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Journal of Bacteriology, August 2004, p . 5129-5137, Vol . 186,
No . 15
The
Phosphoenolpyruvate Carboxylase from Methanothermobacter thermautotrophicus
Has a Novel Structure
Hiten M . Patel,1 Jessica L . Kraszewski,2,3 and
Biswarup Mukhopadhyay2,3,4*
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, Illinois,1
Virginia Bioinformatics Institute,2 Departments of Biochemistry,3
Biology, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, Blacksburg,
Virginia4
Received 9 February 2004/ Accepted 29 April 2004
In Methanothermobacter thermautotrophicus, oxaloacetate synthesis
is a major and essential CO2-fixation reaction . This
methanogenic archaeon possesses two oxaloacetate-synthesizing
enzymes, pyruvate carboxylase and phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase .
The phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase from this organism was purified
to homogeneity . The subunit size of this homotetrameric protein was
55 kDa, which is about half that of all known bacterial and
eukaryotic phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylases (PPCs) . The NH2-terminal
sequence identified this enzyme as the product of MTH943, an open
reading frame with no assigned function in the genome sequence . A
BLAST search did not show an obvious sequence similarity between
MTH943 and known PPCs, which are generally well conserved . This is
the first report of a new type of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase
that we call PpcA ("A" for "archaeal") . Homologs to PpcA were
present in most archaeal genomic sequences, but only in three
bacterial (Clostridium perfringens, Oenococcus oeni, and
Leuconostoc mesenteroides) and no eukaryotic genomes . PpcA was
the only recognizable oxaloacetate-producing enzyme in
Methanopyrus kandleri, a hydrothermal vent organism . Each
PpcA-containing organism lacked a PPC homolog . The activity of M .
thermautotrophicus PpcA was not influenced by acetyl coenzyme A
and was about 50 times less sensitive to aspartate than the
Escherichia coli PPC . The catalytic core (including His138,
Arg587, and Gly883) of the E . coli PPC
was partly conserved in PpcA, but three of four aspartate-binding
residues (Lys773, Arg832, and Asn881)
were not . PPCs probably evolved from PpcA through a process
that added allosteric sites to the enzyme . The reverse is also
equally possible .
The synthesis of oxaloacetate (OAA) is a major and essential CO2-fixation
reaction in the methanarchaea (10, 11,
15, 16, 50,
52, 58, 60) . These
organisms possess an incomplete tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle which
is used to generate intermediates (OAA and
-ketoglutarate
[ -KG])
and a carrier (succinate) for the biosynthesis of amino acids and
tetrapyrroles (10, 11, 15,
16, 50, 52,
58, 60) . The organisms belonging to the
orders of Methanococcales, Methanobacteriales, and
Methanomicrobiales, which primarily use hydrogen as an energy
source (2), employ a reductive sequence starting at
OAA and terminating at
-KG
(10, 11, 15,
16, 50, 52,
60) .
Methanosarcina species, which predominantly depend on acetotrophic
or methylotrophic methanogenesis for energy generation (2),
use an oxidative branch of the TCA cycle that initiates with
OAA and acetate and terminates at
-KG
(52, 58) . Hence, OAA synthesis
is a central anabolic process in methanarchaea . Thus far, pyruvate
carboxylase (PYC) (39, 41,
42, 50) and phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase
(PPC) (14, 31, 47,
60) have been found to be capable of fulfilling
this requirement, as follows:
 |
 |
PYC is ubiquitous in the methanogens (39,
41, 42, 50), and the
primary structure, kinetic characteristics, and expression patterns
of the methanogen PYCs have been investigated (39,
41, 42, 50) .
Methanothermobacter thermautotrophicus (formerly known as
Methanobacterium thermoautotrophicum strain
H)
(2, 57, 61)
and Methanothermus sociabilis also possess phosphoenolpyruvate
carboxylase (14, 31, 47,
60), but very little of such information is
available on these enzymes . Although the Methanothermus sociabilis
PPC was purified to homogeneity, the primary structure and the
encoding gene of this protein were not identified (31,
47) . A search of the genome databases with the
amino acid sequences of known PPCs as queries did not detect a
homolog of this enzyme in the archaea, even though such homologs were
readily found in bacteria and eukaryotes . For these reasons and the
probability that the methanarchaeal PPCs have a novel structure, we
purified the enzyme from M . thermautotrophicus . Our results
show that the PPC from M . thermautotrophicus has a novel
structure and that most archaea possess a homolog of this enzyme .
