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Journal of Bacteriology, January 2004, p . 35-42, Vol . 186,
No . 1
Characterization of CmaA, an Adenylation-Thiolation Didomain Enzyme Involved in
the Biosynthesis of Coronatine
Robin Couch,1 Sarah E . O'Connor,2,
Heather Seidle,1 Christopher T . Walsh,2 and Ronald Parry1*
Department of Chemistry, Rice University, Houston, Texas 77005,1
Department of Biological Chemistry and Molecular Pharmacology, Harvard Medical
School, Boston, Massachusetts 021152
Received 7 July 2003/ Accepted 1 October 2003
Several pathovars of Pseudomonas syringae produce the phytotoxin
coronatine (COR), which contains an unusual amino acid, the
1-amino-2-ethylcyclopropane carboxylic acid called coronamic acid
(CMA), which is covalently linked to a polyketide-derived carboxylic
acid, coronafacic acid, by an amide bond . The region of the COR
biosynthetic gene cluster proposed to be responsible for CMA
biosynthesis was resequenced, and errors in previously deposited
cmaA sequences were corrected . These efforts allowed
overproduction of P . syringae pv . glycinea PG4180 CmaA in P .
syringae pv . syringae FF5 as a FLAG-tagged protein and overproduction
of P . syringae pv . tomato CmaA in Escherichia coli as a
His-tagged protein; both proteins were in an enzymatically active
form . Sequence analysis of CmaA indicated that there were two
domains, an adenylation domain (A domain) and a thiolation domain (T
domain) . ATP-32PPi exchange assays showed that the A
domain of CmaA catalyzes the conversion of branched-chain
L-amino acids and ATP into the corresponding
aminoacyl-AMP derivatives, with a kinetic preference for
L-allo-isoleucine . Additional experiments
demonstrated that the T domain of CmaA, which is posttranslationally
modified with a 4'-phosphopantetheinyl group, reacts with the
AMP derivative of L-allo-isoleucine to produce an
aminoacyl thiolester intermediate . This covalent species was detected
by incubating CmaA with ATP and L-[G-3H]allo-isoleucine,
followed by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis
analysis . It is postulated that the L-allo-isoleucine
covalently tethered to CmaA serves as the substrate for additional
enzymes in the CMA biosynthetic pathway that catalyze cyclopropane
ring formation, which is followed by thiolester hydrolysis, yielding
free CMA . The availability of catalytically active CmaA should
facilitate elucidation of the details of the subsequent steps in the
formation of this novel cyclopropyl amino acid .
Coronatine (COR) (Fig . 1) is a novel phytotoxin that is
produced by five distinct pathovars of Pseudomonas syringae,
including P . syringae pv . atropurpurea, P . syringae pv .
glycinea, P . syringae pv . maculicola, P . syringae pv .
morsprunorum, and P . syringae pv . tomato, which infect
ryegrass, soybean, crucifers, Prunus spp., and tomato,
respectively . COR contributes to virulence in several host-pathogen
interactions and elicits diffuse chlorosis in a wide variety of plant
species (3, 13) . COR also induces
hypertrophy, inhibits root elongation, and stimulates ethylene
production (11, 14, 17,
39) . In several reports workers have noted the
striking structural and functional homologies among COR, jasmonic
acid, and 12-oxophytodienoic acid, suggesting that COR may function
as a molecular mimic of the octadecanoid signaling molecules of
higher plants (11, 14, 17,
39) . COR consists of a bicyclic polyketide moiety,
coronafacic acid (CFA), that is linked to an ethylcyclopropyl amino
acid moiety, coronamic acid (CMA) (Fig . 1) . These
two moieties are produced by different biosynthetic pathways (26) .
Three acetate units, one butyrate unit, and a four-carbon unit that
is derived from glutamic acid are combined to form CFA (27),
while CMA is derived from L-isoleucine via
L-allo-isoleucine which is oxidatively cyclized to
form the cyclopropane ring (25) . A ligase is then
presumed to join CFA to CMA and produce COR via formation of an amide
bond (2, 18) . In the
fermentation broth of P . syringae pv . glycinea, COR is
accompanied by small amounts of norcoronatine, which contains
norcoronamic acid (20) (Fig . 1), and by
other congeners in which CMA is replaced by leucine, valine,
isoleucine, or allo-isoleucine (20,
21) .
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FIG . 1 . Structures of COR, norcoronatine, CFA, CMA, and norcoronamic
acid (norCMA).
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The genes required for COR biosynthesis were first identified in
P . syringae pv . glycinea PG4180, in which the 32.8-kb COR gene
cluster is borne on a 90-kb plasmid designated p4180A (3) .
