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Journal of Bacteriology, July 2004, p . 4596-4604, Vol . 186,
No . 14
Long-Term Anaerobic Survival of the Opportunistic Pathogen Pseudomonas
aeruginosa via Pyruvate Fermentation
Martin Eschbach,1 Kerstin Schreiber,1 Katharina
Trunk,1 Jan Buer,2 Dieter Jahn,1 and Max
Schobert1*
Institute of Microbiology, Technical University Braunschweig, D-38106
Braunschweig,1 Department of Cell Biology, German Research Centre for
Biotechnology, D-38124 Braunschweig, Germany2
Received 23 December 2003/ Accepted 14 April 2004
Denitrification and arginine fermentation are central metabolic
processes performed by the opportunistic pathogen Pseudomonas
aeruginosa during biofilm formation and infection of lungs of
patients with cystic fibrosis . Genome-wide searches for additional
components of the anaerobic metabolism identified potential genes for
pyruvate-metabolizing NADH-dependent lactate dehydrogenase (ldhA),
phosphotransacetylase (pta), and acetate kinase (ackA) .
While pyruvate fermentation alone does not sustain significant
anaerobic growth of P . aeruginosa, it provides the bacterium
with the metabolic capacity for long-term survival of up to 18 days .
Detected conversion of pyruvate to lactate and acetate is dependent
on the presence of intact ldhA and ackA-pta loci,
respectively . DNA microarray studies in combination with reporter
gene fusion analysis and enzyme activity measurements demonstrated
the anr- and ihfA-dependent anaerobic induction of the ackA-pta
promoter . Potential Anr and integration host factor binding
sites were localized . Pyruvate-dependent anaerobic long-term survival
was found to be significantly reduced in anr and ihfA
mutants . No obvious ldhA regulation by oxygen tension was observed .
Pyruvate fermentation is pH dependent . Nitrate respiration abolished
pyruvate fermentation, while arginine fermentation occurs independently
of pyruvate utilization .
Pseudomonas aeruginosa is an important opportunistic pathogen
causing persistent infections of the lungs of cystic fibrosis
patients . Under these conditions, P . aeruginosa forms macrocolonies
and generates a microaerobic to anaerobic environment (40) .
P . aeruginosa is also an important model organism for studying
biofilm formation . Biofilms allow bacteria to survive under
unfavorable conditions in the habitat (35) . It has been shown
previously that the deeper layers of biofilms are anaerobic (21,
40, 42, 44) .
P . aeruginosa is usually described as a bacterium which favors
aerobic growth conditions (29) . However, recent data
obtained from chemostat experiments suggest that the organism tries
to establish a microaerobic milieu for optimal growth (32) .
Under oxygen-limiting conditions, P . aeruginosa grows in the
presence of nitrate or nitrite by using denitrification (11,
46) . Under these conditions, nitrate or nitrite
replace oxygen as alternative electron acceptors . In the absence of
nitrate or nitrite, arginine serves as energy substrate for anaerobic
growth (38) . P . aeruginosa degrades
arginine to ornithine, which is linked to the generation of ATP . For
growth under these arginine-fermenting conditions a complex medium is
required, because arginine does not serve as carbon source and the
ornithine that is produced is excreted into the medium (38) .
Arginine fermentation was also found to be induced under various
stress conditions . It is only partially repressed by the presence of
nitrate (24) . Without arginine or alternative
electron acceptors in the anaerobic growth medium, P . aeruginosa
rapidly becomes energy starved and cell numbers decline dramatically
from 1 x 109 to 5
x 105 cells per ml within
16 days (6) .
The central regulator for the onset of the anaerobic metabolism is
Anr (18, 34) . This protein is highly
homologous to Escherichia coli Fnr . The anr gene
encodes the cysteine residues which were found to be essential in
E . coli Fnr for the formation of the oxygen-sensitive iron-sulfur
cluster . Anr directly induces genes required for arginine
fermentation and cyanide biosynthesis (45) .
Furthermore, Anr induces the gene for a second Fnr-type regulator,
named Dnr (4) . Dnr, in combination with the two-component
regulatory system encoded by the narXL locus, is responsible
for the induction of the denitrification pathway (4,
23, 43) .
Other strictly aerobic bacteria, such as Bacillus subtilis and
Arthrobacter globiformis, possess unexpected fermentation
capacities (10, 16,
27) . B . subtilis requires either glucose and amino
acids or glucose and pyruvate for a mixed acid type of fermentation .
However, in contrast to E . coli, a bacterium with highly effective
glucose fermentation, B . subtilis and P . aeruginosa lack
pyruvate formate lyase (7, 28) .
To investigate P . aeruginosa for yet-unknown fermentation pathways,
we started a genome-wide search for genes potentially involved
in fermentation processes . We identified components of a putative
pyruvate fermentation pathway . While this pathway does not support
anaerobic growth of P . aeruginosa, it is important for long-term
survival under these conditions . An investigation of the genes
and physiological reactions involved is described .