Purification of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase from M .
thermautotrophicus. The enzyme purification was carried out
aerobically at 4°C . Frozen pellets (87 g) of autotrophically grown
M . thermautotrophicus (42) were thawed and
suspended in 90 ml of lysis solution (100 mM Tris-HCl [pH 8.0], 10 mM
MgCl2, 20% glycerol, 1 mM dithiothreitol) . The cells in
this suspension were lysed as described previously (42) .
The resulting slurry was clarified by three centrifugation steps, the
first of which was performed at 15,000 x
g for 20 min, with the other two performed at 100,000
x g for 60 and 30 min . The
supernatant from the final ultracentrifugation step was fractionated
by two consecutive ammonium sulfate precipitation steps . First, the
solution was brought to 30% saturation and then the pellet was
recovered by centrifugation at 15,000 x
g for 30 min and dissolved in 100 ml of buffer A (50 mM Tris-HCl
[pH 7.5] in 20% glycerol) . The supernatant was then brought to
60% saturation and the pellet was recovered as described above . The
percent saturation values were for a temperature of 0°C .
After resuspension, the pellet from the 30% ammonium sulfate
saturation was fractionated by anion-exchange chromatography on a
45-ml bed of DEAE-Sephadex A-25 (particle size, 40 to 120 µm;
Amersham Biosciences Corp., Piscataway, N.J.) in a 1.5- by 30-cm
Econo-column (Bio-Rad Laboratories, Richmond, Calif.) . After
equilibration of the bed with buffer A, the sample was loaded . The
column was then washed with two column bed volumes of buffer A and
eluted with a 200-ml linear gradient of 0 to 1 M NaCl in buffer A .
The flow rates were 300 ml h–1 for packing and
equilibration and 100 ml h–1 for all subsequent steps . The
active fractions eluted at about 0.5 M NaCl, and these were pooled
and concentrated on an Amicon YM-100 filter (100-kDa cutoff; Amicon,
Beverly, Mass.) . The retentate was desalted by dilution with buffer B
(10 mM potassium phosphate buffer [pH 6.8], 20% glycerol) and further
filtration . The desalted enzyme preparation was diluted with 20 ml of
buffer B and fractionated by hydroxyapatite chromatography . For this
purpose, a 0.75- by 15-cm column packed with Bio-Gel HTP (Bio-Rad
Laboratories) to a bed volume of 4.6 ml was used . After the column
bed was equilibrated with buffer B, the desalted enzyme preparation
was loaded . The column was then washed with two column bed volumes
of buffer B and eluted with a 25-ml gradient of 10 to 400 mM
potassium phosphate buffer (pH 6.8) in 20% glycerol . The flow rates
were 11 ml h–1 for packing and equilibration and 10 ml h–1
for all subsequent steps . The active fractions eluted at about 200 mM
potassium phosphate buffer and were pooled .
Solid (NH4)2SO4 was added to a final
concentration of 1 M to the pooled fractions, and the resulting
preparation was fractionated by octyl Sepharose chromatography, for
which a 0.75- by 25-cm column packed with octyl Sepharose CL-4B
(particle size, 40 to 190 µm; Amersham Biosciences Corp.) to a bed
volume of 8 ml was used . The column bed was equilibrated with 1 M
ammonium sulfate in buffer C (25 mM Tris-HCl [pH 7.0], 20% glycerol) .
After loading of the active fractions from the hydroxyapatite
chromatography step, the column was washed with two column bed
volumes each of 1 and 0.7 M ammonium sulfate in buffer C and then
eluted with a 40-ml reversed gradient of 0.7 to 0 M ammonium sulfate
in buffer C . The flow rates were 70 ml h–1 for packing and
equilibration and 50 ml h–1 for all subsequent steps . The
phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase activity was eluted at about 200 mM
ammonium sulfate, and the active fractions were pooled .
