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J Bacteriol, March 1998, p. 1072-1081, Vol. 180, No. 5
0021-9193/98/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1998, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Characterization of a Protocatechuate Catabolic
Gene Cluster from Rhodococcus opacus 1CP: Evidence for a
Merged Enzyme with 4-Carboxymuconolactone-Decarboxylating
and 3-Oxoadipate Enol-Lactone-Hydrolyzing Activity
Dirk
Eulberg,1
Silvia
Lakner,1
Ludmila A.
Golovleva,2 and
Michael
Schlömann1,*
Institut für Mikrobiologie,
Universität Stuttgart, D-70550 Stuttgart,
Germany,1 and
Institute of Biochemistry
and Physiology of Microorganisms, Russian Academy of Sciences,
Pushchino, Russia2
Received 8 September 1997/Accepted 12 December 1997
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ABSTRACT |
The catechol and protocatechuate branches of the 3-oxoadipate
pathway, which are important for the bacterial degradation of aromatic
compounds, converge at the common intermediate 3-oxoadipate enol-lactone. A 3-oxoadipate enol-lactone-hydrolyzing enzyme, purified
from benzoate-grown cells of Rhodococcus opacus
(erythropolis) 1CP, was found to have a larger molecular
mass under denaturing conditions than the corresponding enzymes
previously purified from
-proteobacteria. Sequencing of the N
terminus and of tryptic peptides allowed cloning of the gene coding for
the 3-oxoadipate enol-lactone hydrolase by using PCR with degenerate
primers. Sequencing showed that the gene belongs to a protocatechuate
catabolic gene cluster. Most interestingly, the hydrolase gene, usually
termed pcaD, was fused to a second gene, usually termed
pcaC, which encodes the enzyme catalyzing the preceding
reaction, i.e., 4-carboxymuconolactone decarboxylase. The two enzymatic
activities could not be separated chromatographically. At least six
genes of protocatechuate catabolism appear to be transcribed in the
same direction and in the following order: pcaH and
pcaG, coding for the subunits of protocatechuate 3,4-dioxygenase, as shown by N-terminal sequencing of the subunits of
the purified protein; a gene termed pcaB due to the
homology of its gene product to
3-carboxy-cis,cis-muconate
cycloisomerases; pcaL, the fused gene coding for
PcaD and PcaC activities; pcaR, presumably coding for a
regulator of the IclR-family; and a gene designated pcaF
because its product resembles 3-oxoadipyl coenzyme A (3-oxoadipyl-CoA)
thiolases. The presumed pcaI, coding for a subunit of
succinyl-CoA:3-oxoadipate CoA-transferase, was found to be transcribed
divergently from pcaH.
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INTRODUCTION |
Many aromatic compounds under
aerobic conditions are degraded by bacteria via the catechol or
protocatechuate branch of the 3-oxoadipate pathway (26, 66).
Following ortho cleavage of protocatechuate by
protocatechuate 3,4-dioxygenase (EC 1.13.11.3), five additional
enzymes, i.e.,
3-carboxy-cis,cis-muconate
cycloisomerase (EC 5.5.1.2), 4-carboxymuconolactone
decarboxylase (EC 4.1.1.44), 3-oxoadipate enol-lactone hydrolase (EC
3.1.1.24), succinyl coenzyme A (succinyl-CoA):3-oxoadipate
CoA-transferase (EC 2.8.3.6), and 3-oxoadipyl-CoA thiolase, convert the
ring cleavage product to intermediates of the tricarboxylic acid cycle
(Fig. 1). In Acinetobacter
calcoaceticus, the corresponding genes are clustered into one
pca operon which is governed by PcaU (14, 21,
36), while in Pseudomonas putida several operons with
pca structural genes (50, 57) and in
Agrobacterium tumefaciens several operons and several
regulatory proteins appear to be involved (51, 52). ortho cleavage of catechol yields 3-oxoadipate enol-lactone,
the first common intermediate of the catechol and the protocatechuate branch, in three reactions catalyzed by catechol 1,2-dioxygenase (EC
1.13.11.1), muconate cycloisomerase (EC 5.5.1.1), and muconolactone
isomerase (EC 5.3.3.4) (Fig. 1). While in P. putida the
cat gene cluster comprises only the genes for these three enzymes and for a LysR-type regulator (30), A. calcoaceticus expresses isoenzymes for the reactions common to the
catechol and protocatechuate branches of the 3-oxoadipate pathway
(25, 63). Ralstonia eutropha (Alcaligenes
eutrophus) is intermediate between these species in that it
induces different enol-lactone hydrolases but not different
CoA-transferases and thiolases (35).

