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Journal of Bacteriology, September 1999, p. 5750-5757, Vol. 181, No. 18
Department of Chemical Engineering,
University of Washington, Seattle, Washington
98195,1 and Max-Planck-Institut
für terrestrische Mikrobiologie and Laboratorium für
Mikrobiologie des Fachbereichs Biologie der
Philipps-Universität, 35043 Marburg, Germany2
Received 24 March 1999/Accepted 7 July 1999
The methylotrophic proteobacterium Methylobacterium
extorquens AM1 possesses tetrahydromethanopterin
(H4MPT)-dependent enzymes, which are otherwise specific to
methanogenic and sulfate-reducing archaea and which have been suggested
to be involved in formaldehyde oxidation to CO2 in M. extorquens AM1. The distribution of H4MPT-dependent enzyme activities in cell extracts of methylotrophic bacteria from 13 different genera are reported. H4MPT-dependent activities were detected in all of the methylotrophic and methanotrophic proteobacteria tested that assimilate formaldehyde by the serine or
ribulose monophosphate pathway. H4MPT-dependent activities were also found in autotrophic Xanthobacter strains.
However, no H4MPT-dependent enzyme activities could be
detected in other autotrophic Aerobic methylotrophs are
gram-negative or gram-positive bacteria capable of growth on reduced
C1 compounds such as methanol or methane as their carbon
and energy source (24). Formaldehyde is formed as a central
intermediate in methylotrophic metabolism. At least four different
enzyme systems have been proposed as C1 pathways for the
oxidation of formaldehyde to CO2 in methylotrophic bacteria
(see also 13). The first of these is a linear
pathway involving thiol-linked formaldehyde dehydrogenase, a hydrolase and formate dehydrogenase. This pathway is found in the autotrophic Recently, we described a fourth pathway for formaldehyde oxidation,
involving tetrahydromethanopterin (H4MPT)-dependent enzymes in the In this study, we investigated the distribution of
H4MPT-dependent enzyme activities in methylotrophic
representatives from different phylogenetic and physiological groups.
For those bacteria that showed H4MPT-dependent enzyme
activities, we cloned one of the encoding genes to obtain sequence data
and gain insights into the origin and phylogeny of
H4MPT-dependent enzymes. We concentrated on methenyl
H4MPT cyclohydrolase, which is also present in methanogenic archaea, rather than NAD- and NADP-dependent methylene
H4MPT dehydrogenases, which are novel enzymes not found in
archaea (47). The gene encoding methenyl H4MPT
cyclohydrolase (mch) from M. extorquens AM1 has
been identified by N-terminal sequencing of the purified protein and
shown to consist of only one type of subunit of molecular mass 33 kDa
(31). Mch from M. extorquens AM1 possesses about 36% amino acid sequence identity to homologues from methanogenic archaea and Archaeoglobus fulgidus (11).
Organisms.
The following are laboratory strains (University
of Washington, Seattle) that were used in this study:
Methylobacterium extorquens AM1 (29),
Methylosinus trichosporium OB3b (5),
Xanthobacter flavus H4-14 (33),
Methylococcus capsulatus Bath (5),
Methylococcus thermophilus IIIp (25),
Methylomicrobium album BG8 (5),
Methylomonas rubra 15sh (35), and
Shewanella putrefaciens MR-1 (34).
Methylobacterium organophilum XX (DSM 760),
Hyphomicrobium methylovorum GM2 (DSM 5458),
Xanthobacter autotrophicus (DSM 432), Paracoccus
denitrificans (DSM 413), Rhodopseudomonas acidophila
(DSM 145), Methylobacillus flagellatum KT (DSM 6875),
Methylophilus methylotrophus AS1 (DSM 46235),
Amycolatopsis methanolica (DSM 44096), and
Methanobacterium thermoautotrophicum Marburg (DSM 2133) were
obtained from the DSMZ (Deutsche Sammlung von Mikroorganismen und
Zellkulturen, Braunschweig, Germany). Rhodobacter
sphaeroides 2.4.1 (44) was obtained from S. Kaplan
(University of Texas). Cell mass of Bacillus methanolicus
MGA3 (38) was kindly provided by S. Pluschkell, University
of Minnesota.