Assays and data analysis. The protein was assayed according
to the Bradford method (3), using Pierce dye
reagent (Pierce Biotechnology, Inc., Rockford, Ill.) and a bovine
serum albumin standard . Phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase activity was
determined by coupling the reaction with malate dehydrogenase (MDH)
and monitoring the oxidation of NADH spectrophotometrically at 340 nm
(55) . Unless otherwise mentioned, the assay was
conducted aerobically at 50°C with a reaction mixture of the
following composition: 50 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.0), 0.2 mM NADH + H+,
5 mM KHCO3, 2.5 mM phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP), 5 mM MgCl2,
and 1 U of thermophilic MDH from Thermus flavus (Sigma, St .
Louis, Mo.) per ml . In the amount used, MDH did not limit the
reaction rate in any assay . In most cases, the reaction was initiated
by the addition of PPC . The assays that were performed to monitor the
recoveries during the enzyme purification were initiated with PEP . To
avoid interference from NADH oxidase activities, we performed assays
with cell extracts and preparations from the ammonium sulfate
precipitations anaerobically (38); other
preparations were free of NADH oxidase activity . All pH values
reported here were determined at 25°C . The initial velocity data were
analyzed with the KinetAsyst program, version 1.01 (Intellikinetics,
State College, Pa.) .
Gel electrophoresis, determination of NH2-terminal
sequence, and gel filtration chromatography. Sodium dodecyl
sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) was performed
with a slab gel according to the method of Laemmli (33) .
The NH2-terminal sequence was determined via automated
Edman degradation in which a membrane blot of a denatured sample of
the purified protein was processed (40) . This experiment
was performed by use of a Procise 494 HT sequencer (Applied
Biosystems, Foster City, Calif.) in pulse-liquid mode at the Protein
Sciences Facility, Biotechnology Center, University of Illinois,
Urbana-Champaign . The analysis was done for 10 cycles . For gel
filtration analysis, a HiPrep 16/60 Sephacryl S-300 HR column (bed
volume, 120 ml) and a fast protein liquid chromatography system
(Amersham Pharmacia Biotech, Inc.) were used . The development was
isocratic, at a flow rate of 30 ml h–1, with a mobile
phase of 50 mM sodium phosphate buffer (pH 7.2) containing 150 mM
NaCl . For calibration of the column, the following molecular size
standards (Bio-Rad Laboratories) were employed (mass, Stokes radius)
(40): bovine thyroglobulin (670 kDa, 85 Å), bovine
gammaglobulin (158 kDa, 52.5 Å), chicken ovalbumin (44 kDa, 30.5 Å),
horse myoglobin (17 kDa, 19 Å), and vitamin B12 (1.357
kDa) . For each application, a 0.5-ml solution containing these
components, in the amounts of 2.5, 2.5, 2.5, 1.25, and 0.25 mg,
respectively, was used . The phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase sample
analyzed was a partially purified preparation . It was obtained by
precipitating proteins from a cell extract with ammonium sulfate to
60% saturation as described above and resuspending the resulting
pellet in 50 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.5) containing 20% glycerol . A 0.5-ml
aliquot of this preparation containing 21.7 mg of protein was
analyzed . The enzyme peak in the elution profile was identified by
assaying the column fractions for activity .
Amino acid sequence alignment and phylogenetic inference.
Amino acid sequences were aligned automatically with the ClustalW
program (version 1.82) (56) and then were analyzed by protein
maximum likelihood methods with the ProML program (PHYLIP, version
3.6a2.1) (12) using the JTT amino acid substitution
model . Bootstrap proportions were calculated with the Seqboot, ProML,
and Consense programs from the PHYLIP package . A similar phylogenetic
tree was inferred by the neighbor-joining method with the Protdist
and Neighbor programs (12) .
Purification of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase from M .
thermautotrophicus. The enzyme from M . thermautotrophicus
was purified to homogeneity as described in Table 1 .
In the ammonium sulfate precipitation step, the 30% saturation pellet
retained approximately 60% of the total recovered activity and the
60% saturation pellet had the remaining activity . Starting with the
30% ammonium sulfate saturation pellet, some purification experiments
yielded homogeneous fractionations . Such homogeneous preparations
were rare, and only a limited amount of the enzyme was available for
characterization . It was also not possible to obtain a homogeneous
preparation by fractionation of the 60% ammonium sulfate saturation
pellet .
| TABLE 1 . Purification of PPC from M . thermautotrophicus
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Molecular and catalytic properties of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase.