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FIG. 1.
The protocatechuate and catechol branches of the
3-oxoadipate pathway. Designations as gene products are given in
parentheses. For the reactions common to both branches, some bacteria
possess only a single set of genes, while others harbor separate
pca and cat genes for one or more of the steps.
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Rhodococcus opacus (erythropolis) 1CP has
previously been isolated by virtue of its ability to grow with
4-chlorophenol and 2,4-dichlorophenol (23). The
characterization of its chlorocatechol catabolic enzymes revealed
unusual properties (37, 38, 64). Interestingly, the muconate
and the chloromuconate cycloisomerase of strain 1CP in their
product formation from 2-chloro-cis,cis-muconate and in their inability to convert (+)-2-chloromuconolactone were more
similar to each other than to muconate and chloromuconate cycloisomerases of proteobacteria (64). If this phenotypic
similarity of the Rhodococcus enzymes indicates a higher
degree of relatedness compared to proteobacterial enzymes, then the
improved turnover of 3-chloro- and
2,4-dichloro-cis,cis-muconate by the
chloromuconate cycloisomerases should have evolved independently among
gram-positive bacteria and proteobacteria by functionally convergent
evolution. Despite the structural similarity of 3-oxoadipate
enol-lactone and dienelactones (4-carboxymethylenebut-2-en-4-olides),
the enol-lactone hydrolase was apparently not adapted to convert
dienelactones during evolution of the proteobacterial chlorocatechol
pathway (60). Rather, some other lactone-hydrolyzing enzyme
was recruited from an unknown pathway. An independent evolution of the
chlorocatechol pathway among the gram-positive bacteria would imply
that a different solution to the chemical problem of dienelactone
hydrolysis may have been found. And especially since the dienelactone
hydrolase of R. opacus 1CP has an unusual substrate
specificity (38), we considered it appropriate to include
the lactone hydrolases in sequence comparisons of enzymes for catechol
and chlorocatechol catabolism. We have previously reported on the
sequences of the catechol 1,2-dioxygenase, the muconate cycloisomerase,
and the muconolactone isomerase (16). In the accompanying
report (18), we characterize a gene cluster for
chlorocatechol degradation of R. opacus 1CP. Here we
describe the cloning and sequence analysis of a DNA fragment comprising
the gene for the 3-oxoadipate enol-lactone-hydrolyzing enzyme of strain
1CP. We found the gene to be part of a protocatechuate catabolic gene
cluster and to be merged to the pcaC gene, which in
proteobacteria codes for a separate 4-carboxymuconolactone decarboxylase.
(Some of the results reported in this study have previously been
mentioned in a preliminary communication [17].)
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Strains, plasmids, and cultivation conditions.
Strain 1CP
was previously isolated with 2,4-dichlorophenol as the carbon source
and, based on phenotypic properties, assigned to the species
Rhodococcus erythropolis (23). Very recently, 16S
rDNA and fatty acid analyses (68) called for a
reclassification of the strain to the species R. opacus,
which also belongs to the Rhodococcus rDNA group IV
(55).
For the purpose of this study, R. opacus 1CP was cultivated
in a 10-liter glass fermentor at 30°C in a mineral medium
(13) with 50 mM phosphate buffer (pH 7) and with 25 mM
sodium benzoate (fed in 5-mM portions) as the only carbon and energy
source. To provide biomass for the purification of protocatechuate
dioxygenase, sodium 4-hydroxybenzoate (5 portions of 5 mM) was used as
the only carbon and energy source. Cells were harvested by
centrifugation, frozen in liquid nitrogen, and stored at
20°C until
used.
Escherichia coli DH5
(4), obtained from GIBCO
BRL, was cultivated aerobically with constant shaking at 37°C in
Luria-Bertani (LB) medium (58) supplied, if appropriate,
with 100 µg of ampicillin per ml. For induction of E. coli
DH5
harboring pARO523 (51), 5 ml of overnight precultures
was used to inoculate 200 ml of LB medium (incubation at 37°C). After
induction with 1 mM IPTG (isopropyl-
-D-thiogalactoside)
at an optical density at 600 nm of 0.6, incubation was continued for
3 h at 30°C.
Properties of plasmids used in this study are summarized in Table
1.
Preparation of cell extracts.
Extracts of R. opacus 1CP were prepared by resuspension in 50 mM Tris-HCl (pH
7.5), disintegration by grinding with glass beads, and clarification of
the preparation as described previously (16).