Bacterial strains and growth conditions. The bacterial strains
and plasmids used in this study are shown in Table 1 .
Employed E . coli strains were grown in Luria-Bertani (LB)
medium (33) . Ampicillin was used at a concentration of
100 µg/ml, and gentamicin was used at 10 µg/ml . P .
aeruginosa was grown in OS medium supplemented with 2.5 g of
yeast extract/liter (38) . In indicated experiments 20 mM
pyruvate replaced arginine as the energy source . Carbenicillin
was used at a concentration of 500 µg/ml, and gentamicin was used at
100 µg/ml . During the procedure for the construction of stable
chromosomal gene disruption mutants, sucrose-resistant colonies were
obtained by streaking P . aeruginosa merodiploids or cells
containing sacB encoding plasmids on LB agar or Pseudomonas
Isolation Agar (Gibco, Eggenstein, Germany) supplemented with
5% (wt/vol) sucrose and 200 µg of gentamicin/ml (22) .
| TABLE 1 . Strains of P . aeruginosa and E . coli and plasmids
used
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For anaerobic growth, P . aeruginosa was incubated in completely
filled rubber-stoppered bottles shaken at 100 rpm to minimize
aggregation of the bacteria . Anaerobic conditions were achieved after
3 min through consumption of residual oxygen by the inoculated
bacteria . This was verified by using the redox indicator resazurin at
a concentration of 200 µg/liter as well as oxygen electrode
measurements in control experiments .
Viable cell counting and live/dead staining. Viable cell
counts were determined by periodic removal of samples from the
anaerobic culture with sterile syringes; the serial dilution of cells
was obtained in phosphate-buffered saline followed by plating of the
dilutions on LB agar . CFU were determined by counting the colonies
after incubation of the LB plates at 37°C for 24 h . In addition, a
fluorescence microscopic analysis of the samples after staining the
cells using the LIVE/DEAD BacLight kit (Molecular Probes, Leiden, The
Netherlands) was performed following the instructions of the
manufacturer . The kit contained two different dyes: propidium iodide,
resulting in red fluorescence from stained chromosomal DNA of dead
cells, and SYTO9, resulting in green fluorescence from stained viable
cells .
HPLC analysis of fermentation products. For the measurements
of secreted metabolites by long-term surviving P . aeruginosa,
aerobically grown bacteria in the early stationary phase were
harvested, washed, and resuspended at an optical density at 578 nm
(OD578) of 0.3 in OS minimal medium supplemented with 2.5
g of yeast extract/liter at a pH of 7.0 . The suspensions were further
incubated in rubber-stoppered bottles to achieve anoxic conditions as
described above . After addition of the indicated amounts of pyruvate,
samples were withdrawn with syringes at various time intervals .
Fermentation products were determined by high-performance liquid
chromatography (HPLC) analysis from the supernatant of the cultures
after removal of the bacteria by centrifugation as previously
described (10) .
Construction and testing of an ackA-pta-lacZ reporter
gene fusion. The putative promoter region of the ackA-pta
loci was fused to lacZ . A 314-bp PCR product covering the
region from –310 to +4 upstream of the translational start of the
ackA gene was generated with primer Pa-ackA-for (5'-GCATGGTTCGAgAtCTTTTCGATAAAGAAG-3')
and primer Pa-ackA-rev (5'-GCATCACgGaTCCTTGGTCTGCTC-3') .
Pa-ackA-for contained a double-base mismatch (lowercase g and t)
which introduced a BglII restriction site (underlined) in the
resulting PCR fragment into the PCR fragment . Pa-ackA-rev contained a
double-base mismatch (lowercase g and a) and introduced a BamHI site
(underlined) . The PCR fragment was digested by using BglII and BamHI .
The resulting 291-bp fragment was fused to lacZ by cloning it
into the BglII and BamHI site of pQF50 (17) to
generate pACKA . Integrity of the construct was verified by complete
DNA sequence determination . Reporter gene fusion assays were
performed as previously outlined (31) . Obtained
activities are given in Miller units (25) .
Construction of P . aeruginosa
pta
and
ldhA
mutants. For construction of the various gene disruption mutants, the
previously described sacB-based strategy was employed (22) .
In the P . aeruginosa
pta
mutant PAO-ME1, 288 bp of the pta gene was deleted and
replaced by a gentamicin resistance cassette . For the construction of
the required suicide vector pMEP2, a PCR fragment containing 348 bp
of the 3' region and 1,791 bp of the pta gene was cloned into
BamHI- and HindIII-digested pEX18Ap vector (22) .
The primer pair used for amplification of the pta-containing
PCR fragment was Pa-pta-cuta-for (5'-CGTCGAAGGCATGGatCCGACCCGTC-3')
and Pa-pta-cutb-rev (5'-GGGTGCGCTGGACaAGcTTCATCCAGC-3') .
