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Journal of Bacteriology, January 2004, p . 8-14, Vol . 186, No .
1 Cysteinyl-tRNACys Formation in Methanocaldococcus jannaschii:
the Mechanism Is Still Unknown
Benfang Ruan,1,
Hiroaki Nakano,1,
Masashi Tanaka,2 Jonathan A . Mills,3,
Joseph A . DeVito,3,
Bokkee Min,1 K . Brooks Low,4 John R . Battista,2
and Dieter Söll1,5*
Departments of Molecular Biophysics and Biochemistry,1 Chemistry,5
Therapeutic Radiology, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut 06520-8114,4
Department of Biological Sciences, Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge,
Louisiana 70803,2 DuPont Pharmaceuticals Company, Wilmington,
Delaware 198013
Received 31 July 2003/ Accepted 2 October 2003
Most organisms form Cys-tRNACys, an essential component for
protein synthesis, through the action of cysteinyl-tRNA synthetase
(CysRS) . However, the genomes of Methanocaldococcus jannaschii,
Methanothermobacter thermautotrophicus, and Methanopyrus
kandleri do not contain a recognizable cysS gene encoding
CysRS . It was reported that M . jannaschii prolyl-tRNA
synthetase (C . Stathopoulos, T . Li, R . Longman, U . C . Vothknecht, H .
D . Becker, M . Ibba, and D . Söll, Science 287:479-482, 2000; R .
S . Lipman, K . R . Sowers, and Y . M . Hou, Biochemistry 39:7792-7798,
2000) or the M . jannaschii MJ1477 protein (C . Fabrega, M . A .
Farrow, B . Mukhopadhyay, V . de Crécy-Lagard, A . R . Ortiz, and
P . Schimmel, Nature 411:110-114, 2001) provides the "missing"
CysRS activity for in vivo Cys-tRNACys formation . These
conclusions were supported by complementation of
temperature-sensitive Escherichia coli cysS(Ts) strain UQ818
with archaeal proS genes (encoding prolyl-tRNA synthetase) or
with the Deinococcus radiodurans DR0705 gene, the ortholog of
the MJ1477 gene . Here we show that E . coli UQ818 harbors a
mutation (V27E) in CysRS; the largest differences compared to the
wild-type enzyme are a fourfold increase in the Km
for cysteine and a ninefold reduction in the kcat
for ATP . While transformants of E . coli UQ818 with archaeal
and bacterial cysS genes grew at a nonpermissive temperature,
growth was also supported by elevated intracellular cysteine levels,
e.g., by transformation with an E . coli cysE allele (encoding
serine acetyltransferase) or by the addition of cysteine to the
culture medium . An E . coli cysS deletion strain permitted a
stringent complementation test; growth could be supported only by
archaeal or bacterial cysS genes and not by archaeal proS
genes or the D . radiodurans DR0705 gene . Construction of a
D . radiodurans DR0705 deletion strain showed this gene to be
dispensable . However, attempts to delete D . radiodurans cysS
failed, suggesting that this is an essential Deinococcus gene .
These results imply that it is not established that proS or
MJ1477 gene products catalyze Cys-tRNACys synthesis in M .
jannaschii . Thus, the mechanism of Cys-tRNACys
formation in M . jannaschii still remains to be discovered .
Cysteinyl-tRNA synthetase (CysRS), a highly conserved essential
enzyme, is a key component in protein biosynthesis . It is the
smallest monomeric class I aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase (14,
20) . A recent determination of the crystal
structure of Escherichia coli CysRS (30)
revealed that a zinc ion positioned at the active site is responsible
for the precise binding of the substrate cysteine . This metal ion
coordinates with the side chains of Cys28, Cys209, His234, and Glu238
(30) . CysRS is well conserved in all three domains
of life; phylogenetic studies suggest a transfer of cysS from
bacteria to some archaea (24) . Based on the
knowledge of a large number of complete organism genomes, it is clear
that only three methanogenic archaea, Methanocaldococcus
jannaschii (8), Methanothermobacter thermautotrophicus
(33), and Methanopyrus kandleri (32),
do not contain an open reading frame (ORF) resembling that for CysRS .