Based on SDS-PAGE data, we concluded that the purified enzyme
consisted of only one type of polypeptide, with an apparent molecular
mass of 50 kDa (Fig . 1) . Due to the difficulty in
obtaining an adequate amount of purified enzyme, we estimated the
native molecular mass by using a partially purified preparation . From
the gel filtration chromatography data, the Stokes radius and
apparent native molecular mass were estimated to be 61.8 Å and 277
kDa, respectively . Therefore, the enzyme was homotetrameric . The NH2-terminal
amino acid sequence for the polypeptide was MKVPRXMSTQ, where
"X" was an unidentified residue . In the range of 25 to 70°C,
the enzyme exhibited maximum specific activity at 62°C . From the
linear segment (between 25 and 62°C) of the corresponding Arrhenius
plot, the activation energy for OAA formation was calculated to be
53.8 kJ mol–1 . The loss of HCO3– at
lower pH values did not allow for an accurate determination of the
optimum pH . The apparent pH optimum for the enzyme was 6.8, and the
activities at pHs 6.3 and 7.2 were 5 and 92% of the maximum value,
respectively . The activity was also highly inhibited by either NaCl
or KCl (0.05 to 1.0 M) . At a concentration of 0.25 M, each of these
salts inhibited the enzyme by 60%; at 0.1 M, the inhibition was 27% .
|
FIG . 1 . SDS-PAGE with purified PPC from M . thermautotrophicus .
Lane 1, molecular mass standards; lane 2, 2.5 µg of homogeneous enzyme
from octyl Sepharose chromatography . The gel was stained with Coomassie
blue R-250.
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Mg2+ was required for activity and was not significantly inhibitory
at concentrations up to 50 mM when the PEP concentration in the
assay was 5 mM . The responses of the initial velocity to the
variation in KHCO3 concentration in the 0.1 to 10 mM range
when the PEP concentration in the assays was held constant at 5 mM
followed the Henri-Michaelis-Menten equation well, and from a fit of
the velocity data to this equation, the apparent Km
value for KHCO3 was determined to be 1.8 ± 0.2 mM . A
similar response was observed with 0.025 to 3.5 mM PEP when the KHCO3
concentration was fixed at 10 mM, and the Km value
for PEP was 0.46 ± 0.03 mM . At PEP, KHCO3, and Mg2+
concentrations of 2.5, 5, and 5 mM, respectively, the specific
activity of the homogenous enzyme was 260 U mg–1 .
The effects of several potential modulators on enzyme activity
were examined under standard assay conditions, except that the PEP
and KHCO3 concentrations were 5 and 20 mM, respectively .
Acetyl-CoA at the concentrations of 0.2 and 2 mM neither stimulated
nor inhibited the activity of the enzyme . At a concentration of 10
mM, ATP, ADP, AMP, GTP, and aspartate reduced the activity by 92, 57,
16, 58, and 41%, respectively; the activity observed in the absence
of any one of these compounds was taken as 100% . If the concentration
of Mg2+ was increased to 15 mM, ATP, ADP, AMP, or GTP
(each at a level of 10 mM) reduced the activity of the enzyme by 65,
46, 12, and 15%, respectively . The inhibition by aspartate was not
influenced by such an increase in the Mg2+ level . At a concentration
of 10 mM, glutamate and
-KG
did not inhibit the enzyme significantly .
Phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase gene of M . thermautotrophicus.
The NH2-terminal sequence of the purified enzyme was identical
to residues 40 to 49 of MTH943, an ORF with no assigned function
in the M . thermautotrophicus genome sequence (54) .
We named this ORF ppcA ("A" for "archaeal") . An analysis with
the SignalP program (http://www.cbs.dtu.dk/services/SignalP/)
(44) did not identify the first 39 residues of
MTH943 as a potential signal sequence . The codon for the 40th residue
(ATG) was preceded by a potential ribosome-binding site (GGAGTG, 7 to
12 bp upstream of ATG), but a recognizable ribosome-binding site was
not apparent near the previously described start site for MTH943 (54) .