E. coli cells were harvested by centrifugation, washed with
0.25 volume 50 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7), and resuspended in 0.01 volume of
the same buffer. The cells were disintegrated by passage through a
precooled Aminco French pressure cell (115 MPa), and cell debris was
removed by centrifugation as described above.
Enzyme assays and estimation of protein concentration.
The
activity of 3-oxoadipate enol-lactone hydrolase was measured
spectrophotometrically at 230 nm as described previously (61). The assay mixtures contained 0.67 mM racemic
muconolactone (prepared by the method of Elvidge et al.
[15]) plus partially purified preparations of
muconolactone isomerase (47, 48). The activity of
4-carboxymuconolactone decarboxylase was also measured at 230 nm
(47). The assay mixture (1 ml) initially contained 50 mM
Tris-Cl (pH 7.5), 0.167 mM protocatechuate, and 6 µl of cell extract
from IPTG-induced E. coli DH5
(pARO523) (corresponding to 0.21 mg of protein) with the protocatechuate 3,4-dioxygenase and the
3-carboxymuconate cycloisomerase from A. tumefaciens. The
mixture was incubated for 40 min at room temperature to generate 4-carboxymuconolactone before addition of preparations of partially purified 3-oxoadipate enol-lactone hydrolase and of the fraction that was to be measured. The activities of protocatechuate
3,4-dioxygenase were measured at 290 nm as described previously
(65). The following extinction coefficients were used: for
the conversion of 3-oxoadipate enol-lactone to 3-oxoadipate, 1,430 M
1 · cm
1 (48); for the
conversion of 4-carboxymuconolactone to 3-oxoadipate, 4,200 M
1 · cm
1 (47); and for
the conversion of protocatechuate to
3-carboxy-cis,cis-muconate, 2,300 M
1 · cm
1 (65). Protein
concentrations were measured by the method of Bradford (6),
with bovine serum albumin as the standard.
Protein purifications.
For the initial purification of
3-oxoadipate enol-lactone hydrolase (for sequencing purposes), extract
from benzoate-grown cells (volume, 160 ml; protein, 370 mg; total
activity, 157 U; specific activity, 0.42 U/mg) was chromatographed on a
Pharmacia Q Sepharose High Performance column (HR 16/10; bed volume, 20 ml) with 50 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.5)-0.1 mM dithiothreitol and, for elution, an NaCl gradient (0 to 0.15 M over 60 ml and 0.15 to 0.5 M
over 350 ml). The most active fractions (eluting at ca. 0.4 M NaCl)
were pooled (volume, 25 ml; protein, 17.9 mg; total activity, 135 U;
specific activity, 7.5 U/mg). After addition of
(NH4)2SO4 to 1 M (final
concentration), the preparation was filtered and subjected to Pharmacia
Phenyl Superose HR 10/10 chromatography. Elution was achieved with a
decreasing (NH4)2SO4 gradient of 1 to 0.9 M over 5 ml, 0.9 to 0.4 M over 120 ml, and 0.4 to 0 M over 10 ml. The fractions with the highest activities, eluting at about 0.8 to
0.75 M (NH4)2SO4 (volume, 4.5 ml;
protein, 0.42 mg; total activity, 38 U; specific activity, 90 U/mg),
were pooled and desalted by using Pharmacia PD-10 columns. The pool was
then subjected to chromatography on Pharmacia MonoQ (HR 5/5) by using
an NaCl gradient (0 to 0.2 M over 5 ml and 0.2 to 0.5 M over 70 ml) for elution, which resulted in a preparation (volume, 2 ml; protein, 0.14 mg; total activity, 21.9 U) with a specific activity of 153 U/mg,
equivalent to a 364-fold purification. The details for a second
enrichment of 3-oxoadipate enol-lactone hydrolase, performed to track
the presumed 4-carboxymuconolactone decarboxylase activity of the
enzyme, are given in Table 2.
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TABLE 2.
Copurification of the 3-oxoadipate
enol-lactone-hydrolyzing and 4-carboxymuconolactone-decarboxylating
activities of R. opacus 1CP
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Protocatechuate 3,4-dioxygenase was purified by subjecting an extract
from 4-hydroxybenzoate-grown cells (volume, 120 ml; protein, 492 mg;
total activity, 153 U, specific activity, 0.32 U/mg) to Q Sepharose
High Performance (HR 16/10) chromatography with 50 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.6)
and an increasing NaCl gradient (0 to 1 M over 400 ml) for elution.