Pa-pta-cuta-for contained a double-base mismatch (lowercase a and t)
which introduced a BamHI site (underlined) into the resulting PCR
fragment . Pa-pta-cutb-rev contained a double-base mismatch (lowercase
a and c) and introduced a HindIII site (underlined) . The resulting
vector, pMEP1, was digested with SalI, which removed a 288-bp
fragment from the pta gene between two naturally occurring
SalI sites . A gentamicin resistance cassette was liberated from
plasmid pPS858 by using SalI and was inserted into pMEP1, generating
pMEP2 . The P . aeruginosa pta mutant was generated with pMEP2
following published strategies (22) . The
chromosomal disruption of pta was verified by colony PCR as
described previously (22) . The primer pair used for
verification of the constructed mutants was Pa-ptaint-for
(5'-GCGACCATGATGCTTGCCCTG-3') and Pa-ptaint-rev
(5'-GCATCATACTGCAAGGGTCCGTC-3') .
In the
ldhA
mutant PAO-ME3, 727 bp of the ldhA gene was deleted and
replaced by a gentamicin resistance cassette . For the construction of
the suicide vector pMEP11, a PCR fragment containing 550 bp of the 5'
region, the complete ldhA gene (985 bp), and 330 bp of the 3'
region was cloned into the BamHI- and HindIII-digested pEX18Ap
vector . The primer pair used for amplification of the PCR fragment
was Pa-ldhA-cuta-for (5'-GGTGCCGGgGATCcCGCTCAC-3') and
Pa-ldhA-cutb-rev (5'-CGAAGTCGAGACaAGCtTGGCACTGGT-3') . Pa-ldhA-cuta-for
contained a double-base mismatch (lowercase g and c) and introduced
a BamHI site (underlined) . Pa-ldhA-cutb-rev contained a double-base
mismatch (lowercase a and t) and introduced a HindIII site (underlined) .
The resulting vector, pMEP5, was digested with SdaI, which removed
a 727-bp fragment from the ldhA gene at the two natural SdaI
sites . A gentamicin resistance cassette liberated from plasmid
pPS858 by PstI digestion was inserted into pMEP5, generating pMEP11 .
The P . aeruginosa ldhA mutant was generated by using pMEP11
following published strategies (22) . The primer pair
used for verification of the constructed mutants was Pa-ldhAint-for
(5'-GGCACGGCTTCGAACTGCAC-3') and Pa-ldhAint-rev
(5'-CGTTGGGGAAGCTCAGCAGG-3') .
Microarray experiments. Microarray analyses of anr-dependent
ackA-pta and ldhA transcription were performed . For
this purpose, the expression profile of aerobically grown P .
aeruginosa PAO1 was compared to that of anaerobically grown PAO1,
anr, and dnr mutant strains under aerobic and anaerobic
conditions . Strains were inoculated in AB minimal medium (9)
supplemented with 50 mM nitrate and 50 mM glucose and grown
aerobically to an OD578 of 0.3 . Cultures were immediately
shifted to anaerobic conditions and were incubated for 2 h .
Subsequently, cells were harvested and RNA was extracted by a
modified hot phenol method (1) . RNA from three independent
cultures was pooled for one GeneChip experiment . Two GeneChips
for each mutant and growth condition were compared as detailed before
(5, 8) . Generation of cDNA, labeling, and
hybridization of Affymetrix GeneChips was carried out by following
protocols provided by the manufacturer (Santa Clara, Calif.) . Data
analysis was carried out with Affymetrix Microarray Suite 5.0 .
Affymetrix scaling was used to normalize data from different arrays .
A scale factor was derived from the mean signal of all of the
probe sets on an array and a user-defined target signal . The
signal from each individual probe set is multiplied by this scale
factor . The user-defined target signal was set to 100 in our
experiments, and all other signals were related to that . Therefore,
normalized Affymetrix units represent obtained relative signal
intensities under these defined conditions .
Pta assay. For the preparation of cell extracts from
aerobically grown cells, bacteria were grown to exponential phase at
an OD578 of 0.3 in LB medium supplemented with 10 mM
gluconate and 20 mM pyruvate, harvested, and washed twice with 100 mM
Tris-HCl buffer, pH 8.0 . Alternatively, wild-type and mutant P .
aeruginosa isolates were first cultivated in the same medium as
described above under aerobic conditions . After reaching an OD578
of 0.3, cultures were poured into anaerobic flasks and 20 mM pyruvate
was added . The bacteria were further incubated under oxygen
exclusion for 24 h . The cells were subsequently harvested and washed
twice with 100 mM Tris-HCl buffer, pH 8.0 . After cell disruption by
sonication, the cell homogenate was centrifuged for 10 min at 16,000
x g . To remove residual cell debris
and membranes the supernatant was subsequently centrifuged for 2
h at 125,000 x g . The resulting
clear supernatant contained 1 to 1.5 mg of protein per ml and was
immediately used as a cell extract for enzyme assays .