Growth of bacteria.
Methylobacterium extorquens AM1,
Methylobacterium organophilum XX, H. methylovorum
GM2, Methylobacillus flagellatum KT, and Methylophilus
methylotrophus AS1 were grown on methanol on minimal medium as
described previously or on succinate (0.5%) on the same medium
(17). The methanotrophic strains Methylosinus
trichosporium OB3b, Methylococcus capsulatus Bath,
Methylococcus thermophilus IIIp, Methylomicrobium
album BG8, and Methylomonas rubra 15sh were grown on
methane as described previously (19). The following bacteria
were grown on the media described by the DSMZ (12a). X. autotrophicus and X. flavus H4-14 were grown
on nutrient broth medium plus methanol (100 mM) or on methanol (100 mM)
in minimal medium 81 supplemented with 0.01% yeast extract, P. denitrificans was grown on methanol (100 mM) in minimal medium 81 supplemented with 0.01% yeast extract, and Rhodopseudomonas
acidophila was grown on medium 26 plus methanol (100 mM) under
anoxic conditions in the light. Amycolatopsis methanolica
was also grown on methanol (100 mM) or glucose (0.4%) in the minimal
medium described previously (21), and R. sphaeroides 2.4.1 was grown on Luria-Bertani medium (37) containing 5 g (instead of 10 g) NaCl per liter.
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Copyright © 1999, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Distribution of Tetrahydromethanopterin-Dependent
Enzymes in Methylotrophic Bacteria and Phylogeny of Methenyl
Tetrahydromethanopterin Cyclohydrolases
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ABSTRACT
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
References
-proteobacteria or in gram-positive
methylotrophic bacteria. Genes encoding methenyl H4MPT
cyclohydrolase (mch genes) were cloned and sequenced from
several proteobacteria. Bacterial and archaeal Mch sequences have
roughly 35% amino acid identity and form distinct groups in
phylogenetic analysis.
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INTRODUCTION
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
References
-proteobacterium Paracoccus denitrificans and the
nonsulfur purple bacteria Rhodopseudomonas acidophila and
Rhodobacter sphaeroides, which possess a
glutathione-dependent formaldehyde dehydrogenase (2, 3, 20, 32,
36). Similarly, the gram-positive methylotroph Amycolatopsis methanolica that contains the ribulose
monophosphate cycle was shown to contain a mycothiol-dependent
formaldehyde dehydrogenase (27, 28), which was previously
called NAD factor-dependent formaldehyde dehydrogenase (15,
30). As a second route, tetrahydrofolate (H4F)-dependent enzymes have been discussed as being
involved in formaldehyde oxidation in serine cycle methylotrophs
(10, 26). A third proposed route for formaldehyde oxidation
entails the cyclic ribulose monophosphate pathway involving
6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase (1, 4, 18). This pathway
has been proposed for
-proteobacterial methylotrophs that contain
the ribulose monophosphate cycle. However, only low activities of this
pathway could be detected in the other group containing the ribulose
monophosphate cycle, the obligate methanotrophic bacteria that belong
to the
-proteobacteria class (48). Therefore, the
formaldehyde oxidation pathway in these methanotrophs has been uncertain.
-proteobacterium Methylobacterium extorquens AM1,
a serine cycle methylotroph (11, 31, 47). These enzymes were
previously thought to be restricted to methanogenic and
sulfate-reducing archaea (for a review, see reference
43). Three H4MPT-dependent and
H4F-dependent enzymes from M. extorquens AM1
have been purified and characterized (31, 47): a methenyl
H4MPT cyclohydrolase, a methenyl H4F
cyclohydrolase, and an NADP-dependent methylene H4MPT
dehydrogenase, which also catalyzes the dehydrogenation of methylene
H4F (47). Both pterin cofactors have been shown to be present in similar amounts (47). It therefore appears that in Methylobacterium extorquens AM1, two independent
C1 transfer pathways are simultaneously operative, one
involving H4MPT (in a dephospho form) and one involving
H4F (11, 47). On the basis of mutant and enzyme
studies, the H4MPT-dependent pathway was proposed to be the
main pathway for oxidation of formaldehyde to CO2 (11,
31, 47).