Dioxygenase-containing fractions (eluting at ca. 0.35 M NaCl) were
pooled (volume, 10 ml; protein, 29.5 mg; total activity, 77 U; specific
activity, 2.6 U/mg), mixed with
(NH4)2SO4 to 1.5 M (final
concentration), and centrifuged. The preparation was then
chromatographed on a Phenyl Superose HR 10/10 column with a gradient
decreasing from 1.5 to 0 M
(NH4)2SO4 in buffer over 120 ml
[activity peak at ca. 0.56 M
(NH4)2SO4]. The combined fractions
(volume, 3 ml; protein, 0.6 mg; total activity, 29.5 U; specific
activity, 49 U/mg) were then subjected to gel filtration (Pharmacia
Superdex 200 prep-grade HiLoad 16/60; bed length, 60 ml). Elution with
50 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.6)-0.1 M NaCl resulted in a preparation (volume,
1 ml; protein, 62 µg; total activity, 3.3 U) with a specific activity
of 53 U/mg, equivalent to a 166-fold purification.
SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and Western blotting.
For purity checks of enzyme preparations, discontinuous sodium dodecyl
sulfate (SDS)-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis was carried out and
gels were stained as described previously (16). For
N-terminal sequencing of the protocatechuate 3,4-dioxygenase subunits,
ca. 7 µg of the purified enzyme was loaded onto an SDS-polyacrylamide gel for separation of the
and
subunits. Electrotransfer of the
subunits onto an Immobilon-P membrane (Millipore) was performed for 90 min at 80 V and 4°C in a Bio-Rad Trans-Blot cell as described by Moos
(43). After staining with Coomassie brilliant blue R-250 (42), the protein bands were cut out, rinsed, air dried, and subjected to N-terminal sequencing.
Protein cleavage, isolation of peptides, and sequencing of
peptides and N termini.
Trypsin digestion of 3-oxoadipate
enol-lactone hydrolase and subsequent separation of tryptic peptides by
reversed-phase high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) were
performed by the procedure of Stone et al. (67) as described
previously (16). The amount of enol-lactone hydrolase after
trichloroacetate precipitation, washing, and drying was 40 µg.
Purified 3-oxoadipate enol-lactone hydrolase prior to sequencing was
partially desalted by changing the buffer to 5 mM sodium phosphate
buffer (pH 7) by ultrafiltration and repeated dilution, while selected
peptide-containing fractions from reversed-phase HPLC as well as the
blotted subunits of the protocatechuate 3,4-dioxygenase were sequenced
directly in automated sequencers (Applied Biosystems model 473A or
model 491, respectively).
Purification and general in vitro manipulations of DNA.
Genomic DNA of R. opacus 1CP was obtained as described
previously (16). Plasmid DNA from E. coli DH5
was isolated with Pharmacia Flexiprep kits. Vector DNA digested with
only one enzyme was dephosphorylated prior to ligation. Insert DNA for
ligation or digoxigenin labeling was isolated from gels by use of a Bio 101 Gene Clean II or a Biozym Easy Pure kit. Transformation of E. coli DH5
was achieved by the method of Chung et al.
(9) or Inoue et al. (33). Loss of LacZ
complementation by insertion of DNA into vectors was detected by using
LB plates with 0.13 mM IPTG and 32 µg of X-Gal
(5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indolyl-
-D-galactoside) per ml.
Amplification of segments of the 3-oxoadipate enol-lactone
hydrolase gene.
Oligonucleotides were custom synthesized according
to the sequences of the N terminus and of two internal peptides (Table 3). The codon usage was assumed to
correspond to that of catA, catB, and
catC of strain 1CP (16). PCR mixtures (50 µl)
for the amplification of genomic DNA contained 50 pmol of each primer, 0.1 to 0.2 µg of genomic template DNA, 0.1 mM each deoxynucleotide triphosphate, Goldstar polymerase reaction buffer [75 mM Tris-HCl (pH
9.0), 20 mM (NH4)2SO4, 0.01%
(wt/vol) Tween 20], 1.5 mM MgCl2, and 0.5 U of Eurogentech
Goldstar DNA polymerase. As a denaturing agent (70),
formamide was used in concentrations between 5 and 7% (vol/vol). The
PCR was performed with a touchdown thermocycle program (12):
initial denaturation (94°C; 3 min) before addition of the polymerase;
6 cycles with decreasing annealing temperature (66 to 56°C; 1 min),
polymerization (72°C; initially 1 min, plus 1 additional s for each
cycle), and denaturation (94°C; 30 s); 28 more cycles with
54°C as the annealing temperature; an additional 14 min of
polymerization during the last cycle. Of the two products initially
obtained, the larger one (ca. 440 bp as determined by agarose gel
electrophoresis) required reamplification by the same program to
increase the amounts of DNA for cloning.