Phosphotransacetylase (Pta) activity was determined
spectrophotometrically at 30°C by following the formation of
acetyl-coenzyme A (CoA) from acetyl phosphate and CoA resulting in an
increase of absorption at 233 nm . The assay mixture (600 µl)
contained 90 mM Tris-HCl buffer (pH 8.0), 90 mM potassium chloride,
0.2 mM CoA, 14.5 mM acetyl phosphate, and 5 to 20 µg of cell extract
proteins (37) . The addition of acetyl phosphate
initiated the reaction . An extinction coefficient ( 233)
of 4.44 mM–1 cm–1 was used in the Pta assay, representing
the difference between the extinction coefficients of acetyl-CoA and
CoA . One unit of activity was defined as the enzyme activity that
converted 1 µmol of acetyl-CoA into product after 60 min at 30°C .
Protein concentrations were determined by using the bicinchoninic
acid assay (Sigma-Aldrich, Munich, Germany) .
Identification of ORFs potentially involved in the anaerobic metabolism
of P . aeruginosa. We searched the complete genome sequence of
P . aeruginosa (36) for open reading frames
(ORFs) which are potentially involved in anaerobic energy metabolism
by using the BLAST 2.0 program (www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/BLAST)
(2) . In addition to the genes involved in the
well-established denitrification and arginine fermentation pathways,
various other ORFs potentially involved in the anaerobic energy
metabolism were identified . The gacS-ldhA operon (PA0926 and
PA0927), encoding the sensor kinase GacS of a GacA/GacS component
regulatory system and a potential fermentative lactate dehydrogenase
(LdhA), were detected . Moreover, the ackA-pta loci (PA0835 and
PA0836), potentially encoding acetate kinase and Pta, respectively,
and the adhA locus (PA5427), encoding a potential alcohol
dehydrogenase (AdhA), were found .
No obvious ORFs encoding proteins homologous to subunits of
pyruvate formate lyase, which catalyzes the conversion of pyruvate
into acetyl-CoA and formate, or formate hydrogen lyase, which
catalyzes the conversion of formate into carbon dioxide and hydrogen,
were identified . A model for a putative pyruvate fermentation pathway
in P . aeruginosa was deduced from these observations (Fig.
1) .
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FIG . 1 . Proposed model for P . aeruginosa pyruvate fermentation .
The underlined products were detected by HPLC analysis . PycA, pyruvate
carboxylase; LdhA, fermentative lactate dehydrogenase; Pdh, pyruvate
dehydrogenase; Pta, phosphotransacetylase; AckA, acetate kinase; AdhA,
alcohol dehydrogenase . Enzymes of the reductive citric acid cycle: Mdh,
malate dehydrogenase; Fum, fumarase; Frd, fumarate reductase.
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Pyruvate fermentation provides the basis for anaerobic long-term
survival of P . aeruginosa. P . aeruginosa is usually
described as an aerobic, nonfermenting bacterium (29) .
This was also proposed for B . subtilis, which was found to
perform an anaerobic mixed acid fermentation (10) .
Initially, we tested whether pyruvate fermentation or the fermentation
of glucose or gluconate in the presence of pyruvate sustains
anaerobic growth of P . aeruginosa . However, none of these substrates
allowed significant growth of P . aeruginosa under anaerobic
conditions . We also unsuccessfully tested various minimal and
complex media (data not shown) . These observations are in agreement
with the results of previous investigations, which demonstrated the
limitation of anaerobic growth of P . aeruginosa to denitrification
and arginine fermentation . Unexpectedly, over a longer period
of up to 18 days we observed constant cell numbers for P . aeruginosa
when cultured under anaerobic conditions in OS medium containing
pyruvate (Fig . 2A) . Viable cell counts were obtained by
plating cultures at different time points on solid complex medium and
direct counting the bacteria in a Thoma counting chamber . We
compared the survival of P . aeruginosa in media with and without
pyruvate . For that purpose, samples were taken from the parallel
cultures at various times and viable cell counts of P . aeruginosa
were determined . As shown in Fig . 2A, P . aeruginosa
maintains a constant viable cell number over a period of up to 18
days in the presence of pyruvate . In contrast, without pyruvate the
culturable cell number of P . aeruginosa decreases logarithmically
down to 1% CFU during the same period (Fig . 2A) . To rule
out the possibility that the observed survival of P . aeruginosa
in the presence of pyruvate is caused by a protective effect of
pyruvate against peroxides or oxygen stress, the cells were incubated
anaerobically in rich medium (LB) containing 50 mM KNO3.
The number of the observed CFU for these experiments was comparable
to those observed when CFU were determined aerobically .