How is Cys-tRNACys formed in these methanogenic archaea? One
apparent answer came from reports that archaeal prolyl-tRNA
synthetases (ProRSs) could form Cys-tRNACys in addition to Pro-tRNAPro
(26, 35) . Apart from biochemical
data, the conclusion was based on the persuasive in vivo result (35)
that the M . jannaschii, M . thermautotrophicus, and
Methanococcus maripaludis proS genes could restore the growth,
albeit weakly, of temperature-sensitive E . coli cysS(Ts)
strain UQ818 (5) at a nonpermissive temperature .
Poor growth of the transformed strains was attributed to slow
translation in E . coli of the large number of AGA codons present
in the archaeal proS genes (35) . A different
route to archaeal Cys-tRNACys formation was proposed on
the basis of the existence of an unusual aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase
that lacks the typical features of class I and class II synthetases
and is encoded by the M . jannaschii MJ1477 ORF (15) .
The heterologously expressed MJ1477 protein was shown to cysteinylate
in vitro both M . jannaschii total tRNA and purified E . coli
tRNACys, but the MJ1477 gene could not rescue the growth
of E . coli cysS(Ts) strain UQ818 (15) .
Instead, DR0705, the Deinococcus radiodurans ortholog of
MJ1477, was shown to complement strain UQ818 . While these data
suggested that MJ1477 provides Cys-tRNACys in M . jannaschii,
MJ1477 orthologs are not present in the genomes of M .
thermautotrophicus (33) or the viable cysS
deletion strain (36) of M . maripaludis (J .
Leigh, unpublished data) .
In both of the above-mentioned studies (15,
35), the conclusions were based on the weak complementation of
E . coli strain UQ818 by the archaeal proS genes or the
D . radiodurans DR0705 gene . E . coli UQ818 has a
thermolabile CysRS; cell extracts display little CysRS activity at
33°C (5) . Strain UQ818 does not grow at the
nonpermissive temperature of 41°C but does grow after complementation
with cysS genes from E . coli (14,
20) or from M . maripaludis or
Methanosarcina barkeri (24) . A characterization
of the cysS mutation in strain UQ818 has not been reported .
Although the finding that archaeal ProRSs form Cys-tRNACys has
been reported repeatedly (9, 26,
27, 34, 35), a
biochemical reexamination of the amino acid recognition of ProRS
enzymes showed that cysteine charging in vitro is a property of ProRS
enzymes from all domains (1); however, the reaction
product is the misacylated Cys-tRNAPro species (2) .
Therefore, we wanted to further examine the in vivo complementation
of E . coli cysS(Ts) strain UQ818 and to analyze the
complementation of an E . coli cysS deletion strain ( cysS) .
In addition, we attempted to evaluate the physiological significance
of DR0705 by using a gene deletion in D . radiodurans (3) .
General. [35S]Cysteine (1,075 Ci/mmol) was purchased
from Perkin-Elmer Life Sciences (Boston, Mass.) . [14C]Serine
(155 mCi/mmol) was obtained from Amersham Pharmacia Biotech (Little
Chalfont, United Kingdom) . E . coli total tRNA was obtained
from Sigma (St . Louis, Mo.), and the TOPO-TA cloning kit was obtained
from Invitrogen (Carlsbad, Calif.) . Oligonucleotide synthesis and DNA
sequencing were performed at the Keck Foundation Research
Biotechnology Resource Laboratory at Yale University (New Haven,
Conn.) . Protein concentrations were determined by the method of
Bradford (6) with bovine serum albumin as a
standard .
Plasmids, strains, and culture medium. Table 1
lists the plasmids and strains used in this study . Primers were
designed to PCR amplify each ORF and introduce the desired
restriction sites . The forward primers contained a restriction site
and 20 nucleotides identical to the start sequence of the 5' end; the
reverse primers contained a restriction site and 20 nucleotides
complementary to the sequence of the 3' end . Standard PCR procedures
were used to generate the coding sequences of the M . jannaschii
proS, M . maripaludis proS and cysS, D .
radiodurans DR0705 and cysS, and E . coli cysE and cysS
genes from their corresponding genomic DNAs . The amplified coding
sequences were cloned into the pCR2.1-TOPO vector . After verification
of the DNA sequences, the genes were subcloned into the desired
vector . For in vivo complementation, the genes were subcloned into
the pCYB1 vector between the NdeI and BamHI sites under
the control of an isopropyl-ß-D-thiogalactopyranoside
(IPTG)-inducible tac promoter . An E . coli cysE mutant
allele, cysEM256I (10), was generated by
PCR mutagenesis of the cysE gene (created above) with primers
that contained the corresponding mutation .
| TABLE 1 . Strains and plasmids
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A medium-copy-number vector, pBADbr, was constructed with the
arabinose promoter from pBAD18-Cm and the replication origin from
pET28a by using BglII and ClaI restriction sites . The E .
coli cysS gene was cloned into its NheI and SacI sites
to generate pBADbrcysS .