Therefore, we propose that the ATG codon for the Met residue at the
40th position of this ORF is the actual initiation codon for the
ppcA gene . With this change, the calculated subunit molecular
mass for the protein would be 55,042 Da, which was close to the
experimentally determined value of 50 kDa (Fig . 1) .
A BLAST search (1) with the amino acid sequence for a known
PPC did not identify MTH943 as a PPC homolog . In contrast, bacterial
and plant PPCs are readily identified through these searches . A
pairwise comparison at the Pôle Bio-InformatiqueLyonnais site on the
World Wide Web showed that PpcA had very little sequence similarity
to the maize and E . coli PPCs (17, 22)
and provided the following values (percentages of identity and
percentages of strong similarity): for maize PPC and E . coli
PPC, 38.45 and 21.44%; for E . coli PPC and PpcA, 12.12 and
12%; and for maize PPC and PpcA, 9.78 and 12.26% . PpcA is composed of
483 amino acid residues, whereas the E . coli and maize PPC
polypeptides contain 883 and 970 residues, respectively (17,
22) .
Distribution of archaeal phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase homologs in
other organisms. Interestingly, PpcA homologs were present in most
archaea for which whole genome sequences are available (Table
2) . A search of bacterial genomes identified only
the following PpcA homologs (bacterium, open reading frame [ORF],
accession number): Clostridium perfringens, CPE1094,
NP_562010 (51); Oenococcus oeni MCW, Ooen1256,
ZP_00070236; and Leuconostoc mesenteroides subsp . mesenteroides
ATCC 8293A, Lmes0541,
ZP_00063059 . None of these bacterial homologs have been assigned
a function . A primary structure alignment indicated that the PpcA
homologs were highly similar to each other (Fig . 2) .
A phylogenetic analysis clearly supported this relationship and did
not reveal specific groupings within the PpcAs . The same analysis
showed that the previously described PPCs have no discernible
evolutionary relationships to the archaeal enzymes .
| TABLE 2 . Distribution of OAA-synthesizing enzymes in archaeaa
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FIG . 2 . Primary structure alignment for PpcA from M .
thermautotrophicus and its homologs . The segments of E . coli
PPC that were successfully aligned with the PpcAs are shown with the
position numbers for their termini . The sources for the sequences are as
follows (abbreviation, organism, ORF number, accession number
[reference]): MT, M . thermautotrophicus, MTH943, D69226 (54); MA,
Methanosarcina acetivorans, MA2690,
NP_617588 (18); MK, Methanopyrus kandleri, MK0190,
NP_613477 (53); AF, Archaeoglobus fulgidus, AF1486,
NP_070315 (32); HN, Halobacterium sp . NRC-1, VNG2259c,
NP_280898 (43); PF, Pyrococcus furiosus, PF1975,
NP_579704 (45); FA, Ferroplasma acidarmanus, FACI0253,
ZP_00000247; PA, Pyrobaculum aerophilum PAE3416,
NP_560717 (13); SS, Sulfolobus solfataricus, SSO2256,
NP_343633 (49); CP, Clostridium perfringens CPE1094,
NP_562010 (51) . Shading with color shows sequence identity and a
presentation of the residues in color indicates functional conservation,
and in both cases the following color codes were used: blue, H, K, and R
(basic); green, A, G, C, S, and T (small); gray, I, L, and V
(aliphatic); pink, M; red, D and E (acidic); turquoise, P; violet, Q and
N (neutral); orange (with or without yellow shading), F, Y, and W
(aromatic) . Two catalytically important and characteristic features for
the E . coli PPC (24, 25)
are marked underneath with black bars; these were found to be conserved
in the PpcAs (Fig . 3).
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Comparison of primary structures of M . thermautotrophicus PpcA
and PPCs. As mentioned above, a BLAST search (1) did
not identify MTH943 as a PPC . PSI- and PHI-BLAST searches (1)
revealed weak similarities between PpcA and several bacterial PPCs .
An analysis with 3D-PSSM, a web-based program for protein fold
recognition (http://www.sbg.bio.ic.ac.uk/servers/3dpssm/)
(30), revealed the following PPC characteristics (24,
25) in the archaeal enzyme: class, alpha and beta
proteins; fold, TIM beta/alpha-barrel; and superfamily,
phosphoenolpyruvate/pyruvate domain . These clues, automated
alignments (1, 56), and manual
inspections helped us to find certain key PPC features in M .
thermautotrophicus PpcA which are presented in Fig . 2 .
