoate is required for methanopterin biosynthesis in
Methanobrevibacter sp . (63) . Although labeling
of p-aminobenzoate was consistent with its formation from
chorismate, this biosynthetic route was not demonstrated
conclusively . Therefore, it was interesting that aryl acids alone
were sufficient to support growth of the
aroD::pac
mutant . To confirm that no other compounds were required for growth,
this mutant was serially transferred five times in minimal medium
with acetate and aryl acids, for a total dilution of
108-fold .
After five transfers, the growth of the mutant closely resembled that
of the wild type in this medium (data not shown) . From this result,
methanococci must have an alternative pathway of p-aminobenzoate
biosynthesis during growth on aryl acids . It is also possible that
chorismate is an intermediate during growth without these AroAA
precursors .
In vivo incorporation of phenylacetate into phenylalanine.
To confirm the incorporation of aryl acids into the AroAAs, the
mutant S87 was cultured with [1-13C]phenylacetate, unlabeled
p-hydroxyphenylacetate, and indoleacetate . After extraction
of the cellular proteins and acid hydrolysis to produce a mixture
of amino acids, only one amino acid carbon was specifically
enriched by the 13C label (Fig . 4A) . This carbon
was identified as the C
of phenylalanine based in part upon its 13C chemical shift
in a 1H-decoupled 13C experiment . However, this criterion
alone was not sufficient, and the identification was confirmed
by the 1H
and 1Hß resonances obtained in 1H-13C
HMQC-TOCSY experiments of the mixture and those of amino acid
standards prepared at the same pH . The observed 1H
chemical shifts in the mixture were 4.29 ppm for the 1H
proton and 3.34 and 3.20 ppm for the 1Hß
protons (Fig . 4B) . These matched the resonances of
the phenylalanine standard observed at 4.25 ppm for the 1H
proton and 3.33 and 3.18 ppm for the 1Hß
protons . In contrast, the 1H chemical shifts of other candidate
standards had significant deviations from that observed for the
mixture . For example, tryptophan had the closest chemical shifts and
resonances for the 1H
proton at 4.24 ppm and the 1Hß protons at 3.49 and 3.37
ppm .
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FIG . 4 . NMR spectra of the mixture of amino acids produced by acid
hydrolysis of labeled proteins . The amino acids (10 mg) were isolated by
Robert's method from S87 cells grown in the presence of 0.1 mM [1-13C]phenylacetate .
(A) 13C spectrum of the mixture of amino acids produced by
acid hydrolysis of the labeled proteins . (B) Proton spectrum of the
13C-labeled amino acids demonstrating coupling to 13C.
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IOR from M . maripaludis. The IORs from M .
marburgensis and Pyrococcus spp . have been purified and
found to contain two subunits (35, 49,
50, 56) . Two homologs of the
IORs are present in the genomes of M . maripaludis (J . Leigh,
personal communication), each one encoded by adjacent ORFs: MMP0316
and MMP0315, and MMP0713 and MMP0714 for the
and ß subunits, respectively . A phylogenetic tree of the
subunits from the prokaryotes grouped the IOR homologs into six
clades (Fig . 5) . While all six clades were observed
by the Fitch-Margoliash, neighbor-joining, and parsimony algorithms,
only some were strongly supported by bootstrap analyses . Moreover, it
was not possible to confidently assign the genes from Chlorobium
tepidum, Bacteroides thetaiotaomicron, and homolog 1 of Geobacter
metallireducens to a clade or to determine the deep branching
order among the clades (Fig . 5) . Four clades (A to D)
contained only archaeal genes, and two clades (E and F) contained
bacterial and archaeal sequences . The biochemically characterized
IORs from Pyrococcus spp . and M . marburgensis, which is
closely related to Methanothermobacter thermoautotrophicus (56),
were all in clade D, which included only archaeal genes but not the
methanococcal homologs . Instead the M . maripaludis homologs
were found in clades A and F, along with the homologs from the
closely related mesophile Methanococcus voltae (W . B . Whitman,
R . A . Feldman, and R . Overbeek, unpublished observation) . Clade A was
composed entirely of archaeal genes . In addition to the methanococcal
homologs, it also included homolog 1 of Methanosarcina spp .