The M . jannaschii tRNACys gene behind the lpp
promoter was subcloned from pTech-Mj-tRNACys (35)
into pACYC184 by using restriction enzymes AvaI and BstZ171 .
This procedure removed the cat gene from pACYC184 . The
resulting plasmid, pACYC-Tc-Mj-tRNACys, confers
tetracycline resistance .
The following antibiotics at the concentrations indicated were
used in Luria-Bertani (LB) medium (31): ampicillin (100
µg/ml), chloramphenicol (34 µg/ml), kanamycin (20 µg/ml),
and tetracycline (20 µg/ml) . The final concentrations of arabinose
and isopropyl-ß-D-thiogalactopyranoside (IPTG)
in the culture medium were 0.02% and 1 mM, respectively .
Cloning of E . coli cysS genes and purification of CysRS
enzymes. Genomic DNA of E . coli strain W3110 or UQ818 was used .
PCR primers were designed to amplify the cysS ORF, and the
resulting DNA fragment was cloned into the pET15b vector at the
NdeI and BamHI sites for expression of proteins as
N-terminal His6-tagged proteins . These pET15b-cysS clones
were transformed into E . coli BL21(DE3) cells, and the
transformants were grown in 500 ml of LB-ampicillin medium to a cell
density (A600) of 0.4 . At this point, cysS
expression was induced with 1 mM IPTG treatment for 2 h . Cells were
harvested and lysed, and wild-type and mutant His6-CysRS
proteins were purified from cell extracts by Ni-nitrilotriacetic
acid-agarose chromatography as described in the Qiagen (Valencia,
Calif.) protein purification manual . Both proteins were judged to be
>95% pure by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel
electrophoresis after Coomassie brilliant blue staining . Active-site
titration showed that the CysRS and CysRSV27E (CysRS with a V27E
mutation) preparations contained 100 and 52% active enzymes,
respectively . These values were used to determine enzyme
concentrations for the calculation of kcat . The enzymes were
stored in 10% glycerol in 50 mM HEPES-KOH (pH 7.0)-50 mM KCl-15
mM MgCl2-5 mM dithiothreitol at -20°C .
Assay for CysRS activity. Cys-tRNA formation was measured as
acid-precipitable radioactivity as described previously (1) .
The standard reaction mixture contained 50 mM HEPES-KOH (pH 7.0), 50
mM KCl, 15 mM MgCl2, 5 mM dithiothreitol, 10 mM ATP, 0.2
mM [35S]cysteine, and 10 mg of unfractionated E . coli
tRNA/ml (unless specified otherwise) in a final volume of 0.1 ml . The
final enzyme concentrations were 0.37 nM for CysRS and 1.6 nM for
CysRSV27E . Initial velocities were measured at 30°C . The substrate
concentrations ranged from 0.01 to 20 times the Km
values, and the experiments were done in triplicate .
Active-site titration of CysRS enzymes. CysRS preparations
were incubated at 30°C in 100 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.5)-10 mM KCl-10 mM
MgCl2-4 mM ATP (pH 7)-200 µM [35S]cysteine (650
cpm/pmol)-5 mM dithiothreitol-1 U of inorganic pyrophosphatase in a
total volume of 0.1 ml . Aliquots (25 µl) were used at various times
for active-site titration as described previously (1) .
Growth of E . coli UQ818 at nonpermissive temperatures under
various conditions. A cysteine gradient plate (12)
was used to show the growth of UQ818 at nonpermissive temperatures in
the presence of cysteine . UQ818 cells were grown overnight in LB
medium . A 10-4 dilution of the overnight culture (0.1 ml)
was spread on a
plate (1% Bacto Tryptone, 0.5% sodium chloride, 1.5% agar) . After the
plate was dried, an aliquot (0.15 ml) of cysteine (0.4 M) was
placed in a central well, and the plate was incubated for 2 days at
41°C .