Cloning strategy and hybridization procedures.
The PCR
products were ligated into a T-tailed vector (39) prepared
from pBluescript II KS (+), yielding pRERE1 and pRERE2, respectively.
The ca. 170-bp insert of pRERE1 was digoxigenin labeled by using a
Boehringer Mannheim DIG DNA Labeling and Detection Kit Nonradioactive.
A Southern blot of 3 µg of EcoRI-digested R. opacus 1CP DNA (run on a 1% agarose gel with TAE buffer
[58]) was then hybridized with the digoxigenin-labeled
probe to detect the corresponding fragment (procedure as described in
the Boehringer manual). An area that corresponded in size to the
hybridization signal (about 2.5 to 4 kb) was excised from a second gel,
and DNA eluted from the gel slice was ligated into pBluescript II KS
(+). This ligation mixture was used to transform E. coli
DH5
. By colony hybridization with the labeled insert of pRERE1
(performed in a manner analogous to the procedure described in
reference 16), a clone carrying pRER3, which
contains a ca. 3.6-kb insert of R. opacus DNA, was
identified. After sequencing had shown that the gene coding for
3-oxoadipate enol-lactone hydrolase was not complete on the insert, a
clone with an overlapping, ca. 2.5-kb PstI insert (pRER4)
was isolated in an analogous way by using a digoxigenin-labeled, ca.
650-bp BamHI fragment of pRER3 as a probe.
DNA sequence analysis.
The nucleotide sequence of the
overlapping inserts of pRER3 and pRER4 was determined by sequencing
subclones in pBluescript II KS (+), by sequencing of nested deletions
generated with a double-stranded nested deletion kit (Pharmacia), and
by sequencing with custom-synthesized oligonucleotides as primers. For
sequencing reactions, an Applied Biosystems Prizm kit was used, with
subsequent electrophoresis and analysis in an Applied Biosystems A373
sequencer. Computer-based sequence analyses were performed mainly with
the PC/GENE program package (Intelligenetics Inc., Mountain View, Calif.). The PC/GENE version of FASTA (53) as well as the
BLAST programs (2, 22) were used to screen the EBI and NCBI
databases. Multiple sequence alignments were performed by the PC/GENE
version of CLUSTAL (28), with open and unit gap costs set to
10.
Nucleotide sequence accession number.
The 5,475-bp sequence
of the overlapping inserts of pRER3 and pRER4 shown in Fig. 4 will
appear in the EMBL, GenBank, and DDBJ nucleotide sequence databases
under accession no. AF003947.
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RESULTS |
Cloning of pca genes based on sequences from the
purified 3-oxoadipate enol-lactone-hydrolyzing enzyme.
As a basis
for cloning of the corresponding gene, the 3-oxoadipate
enol-lactone-hydrolyzing enzyme was purified to homogeneity from an
extract of benzoate-grown cells of R. opacus 1CP.
Surprisingly, the subunit molecular mass of the enzyme turned out to be
ca. 42 kDa (Fig. 2), considerably greater
than reported for the 3-oxoadipate enol-lactone hydrolases of P. putida and A. calcoaceticus. On SDS-gels, the latter
enzymes appeared to have masses of between 30 and 33 kDa (40,
72); for the Acinetobacter catD and pcaD gene products, sizes of 29.3 and 29.1 kDa, respectively, were calculated (25, 63). Tryptic peptides were prepared from the Rhodococcus 3-oxoadipate enol-lactone hydrolase, and several
of them as well as the N terminus were sequenced (Table 3). Degenerate oligonucleotides derived from these sequences allowed the amplification of ca. 170- and ca. 440-bp fragments with genomic DNA of strain 1CP as
the template. After labeling with digoxigenin, the ca. 170-bp fragment
first served to identify hybridizing bands on a Southern blot of
EcoRI-digested Rhodococcus DNA and later to screen colonies of transformed E. coli DH5
for the
presence of plasmids with the desired insert. A clone containing
plasmid pRER3 with a 3,628-bp EcoRI insert was isolated
(Fig. 3). A labeled ca. 650-bp BamHI fragment of pRER3
served to clone the overlapping 2,449-bp PstI insert present
on pRER4.

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FIG. 2.
Silver-stained SDS-polyacrylamide gel showing purified
4-carboxymuconolactone decarboxylase:3-oxoadipate enol-lactone
hydrolase from R. opacus 1CP in lane 2. Lane 1, Pharmacia
low-molecular-weight markers: bovine -lactalbumin (14.4 kDa),
soybean trypsin inhibitor (20.1 kDa), bovine carbonic anhydrase (30 kDa), chicken egg white ovalbumin (43 kDa), bovine serum albumin (67 kDa), and rabbit phosphorylase b (94 kDa).