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MATERIALS AND METHODS
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
References
Coenzymes. Tetrahydromethanopterin (H4MPT) and methenyl H4MPT were purified from Methanobacterium thermoautotrophicum Marburg (7). H4F was purchased from Sigma.
Preparation of cell extracts. Frozen cells (0.5 g) were resuspended in 1 ml of 50 mM morpholinepropanesulfonic acid (MOPS)-KOH (pH 7.0) at 4°C and passed two times through a French pressure cell at 1.2 × 108 Pa. Cell debris and unbroken cells were removed by centrifugation in an Eppendorf microcentrifuge. The resulting supernatant is referred to as cell extract.
Protein concentration was determined by the Bradford assay (6) by using the Bio-Rad reagent with bovine serum albumin as the standard.Determination of enzyme activities. The assays were routinely performed at room temperature in 1-ml cuvettes (diameter, 1 cm) in a total volume of 0.7 ml.
Methenyl H4MPT cyclohydrolase activity was determined photometrically at 335 nm as described before (31). NADP- and NAD-dependent methylene H4MPT dehydrogenase and NADP-dependent methylene H4F dehydrogenase activities were monitored at 340 nm (47). Glutathione-linked formaldehyde dehydrogenase was measured at 340 nm as described before (32).Standard molecular biology techniques. All standard procedures were performed as described by Sambrook et al. (37). Enzymes were used in accordance with recommendations of the manufacturers (Boehringer Mannheim and New England Biolabs).
PCR amplification. The heterologous primers mch-1 (5'-TTCTTCGCCMTGGGKTCKGGKCC), mch-2a (5'-TGCCTCGGCTCKCAATATGCYGGBTGG), mch-2b (5'-TGCCTCGGCAGCCAGWAYGCSGGCTGG), mch-3 (5'-GCGTCGTTKGTKCKBCCCAT), and mch-4 (5'-AACAGCGCTCCGTCKATYTTGTARAARTC) were derived from four sequence parts of Mch conserved in the sequences from Methylobacterium extorquens AM1, methanogenic archaea, and Archaeoglobus fulgidus. The primer combination mch-2a-mch-3 was used to amplify a PCR product of approximately 420 nucleotides with chromosomal DNA from Methylococcus capsulatus Bath, Methylomonas rubra 15sh, Methylococcus thermophilus IIIp, and Methylobacillus flagellatum KT. From the newly obtained Mch sequences, additional heterologous primers were designed, namely, mch-5 (5'-GAGGAGCTSTACAAGGAGCTSGGBTA) and mch-6 (5'-TGSGCCTTGTGYAGYGCBACYTC). PCR products were obtained for Methylophilus methylotrophus AS1 (primer combination mch-4-mch-5, 489-nucleotide product) and H. methylovorum GM2 (primer combination mch-1-mch-6, 264-nucleotide product). Homologous primers were derived from part of mch from both organisms: m1 (5'-GGCCTTGAACACTTCAGC) and m2 (5'-CAAAGACAGTGCTGATGC), h1 (5'-GGCGATCTGCACGGTGCC) and h2 (5'-GTGGAAGACCTCTTCAAGG). With template DNA from Methylophilus methylotrophus AS1, m1 and mch-2a were used to amplify an additional PCR fragment. With template DNA from H. methylovorum GM2, two additional PCR fragments were cloned, generated with primers h1 and mch-4 as well as h2 and mch-2b.