In order to evaluate the growth restored by cysEM256I, UQ818
was transformed with pCYB1, pCYB-ECcysS, pCYB-cysEM256I, or
pCYB-MMcysS . The transformants were cultured overnight in
LB-ampicillin medium, and the liquid cultures (one loop) were
streaked on LB-ampicillin agar plates containing 1 mM IPTG . The
plates were grown at 30 or 41°C for 2 days .
In order to compare the growth restored by various genes, we
measured at 42°C the growth curves for W3110 cells and UQ818 cells
transformed with pCYB-ECcysS, pCYB-MMcysS, pCYB-DR0705,
pCYB-MMproS, pCYB-MJproS, pCYB-ECcysEM256I, or pCYB1 . UQ818
transformants with archaeal proS genes also contained an M .
jannaschii tRNACys gene (35) . Each
strain from an overnight culture was inoculated into LB medium with
antibiotics and IPTG in triplicate and grown at 42°C for 8 h .
Aliquots (1 ml) were taken every 0.5 h to measure the A600 .
Construction of an E . coli cysS chromosomal deletion strain.
An E . coli chromosomal deletion strain was constructed by using
the generalized recombination system of bacteriophage
(39) . The cysS gene was expressed from an
arabinose regulon on pBADbrcysS, while the chromosomal cysS
copy in E . coli strain EC723 was replaced with a lox -kan
cassette (18) . The details of strain construction
were adapted from the method of Yu et al . (39) .
The genomic DNA of E . coli strain EC400 served as the template
for PCR amplification of the lox2-kan cassette (11),
and the resulting cassette was flanked with 50-bp sequences identical
to those found in the upstream and downstream regions of the
cysS gene . The deletion cassette was transformed into heat-shocked
(15 min) E . coli strain EC723 containing a rescue plasmid, pBADbrcysS .
Transformants were selected on kanamycin plates, and strains
containing a cysS chromosomal deletion were screened by PCR
and nucleotide sequencing .
Plasmid exchange experiments with the E . coli cysS chromosomal
deletion strain. The cysS chromosomal deletion strain was
further transformed with pACYC-Tc-Mj-tRNACys, which
provides M . jannaschii tRNACys for M . jannaschii cysS
to function in E . coli (35) . The resulting
strain was transformed by electroporation (31) with pCYB
derivative plasmids (50 ng) containing cysS or other genes at
30°C to prevent lysis of the host (39) .
Transformants were cultured in LB medium containing kanamycin and
tetracycline for 60 min, and then a series of dilutions of the
transformants were spread on LB agar plates containing kanamycin,
tetracycline, ampicillin, L-arabinose, and
IPTG . Cells were grown at 30°C for 1 day, and the numbers of
ampicillin-resistant colonies were counted . Colonies then were
replicated to LB agar plates containing either chloramphenicol (34
µg/ml) or ampicillin (50 µg/ml) and also containing kanamycin,
tetracycline, L-arabinose, and IPTG . After 24
h of incubation, the growth of the replicants was checked .
Construction of plasmids for use in deleting DR0705 and cysS
(DR1670) from the D . radiodurans R1 genome. The plasmid used for
DR0705 deletion, pTNK301 (carrying the DR0705 deletion cassette)
(Fig . 1B), was generated in a three-step process by
splicing by overlap extension (13, 19) .
The Tn903 neomycin phosphotransferase gene (npt) was
fused to a 120-bp sequence upstream of the initiation codon of the
D . radiodurans R1 katA gene (PkatA in Fig.
1) (16) . The primers shown in Fig .
1B were used for PCR to amplify the 806-bp sequence
immediately downstream of the DR0705 termination codon and the 971-bp
sequence upstream of the DR0705 initiation codon and for PCR to
splice both fragments to the PkatA-npt cassette . The resulting
cassette was cloned into pGEM-T to give pTNK301 for DR0705 deletion .
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FIG . 1 . Scheme of cassette constructs for Deinococcus gene
deletions . (A) DR0705 in the D . radiodurans R1 chromosome . (B)
DR0705 deletion cassette . (C) DR1670 deletion cassette . Primers
indicated above or below the cassette were used for PCR . Sections of the
diagrams are labeled as follows: A upstream, 971 bp immediately upstream
of the initiation codon of DR0705; A downstream, 806 bp immediately
downstream of the termination codon of DR0705; B upstream, 886 bp
immediately upstream of the initiation codon of DR1670; B downstream,
957 bp immediately downstream of the termination codon of DR1670.