In contrast, the methanococcal homologs were the only archaeal
genes in clade F, which also contained genes from a variety of
facultative and strictly anaerobic bacteria . Because of the low
similarity of the methanococcal homologs to the biochemically
characterized enzymes and the broad distribution among different
types of prokaryotes, it was not possible to infer the physiological
properties of the IOR homologs from this phylogeny .
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FIG . 5 . Phylogeny of the iorA genes that encode the
subunit of IOR . The phylogenetic tree was constructed by using the
PHYLIP package based upon an alignment of conserved positions using the
Fitch-Margoliash algorithm . Similar phylogenetic trees were generated by
neighbor-joining and parsimony algorithms (data not shown) . The
bootstrap values for all three algorithms were very close and are
labeled in the tree by the symbols at the branch points: •, values of
>90%;
,
values of >60%; unlabeled, values of
60% .
The scale bar is 0.5 expected amino acid substitutions per site . The six
clades found are labeled A to F . The accession numbers for protein
sequences from the National Center for Biotechnology Information
database (from top to bottom in the tree) are:
AAM05134,
AAM32330,
CAF29872.1,
AAR21228,
AAL80969,
NP_143041,
NP_126757,
C90374,
BAB65740,
BAB59718,
CAC12141,
Q9UZ57,
O58495,
AAL80657,
BAA20528 [formerly named Pyrococcus sp KOD1(43)],
NP_615972,
NP_634117,
O28783,
AAB86318,
ZP_00000830,
ZP_00001160,
ZP_00080126,
NP_106112,
BAC48676,
CAD15531,
ZP_00056522,
ZP_00129724,
AAM32484,
AAM05385,
NP_661020,
AAO75537,
ZP_00054515,
ZP_00015617,
ZP_00010808,
ZP_00079304,
NP_623747,
NP_348620,
ZP_00059944,
AAR21230, and
CAF30269.1.
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In order to further understand the role of the IORs in M . maripaludis,
the iorA2 (MMP0713) gene was deleted by replacement with the
pac cassette (Fig . 6A) . The genotype of the
resulting mutant, S122, was confirmed by Southern blotting . The
replacement of the internal portion of MMP0713 with the pac
cassette resulted in an increase in size of the EcoRV fragment from
2.4 kb in the wild type to 3.2 kb in the mutant S122 (Fig.
6B) . The IOR specific activity in the mutant was
greatly reduced, from 162 mU mg–1 in the wild type to 39
mU mg–1 with phenylpyruvate as the substrate (Table
2) . The genes iorAB2 were then cloned next
to a strong promoter in the methanococcal expression vector pMEV2 (32),
and the vector was transformed into the mutant S122 to produce
strains S151, S153, and S155 . The complemented strains all possessed
elevated levels of IOR activity, confirming that these genes encoded
IOR (Table 2 and data not shown) . Interestingly,
the specific activity for POR in these complemented strains was
reduced, from 390 mU mg–1 in the wild type and strain S122
to 180 to 220 mU mg–1 in the complementation mutants .
Presumably, biosynthesis of elevated levels of IOR depleted the
coenzymes needed for biosynthesis of normal levels of POR . Although
the methanococcal IORs were not purified, the properties of the
mutants suggested that the enzymes had different specificities for
the aryl acids . Compared to the wild type, extracts of the
iorA2::pac
mutant S122 possessed greatly reduced activity with phenylpyruvate
and p-hydroxyphenylpyruvate (Table 2), suggesting
that IOR2 preferentially utilized these substrates . Similarly,
complemented strains possessed very high activities for phenylpyruvate
and p-hydroxyphenylpyruvate compared to the activity with
indolepyruvate (Table 2) . Presumably, the residual
activity in the mutant S122, which was nearly the same for all three
substrates, represented IOR1 . Thus, the substrate specificities of
IOR1 and IOR2 appeared to differ .