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Characterization of the inserts of pRER3 and pRER4.
The
sequence of the overlapping inserts of pRER3 and pRER4 comprises five
complete and two incomplete open reading frames (Fig.
3 and
4). The
first two complete open reading frames start at positions 408 and 1121, respectively. They are transcribed in the same direction and overlap by
1 bp. Their predicted N-terminal sequences exactly match those
determined for the two subunits of purified protocatechuate
3,4-dioxygenase (Table 3). The predicted sequences of the gene products
were found to be homologous to PcaH and PcaG of A. calcoaceticus, Burkholderia cepacia, and P. putida (Fig. 5). Thus, the two open
reading frames, coding for polypeptides with molecular masses of 26,837 and 22,936 Da, were designated pcaH and pcaG.

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FIG. 3.
Restriction map of the inserts of pRER3 and pRER4,
together carrying 5,475 bp of R. opacus 1CP DNA in the
multiple cloning site of pBluescript II KS (+). Arrows indicate the
lengths and orientations of open reading frames. Overlapping open
reading frames (between pcaH and pcaG, 1 bp;
between pcaB, pcaL, and pcaR, 4 bp)
are indicated by blunt arrows.
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FIG. 4.
Sequence of the 5,475 bp carried on pRER3 and pRER4. The
predicted amino acid sequences are shown below the DNA sequence. Amino
acid sequences derived from direct sequencing of N termini or tryptic
fragments are underlined. For pcal', presumably transcribed
in the opposite orientation, the complementary (here, coding) strand is
also shown.
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FIG. 5.
Sequence alignment of the subunits of protocatechuate
3,4-dioxygenases. Positions identical in both and subunits of
all four enzymes are highlighted by black boxes; those identical in
only one subunit of all four enzymes are shaded. Numbers above the
sequences refer to positions in the alignment, not in a single
sequence. Amino acid residues which for the enzyme of P. putida ATCC 23975 have been found to be involved in the active
site are indicated by downward-pointing arrows; iron ligands by
upward-pointing arrows (above the alignment for the subunit and
below the alignment for the subunit) (45). Accession
numbers and references for the published sequences: M30791
(74), M33798 (24), and L14836 (19).
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A third complete open reading frame extends from positions 1791 to 3143 (Fig. 4). The predicted gene product is identical to the sequences
predicted for 3-carboxymuconate cycloisomerases of A. calcoaceticus, Bradyrhizobium japonicum, and P. putida (L05770 [36], Y10223 [3],
and L17082 [71]) in 36.9, 42.0, and 40.1%,
respectively, of the positions. Thus, the third complete open reading
frame was considered to represent the pcaB gene coding for
3-carboxymuconate cycloisomerase.
Overlapping pcaB by 4 bp, a fourth complete open reading
frame, extending from positions 3140 to 4342, was detected (Fig. 4).
All sequences of tryptic peptides and of the N terminus of the
3-oxoadipate enol-lactone-hydrolyzing enzyme occur in the protein
sequence predicted from the open reading frame (Table 3; Fig. 4). In
addition, the calculated molecular mass of the gene product (42,230 Da)
corresponds to that of the purified protein (Fig. 2). Most
interestingly, comparisons of the sequence to databases revealed
similarities to both 3-oxoadipate enol-lactone hydrolases and
4-carboxymuconolactone decarboxylases. Further analyses showed that the
N-terminal two-thirds of the protein are homologous to the hydrolases
whereas the C-terminal third is homologous to the decarboxylases (Fig.
6). These results suggested that the
protein encoded by the fourth open reading frame has
4-carboxymuconolactone-decarboxylating activity in addition to
3-oxoadipate enol-lactone-hydrolyzing activity. To test this
hypothesis, we attempted to purify the enzymes responsible for these
activities from an extract of benzoate-grown cells of R. opacus 1CP. As shown in Fig. 7 and
Table 2, the 4-carboxymuconolactone decarboxylase and 3-oxoadipate
enol-lactone hydrolase activities could be separated from each other by
neither anion-exchange chromatography nor hydrophobic interaction
chromatography. The fused gene coding for both PcaC and PcaD activities
was designated pcaL, to differentiate it from the two
precursor genes.

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FIG. 6.