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FIG . 2 . (A) Anaerobic survival of P . aeruginosa without pyruvate
( )
and in the presence of 20 mM pyruvate ( ).
P . aeruginosa was grown aerobically in OS medium with 20 mM
gluconate into the early stationary phase . Bacteria were harvested,
washed, resuspended in OS medium at an OD578 of 0.3, and
poured into rubber-stoppered bottles . Pyruvate (20 mM) was added where
indicated . Viable cell counts were determined by plating the cultures
onto LB agar plates . The determined CFU are the means of three
independent experiments . Error bars indicate the observed standard
deviations; 100% survival represents 5.3 x
108 ± 1.02 x 108
CFU/ml ( )
and 5.6 x 107 ± 0.99
x 108 CFU/ml ( ),
respectively . (B) Kinetics of pyruvate utilization and product formation
under anaerobic survival conditions of P . aeruginosa in the
presence of 20 mM pyruvate as the sole carbon and energy source . A
representative experiment of a single culture is shown . Observed
standard deviations are explained in footnote a of Table
2 . The resulting error bars are omitted for the sake
of clarity . Pyruvate (•), lactate ( ),
acetate ( ),
and succinate ( )
were detected by using HPLC analysis of the supernatant as described in
Materials and Methods.
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Previously, viable but nonculturable cells which were not detectable
by the plate counting approach were obtained under conditions of
oxygen starvation (6) . Therefore, we determined the total
cell number in a Thoma counting chamber . Additionally, we stained
the cells with two different dyes specific for viable cells or
dead cells, resulting in green (viable) or red (dead) fluorescence
after UV excitation . Using a fluorescence microscope, we observed
over a period of 18 days predominantly (more than 95%) green
fluorescence and, thus, viable P . aeruginosa cells cultivated
in the presence of 20 mM pyruvate under anaerobic conditions . The
total cell numbers observed via Thoma counting remained constant over
the same period . These observations clearly indicate that P .
aeruginosa cells were viable and confirmed the data obtained from
the plate counts . In contrast, the total cell number of a P .
aeruginosa culture without addition of pyruvate significantly
decreased over the same period when analyzed by the Thoma counting
chamber . Moreover, the decreased cell numbers of the cultures
contained a larger number of dead cells (up to 25%) when analyzed by
the differential viable/dead staining method . The latter results are
in agreement with previous observations (6) .
Furthermore, these results clearly demonstrate that pyruvate is
essential for long-term survival under anaerobic conditions .
Interestingly, pyruvate could not be replaced by other substrates,
such as glucose or gluconate, for fermentation . Similarly, the
combination of pyruvate with glucose or gluconate did not change the
survival rate (data not shown) .
P . aeruginosa anaerobically converts pyruvate into lactate,
acetate, and succinate. Because pyruvate was found to be essential for
anaerobic survival of P . aeruginosa, we analyzed the growth
medium for possible pyruvate fermentation products . HPLC analysis
measured increasing amounts of lactate, acetate, and succinate
accompanied by a stoichiometric decrease of the pyruvate
concentration (Fig . 2B) . P . aeruginosa
formed under the following anaerobic conditions: 0.56 mol of lactate
(9.0 mM), 0.39 mol of acetate (6.3 mM), and 0.04 mol of succinate
(0.7 mM) per mol of pyruvate (16.2 mM) (Table 2) .
No additional compounds, such as ethanol, acetoin, formate, or
2,3-butanediol, were identified during HPLC analysis . The complete
stoichiometric conversion of pyruvate to the corresponding
fermentation products after 18 days coincided with the beginning of
the decrease of viable cell counts (Fig . 2A), underscoring
the importance of pyruvate fermentation for the anaerobic survival
of P . aeruginosa .
| TABLE 2 . Fermentation product formation by wild-type P . aeruginosa
and several mutantsa
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In a control experiment we tested the fermentation products acetate
(6.5 mM), lactate (9.0 mM), and succinate (0.7 mM), alone and in
combination, for their ability to support long-term anaerobic
survival in OS medium . However, none of the products or the
combination sustained anaerobic survival (data not shown) .
These results confirmed our initially proposed model of a mixed
acid pyruvate fermentation in P . aeruginosa . The one exception
was that we did not observe a significant conversion of acetyl-CoA
into ethanol (dashed line in Fig . 1) .
Effect of external pH, nitrate respiration, and arginine fermentation
on pyruvate fermentation. Resting cells of P . aeruginosa with an
OD578 of 4 were incubated anaerobically with 50 mM
pyruvate at the following external pH values: 5.0 in 100 mM
morpholinepropanesulfonic acid (MES) buffer and 6.0, 7.0, and 8.0 in
100 mM phosphate buffer . Cell suspensions of P . aeruginosa in
phosphate buffer with pH values of 6.0 and 7.0 were used to perform
pyruvate fermentation as described above, which was followed by HPLC
analysis . Cell suspensions in MES buffer with a pH of 5.0 neither
consumed significant amounts of pyruvate nor formed lactate, acetate,
and succinate (data not shown) . At a pH of 8.0 in phosphate buffer
there was only limited pyruvate consumption and subsequent formation
of lactate, acetate, and succinate, indicating a limited pH range
of 6 to 7 for pyruvate fermentation (data not shown) .