|
FIG . 6 . Construction of
iorA2::pac
mutation . (A) M . maripaludis iorA2 (MMP0713) gene region . The
ORFs MMP0712, MMP715, MMP0716, and MMP0717 were annotated as
solute-binding protein/glutamate receptor, coenzyme F390 synthetase II,
acetohydroxyacid synthase small-subunit related, and hypothetical
protein, respectively (J . Leigh, personal communication) . The primers
U3, U4, D3 and D4 were used to clone the flanking regions for
construction of pIJA03-iorA . The primers E1 and E2 were used for
cloning iorA2 and iorB2 during the construction of pMEV2-iorAB2 .
(B) Confirmation of the genotype by Southern hybridization with the
wild-type S2 and the iorA2 mutant S122 . The genomic DNA (3.3 µg)
was digested with EcoRV prior to hybridization to the probe indicated in
panel A . Lanes 1 and 2, S122 and S2 genomic DNAs, respectively; lane 3,
pJA03-iorA2 DNA digested with PvuII and NheI as a positive
control.
|
|
| TABLE 2 . Indolepyruvate oxidoreductase specific activities of the
wild-type S2 and mutant S122 and S155 strainsa
|
|
Regulation of de novo AroAA biosynthesis by aryl acids. The
growth of the
iorA2::pac
mutant S122 was indistinguishable from that of the wild type in
medium with (McC) or without (McNA or McN) amino acids . However, the
aryl acids phenylacetate and p-hydroxyphenylacetate, either
alone or in combination, severely inhibited growth of the mutant in
minimal medium (Fig . 7A and data not shown) . In
some experiments, growth of the
iorA2::pac
mutant resumed after a long lag in the presence of phenylacetate
or p-hydroxyphenylacetate (Fig . 7B) . Growth in
these cases was best explained by selection for revertants . Growth
was seldom seen when very small inocula were used, suggesting that
growth occurred due to selection for mutants arising spontaneously .
Moreover, the aryl acids no longer inhibited the growth of these
cultures upon subsequent transfers in the same medium (data not
shown) . The inhibition by the individual aryl acids suggested that
phenylacetate and p-hydroxyphenylacetate inhibited the de novo
pathway of AroAA biosynthesis . The inhibition by all three aryl acids
together further indicated that the level of IOR activity remaining
in the mutant was insufficient to provide AroAAs from the aryl acids .
|
FIG . 7 . Effects of aryl acids on growth of the
iorA2::pac
mutant S122 . The McNA medium contained 1 mM aryl acids or AroAAs as
indicated . The inoculum was
2
x 105 cells . (A)
Inhibition of growth of strain S122 by phenylacetate or p-hydroxyphenylacetate.
,
wild-type S2 without any addition; •, S122 without any addition;
,
S122 with phenylacetate alone, p-hydroxyphenylacetate alone, both
phenylacetate and p-hydroxyphenylacetate, or all three aryl
acids . (B) Restoration of growth by AroAAs . Shown are S122 without any
addition (•), with phenylacetate ( ),
with phenylacetate and phenylalanine ( ),
with p-hydroxyphenylacetate ( ),
and with p-hydroxyphenylacetate and tyrosine ( ) .
(C) Complementation of the
iorA2::pac
mutant with pMEV2-iorAB2 . Shown are growth of wild-type S2
without any addition ( ),
the complemented strain S155 without any addition (•), S155 with
phenylacetate ( ),
S155 with p-hydroxyphenylacetate ( ),
S155 with phenylacetate and p-hydroxyphenylacetate ( ),
and S155 with the three aryl acids ( ).
|
|
In support of these hypotheses, phenylalanine provided partial
protection against inhibition by phenylacetate, indicating that
limitation for AroAAs caused at least some of the growth inhibition
(Fig . 7B) . However, tyrosine failed to protect against
inhibition by p-hydroxyphenylacetate . Tyrosine was assimilated
poorly by M . maripaludis . For instance, tyrosine supported
only poor growth of the
aroD::pac
mutant S87 after a lag of >2 days (Fig . 3B) .