Sequence alignment of the 4-carboxymuconolactone
decarboxylase:3-oxoadipate enol-lactone hydrolase PcaL of R. opacus 1CP to the 4-carboxymuconolactone decarboxylases PcaC of
A. calcoaceticus (M33798 [24]) and B. japonicum (Y10223 [3]), to the N terminus (term.)
of PcaC from P. putida (73), and to the
3-oxoadipate enol-lactone hydrolases PcaD of B. japonicum
(Y10223 [3]) and CatD and PcaD of A. calcoaceticus (L05770 [25] and M76991
[63]). Positions identical in all compared sequences
are highlighted. Possible catalytic triad residues (25, 46)
of the hydrolases as well as glycine residues allowing formation of the
"nucleophile elbow" (46) are indicated by arrows.
Numbers above the sequences refer to positions in the alignment, not in
a single sequence.
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FIG. 7.
Elution profiles of 3-oxoadipate
enol-lactone-hydrolyzing and 4-carboxymuconolactone-decarboxylating
activities during chromatography on Q-Sepharose High
Performance (A) and Phenyl Superose (B). Experimental details are given
in Table 3. Closed and open circles, 3-oxoadipate enol-lactone
hydrolase and 4-carboxymuconolactone decarboxylase activities,
respectively; dotted lines, NaCl or
(NH4)2SO4 concentration; solid
lines, absorption at 280 nm.
|
|
The fifth complete open reading frame, between positions 4339 and 5136, overlaps pcaL by 4 bp. The predicted gene product shares
43% identical positions with PcaR of P. putida (L33795 [57]), 34.7% with PcaU of A. calcoaceticus
(U04359 [20]), and 37.4% with PobR of A. calcoaceticus (L13114 [11]). All three proteins
belong to the IclR family of regulators and are activators of
pca and pob genes, respectively, in the two
species. Thus, the fifth open reading frame was assumed to represent
the regulatory gene pcaR.
Downstream of the presumed pcaR (start at position 5158) and
transcribed in the same direction, an incomplete open reading frame was
detected. The predicted gene product appeared to be homologous to
3-oxoadipyl-CoA thiolases, as shown by 38.8% identical positions to
PcaF of A. calcoaceticus (L05770 [36]) and
P. putida (U10895 [27]). Therefore, this
incomplete open reading frame was designated pcaF'.
Transcribed divergently from pcaH, another incomplete open
reading frame was identified (start at position 255). It was
termed pcaI' due to the similarity of the predicted
gene product to PcaI, a subunit of succinyl-CoA:3-oxoadipate
CoA-transferases, of A. calcoaceticus (L05770
[36]) and P. putida (M88763
[49]) (37.7 and 41.2%, respectively, identical
positions).
 |
DISCUSSION |
Characterization of the gene coding for the 3-oxoadipate
enol-lactone-hydrolyzing enzyme induced during growth of R. opacus 1CP with benzoate showed it to be part of a protocatechuate
catabolic gene cluster. This was unexpected, since Rann and Cain
(56) as well as Cain (8) had argued that in their
Rhodococcus strains, two different 3-oxoadipate enol-lactone
hydrolases are induced for the catechol and protocatechuate branches of
the 3-oxoadipate pathway. The isoenzymes could be distinguished by
their denaturation kinetics at 41°C, by their
Km values, and by their gel filtration behavior.
Whether the reason for the discrepancy between our results and those of
Cain's group is the investigation of different strains or whether
other factors are responsible is not known.
The 3-oxoadipate enol-lactone-hydrolyzing enzyme of R. opacus 1CP did not reveal any unusual similarities to the
dienelactone hydrolases of chlorocatechol catabolic pathways. The
enzyme was, however, found to be quite unique in being able to catalyze
two subsequent reactions, 4-carboxymuconolactone decarboxylation and 3-oxoadipate enol-lactone hydrolysis. This conclusion was inferred from
the occurrence of a pcaD-like segment as well as a
pcaC-like segment within one open reading frame, from the
molecular mass being consistent with such a merged protein, and from
the inability to separate the two activities chromatographically. The
proteobacterial 4-carboxymuconolactone decarboxylases, in contrast, are
separate enzymes (47), i.e., not part of a larger enzyme
with additional hydrolytic activity (and vice versa). Since the general
trend of protein evolution goes from simple to more complex enzymes and
since gene fusions play a major role in this process (5, 34,
62), the enzymatic situation in proteobacteria may be considered
the more ancient one. Consequently, during evolution of the
protocatechuate pathway found in Rhodococcus, the original pcaD and pcaC genes were fused to code for a
protein with both decarboxylase and hydrolase activities. This merger
of two proteins catalyzing sequential reactions might be beneficial to
the cells for two reasons: (i) it might contribute to minimizing the
distance which a metabolic intermediate has to diffuse to the next
active site; (ii) alternatively, if the distances are already optimized by the enzymes of the 3-oxoadipate pathway forming a multienzyme complex, as suggested by Meagher et al. (41), this complex
might be somewhat stabilized by two of the components being fused into one protein. The fusion could apparently occur without other major rearrangements: in the
-proteobacterium P. putida as well
as in the
-proteobacteria A. tumefaciens and B. japonicum, pcaC is located directly downstream of
pcaD within the same operon (Fig.