Pyruvate fermentation of P . aeruginosa in the presence of the
electron acceptor nitrate was monitored . Nitrate was completely
converted into nitrite after 3 h of incubation, which in turn was
converted to nitrogen after 6 h (data not shown) . Pyruvate was
consumed rapidly, but no lactate or succinate was detected by HPLC
analysis after 1.5 and 3 h (Fig . 3B) . Acetate was only
formed transiently at about 1.5 h and was rapidly consumed .
Similar observations had previously been made for E . coli and
were explained as a glucose overflow metabolism (41) . After
3 h of incubation, when all nitrate had been converted into
nitrite, pyruvate consumption slowed down and finally resulted in the
formation of lactate, acetate, and succinate (compare Fig.
3B to C) . These observations clearly indicate the complete
metabolization of pyruvate via the Krebs cycle during nitrate
respiration analogous to pyruvate metabolization during aerobic
growth conditions . Only after full utilization of the primary
alternative electron acceptor nitrate does the organism use pyruvate
via a fermentative mode of energy generation .
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FIG . 3 . Kinetics of pyruvate degradation and product formation by
resting cells of P . aeruginosa in 100 mM phosphate buffer (pH
7.4) . The cells were grown for 21 h in OS minimal medium with 50 mM
nitrate as electron acceptor and 10 mM gluconate-20 mM pyruvate as
carbon source under oxygen limitation and then were harvested and washed
in phosphate buffer . Finally, the cell suspensions (OD578
between 8 and 9) of bacteria were incubated under anoxic conditions with
the addition of 50 mM arginine (A), 50 mM nitrate (B), or without
further additions (C) . Pyruvate (•), lactate ( ),
acetate ( ),
and succinate ( )
were detected by HPLC analysis of the supernatant as described in
Materials and Methods . Graphs represent the results of three independent
experiments; standard deviations were below 7% for the determined
pyruvate, lactate, and acetate concentrations and below 15% for the
already low succinate concentrations.
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Moreover, pyruvate was fermented in the presence of arginine, another
fermentable substrate . As expected, pyruvate was completely converted
into its typical fermentation products from the beginning of
incubation (Fig . 3A) . After 4.5 h, the pH of the medium had
increased to 8.0 because of NH3 generated by arginine
fermentation . From that time point pyruvate was only very slowly
fermented (Fig . 3A) . This was in accordance with
the experiment described above, which was performed at a pH of 8 .
Clearly, both fermentation processes can be maintained in parallel .
In theory, the parallel fine-tuned activity of both pathways, the
acid-producing pyruvate fermentation and NH3-generating
arginine fermentation, would contribute to the stabilization of an
appropriate extracellular pH value for long-term survival .
The gacS-ldhA and ackA-pta loci are required for
pyruvate fermentation. Two loci on the P . aeruginosa chromosome,
ldhA, encoding a fermentative lactate dehydrogenase, and
ackA-pta, encoding acetate kinase and Pta, were investigated for
their potential involvement in the observed fermentative metabolism
and its corresponding regulation . The mutants PAO-ME1 ( pta)
and PAO-ME3 ( ldhA)
were constructed and tested for their long-term anaerobic survival
capacities and for the production of fermentation products . The
viable cell numbers of both mutants decreased significantly upon
anaerobic incubation in the presence of pyruvate (Fig .
4A) . HPLC analysis of the supernatant of an ldhA knockout
mutant culture after 23 days of anaerobic incubation showed neither
the consumption of significant amounts of pyruvate nor the formation
of lactate, acetate, succinate, or other products (Table
2) . However, in the supernatant of the pta
knockout mutant a small decrease in the concentration of pyruvate
(from 20 to 15.2 mM) as well as small amounts of lactate (2.2 mM),
acetate (1.5 mM), and succinate (0.4 mM) were measured . These
observations are explained by the activity of other Ptas in P .
aeruginosa specific for metabolites, such as propionyl-CoA or
butyryl-CoA, which also can accept acetyl-CoA as substrate to a
lesser degree . On the other hand, the action of the respiratory
pyruvate oxidase (PoxB), which catalyzes the one-step conversion of
pyruvate into acetate and carbon dioxide, might account for the small
increase of acetate observed in the pta mutant .
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FIG . 4 . (A) Anaerobic survival of P . aeruginosa wild type ( ),
ldhA mutant ( ),
and pta mutant ( )
in the presence of 20 mM pyruvate . CFU of wild-type P . aeruginosa
without pyruvate served as a control ( ).