Figure 3 shows the three-dimensional structure of
an Escherichia coli PPC subunit in which the highlighted
sections represent two catalytically important sequence elements that
were conserved in M . thermautotrophicus PpcA and its homologs .
|
FIG . 3 . Structural similarities between E . coli PPC and M .
thermautotrophicus PpcA . The structure shown is for the E . coli
enzyme (accession no.
1FIY) (24) . Catalytically important 136TAHP139
and 580GRGGSIGRGGQ589 elements are shown in black,
and the homologous sequences in M . thermautotrophicus PpcA were
9TQHP12 and 252GMGSAPFRGN261,
respectively . The side chains shown correspond to His138 and
Arg587 of E . coli PPC and were conserved in M .
thermautotrophicus PpcA as His11 and Arg259.
|
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We have purified and characterized the PPC from M . thermautotrophicus
to homogeneity and determined that the subunit of this enzyme
corresponds to MTH943 (54), an ORF that has no assigned
function and is considered distinctive to the archaea (19) .
The molecular mass of the subunit of this enzyme was similar to that
of the Methanothermus sociabilis PPC (60 kDa) (47)
but was half that for all known bacterial and eukaryotic PPCs (96 to
116 kDa) (25) . Also, the overall amino acid
sequence of the M . thermautotrophicus enzyme was very
dissimilar to that of the known PPCs . A careful inspection revealed
that a few of the essential and characteristic PPC sequence features
were partially conserved in the archaeal enzyme (Fig . 2
and 3) . As described below, these conserved elements
represented only a small part of the PPC protein and were located
either at or near the catalytic core (24,
25) . Also, the sequence features that allow for
allosteric regulation of E . coli and maize PPCs (24,
25) were apparently absent from MTH943 . Thus, the
M . thermautotrophicus enzyme was clearly distinct from all
previously described bacterial and eukaryotic PPCs, and we called
this archaeal enzyme PpcA . Similar to the Methanothermus sociabilis
PpcA (native mass, 240 kDa) (47) and all PPCs (24,
25), the M . thermautotrophicus enzyme (277
kDa) was homotetrameric . However, a final conclusion on the
quaternary structure of the PpcAs must await an accurate
determination of the native molecular mass for these proteins by use
of a more appropriate method . The present values were derived solely
from gel filtration data (this work; 47) and
therefore are less reliable than values from analytical
ultracentrifugation (7) .
PPCs are present in all photosynthetic organisms, which include
higher plants, green algae, and photosynthetic bacteria (25) .
They are also found in most nonphotosynthetic bacteria and protozoa,
but not in molds, yeasts, and animals (25) . In all of
these organisms, PPC serves an anaplerotic role . The structure of
this very widely distributed enzyme is highly conserved across
phylogenetic boundaries (24, 25) .
Therefore, the observed lack of obvious similarity between the PPCs
and M . thermautotrophicus PpcA came as a great surprise . An
equally surprising observation was that PPCs were absent from the
archaea, whereas PpcA was almost universally present in this domain .
Interestingly, outside of the archaeal domain, PpcA homologs were
found in only three bacteria, one of which (C . perfringens [51])
does not possess a PPC; the genome sequence data for the other two (O .
oeni and L . mesenteroides) are not complete .
The alignment in Fig . 2 shows that some of the
catalytically important sequence features of the bacterial and
eukaryotic PPCs were partially conserved in the M .
thermautotrophicus enzyme (Fig . 2) . The PPCs
possess a unique Gly-Arg loop sequence (GRGGXXGRGG, where XX = TV,
SI, or SV) which appears in the E . coli and maize proteins as
GRGGSIGR587GG (positions 580 to 589) (Fig . 3) and
GRGGTVGR647GG (positions 640 to 649), respectively (24,
25) . Arg587 of the E . coli PPC
and Arg647 of the maize PPC are PEP-binding-site residues
and are essential for catalysis (24, 25) .
This Gly-Arg loop forms a lid for the active site and thereby
protects the reaction intermediates from attack by water (24) .