8) (3, 32, 52). In A. calcoaceticus, this order is also present, but the genes are
interrupted by pcaK, a gene for a transporter
(36). The order whereby the PcaC segment follows the PcaD
segment is retained in the fused protein, which we designated PcaL. The
PcaD-homologous region of PcaL extends to position 268 of the
alignment, and the PcaC-homologous segment starts at position 271 (Fig.
6). Thus, it was apparently not necessary to introduce any major loops
for the new protein to accommodate both domains.

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|
FIG. 8.
Structures of gene clusters for protocatechuate
catabolism. Homologous genes are shaded in the same way. Arrows with
dotted borderlines represent Rhodococcus genes for which no
or only partial sequence information is available. The information was
compiled from the following sources: P. putida, references
7, 19, 27, 32, 49, 57, and 71;
A. calcoaceticus, references 20 (U04359),
24, 25, and 36; A. tumefaciens, references 51 and
52.
|
|
Other features of the protocatechuate gene clusters have also been
conserved. Thus, pcaD directly follows pcaB, the
gene for 3-carboxymuconate cycloisomerase, also in A. calcoaceticus, B. japonicum, and P. putida
(3, 32, 36), whereas in A. tumefaciens a
different order occurs (51). Moreover, pcaG, the
gene for the
subunit of protocatechuate 3,4-dioxygenase, has been
reported to be located downstream of pcaH, the gene for the
subunit, for A. tumefaciens, B. cepacia,
A. calcoaceticus, and P. putida, representatives
of the
-,
-, and
-proteobacteria (19, 24, 51, 74).
From the order of the Rhodococcus pca genes, it is clear
that pcaI and probably pcaJ, the genes
coding for the two
sub- units of succinyl-CoA:3-oxoadipate CoA-transferase, are transcribed
independently from the other genes for protocatechuate catabolism. This
corresponds to the finding of Cain (8) that the
transferase activity showed a different behavior in the presence of
glucose as a catabolite repressor than the other enzymes of the
protocatechuate or catechol branch. It is unclear, however, whether
pcaH, -G, -B, -L,
-R, and -F are transcribed together as one operon
or in separate units which are possibly governed by the same regulator
and coinducer. An unusual feature of this organization is that
pcaR, the presumed regulatory gene, overlaps pcaL
by 4 bp, which suggests that these genes are transcribed together and
may even be translationally coupled (44, 69). In contrast,
pcaU of A. calcoaceticus and pcaR of
A. tumefaciens are transcribed divergently from other
pca genes (21, 52), whereas in P. putida
pcaR is transcribed in the same direction as the pca
structural genes but is separated from them by more than 400 bp
(27, 57). Activators of catabolic pathways, like many
LysR-type proteins, often repress their own formation at the
transcriptional level and thus tend to generate a relatively constant
level of the regulator (59). Transcriptional repression of
their own gene has also been found for the IclR-type regulators PobR
(10), PcaR (29), and PcaU (54).
Although genes forming one operon may in addition be transcribed
separately, as in the case of P. putida catA
(31), the organization of the pca genes of
R. opacus 1CP suggests that the presumed pcaR
gene may be cotranscribed with the structural genes, presumably
resulting in vaying levels of the activator. It would be interesting to
study this regulation and the possible influence of other regulatory
elements in more detail.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
We thank H.-J. Knackmuss for providing the environment in which
we could do this work. We are indebted to R. Getzlaff and V. Noedinger for protein sequencing, to R. Schmid for the
opportunity to use an automated DNA sequencer, and to S. Bürger
for performing the DNA sequencing. Thanks are due to D. Parke for
providing pARO523 and for helpful advice on setting up the
decarboxylase assay.
The work was supported by a fellowship of the
Landesgraduiertenförderung to D.E. and by grants from the
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Institut
für Mikrobiologie, Universität Stuttgart, Allmandring 31, D-70569 Stuttgart, Germany. Phone: (49)-711-6855489. Fax:
(49)-711-6855725. E-mail: imbms{at}po.uni-stuttgart.de.
 |
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