Investigations have shown that the structural genes for CFA and
CMA biosynthesis are located at opposite ends of the gene cluster (40) .
An intermediate region, located between the biosynthetic regions,
encodes the three regulatory proteins involved in transcriptional
control of the other two regions (29, 31,
38) . Nucleotide sequence analysis of each of the
biosynthetic regions revealed open reading frames which indicate that
CFA is biosynthesized by monofunctional and multifunctional
polyketide synthase proteins (30, 32),
whereas CMA appears to be biosynthesized by a thiotemplate mechanism
that resembles nonribosomal peptide synthetases (37) .
Protein overexpression and function assays are required to confirm
these predictions based on in silico data .
To begin to decipher the mechanism of CMA biosynthesis, we report
here the initial characterization of CmaA, a protein encoded by the
CMA region that appears to be a didomain protein containing an
adenylation domain (A domain) and a thiolation domain (T domain) . We
found that CmaA catalyzes the adenylation of L-allo-isoleucine
and the attachment of L-allo-isoleucine to
the CmaA T domain . We postulate that the enzyme-bound
L-allo-isoleucine serves as the substrate for the later
stages of CMA biosynthesis .
Bacterial strains and plasmids. Pseudomonas strains were
routinely cultured on King's medium B (16) at 28
or 18°C, while Escherichia coli cultures were grown on
Luria-Bertani medium at 37°C (33) . Ampicillin (100
µg/ml) and kanamycin (30 µg/ml) were used for plasmid selection in
both organisms .
Reagents. Unless indicated otherwise, all chemicals were
purchased from Sigma Chemical Co . (St . Louis, Mo.) . Restriction
enzymes were obtained from NEB Life Technologies (Beverly, Mass.),
and Pfu Turbo polymerase was purchased from Stratagene (La
Jolla, Calif.) . Protein concentrations were determined with the
Advanced protein assay reagent from Cytoskeleton Inc . (Denver, Colo.)
or with Bio-Rad protein assay reagent (Bio-Rad Laboratories,
Hercules, Calif.) .
DNA manipulations. Agarose gel electrophoresis, restriction
enzyme digestion, and purification of DNA fragments were performed by
standard procedures (33) . Plasmids were prepared
by using a Qiaprep Spin miniprep kit (Qiagen, Chatsworth, Calif.) .
Electrocompetent P . syringae FF5 cells were prepared as
described previously (12), and electroporation was
conducted by using a Bio-Rad Gene Pulser II at 200
,
2.5 kV, and 25 µF . Creation of the Pseudomonas expression
vectors pSFFLAG-CTC and pSFFLAG-MAC has been described previously
(9) . P . syringae strains harboring the
FLAG-tagged expression vectors were selected by ampicillin
resistance . The nucleotide sequences of all expression constructs
were confirmed by sequencing to verify the absence of errors .
Resequencing of the CMA region of PG4180 was carried out by primer
walking by using pSAY10 (40) as the template and
was performed by a commercial sequencing facility . Polyacrylamide gel
electrophoresis (PAGE)-purified sequencing and PCR primers were
synthesized by Sigma Genosys (The Woodlands, Tex.) .
Protein manipulations. Native PAGE and sodium dodecyl
sulfate (SDS)-PAGE were performed by using the separation and
development units of the PhastSystem (Amersham Biosciences,
Piscataway, N.J.) or by using the Mini-Protean II system (Bio-Rad
Laboratories) . SDS-PAGE protein molecular weight standards (broad
range) were obtained from Bio-Rad Laboratories . Native PAGE molecular
weight standards were created by combining chymotrypsinogen A
(molecular mass, 25 kDa), albumin (67 kDa), aldolase (158 kDa),
catalase (232 kDa), ferritin (440 kDa), and thyroglobulin (669 kDa),
all of which were purchased from Amersham Biosciences .
Computational analyses. Primary sequence alignment was
performed by using the Gene Inspector 1.5 software (Textco, Inc.,
West Lebanon, N.H.) run on a Macintosh computer . Basic local
alignment search tool (BLAST) analyses were performed at the National
Center for Biotechnology Information web site (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/) .
The ScanProsite program, available at the Expasy web site (http://us.expasy.org/tools/scanprosite/),
was used to scan the CmaA amino acid sequence for the presence
of signature motifs . GraphPad Prism 3.0 (GraphPad Software Inc., San
Diego, Calif.) was used for nonlinear regression analysis of all
enzyme assay data . Sequencher, version 4.1 (Gene Codes Corporation,
Ann Arbor, Mich.), was used to compile DNA sequence data .