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The plasmid used for cysS (DR1670) deletion, pTNK302 (carrying
the DR1670 deletion cassette) (Fig . 1C), was generated in a
manner similar to that used for constructing pTNK301 . The chloramphenicol
acetyltransferase (cat) gene from pBC (Stratagene, La Jolla,
Calif.) was spliced to the D . radiodurans katA promoter . The
resulting PkatA-cat fragment was fused to a 957-bp sequence
downstream of DR1670 and to an 886-bp sequence immediately upstream
of DR1670 by overlap extension, and the resulting product was
cloned into pGEM-T to give pTNK302 .
Deletion of DR0705 from D . radiodurans R1. DR0705 was
disrupted by targeted mutagenesis as described previously (13) .
The DR0705 deletion cassette (Fig . 1B) was transformed
into an exponential-phase D . radiodurans R1 culture, and the
recombinants were selected on tryptone-glucose-yeast extract
(TGY) plates containing kanamycin (10 µg/ml) . Since D . radiodurans
is multigenomic, individual colonies had to be screened to determine
whether they were homozygous for the disruption . Genomic DNAs of the
individual recombinants were extracted and subjected to PCR analysis
for the existence of wild-type DR0705 or the deletion cassette .
Briefly, putative deletion mutants were subjected to PCR
amplification for wild-type DR0705 with primers AFW4 and ARV4 (Fig.
1A) . No PCR product should be obtained if DR0705
has been deleted . To verify the disruption, genomic DNAs from D .
radiodurans R1 and the DR0705 deletion strain were PCR amplified
to obtain DNA fragments of the deletion region with primers AFW2 and
ARV3 (Fig . 1A and B), and the amplified DNA
fragments ( 2.7
kb) were further subjected to HindIII and XhoI
digestions . The npt gene-containing fragments should be cut in
half, because the npt gene, but not DR0705, contains single
restriction sites for HindIII and XhoI .
Deletion of cysS from D . radiodurans R1. The
cysS (DR1670) deletion cassette (Fig . 1C) was
transformed into exponential-phase D . radiodurans R1 cells by
the CaCl2 method (13) . The culture was
spread on TGY plates containing chloramphenicol (3 µg/ml) and
incubated at 30°C . Recombinants were observed on these plates within
6 days . Candidates were purified in three rounds of single-colony
isolation . Then, chloramphenicol-resistant colonies were PCR screened
for the loss of cysS by using genomic DNA isolated from each
candidate .
The mutant CysRS in strain UQ818 is defective in cysteine binding.
E . coli strain UQ818 was isolated as a spontaneous temperature-sensitive
mutant and lacks CysRS activity in vitro at 42°C (5) . In
order to characterize the CysRS in this strain, we cloned and
sequenced the cysS(Ts) gene . We found a single nucleotide change
(T A
at position 80) leading to a V E
change at position 27 of the CysRS protein . Sequence alignment of 76
canonical CysRS proteins showed that valine is the most abundant
amino acid at position 27 (in 51 out of 76 proteins), the other amino
acids being leucine, threonine, cysteine, alanine, tyrosine,
asparagine, and glycine .
To understand the effect of the V27E mutation on cysteinylation,
the N-terminal His6-tagged CysRS and CysRSV27E enzymes were
overexpressed and purified on an Ni-nitrilotriacetic acid matrix .
Aminoacylation kinetics were determined at 30°C, a temperature
at which the CysRSV27E enzyme retains activity . The results (Table
2) indicated a significant difference in the Km
values for cysteine (7.2 and 28.2 µM, respectively) . The Km
values for the other substrates, tRNA and ATP, did not differ
significantly for the mutant and wild-type enzymes . However, the kcat
values for both substrates were about four- to ninefold lower in the
mutant, with a ninefold decrease in the value for ATP . Kinetic
constants for other CysRS enzymes were determined earlier by ATP-PPi
exchange (23, 29); thus, they are not
strictly comparable to our aminoacylation data . However, our values
are in the range of values reported for CysRS enzymes from E . coli
(0.4 µM for tRNACys), mammals (0.8 µM for tRNACys,
800 µM for ATP, and 11 µM for cysteine), and yeasts (0.54 µM
for tRNACys, 80 µM for ATP, and 8 µM for cysteine) .