A sequence element homologous to this loop was present in each PpcA,
and in the M . thermautotrophicus enzyme it was 252GMGSAPFR259GN261
(Fig . 2) . However, the putative Gly-Arg element of the
archaeal enzymes had only three Gly and one Arg residue (compared to
six conserved Gly and two Arg residues in a PPC) and also contained
a Pro and a Phe residue (Fig . 2) . It will be interesting
to study how the Pro and Phe residues affect the function of the
Gly-Arg loop . The His177 residue of the maize PPC directly
participates in catalysis (24, 25)
and lies within a TXHP element that is fully conserved in all PPCs
(residues 135 to 138 in E . coli PPC) (Fig . 2
and 3) . The PpcA homologs also contained a TXHP
sequence which belonged to a larger and fully conserved element, with
a consensus of PXXM(M/A/C/S)TQHPD (residues 4 to 13 of the M .
thermautotrophicus enzyme) (Fig . 2) . In summary, His11and
Arg259 of M . thermautotrophicus PpcA might represent
functional equivalents of the catalytically active His138
and Arg587 of E . coli PPC (Fig . 2
and 3) . The following sequence elements were found
to be conserved in both PPCs and PpcAs (consensus, sequence numbers
in M . thermautotrophicus PpcA, and sequence numbers in E .
coli PPC): (V/I/L)(A/I)PL(F/V/I)E, 178 to 183, 501 to 506;
SDXAX3GX3(S/A)X6A, 214 to 232, 542 to 560;
RAIX(F/W/Y)X9-10P X3G, 373 to 392, 713 to 733 .
Leu504, Glu506, and Arg713 of E .
coli PPC belong to these elements and have been implicated in the
fixation of CO2 onto the enolate form of pyruvate, in binding
Mn2+, and in catalysis, respectively (25) .
E . coli PPC is activated by acetyl-CoA (6), whereas
this compound did not have any effect on the activity of M .
thermautotrophicus PpcA . The archaeal enzyme was relatively
insensitive to aspartate, an allosteric inhibitor of the PPCs (5,
21) . At a concentration of 10 mM, aspartate
lowered the activity of PpcA by 41% . For the E . coli enzyme,
the same degree of inhibition is caused by about 0.2 mM aspartate (55) .
Thus, the M . thermautotrophicus enzyme was about 50 times less
sensitive to aspartate than the E . coli enzyme . The small PPC
from Methanothermus sociabilis is also insensitive to
aspartate (47) . This difference between the two
classes of enzymes fits the observation that of four
aspartate-binding residues of E . coli PPCs (Arg587, Lys773,
Arg832, and Asn881) (25), three
are not conserved in the PpcAs . Arg587, which also has a
catalytic role (24, 25), is conserved
in the PpcAs (Fig . 2) . Asn881 of E . coli
PPC belongs to a carboxy-terminal NTG element (25) .
The terminal Gly residue is catalytically active and forms an ion
pair with Arg587 (25) . Aspartate binds
to the Asn of the NTG element and prevents the terminal Gly from
moving towards the ion-pairing Arg (25) . While the PpcA
homologs possess the carboxyl-terminal Gly residue (Fig . 2),
the Asn881 of the E . coli enzyme was not conserved in
these proteins . Lys773 and Arg832 of E . coli
PPC are also not conserved in the PpcAs .
It is rare to find both a PPC and PYC in an organism, and wherever
they coexist their activities are regulated differently (reviewed in
reference 42) . The kinetic properties of the PpcA and PYC
from M . thermautotrophicus suggest that these OAA-synthesizing
enzymes might be active in the cell under two different sets of
conditions . The PYC from this methanogen shows a strong substrate
inhibition with ATP and a negative cooperativity towards bicarbonate
(42) . Therefore, this enzyme will be more active at low ATP
and high bicarbonate concentrations, a state that represents
hydrogen limitation, among other things . Because the apparent Km
value for bicarbonate of PpcA is 1.8 mM and that of PYC is 6.8 mM (42),
PpcA will be the favored activity at low bicarbonate concentrations .