Cloning of CmaA . (i) FLAG-tagged proteins. Two sets of PCR
primer pairs were used to amplify the P . syringae pv .
glycinea cmaA gene from plasmid pSAY10 (40) . The first
set (primer pair 1) consisted of CmaA-F-EcoRI (5'-TATGAATTCCATGACCTCCTACCATTCACAT-3';
restriction site is underlined) and CmaA-R-SmaI (5'-AACCCCGGGTCTCAGTCATTTCCATGTTGGCTCC-3'),
and the second set (primer pair 2) consisted of CmaA-F-EcoRI
and CmaA-RNS-SmaI (5'-AACCCCGGGTCGTCATTTCCATGTTGGCTCC-3') .
The two sets of primer pairs resulted in a PCR product containing
unique EcoRI and SmaI restriction sites (underlined) at the
5' and 3' ends, respectively . After high-fidelity PCR amplification
with Pfu Turbo DNA polymerase and either primer pair 1 or primer
pair 2, the
1.8-kb
PCR product was purified with a Qiaquick PCR purification kit
(Qiagen), digested with EcoRI and SmaI, and ligated
into the multiple cloning site of EcoRI-SmaI-digested
pSFFLAG-MAC (for the product of primer pair 1) or pSFFLAG-CTC (for
the product of primer pair 2) . The resulting constructs were
electroporated into E . coli by using a Gene Pulser II electroporator
(Bio-Rad Laboratories) according to the manufacturer's instructions .
The transformants were confirmed by ampicillin selection, restriction
mapping, and DNA sequencing and were designated pSFFLAG-MACcmaA
and pSFFLAG-CTCcmaA . For overproduction of CmaA in Pseudomonas,
the constructs were electroporated into P . syringae pv . syringae
FF5, a COR nonproducer (36), and protein expression and
purification were carried out as previously described (9) .
(ii) His-tagged proteins. The P . syringae pv . tomato
DC3000 cmaA gene was amplified from the genomic DNA of this
strain, which is a known COR producer . DC3000 genomic DNA was
prepared by using a Bactozol kit (Molecular Research Center, Inc.,
Cincinnati, Ohio) . PCR amplification with primers cmaA-NdeI
(5'-GGAATTCCATATGACCTCCTACCATTCA-3') and cmaA-EcoRI
(5'-AAAAAAGAATTCTCAGTCATTTCCATGTTG-3') resulted in a product
containing unique NdeI and EcoRI sites (underlined) .
The PCR product was purified as described above and ligated into the
multiple cloning site of NdeI-EcoRI-digested vector
pET28b (Novagen, Madison, Wis.) . The constructs were transformed into
E . coli as described above and were selected by kanamycin
resistance . DNA sequencing confirmed the identity of the insert . For
overproduction of CmaA in E . coli, this construct was transformed
into E . coli BL21(DE3) along with plasmid pSU20-Sfp containing
the gene encoding Sfp, a Bacillus subtilis phosphopantetheinyl
transferase with broad substrate specificity (22) .
pSU20-Sfp was constructed by removal of the sfp gene, along
with its promoter and ribosome binding site, from plasmid pUC8-Sfp (24)
as an EcoRI-BamHI fragment and ligation of the fragment
into plasmid pSU20 (1) digested with EcoRI
and BamHI .
For overproduction of the His-tagged CmaA protein (His-CmaA),
BL21(DE3) cells harboring the desired plasmids were grown in
Luria-Bertani medium supplemented with 30 µg of kanamycin per ml and
34 µg of chloramphenicol per ml . One liter of medium was inoculated
with 10 ml of an overnight starter culture and incubated at 25°C
until an optical density at 595 nm of 0.55 was reached . Protein
expression was then induced by addition of 100 µM isopropyl-ß-D-thiogalactopyranoside
(IPTG), and cells were allowed to grow for an additional 15 h
at 15°C . Cells were harvested by centrifugation (10 min at 6,000
x g) and resuspended in lysis buffer
(25 mM Tris [pH 8], 500 mM NaCl, 10% glycerol) and lysed by two
passages through a French press at 10,000 lb/in2 . Cell
extracts were clarified by centrifugation (30 min at 15,000
x g) and applied to
nickel-nitrilotriacetic acid resin (1 ml of resin for 3 liters of
culture) (Qiagen) . Cell lysate was allowed to bind in batch to the
resin for 2 h at 4°C and then was decanted into a column . The resin
was washed with 15 column volumes of lysis buffer and then eluted
with a step gradient of lysis buffer containing increasing amounts
of imidazole (5, 30, 60, 100, and 500 mM) . CmaA eluted in the
100 and 500 mM imidazole fractions . Fractions containing the desired
protein were dialyzed against 25 mM Tris (pH 7.5)-200 mM NaCl-10%
glycerol and frozen at -80°C .