PCR amplifications were carried out at annealing temperatures of 35, 38, and 42°C by using Taq polymerase (Boehringer Mannheim). PCR products were cloned into the pCR2.1 vector with the Invitrogen TA cloning kit and identified by sequencing.Cloning of mch genes. Southern blots indicated the presence of the mch gene in chromosomal digests of Methylobacterium organophilum XX DNA by using mch-2 as a heterologous oligonucleotide probe, the presence of the mch gene in chromosomal digests of X. autotrophicus DNA by using mch-6 as a heterologous oligonucleotide probe, and the presence of the mch gene in chromosomal digests of Methylosinus trichosporium OB3b by using mch-3 as a heterologous oligonucleotide probe. Hybridizations were carried out at 55°C, and washing steps were performed at 55°C and with 5× SSC (0.75 M NaCl plus 0.075 M sodium citrate). For cloning of the mch gene from Methylobacterium organophilum XX, chromosomal DNA was digested by SalI, eluted from the gel at approximately 2.1 kb (Qiagen gel extraction kit), and ligated to pAYC63 (9) predigested with SalI. For cloning of the mch gene from X. autotrophicus, an SphI digest was used and DNA at approximately 4 kb was ligated to pAYC63 (9) predigested with the same enzyme. For cloning of the mch gene from Methylosinus trichosporium OB3b, a SalI digest was used and DNA at approximately 0.9 kb was ligated to pAYC63 (9) predigested with the same enzyme. Positive clones were obtained from the partial clone banks, which were identified by colony hybridizations (37) by using the probes mentioned and by sequencing. The positive clone obtained for Methylosinus trichosporium OB3b contained only the 3' region of the mch gene. To obtain the sequence further upstream, the oligonucleotides ob3b-6 (5'-GGAATAGATGATCGCGTC) and ob3b-7 (5'-CAGGCGAGACGTTCCGTGC) were used for inverted PCR. Chromosomal DNA of Methylosinus trichosporium OB3b was digested with BglII and self-ligated. This DNA was used as a template for amplification employing the oligonucleotides ob3b-6 and ob3b-7. The band of interest (approximately 1.8 kb) was identified by Southern hybridization using the oligonucleotide ob3b-4 (5'-GTCGACGGCATCGCCACG) as a probe and cloned into pCR2.1 (Invitrogen) and sequenced. The insert was shown to contain 449 nucleotides of new sequence.
The complete mch gene from Methylococcus capsulatus Bath was cloned by using an oligonucleotide probe (MC-1 5'-CCACCAAGATCAAGGACGGCAACG) derived from the sequence of the PCR product obtained as described above. Chromosomal DNA was digested by EcoRI, eluted at approximately 1.6 kb, and ligated to pAYC63 (9) predigested with EcoRI. The blots were washed at 50°C and with 2× SSC. Positive clones were obtained from the partial EcoRI clone bank and identified by colony hybridizations and sequencing. The complete mch gene from Methylobacillus flagellatum KT was cloned in a similar fashion, from a partial chromosomal library in pAYC63 (9) containing SacI inserts of approximately 2.7 kb. The PCR product described above was used as a probe. Oligonucleotide labeling, hybridizations, and detections were done with the digoxigenin oligonucleotide tailing kit and by following the protocol provided by Boehringer Mannheim.DNA sequencing and analysis. DNA sequencing was performed at the sequencing facility of the University of Washington. Nucleotides and inferred peptide sequences were aligned by the Clustal method (DNAStar package) and manually. Dendrograms were constructed by using PUZZLE version 4.0 (42) and the programs from the PHYLIP version 3.5c package (16).
Nucleotide sequence accession numbers. The gene sequences have been deposited in the GenBank database under accession no. AF139592, AF139593, AF142649 to AF142655, and AF162786.
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RESULTS |
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Occurrence of H4MPT-dependent enzyme activities in cell
extracts of methylotrophic bacteria.