Therefore, the failure of tyrosine to protect against aryl acid
inhibition probably reflected its poor uptake . In addition, p-hydroxyphenylacetate
appeared to be a stronger inhibitor than phenylacetate (see below),
so its effects would be more difficult to reverse upon the addition
of the AroAAs . Because phenylacetate was less inhibitory,
phenylalanine could provide partial protection, presumably by sparing
the chorismate requirement for biosynthesis of the other AroAAs . In
contrast, indoleacetate did not inhibit the growth of the
iorA2::pac
mutant (data not shown) . Presumably, it was either not a strong
inhibitor of AroAA biosynthesis or the levels of IOR activity were
sufficient for tryptophan biosynthesis .
In strain S155, where the chromosomal
iorA2::pac
mutation was complemented by iorAB2 expression from a plasmid,
the relative growth inhibition by the aryl acids was greatly reduced .
First, p-hydroxyphenylacetate or phenylacetate alone was still
inhibitory, as expected if they inhibited the de novo pathway .
However, phenylacetate and p-hydroxyphenylacetate together or
all three aryl acids together were no longer inhibitory, as expected
if the IOR activity was now sufficient to provide AroAAs (Fig .
7C) . This result confirmed the hypothesis that the
failure of S122 to grow in the presence of the aryl acids was due to
low levels of IOR activity and not due to a polar effect on other
genes at this locus . Compared to the wild type, strain S155
also grew slowly in McNA medium without the addition of the aryl
acids (Fig . 7C) . Presumably, this result reflected the
reduced levels of POR activity .
If the aryl acids inhibited de novo AroAA biosynthesis, they might
also inhibit the growth of the wild type . While even low
concentrations of p-hydroxyphenylacetate were inhibitory, higher
concentrations of phenylacetate or indoleacetate were required
(Fig . 8) . In contrast to the mutant S122, the aryl acids were
inhibitory only when present individually, and combinations did
not inhibit . Presumably, when the three aryl acids were present
together, the AroAAs were formed from the aryl pathway and the
requirement for the de novo pathway was spared . The absence of
inhibition by all three aryl acids strongly suggested that inhibition
by aryl acids was due to an effect on AroAA biosynthesis . However,
because tyrosine was assimilated poorly, it was not possible to
demonstrate protection by the AroAAs themselves .
|
FIG . 8 . Effects of aryl acids on growth of wild type S2 . The McNA medium
contained 1 mM aryl acids where indicated . The inoculum was
2
x 105 cells . Shown is the
S2 strain growing without any addition ( ),
with phenylacetate alone (•), with indoleacetate alone ( ),
with p-hydroxyphenylacetate alone ( ),
and with the three aryl acids ( ) .
The inset shows the growth lag of strain S2 during growth with
increasing concentrations of phenylacetate (•), indoleacetate ( ),
and p-hydroxyphenylacetate ( ).
|
|
Effect of aryl acids on enzymes of the de novo pathway. To
identify the site of action of the aryl acids, the activities for
some of the key steps were examined in cell extracts . In many
prokaryotes and yeasts, the initial reaction, DAHP synthase, is a key
regulatory step (18, 30, 40,
41) . However, in methanococci, the initial step of
the de novo pathway is not known (67), and it was
not possible to examine that reaction . For the enzymes of the de novo
pathway tested, growth in the presence of the aryl acids had only
small effects on the specific activities in cell extracts . DHQ is the
first enzyme in the pathway that is known . Its specific activity in
wild-type cells grown with the aryl acids was one-third (2.3 ± 0.1 mU
mg–1) of the level in cells grown without additions (6.0 ±
0.2 mU mg–1) . For PDH, the specific activity of cells
grown with the aryl acids (23 ± 1.2 mU mg–1) was
nearly the same as the level in cells grown without additions (18 ±
2.1 mU mg–1) . For CM and PDT, the specific activities were
the same (see below) . Therefore, the presence of aryl acids did not
have a large affect on the expression of these enzymes .