A C-terminal His-tagged version of CmaA was also constructed by
amplification of the gene with primers cmaA-NcoI (5'-AAAAAACCATGGATGACCTCCTACCATTCA-3';
restriction site is underlined) and cmaA-XhoI (5'-AAAAAACTCGAGCTCATTTCCATGTTGGCT-3') .
The resulting product was ligated into NcoI-XhoI-digested
pET28b . Selection, transformation, and protein expression were
performed as described above .
ATP-32PPi exchange assays. ATP-PPi
exchange reactions were carried out at 25°C in 100-µl mixtures that
contained 75 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.5), 10 mM MgCl2, 1 mM
tris-(2-carboxyethyl)phosphine (Molecular Probes, Eugene, Oreg.), 1
mM [32P]sodium pyrophosphate (5 Ci/mol; Dupont NEN,
Boston, Mass.), 5 mM ATP, 0.2 nmol of FLAG-tagged CmaA protein
(CmaA-FLAG) or 0.14 nmol of His-CmaA, and various concentrations of
amino acid substrate . The reactions were initiated by addition of
enzyme, were allowed to proceed for 10 min, and then were quenched by
addition of a 1.6% activated charcoal-4.46% tetrasodium
pyrophosphate-3.5% perchloric acid mixture in water . The charcoal was
collected by either centrifugation or filtration, washed twice with a
4.46% tetrasodium pyrophosphate-3.5% perchloric acid solution, and
then, if collected by centrifugation, resuspended in 0.5 ml of water,
combined with liquid scintillation cocktail (ScintiVerse; Fisher
Scientific, Pittsburgh, Pa.), and placed in a liquid scintillation
counter . If filtration was used to collect the charcoal, the entire
filter paper was placed directly into the scintillation vial after
the wash step, mixed vigorously with scintillation cocktail, and
counted . Each reaction was performed at least in duplicate . The
amount of charcoal-bound radioactivity was converted into reaction
velocity by using the specific activity of the 32PPi .
A nonlinear regression fit of the plot of velocity versus substrate
concentration provided the Vmax and Km
values .
PPi release assay. PPi levels were measured by
monitoring the appearance of NADH (at 340 nm) generated by a coupled,
continuous spectrophotometric assay (8) . Reactions
were carried out at 25°C, and the reaction mixtures (500 µl)
contained 1 M Tris-HCl (pH 8), 50 mM UDP-glucose (Sigma-Aldrich, St .
Louis, Mo.), 50 mM glucose 1,6-bisphosphate (Sigma-Aldrich), 10 mM
NAD+, 100 mM dithiothreitol, 5 mM EDTA, 100 mM ATP, 1 M
MgCl2, 1 U of UDP-glucose pyrophosphorylase
(Sigma-Aldrich), 5 U of phosphoglucomutase (Sigma-Aldrich), 8 U of
glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (Sigma-Aldrich), 0.2 nmol of CmaA,
and various concentrations of amino acid substrate . The reactions
were initiated by addition of CmaA and were monitored for 30 to 45
min with a Hewlett-Packard 8453 diode array spectrophotometer
(Agilent Technologies, Palo Alto, Calif.) . The spectrophotometer
recorded data points every 20 s . Each assay was performed in
duplicate . A linear reaction velocity was obtained by using a minimum
of 30 colinear data points and an extinction coefficient of 6,220 M-1
cm-1 for NADH .
Aminoacylation of the T domain of CmaA by L-allo-isoleucine.
Radioautographic studies were performed to examine the reaction of
enzymatically generated L-allo-isoleucyl-AMP with
the free thiol of the 4'-phosphopantetheine arm located within the T
domain of CmaA . Reactions were performed at 25°C, and the
reaction mixtures (40 µl) contained 100 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8), 10 mM
MgCl2, 1 mM TCEP [tris-(2-carboxyethyl)phosphine], 5 mM
ATP, 800 µM L-[G-3H]allo-isoleucine
(generally tritiated; 320 Ci/mol; Moravek Biochemicals, Brea,
Calif.), and 0.3 nmol of FLAG-CmaA or 0.14 nmol of His-CmaA . A
control reaction, from which ATP was excluded, was also carried out .
The reaction was initiated by addition of CmaA and was allowed to
proceed for 30 min . The reaction was terminated by addition of 8 ml
of 6x SDS sample buffer (280 mM
Tris-HCl [pH 6.8], 10% SDS, 30% glycerol, 0.6 M dithiothreitol, 0.01%
bromophenol blue) and boiling for 5 min . Samples were analyzed by
electrophoresis with a SDS-10% PAGE gel . After electrophoresis, the
gel was soaked in fixing solution (isopropanol-water-acetic acid,
25:65:10) for 30 min, soaked in Amplify reagent (Amersham
Biosciences) for 30 min, vacuum dried (60°C for 1 h), and exposed to
Kodak Biomax XR X-ray film (Eastman Kodak Company, Rochester, N.Y.)
for 3 days at -80°C before the film was developed .