The V27E mutation does not affect the discrimination of the enzyme
for serine, which was not charged by either wild-type or mutant CysRS
(data not shown) .
| TABLE 2 . Kinetic parameters of wild-type and mutant E . coli CysRS
enzymes
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Complementation of the temperature-sensitive phenotype of E . coli
cysS(Ts) strain UQ818. Since the mutant CysRSV27E enzyme is
impaired in cysteine binding, we tested whether elevated cysteine
levels in E . coli UQ818 cells would restore their ability to
grow at a nonpermissive temperature on a cysteine gradient plate (12) .
Only cells located close to the cysteine-containing well grew after 2
days of incubation at 41°C, apart from some revertant colonies (Fig.
2) . Thus, elevated cysteine levels can restore the
growth of the cysS(Ts) strain at a nonpermissive temperature .
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FIG . 2 . Growth of E . coli cysS(Ts) strain UQ818 at 41°C on a
cysteine gradient
plate . The highest cysteine concentration is in the well (see Materials
and Methods).
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To investigate the possibility that an elevation in cysteine
biosynthetic capacity would also rescue growth, we transformed the
E . coli cysS(Ts) strain with a cysE allele encoding serine
acetyltransferase . This enzyme converts serine to O-acetylserine,
the direct precursor of cysteine (10) . Since serine
acetyltransferase is feedback inhibited by cysteine, a
feedback-resistant mutant enzyme, CysEM256I (10),
was selected; an E . coli cysEM256I strain excretes up to 2.5
mM cysteine into the medium (10) . Therefore, we
transformed UQ818 cells with cysEM256I (cloned into pCYB) and
used the E . coli and M . maripaludis cysS genes as controls .
As expected, cysEM256I rescued the growth of strain UQ818 at
41°C, albeit not as well as did the E . coli and M . maripaludis
cysS genes (Fig . 3) . Taken together, these results
suggest that increased cellular cysteine levels enable E . coli
UQ818 to grow at a nonpermissive temperature .
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FIG . 3 . Complementation of E . coli cysS(Ts) strain UQ818 with
pCYB1, pCYB-ECcysS, pCYB-cysEM256I, or pCYB-MMcysS .
LB agar containing ampicillin and IPTG was used for growth at 41°C (see
Materials and Methods).
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Since it was previously reported that the M . maripaludis proS
gene (35) or the D . radiodurans DR0705 gene (15)
also rescues the high-temperature growth of E . coli strain
UQ818, we wanted to compare the rates of growth of these
transformants with those of transformants complemented with the
cysS genes . E . coli strain UQ818 (carrying an M .
jannaschii tRNACys gene) does not grow at 42°C;
however, strains complemented with the cysS genes grew at
42°C . The observed doubling times for W3110, UQ818 with E . coli
cysS, and UQ818 with M . maripaludis cysS were 0.5, 1, and
2 h, respectively . However, no growth (defined as no appreciable
change in the A600 during the experiment; after 8
h, the absorbance was <4% that of wild-type strain W3110) was
observed in LB medium for strain UQ818 containing D . radiodurans
DR0705, M . jannaschii proS, M . maripaludis proS, or E .
coli cysEM256I (data not shown) .
Only canonical cysS genes restore CysRS function to an E .
coli cysS deletion strain. Because complementation of the cysS(Ts)
gene in strain UQ818 is fraught with pitfalls, we constructed an
E . coli cysS chromosomal deletion strain in order to perform an
unambiguous test . Survival of a cysS deletion strain can be
maintained with a rescue plasmid carrying E . coli cysS . This
chloramphenicol-resistant plasmid, pBADbrcysS, can be replaced
by transformation and selection for an incompatible plasmid carrying
a functional cysS gene . We have constructed such incompatible
plasmids (pCYB derivatives) that are ampicillin resistant . The pCYB
plasmids contain various ORFs in order to test their ability to
complement the E . coli cysS deletion strain . Upon
transformation of the deletion strain, cells carrying only a pCYB
plasmid (pBADbrcysS being lost due to plasmid incompatibility)
would be chloramphenicol sensitive . Cells still containing both
plasmids would be ampicillin and chloramphenicol resistant .