P . aeruginosa wild type and mutants were grown aerobically in OS
minimal medium using 20 mM gluconate as sole carbon source . At an OD578
of 0.3, cells and media were transferred to rubber-stoppered bottles and
20 mM pyruvate was added . Survival under anaerobic conditions without
alternative electron acceptors was determined with viable cell counts on
agar plates and was confirmed with fluorescence microscopy using the
LIVE/DEAD BacLight kit as outlined in Materials and Methods . Graphs
represent the results of at least three independent experiments .
Standard deviations were found comparable to those shown for the
experiments in Fig . 2A and were omitted for the sake
of clarity . (B) Anaerobic survival of P . aeruginosa wild type ( ),
anr mutant ( ),
dnr mutant ( ),
narL mutant ( ),
and IHF mutant ( )
in the presence of 20 mM pyruvate . P . aeruginosa wild type and
mutants were grown aerobically in OS minimal medium with 20 mM gluconate
as sole carbon source . At an OD578 of 0.3 cells were
transferred to rubber-stoppered bottles and 20 mM pyruvate was added .
Survival under anaerobic conditions without end electron acceptors was
determined with viable cell counts on agar plates as outlined in
Materials and Methods . Graphs represent the results of at least three
independent experiments . Standard deviations were found comparable to
those shown for the experiments in Fig . 2A and were
omitted for the sake of clarity.
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These results obtained from the
ldhA
and
pta
mutants confirm that the investigated ORFs are coding for the enzymes
essential for pyruvate fermentation as proposed in our model (Fig.
1) . Moreover, the almost complete failure of both
systems, one NAD+ regenerating, the other ATP producing, in single
chromosomal mutants indicates their close cooperation during
long-term survival and pyruvate formation .
Expression of the ackA-pta locus is regulated by oxygen
tension via Anr and integration host factor (IHF). To investigate the
oxygen tension-dependent expression of the ldhA and ackA-pta
loci, DNA microarray experiments were performed . Whole cellular RNA
preparations were screened for the presence of ldhA-, ackA-,
and pta-specific mRNA formation . RNA preparations from
aerobically and anaerobically grown P . aeruginosa were
compared . No obvious changes in ldhA expression in response to
changes in oxygen tension were observed (Table 3) . In
agreement with these findings, there were no obvious differences in
NADH-dependent lactate dehydrogenase activity in the cell extracts
that were prepared from aerobically and anaerobically grown P .
aeruginosa .
| TABLE 3 . Expression of ackA, pta, and ldhA in
wild-type P . aeruginosa and various mutants depending on oxygen
tensiona
|
|
However, the expression of the ackA-pta operon was increased
sixfold under anaerobic conditions . Due to the short half-life
of mRNA, we failed to follow the transcriptional profile for a longer
time period . For that purpose, the complete promoter region of the
P . aeruginosa ackA-pta locus was fused to the lacZ
reporter gene . After 2 days under pyruvate fermentation conditions,
the induction of this reporter gene fusion was 3.7-fold that under
aerobic conditions . The observed induction factor was a little lower
than the observed sixfold induction by the DNA microarray approach .
In order to confirm the anaerobic induction of the ackA-pta
loci at the enzyme level, Pta enzyme assays were performed . Pta
activity in cell extracts increased about sixfold under anaerobic
condition compared to that under aerobic growth conditions (Table
3) . Interestingly, in the
ldhA
mutant full anaerobic induction of Pta formation was observed .
Nevertheless, in the absence of lactate dehydrogenase ( ldhA)
no obvious pyruvate utilization and long-term survival was observed,
indicating the close interplay between both enzymatic systems . As
expected, no significant pta activity was found in the pta
mutant .
In order to identify the regulatory loci involved in the oxygen-dependent
control of ackA-pta expression, DNA microarray and ackA-lacZ
reporter gene fusion experiments with various regulatory mutants
were performed . Both strategies revealed the essential role of
the anr and ihfA loci for anaerobic ackA-pta
induction (Table 3) . The anr gene encodes an
Fnr type of regulatory protein which most likely contains a 4Fe-4S
cluster responsible for oxygen tension perception (18,
19, 34) . The ihfA locus encodes one
subunit of the DNA-bending IHF (13, 14) .
The ß-galactosidase activity of the ackA-lacZ reporter
gene fusion was measured in the anr, dnr, narL,
and ihfA mutant strains after 2 days of incubation under
fermentative conditions . Expression of the ackA-lacZ reporter
gene fusion in wild-type P . aeruginosa increases 3.7-fold
under fermentative conditions . There was no increase in
ß-galactosidase activity of the anr mutant, whereas
ß-galactosidase activity of the ihfA mutant was even a little
lower under fermentative conditions compared to that of the anr
mutant (Table 3) . The narL mutant strains revealed
a 2.9-fold increase of reporter gene expression under fermentative
conditions comparable to wild-type conditions . The dnr mutant
led to an only slightly decreased ackA-lacZ expression . In
agreement with this, both mutant strains revealed efficient anaerobic
long-term survival (Fig . 4B) .