Sequence revisions. In 1998, a corrected version of the P .
syringae pv . glycinea PG4180 cmaA nucleotide sequence was
deposited in the GenBank database (4) . In order to
characterize the CmaA protein, it was critical to confirm the
accuracy of this sequence . Therefore, the cmaA region of P .
syringae pv . glycinea PG4180 was resequenced . A comparison of the
new sequence, which has at least twofold coverage in the forward and
reverse directions of the entire gene, with the 1998 sequence
revealed a number of differences between the two sequences . To
clarify these differences, the P . syringae pv . tomato DC3000
cmaA gene sequence was retrieved from The Institute for
Genomic Research (TIGR) web site (www.tigr.org)
and compared with the other two cmaA gene sequences . The TIGR
P . syringae pv . tomato sequence exhibited 97% identity with
the newly obtained cmaA nucleotide sequence but only 93% identity
with the 1998 cmaA gene sequence . At the protein level, the
TIGR P . syringae pv . tomato amino acid sequence exhibited 96%
identity with the new PG4180 CmaA sequence (Fig . 2) but
only 79% identity with the 1998 CmaA sequence (data not shown) . The
differences are due to reading frame changes caused by inserted
or deleted bases in the 1998 cmaA sequence . Because of the repeated
coverage of the resequenced cmaA region and the high degree
of similarity between the new cmaA sequence and the TIGR sequence,
we assumed that the correct sequence for the PG4180 cmaA gene
has been obtained (GenBank accession number
AY386681) . This sequence was used as a basis for overproduction
of CmaA in P . syringae FF5 .
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FIG . 2 . Alignment of CmaA amino acid sequences . A comparison of the CmaA
sequence from P . syringae pv . glycinea with the CmaA sequence
from P . syringae pv . tomato DC3000 indicates that these two
sequences are 96% identical . The residues enclosed in the rectangle
create an AMP-binding domain signature sequence, whereas the residues
enclosed in the ellipses are common to a T domain, as determined by
using the ScanProsite program at the Expasy web site . The arrow
indicates the putative 4'-phosphopantetheine attachment site . The
underlined residues are the residues that contribute to the
specificity-conferring code of A domains in nonribosomal peptide
synthetases . See the text for further discussion.
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Because of the errors discovered in the previously deposited PG4180
cmaA sequence, the entire CMA region of PG4180 was also
resequenced, and the resequenced region was compared with the
sequence reported for P . syringae pv . tomato . A significant
number of errors were discovered in the original PG4180 sequence .
Furthermore, both the new PG4180 sequence (GenBank accession number
AY391839) and the P . syringae pv . tomato sequence appeared
to contain at least three previously unrecognized open reading
frames, which we designated cmaC, cmaD, and cmaE (Fig.
3) .
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FIG . 3 . Gene organization in the CMA region of the COR biosynthetic gene
cluster of P . syringae pv . glycinea PG4180.
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CmaA sequence analysis. An analysis of either the P .
syringae pv . glycinea or P . syringae pv . tomato cmaA
nucleotide sequence revealed a 1,788-bp open reading frame encoding a
595-amino-acid CmaA protein . A BLAST analysis of each CmaA protein
revealed that the greatest similarities were with adenylation
activation enzymes and domains that play a role in nonribosomal
peptide biosynthesis (results not shown) . Furthermore, screening the
CmaA amino acid sequence for the presence of signature motifs by
using the Expasy ScanProsite algorithm resulted in identification of
both an AMP-binding domain signature sequence motif (A domain) and
several residues that are characteristic of a T domain (Fig.
2) . Both of these domains are common in adenylation
activation proteins . Thus, based upon these sequence analyses, it
appeared reasonable to propose that CmaA is an adenylation activation
enzyme that covalently loads its substrate by first adenylating it
(via the A domain) and then transferring it onto the
4'-phosphopantetheine arm located within the T domain (7,
19) . The presence of A and T domains in CmaA was
recognized previously, despite the errors present in the cmaA
nucleotide sequence (37) .
In an attempt to identify the substrate specificity of CmaA, key
residues that comprise the A domain specificity-conferring code (5,
35) were examined (underlined residues in Fig .