Therefore, the CysRS activity encoded by genes cloned into pCYB can
be assessed by their ability to replace the pBADbrcysS rescue
plasmid in the E . coli cysS deletion strain .
pCYB transformants of the
cysS
strain were selected on ampicillin and then screened for
chloramphenicol sensitivity to assess the efficiency of plasmid
exchange . When pCYB plasmids containing cysS genes from E .
coli or M . maripaludis were tested, transformation
efficiencies were increased and the efficiency of plasmid exchange
was high (Table 3) . Even though the same amount of plasmid DNA
(50 ng) was used for transformation of the same batch of competent
E . coli
cysS
cells, the number of transformants was greatly reduced in the
cysS
strain when pCYB plasmids without functional cysS genes were
introduced (Table 3) . Presumably, selection against
the pBADbrcysS rescue plasmid did not allow enough cysS
to be expressed for functional complementation of the cysS chromosomal
deletion . When the transformants were tested for chloramphenicol
resistance, >90% of the proS or DR0705 transformants retained
the pBADbrcysS rescue plasmid (Table 3); this
result indicates that proS or DR0705 does not provide cysS
function . Thus, proS and DR0705 do not encode a CysRS that is
functional in E . coli .
TABLE 3 . Plasmid exchange in the E . coli
cysS
straina
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Deletion of DR0705 from D . radiodurans R1 generates a viable
strain. DR0705 was deleted from the D . radiodurans R1 chromosome
and replaced with a kanamycin resistance cassette under the control
of a constitutively expressed D . radiodurans promoter . The results
of experiments with the DR0705 deletion strain, designated TNK201,
are shown in Fig . 4 . Amplification of the 924-bp DR0705
ORF was not observed when genomic DNA of TNK201 was used as a
template, although an
900-bp
fragment was obtained when D . radiodurans R1 genomic DNA was
used as a template (Fig . 4, lanes 2 and 3) . These
results suggest that DR0705 had been replaced with the PkatA-npt
cassette in TNK201 . To verify the disruption, genomic DNAs from R1
and TNK201 were amplified with primers AFW2 and ARV3 (Fig.
1A and B), and DNA fragments of 2.7 kb were obtained
(Fig . 4, lanes 4 and 5) . Both purified DNA fragments
were digested with HindIII and XhoI; HindIII cut
the TNK201-derived PCR product into fragments of 1.2 and 1.5 kb,
while R1-derived DNA remained intact (Fig . 4, lanes
6 and 7) . Similarly, XhoI cut the TNK201-derived PCR product
into 1- and 1.7-kb fragments but not the product amplified from R1
(Fig . 4, lanes 8 and 9) . These results confirm that
DR0705 had been deleted from strain TNK201 and replaced with the PkatA-npt
cassette . The deletion strain (TNK201) grew with the same kinetics as
its R1 parent (with a doubling time of
1
h in TGY broth at 30°C) . Thus, DR0705 is not essential for the growth
of this Deinococcus strain .
|
FIG . 4 . Replacement of the D . radiodurans DR0705 gene with the PkatA-npt
cassette . Lanes 1 and 10, DNA size markers; lanes 2, 4, 6, and 8, DNA
from D . radiodurans R1; lanes 3, 5, 7, and 9, DNA from DR0705
deletion strain TNK201 . Lanes: 2 and 3, PCR products of primers AFW4 and
ARV4; 4 and 5, PCR products of primers AFW2 and ARV3; 6 and 7, HindIII
digestion of DNA in lanes 4 and 5, respectively; 8 and 9, XhoI
digestion of DNA in lanes 4 and 5, respectively . DR0705 has no
restriction sites for HindIII and XhoI, while the npt
gene is cut once by both enzymes.
|
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Attempts to delete cysS from D . radiodurans R1 were
unsuccessful. The same strategy as that used for DR0705 was pursued for
replacing the cysS gene with a cat gene cassette under
the control of the constitutively expressed katA promoter
(Fig . 1C) . However, all colonies screened were
heterozygous for chloramphenicol resistance, containing both cysS
and cat genes . This result suggests that cysS cannot be
deleted from D . radiodurans R1 .