The effect of phenylacetate and p-hydroxyphenylacetate on the
activities of the phenylalanine or tyrosine biosynthetic enzymes
from chorismate were also examined . CM is the first common enzyme
for the biosynthesis of both phenylalanine and tyrosine (Fig .
1) . The CM from M . jannaschii has been categorized as a
monofunctional AroQ (7, 34) . The
aroQ gene of many organisms is often fused with either other
AroAA biosynthetic genes or a regulatory domain (7).
M . maripaludis possesses a homolog of the M . jannaschii
CM (encoded by aroQ), MMP0578 . In cell extracts, the CM specific
activity was affected very little by the AroAAs, phenylacetate,
or p-hydroxyphenylacetate, which was expected because a regulatory
domain was not present in the open reading frame (ORF) (Table
3) . Thus, CM was unlikely to be a major site of inhibition by
the aryl acids .
| TABLE 3 . CM, PDT, and PDH specific activities of the wild-type strain S2
|
|
PDT is the first enzyme in the phenylalanine branch (Fig . 1) .
Like the PDT from H . vallismortis (27), the
activity of PDT from wild-type M . maripaludis was inhibited
70%
by phenylalanine and activated
2-fold
by tyrosine (Table 3) . In one set of experiments,
the Vmax and Km for prephenate were 5.3 mU
min–1 and 1.2 mM, respectively . The apparent Vmax
and Km for prephenate in the presence of the
inhibitor phenylalanine at 0.1 mM were 2.8 mU min–1 and
0.96 mM, respectively, and the Vmax and Km
for prephenate in the presence of the activator tyrosine at 0.1
mM were 6.0 mU min–1 and 0.63 mM, respectively . Thus,
phenylalanine affected mostly the Vmax, while tyrosine
affected mostly the Km for prephenate . Methanococci
contain high intracellular concentrations of potassium, which is an
activator for some biosynthetic enzymes (70) .
However, PDT activity from M . maripaludis was inhibited by
KCl, as was previously found for PDT activity from E . coli (16) .
In this series of experiments, the Vmax and Km
for prephenate with physiological concentrations of KCl of 0.725 M (25)
were 7.8 mU min–1 and 3.5 mM, respectively . In the absence
of KCl, the Vmax and Km for prephenate were
6.8 mU min–1 and 1.1 mM, respectively, in this experiment .
Thus, KCl largely affected the Km for prephenate .
Phenylacetate and p-hydroxyphenylacetate had no effect on the
activity of PDT from M . maripaludis, even when the assay
contained well below the Km concentration of
prephenate (Table 3) . Therefore, it is unlikely
that this enzyme was the site of inhibition by the aryl acids .
Finally, PDH, the first committed enzyme of tyrosine biosynthesis,
was tested . PDH activity from wild-type M . maripaludis was inhibited
by
70%
by either tyrosine or p-hydroxyphenylpyruvate and 55% by p-hydroxyphenylacetate
(Table 3) . Phenylalanine had a small effect, and
phenylacetate had no effect on the PDH activity . This inhibition
pattern was consistent with its role in tyrosine biosynthesis, and it
would not explain the growth inhibition by aryl acids .
Evidence has been presented for two pathways of AroAA biosynthesis in
M . maripaludis . The presence of the de novo pathway from
dehydroquinate is supported by construction of an AroAA auxotroph via
deletion of the aroD homolog in the genome . Moreover, activities
of four enzymes in this pathway were demonstrated directly in
cell extracts . Evidence for the IOR pathway from aryl acids includes
growth experiments where the aryl acids fulfilled the requirement for
AroAAs by the auxotroph and the specific incorporation of the
isotopically labeled aryl acid phenylacetate into phenylalanine . The
role of IOR2 in this pathway is further supported by the apparent
inability of the deletion mutant S122 to incorporate aryl acids .