2) . Of the 10 residues that make up the specificity-conferring
code, 7 are found in A domains that are specific for
L-isoleucine, L-leucine, and
L-valine . Both L-isoleucine and
L-allo-isoleucine have been shown to be
incorporated into CMA, but L-allo-isoleucine,
whose specificity-conferring code has not been defined yet, is
a much more efficient precursor (25) . The timing of the
epimerization of L-isoleucine to
L-allo-isoleucine is currently unknown . By
analogy with the conversion of L-allo-isoleucine
into CMA, it appears that norcoronamic acid should be derived from
L-valine . For these reasons, L-isoleucine,
L-allo-isoleucine, and L-valine
each appeared to be a potential substrate for CmaA .
Protein overexpression and visualization. Two complementary
approaches were taken to overexpress CmaA for substrate specificity
assays . In one approach, the P . syringae pv . glycinea CmaA
protein was expressed in P . syringae pv . syringae FF5, a
Pseudomonas strain that lacks the COR gene cluster (36) .
Additionally, the P . syringae pv . tomato CmaA protein was
overexpressed in E . coli . To generate the appropriate
constructs, the cmaA gene was PCR amplified from P .
syringae pv . glycinea and P . syringae pv . tomato, cloned
into expression vectors that produced FLAG-tagged and His-tagged
proteins, respectively, and transformed into the appropriate hosts .
The soluble protein yields were compared with N-terminal and
C-terminal tag locations, and a C-terminal FLAG-tagged protein and an
N-terminal His-tagged protein were selected for subsequent functional
assays . Figure 4A shows the SDS-PAGE results for
the N-terminal His-CmaA and the C-terminal CmaA-FLAG . As shown in the
Fig . 4, denatured CmaA-FLAG electrophoresed faster
than expected, since the protein migrated at a molecular weight
<66,000, whereas the predicted molecular weight is actually
68,000 .
Denatured His-CmaA electrophoresed at approximately the same position
as CmaA-FLAG . Native PAGE of CmaA-FLAG indicated that the protein
exists as a dimer (Fig . 4B) .
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FIG . 4 . PAGE analysis of affinity-tagged CmaA . (A) SDS-PAGE analysis .
Denatured CmaA migrated at a molecular weight (MW) slightly less than
the molecular weight (68,500) predicted from its amino acid sequence .
(B) Native PAGE analysis . CmaA-FLAG appeared to migrate as a dimer.
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PPi exchange assay. The substrate specificity of
CmaA was assayed by using the amino acid-dependent exchange of
radiolabel from 32PPi into ATP (10) .
This assay measures the reversible formation of the aminoacyl-AMP
derivative and allows determination of amino acid selectivity .
His-CmaA and FLAG-CmaA were each assayed with variable concentrations
of substrate in a buffered solution containing ATP and 32PPi .
After a brief incubation period, newly formed, radiolabeled ATP
was collected by using activated charcoal and subsequently was
quantified by liquid scintillation counting . A nonlinear regression
analysis of reaction velocity versus substrate concentration provided
the Km and Vmax values, the latter of which
was used to calculate kcat .
L-Leucine, L-valine, and
L-isoleucine were suggested to be possible
substrates by examining the specificity-conferring code of CmaA . A
series of qualitative assays with His-CmaA indicated that
L-allo-isoleucine is the preferred substrate, and
a small amount of activation was also observed with L-leucine,
L-valine, or L-isoleucine
(Fig . 5) . Kinetic parameters for the four isoleucine
diastereomers were measured (Table 1) . A more detailed
kinetic analysis was performed with the more active CmaA-FLAG .
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FIG . 5 . Relative amino acid substrate activities as determined by using
the ATP-PPi exchange assay and His-CmaA . The y axis indicates the
ATP-PPi exchange activity for various amino acid substrates compared to
the activity for L-allo-isoleucine . The
curved line indicates that the data for L-allo-isoleucine,
at a relative activity of 100%, are off the scale relative to the data
for the other substrates.
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| TABLE 1 . Kinetic parameters for CmaA-FLAG and His-CmaA as determined by
the PPi exchange assay
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L-Isoleucine appears to be preferred over
L-leucine and L-valine, as implied by
the relatively small Km value and the relatively
large kcat/Km value . Furthermore, CmaA is
quite selective with respect to the absolute configuration of
isoleucine; that is, the kcat and kcat/Km
values of the D stereoisomer of isoleucine are
roughly one-third those of the L stereoisomer, clearly
indicating that there is a preference for the latter . However, after
examination of the L-allo-isoleucine
data, it became very apparent that this amino acid is by far the
preferred substrate, as it yields the smallest Km,
the greatest kcat, and the largest kcat/Km
value of all the substrates tested . The preference for the
L isomer of allo-isoleucine was also apparent, as
D-allo-isoleucine resulted in a
threefold increase in the Km, an 85-fold decrease
in the kcat, and consequently a 272-fold decrease in the kcat/Km
value . Interestingly, CMA, the ethylcyclopropyl amino acid component
of COR which is thought to be the product of the cyclization of
allo-isoleucine, was the second best substrate tested, as
judged by the kcat/Km value . Norcoronamic
acid, which is thought to be the product of cyclization of valine,
was the worst substrate tested .