It is possible that under biotin limitation a cell will fully or
primarily depend on PpcA activity for OAA synthesis, because this
organism does not produce holo-PYC if an exogenous source of biotin
is not available (42) . Although the PpcA of M .
thermautotrophicus was inhibited by NaCl and KCl, the PYC of this
organism is greatly stimulated by these salts and shows maximal
activity if these are present in the assay at 0.2 and 0.4 M
concentrations, respectively (42) . When it is
present at a level higher than that of ATP, Mg2+ inhibits
PYC (42), whereas the PpcA activity was not influenced if
this ion was present in a large excess over PEP . More precise
comparisons of the physiological roles of the PpcA and PYC in a
methanogen will require a genetic analysis . Since the
Methanosarcina species possess both a PYC (41)
and a PpcA homolog (Fig . 2 and Table
2) and are amenable to genetic manipulations (36), they
offer a better system for such studies .
Table 2 summarizes our current knowledge of the
OAA-synthesizing activities in the archaea, and the data show a very
interesting pattern . A PpcA homolog was found in every methanogen,
except Methanocaldococcus jannaschii (4) and
Methanococcus maripaludis (accession number
BX950229) (Table 2); the genome sequence information
for Methanococcoides burtonii is incomplete (48) .
It has been shown that cell extracts of Methanococcus maripaludis
lack PPC activity (50) . The other archaeal genome
sequences that lack PpcA homologs are those of Thermoplasma
volcanium (29), Thermoplasma acidophilum
(46), and Aeropyrum pernix (27)
(Table 2), and these organisms probably rely solely
on phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase (PCK) for OAA synthesis.
 |
Thus, PpcA was widespread in the archael domain (Table
2) . In contrast, PYC is very much a methanogen enzyme and PCK is
probably restricted to the crenarchaeota (Table 2) .
A PCK can either be ATP dependent or GTP dependent (34),
and most archaeal enzymes are expected to be GTP dependent (Table
2) . The putative ATP-dependent PCK of Aeropyrum pernix (27)
is an exception . Methanopyrus kandleri differs from other
methanogens in that it lacks a PYC homolog (Table 2) .
It also does not possess a PCK (Table 2) . It has
been recently proposed that Methanopyrus kandleri uses a carboligase
for OAA synthesis (53) . Our analysis suggested that
this extremely thermophilic archaeon probably uses a PpcA for this
purpose, and a similar situation exists for Archaeoglobus fulgidus
and Halobacterium sp . NRC-1 (Table 2) . Among
the crenarchaeota, Pyrobaculum aerophilum (13)
presents such an example (Table 2) .
The unusual catalytic and regulatory properties and structure of
PpcA bring new thoughts on the evolution of PPCs (59) . As
shown in Fig . 3, the areas of clear similarities between
PpcA and PPCs concern only the catalytic core . It is possible that
PPCs evolved from a PpcA through a process that increased the
subunit size and generated the structural attributes that are
required for the allosteric regulation of activity (5,
21, 24, 25) .
It is equally possible that PpcA was derived from a complex PPC
through the loss of certain features . A similar benefit could be
realized in research aimed towards improving photosynthesis
productivities in C3 plants in which the focus has been the
introduction of an unregulated PPC (24, 25) .
PpcA forms a new topic in archaeal biochemistry and CO2
sequestration, as well as the primary productivity in the
hydrothermal vent environment, where organisms such as
Methanopyrus kandleri and Methanocaldococcus jannaschii
live (20, 23) and employ two different OAA
synthesis routes (Table 2) (39) .
A part of the reported work was completed during B.M.'s postdoctoral
research in the laboratory of Ralph S . Wolfe at the University of
Illinois, and we thank him for encouragement and support . We thank
David E . Graham for help in phylogenetic analysis, John A . Leigh for
access to the M . maripaludis genome database before
submission, and Endang Purwantini for discussions and comments on the
manuscript .
Hiten Patel received a Colgate-Palmolive Undergraduate Research
Award from the Biotechnology Center at the University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign . This work was supported, in part, by a start-up
fund to B.M . from the Virginia Bioinformatics Institute, Virginia
Tech .
* Corresponding author . Mailing address: Virginia
Bioinformatics Institute, Bioinformatics I, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and
State University, 0477 Washington St., Blacksburg, VA 24061 . Phone: (540)
231-8015 and (540) 231-1219 . Fax: (540) 231-2606 . E-mail: biswarup@vt.edu .
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