Anaerobic heterotrophs ferment AroAAs to the aryl acids to provide
energy under starvation conditions (4, 20,
21) . Thus, the aryl acids may be more abundant in
anaerobic environments than the amino acids themselves . Consistent
with this idea is the observation that methanococci utilized the aryl
acids more readily than the amino acids themselves . Moreover, the
aryl acids down regulated the de novo biosynthetic pathway
sufficiently to inhibit growth in the
iorA2::pac
mutant . Because the AroAAs were taken up poorly, it was not possible
to reverse this inhibition completely by the addition of the amino
acids . Thus, it might be that chorismate was a precursor for
additional cellular components in addition to the AroAAs . The
inability to demonstrate an additional nutritional requirement
following extensive subculture of the aroD::pac mutant
with only the aryl acids does not support this hypothesis . In
addition, the individual aryl acids phenylacetate and p-hydroxyphenylacetate
inhibited the growth of the wild-type S2, the
iorA2::pac
mutant S122, and the iorAB2 complementation strain S155 .
However, when the aryl acids were provided together, only the
iorA2::pac
mutant was inhibited . These results suggested that AroAA
biosynthesis, which is the product of the IOR pathway, was the major
site of aryl acid inhibition . These results further imply that the
aryl acids are physiologically relevant precursors for the AroAAs .
Although it was not possible to identify the major site of regulation
by aryl acids, some regulatory features of the de novo pathway
were elucidated . These features are summarized in the working model
proposed in Fig . 1 . Growth in the presence of the aryl
acids lowered the expression of DHQ but not the levels of CM,
PDH, and PDT activity . Thus, regulation of levels of expression
appeared to be a relatively minor factor in the regulation of this
pathway in methanococci . Similarly, the presence of branched-chain
amino acids had only small effects on the specific activities of
their biosynthetic enzymes (W . L . Gardner and W . B . Whitman,
unpublished data) .
In contrast, feedback inhibition in the methanococcal enzymes
closely resembles that found in other prokaryotes . Like the enzyme
from the halophilic archaeon H . vallismortis, the M .
maripaludis PDT activity is inhibited by phenylalanine and activated
by tyrosine (27) . Additionally the H . vallismortis
PDT is inhibited by tryptophan and activated by methionine, leucine,
and isoleucine . This type of interpathway regulation was discovered
in Bacillus subtilis and named metabolic interlock (26) .
Feedback inhibition of PDT by phenylalanine is highly conserved in
gram-negative and gram-positive bacteria and yeast (16,
26, 30) . In E . coli, the
bifunctional P protein has been mapped, and the PDT, CM, and
regulatory domains have been clearly identified (72) . Two
highly conserved motifs in the regulatory domain that are involved
in the binding of phenylalanine are also present in the M . maripaludis
PDT sequence (reference 42 and data not shown) . These
observations agree with the proposal for an ancient origin of PDT
regulation (27) .
The feedback inhibition of PDH by tyrosine is also highly conserved
among gram-positive and gram-negative bacteria (2,
8, 23) . The B . subtilis
PDH is also inhibited by phenylalanine, tryptophan, and p-hydroxyphenylpyruvate
(8) . The M . maripaludis PDH is inhibited by
tyrosine, p-hydroxyphenylpyruvate, and p-hydroxyphenylacetate,
connecting it to the aryl acid pathway . However, the magnitude
of the inhibition by p-hydroxyphenylacetate is not sufficient
to explain the growth inhibition by this aryl acid . Presumably, the
aryl acids have other sites of inhibition in the de novo pathway . In
any case, feedback inhibition was also observed in the methanococcal
acetohydroxyacid synthase, the first enzyme in branched-chain amino
acid biosynthesis (68, 71), suggesting
that this regulatory mechanism is widely conserved among the
prokaryotes .
This work was supported by grant DE-FG02-01ER15262 from the
Department of Energy .
We thank Andrew Leech for his recommendations on the preparation
of dehydroquinate and Robert S . Phillips and John A . Leigh for
helpful discussions .
* Corresponding author . Mailing address: Department of
Microbiology, University of Georgia, Athens, GA 30602-2605 . Phone: (706)
542-4219 . Fax: (706) 542-2674 . E-mail:
whitman@uga.edu .
Present address: 127 Roland Rd., Thomaston, GA 30286 .
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