PPi release assay. A continuous,
spectrophotometric assay was also employed to determine the substrate
specificity of CmaA (8) . This assay measures the
release of PPi by means of a coupled enzyme system in
which PPi drives the reduction of NAD+ to NADH, a process
that is conveniently monitored at 340 nm . Continuous release of
PPi must be accompanied by the release of the aminoacyl-AMP
derivative to regenerate the free A domain for catalysis of
another reaction cycle . Thus, this assay is in effect a measure of
the frequency of loss of the aminoacyl-AMP derivative from the A
domain active site . Following adenylation, preferred amino acid
substrates are expected to be held tightly by the enzyme, presumably
to await transfer to the 4'-phosphopantetheine arm of the T domain .
On the other hand, less preferred substrates have a tendency to leak
from the adenylation site following the adenylation reaction . With
this assay, therefore, highly preferred substrates should generate
relatively small Km and kcat
values (i.e., tight binding with little leakage), while the
substrates that are less preferred should yield larger Km
and kcat values .
Table 2 shows the kinetic values obtained in the PPi
release assay when CmaA-FLAG was used in conjunction with various
substrates . As observed with the PPi exchange assay (Table
1), the PPi release assay results
illustrated the preference of CmaA for L-isoleucine
over L-leucine and L-valine .
Furthermore, the specificity of CmaA for L-isoleucine
over D-isoleucine was also apparent when this
assay was used . Most importantly, it is clear that L-allo-isoleucine
was the most preferred substrate for CmaA of all the substrates
tested, as it displayed the smallest Km and kcat
values and the largest kcat/Km
value (Table 2) . These results are in good
agreement with those of the PPi exchange assay .
| TABLE 2 . Kinetic parameters for CmaA-FLAG as determined by the forward
PPi assay
|
|
Covalent loading of L-allo-isoleucine by
CmaA. With the preferred substrate of the adenylation reaction
identified, the ability of CmaA to catalyze loading of its T domain
with L-allo-isoleucine was examined .
CmaA-FLAG was incubated with L-[G-3H]allo-isoleucine
in the presence or absence of ATP . The proteins were subsequently
denatured, electrophoresed, and analyzed by autoradiography . Figure
6 shows the autoradiograph obtained, which verified
that there was ATP-dependent acylation of CmaA with L-allo-isoleucine .
Identical results were obtained with His-CmaA (data not shown) .
|
FIG . 6 . Covalent labeling of CmaA-FLAG by L-[G-3H]allo-isoleucine
in the presence of ATP.
|
|
Biosynthesis of the plant phytotoxin COR by P . syringae appears
to proceed by formation of CMA and CFA, which are then linked
to produce COR (Fig . 1) . A set of three genes, cmaA,
cmaB, and cmaT, in the CMA region of the biosynthetic
cluster (Fig . 3) have previously been implicated in
CMA formation from the proteogenic amino acid L-isoleucine .
To begin to decipher the mechanism of cyclopropane ring formation, we
have undertaken biochemical characterization of the CmaA protein .
This protein is predicted to be a 68-kDa, two-domain (A domain-T
domain) protein that resembles the amino acid activation modules
observed in nonribosomal peptide biosynthetic pathways .
Discrete A domain-T domain proteins in biosynthetic pathways often
capture a proteogenic amino acid and modify it . The modified amino
acid is then released to create a dedicated pool of nonproteinogenic
monomers for natural product biosynthesis (7) . For example,
in the nikkomycin biosynthetic pathway, a discrete A domain-T
domain enzyme specifically activates and loads histidine, after which
a P450 enzyme hydroxylates the ß-carbon position of the covalently
sequestered histidine residue . Similar discrete A domain-T domain
proteins are observed in numerous other natural product pathways,
such as those for chloramphenicol and novobiocin (7) .
In this study we demonstrated that the logic of CMA biosynthesis is
to activate L-allo-isoleucine and to link it to
CmaA in the form of a thiolester . It is postulated that the
covalently linked L-allo-isoleucine is
cyclized to produce covalently bound CMA, which is subsequently
hydrolyzed by CmaT to produce free CMA .
The cmaA gene from P . syringae pv . glycinea PG4180 and the
cmaA gene from P . syringae pv . tomato DC3000 were cloned
and expressed in a Pseudomonas host strain and in E . coli,
respectively, and were purified by affinity chromatography . The
protein was posttranslationally modified in the T domain with a
4'-phosphopantetheinyl moiety in vivo, either by the heterologously
expressed Bacillus phosphopantetheinyl transferase Sfp in the
E . coli expression system or by an endogenous Pseudomonas
transferase . The kinetic data indicate that the CmaA that is produced
in Pseudomonas is substantially more active than the enzyme
that is produced in E . coli . The N-terminally tagged version
produced in E . coli has a mutation in the protein sequence
(Ser521Phe) which may contribute to the decrease in activity .