The work presented here examined the earlier interpretation (9,
26, 27, 34,
35) of the data on Cys-tRNACys formation in
archaea . In vitro evidence has clearly shown that the ProRS
enzymes from all three domains of life can charge cysteine to tRNA (1,
2) . Even though the ProRS enzymes lack the amino acid
landscape of the extremely conserved cysteine binding pocket of
the canonical CysRS enzymes (30), the crystal structure of
M . thermautotrophicus ProRS showed efficient binding of cysteine
to the active site of the enzyme (22) . However, the
specificity for cognate tRNA prevails, and ProRS generates
misacylated Cys-tRNAPro, which is not edited by the enzyme
(1, 2, 4,
27) .
Thus, we looked for an explanation for the successful in vivo
rescue of the temperature-sensitive cysS phenotype by complementation
with archaeal proS genes (9, 35) .
It had already been reported (7, 38)
that rescue of a temperature-sensitive aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase
phenotype can occur through factors other than the wild-type gene
product . For instance, partial suppression of a temperature-sensitive
E . coli valyl-tRNA synthetase strain by ribosomal protein
mutations was reported (7, 38) . Such
mutations or metabolic changes slow down the growth rate suitably so
that the mutant synthetase at the nonpermissive temperature is able
to provide sufficient aminoacyl-tRNA for adequate protein synthesis
and cell survival . Stabilization of the mutant CysRS in strain
UQ818 through increased cysteine levels or through interactions with
other proteins may yield the same result . Therefore, the inability of
archaeal proS genes to restore viability to the E . coli
cysS
strain indicates that archaeal proS genes do not generate
Cys-tRNACys, at least in E . coli . While all of the
published data combined do not rule out the possibility that ProRS
synthesizes some correctly charged Cys-tRNA, the conclusion (9,
35) that ProRS can form Cys-tRNACys in vivo is not
established . Therefore, we assume that archaeal ProRS does not supply
Cys-tRNACys in M . jannaschii . Whether this enzyme can provide
this function with the help of an additional protein(s) is an open
question (25) .
The above findings may also explain the observation that the D .
radiodurans DR0705 gene rescued the temperature-sensitive
phenotype of strain UQ818 (15), even though this gene did not
restore the growth of the E . coli
cysS
strain . The fact that the DR0705 gene can be deleted from D .
radiodurans without any effect on growth shows that its gene
product is not required for the viability of the organism . However,
attempts to delete the canonical cysS gene did not result in a
viable strain, suggesting that CysRS is indeed a required enzyme in
D . radiodurans . Unfortunately, genetic methods to establish
unambiguously the essentiality of a gene do not yet exist for D .
radiodurans .
Although the product of M . jannaschii MJ1477 ORF cysteinylates
the homologous tRNA with cysteine in vitro (15), the
nature of this protein as CysRS has been questioned by extensive
computational analyses that instead predict a secreted
polygalactosaminidase or a related polysaccharide hydrolase (21,
28) . Moreover, no MJ1477 orthologs are present in
the completed genome sequences of the methanogens M .
thermautotrophicus (33) and M . maripaludis
(Leigh, unpublished); the former organism contains no canonical
cysS gene, while a viable cysS deletion strain of M .
maripaludis exists (36) . Therefore, MJ1477
cannot explain the lack of cysS in M . thermautotrophicus .
Given the results of the different lines of experimentation, it
cannot be convincingly deduced that the MJ1477 and DR0705 proteins
function as CysRS enzymes .
All of these data compel us to conclude that the mechanism of
Cys-tRNACys formation in M . jannaschii is still unknown .
We are indebted to Sotiria Palioura, Veronica Liu, and Anjana Agarwal
for help with some experiments .
This work was supported by grants from the National Institute of
General Medical Sciences (to D.S.), the Department of Energy (to
J.R.B . and D.S.), and the National Aeronautics and Space
Administration (to D.S.) .
* Corresponding author . Mailing address: Department of
Molecular Biophysics and Biochemistry, Yale University, P.O . Box 208114, 266
Whitney Ave., New Haven, CT 06520-8114 . Phone: (203) 432-6200 . Fax: (203)
432-6202 . E-mail:
soll@trna.chem.yale.edu .
B.R . and H.N . contributed equally to the work described in this
report .
Present address: Symyx Technologies, Santa Clara, CA 95051 .
Present address: Rib-X Pharmaceuticals, Inc., New Haven, CT 06511 .
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