The putative promoter region in front of the ackA-pta locus
was scanned for potential binding sites of known regulatory
proteins of P . aeruginosa by using the weight matrix search
program of the PRODORIC database (26) . The search revealed
the presence of the Anr-Dnr binding motif TTGATTTTCATCAG (88%
identity to the Anr consensus) and the IHF binding motif
CAACACCTGCGCCAC (89% identity to the IHF consensus), which are
localized 182 to 195 bp and 122 to 136 bp upstream of the
translational start codon of ackA, respectively .
The anr and ihfA genes are required for overall
pyruvate fermentation. P . aeruginosa anr, dnr, ihfA,
and narL deletion mutants were grown aerobically to an OD578
of 0.3 followed by addition of pyruvate and cultivation under
anaerobic conditions for 4 weeks as described for wild-type P .
aeruginosa . Total and viable cell numbers with three different
approaches were determined, and HPLC analyses from the supernatant of
all mutants were performed . The viable cell numbers of the anr
mutant had already decreased after 10 days (Fig . 4B),
and HPLC analysis showed no further conversion from pyruvate to
lactate, acetate, and succinate after that time (data not shown) . In
agreement with the anr-dependent ackA-pta expression,
this oxygen regulator is required for a prolonged survival of P .
aeruginosa under anaerobic conditions using the pyruvate
fermentation pathway in the absence of external electron acceptors .
In contrast, the dnr mutant maintained constant viable cell
numbers under the anaerobic conditions tested, comparable to those of
P . aeruginosa wild type (Fig . 4B) . Additionally,
the HPLC analysis of the dnr mutant culture supernatants showed
no difference in the kinetics of pyruvate consumption and product
formation in comparison to the wild type (Table 2) .
The viable cell number of a P . aeruginosa ihfA knockout mutant
decreased logarithmically from the start of anaerobic cultivation
down to 0.3% survivors after 16 days (Fig . 4B) . HPLC
analysis detected neither pyruvate utilization nor product formation
(Table 2) . The ihfA gene encodes one subunit of
the IHF, a DNA bending protein, which is essential for pyruvate
formation . To exclude the possibility that the tested mutant P .
aeruginosa strains did not survive due to reduced cellular
concentrations of protective catalases or peroxidases, cells were
plated on LB agar containing 20 mM pyruvate . After anaerobic
incubation the plates were removed and further incubated aerobically
for 24 h . The observed numbers of CFU remained unchanged compared
to those of solely aerobically grown cells .
No differences in the viable counts or the HPLC profiles were
observed for a knockout mutant in the narL gene in comparison
to those of the wild type (data not shown) . We did not detect a
significant participation of the stationary sigma factor RpoS nor the
response regulator GacA on anaerobic survival . Survival of the mutant
strains was comparable to that of the wild type . Obviously, pyruvate
fermentation is not a typical stress condition which activates RpoS
or GacA, even when P . aeruginosa is not growing . RpoS and GacA
are certainly essential for the anaerobic starvation that follows
after pyruvate has been consumed .
Conclusions. (i) Under anaerobic growth conditions, in the
absence of alternative electron acceptors P . aeruginosa
utilizes the conversion of pyruvate into acetate and lactate for
long-term survival . This process does not contribute to anaerobic
cell growth . (ii) Long-term survival is sustained by NAD+-regenerating
lactate dehydrogenase, a Pta, and an ATP-generating acetate kinase .
These enzymes are encoded by ldhA and the ackA-pta
operon . The ackA-pta operon is induced under oxygen-limiting
conditions by the oxygen regulator Anr and DNA-bending IHF, whereas
the ldhA gene expression is independent of oxygen tension .
(iii) The observed pyruvate fermentation may contribute to the
survival of P . aeruginosa in biofilms and during host
infection, when oxygen-limiting conditions dominate and nitrate
concentration is limited .
We thank Barbara Schulz for critically reading the manuscript and
Dieter Haas (Université de Lausanne, Switzerland) for providing the
P . aeruginosa gacA and anr mutants . We are indebted to
Hiruide Arai (Riken Institute, Tokyo, Japan) for the P . aeruginosa
dnr mutant and E . P . Greenberg (University of Iowa) for the
rpoS mutant strain .
The investigation was funded by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft,
the German Research Centre for Biotechnology, and the Fonds der
Chemischen Industrie to D.J .
* Corresponding author . Mailing address: Institute of
Microbiology, Technical University Braunschweig, Spielmannstr . 7, D-38106
Braunschweig, Germany . Phone: 49 531 5857 . Fax: 49 531 5854 . E-mail: m.schobert@tu-bs.de .
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