However, a wild-type C-terminally His-tagged construct also exhibited
substantially reduced activity compared to the activity of the
Pseudomonas protein (data not shown) . Therefore, we suspect that
the differences in the kinetic data are due to the fact that E .
coli is a poor expression vehicle for the COR biosynthetic
proteins . CmaA protein folding may not occur properly in E . coli,
or alternatively, the B . subtilis phosphopantetheinyl
transferase may not modify CmaA efficiently . Incubation of purified
protein from either background with L-[G-3H]allo-isoleucine
and subsequent analysis by SDS gel electrophoresis followed by
autoradiography revealed that the protein was covalently modified
with this amino acid in an ATP-dependent manner (Fig . 6) .
Monitoring 32PPi exchange data, which measured the
enzyme-dependent reversible formation of an aminoacyl-AMP derivative,
indicated that L-allo-isoleucine is
strongly favored as the substrate over all the other amino acids
examined . The data suggest that free L-allo-isoleucine
is biosynthesized by the phytopathogenic P . syringae strains
prior to this step of CMA biosynthesis . How this unusual isoleucine
diastereomer is synthesized remains unknown . The kinetic parameters
for L-valine indicate that it is a rather poor
substrate . This is somewhat surprising given the natural occurrence
of norcoronamic acid, which is probably derived from
L-valine by a process similar to CMA formation . However,
norcoronatine is a minor constituent of P . syringae pv .
glycinea fermentation, and so formation of norcoronamic acid may be a
relatively inefficient process .
The A domains of nonribosomal peptide synthetases typically
exhibit a consensus sequence that determines the amino acid substrate
specificity . While the consensus sequence of L-isoleucine-activating
domains is very similar to that of CmaA (Fig . 2), there
are three changes in the consensus sequence that may be responsible
for the preference for L-allo-isoleucine .
Although other L-allo-isoleucine-containing
natural products exist (23, 34),
this is the first example of an A domain specific for the (2S,3R)
stereochemistry of L-allo-isoleucine .
In this paper we describe the first characterization of the CMA
biosynthetic pathway at the enzymatic level . The data reveal that
there is a discrete A domain-T domain whose function is to tether
L-allo-isoleucine, presumably for subsequent
cyclization and hydrolysis by CmaT to produce CMA . Previous studies
have shown that CmaT exhibits thioesterase activity with model
substrates (28) . In addition to the CmaA and CmaT
genes, five other genes are present in the CMA biosynthetic region of
P . syringae PG4180 (Fig . 3) . The sequence of
CmaB exhibits similarities to the sequences of
-ketoglutarate-dependent
dioxygenases, BarB1/Bar2 encoded by the barbamide gene cluster (6),
and SyrB2 encoded by the syringomycin gene cluster (15,
41) . These similarities suggest that CmaB is a
nonheme iron dioxygenase that may carry out hydroxylation or
chlorination of the CmaA-bound L-allo-isoleucine
at C-6 (Fig . 7) . CmaC exhibits similarity to
methylmalonyl coenzyme A mutases, which suggests that its role may be
to deprotonate and cyclize CmaA-bound 6-hydroxy-allo-isoleucine
or 6-chloro-allo-isoleucine to produce CmaA-bound CMA (Fig.
7) . CmaD exhibits similarities to acyl carrier
proteins, while CmaE shows similarities to proteins with an
/ß
hydrolase fold . The role played by these two proteins is unclear .
Characterization of the later steps in the CMA biosynthetic pathway
is under way .
|
FIG . 7 . Hypothetical biosynthetic pathway for conversion of
L-allo-isoleucine into CMA.
|
|
We acknowledge support of this study by the National Institutes of
Health (grant GM26564 to R.J.P . and grant GM20011 to C.T.W.), by the
Robert A . Welch Foundation (grant C-0729 to R.J.P.), and by an Irving
S . Sigal postdoctoral fellowship (to S.E.O) .
Construction of vector pSU20-sfp by M . G . Thomas is also gratefully
acknowledged .
* Corresponding author . Mailing address: Department of
Chemistry MS60, Rice University, 6100 Main St., Houston, TX 77005 . Phone: (713)
348-2446 . Fax: (713) 348-5155 . E-mail:
parry@rice.edu .
Present address: Department of Chemistry, Massachusetts Institute of
Technology, Cambridge, MA 02139 .
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