Cell extracts from different
methylotrophic bacteria were tested for the presence of methenyl
H4MPT cyclohydrolase, NADP-dependent methylene
H4MPT dehydrogenase, and NAD-dependent methylene
H4MPT dehydrogenase activities, which were shown to involve
three different enzymes in Methylobacterium extorquens AM1
(31, 47). The results are shown in Table
1. Cells were grown on the C1
substrates indicated. Additionally, most facultative methylotrophic
bacteria were grown under a nonmethylotrophic growth condition for
induction studies. All of the methanotrophic bacteria tested were found
to exhibit H4MPT-dependent enzyme activities in the range
of 0.1 to 1.7 U/mg (Table 1). The methanotrophs are either
-proteobacteria containing the serine pathway for assimilation
(Methylosinus trichosporium OB3b) or
-proteobacteria
containing the ribulose monophosphate pathway (Methylococcus
capsulatus Bath, Methylococcus thermophilus IIIp,
Methylomicrobium album BG8, and Methylomonas
rubra 15sh). The methanotrophic bacteria are all obligate
methylotrophic bacteria growing only on methane or, in some cases, also
on methanol. Methylomicrobium album BG8 also exhibited a
comparable activity of methenyl H4MPT cyclohydrolase when
growing in the presence of methanol (data not shown). No significant
activities (<0.01 U/mg) of a pyridine-dependent methylene
H4F dehydrogenase could be detected in methanotrophic bacteria.
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-proteobacteria were found to exhibit H4MPT-dependent
enzyme activities. Like Methylobacterium extorquens AM1,
Methylobacterium organophilum XX showed
C1-inducible activities of methenyl H4MPT
cyclohydrolase and NADP-dependent methylene H4MPT
dehydrogenase and no distinct induction of NAD-dependent methylene
H4MPT dehydrogenase (Table 1). The NADP-dependent methylene H4F dehydrogenase activity in cell extracts of H. methylovorum GM2 (0.13 U/mg) and Methylobacterium
organophilum XX (0.03 U/mg) was found to be very low (see also
reference 26).
The
-proteobacteria Methylobacillus flagellatum KT and
Methylophilus methylotrophus AS1 contain the ribulose
monophosphate pathway for formaldehyde assimilation and were found to
exhibit rather high activities of H4MPT-dependent enzymes
of 0.2 to 1.8 U/mg.
In contrast to these proteobacteria, no H4MPT-dependent
enzyme activities could be detected in the gram-positive methylotrophic bacteria Amycolatopsis methanolica and Bacillus
methanolicus MGA3.
Five autotrophic bacteria were tested for H4MPT-dependent
cyclohydrolase and dehydrogenase activities, Xanthobacter
autotrophicus and Xanthobacter flavus H4-14,
Paracoccus denitrificans, Rhodobacter sphaeroides
2.4.1, and Rhodopseudomonas acidophila. The latter organism
was grown on methanol anaerobically in the light, while R. sphaeroides was grown aerobically on rich medium. Interestingly, it was found that cell extracts of the Xanthobacter strains
contain H4MPT-dependent enzyme activities. However, in cell
extracts of the other autotrophic bacterial strains tested, these
enzyme activities could not be detected. P. denitrificans,
Rhodopseudomonas acidophila, and Rhodobacter
sphaeroides were previously shown to contain glutathione-dependent formaldehyde dehydrogenase (2, 3, 32, 36), which was measured as a control enzyme (data not shown).
Besides the organisms shown in Table 1, cell extracts of
Shewanella putrefaciens MR1 were assayed for
H4MPT-dependent enzyme activities. S. putrefaciens is a
-proteobacterium that can grow anaerobically
on formate as the sole carbon source and has been shown to contain
hydroxypyruvate reductase activity, the key enzyme of the serine
pathway (39). The bacterium was not grown on C1 substrates but on minimal medium supplemented with glucose or in rich
media. In cell extracts of S. putrefaciens, no
H4MPT-dependent enzyme activities could be detected under
these growth conditions and it was not investigated further.
Cloning of methenyl H4MPT cyclohydrolase genes (mch). The known sequences of methenyl H4MPT cyclohydrolases (Mch) from Methylobacterium extorquens AM1 (11), methanogenic archaea (8, 41, 45, 46), and Archaeoglobus fulgidus (23) were used to deduce heterologous primers for PCR (for an alignment, see reference 11). PCR products of approximately 430 nucleotides (corresponding to bp 279 to 706 of the mch gene from Methylobacterium extorquens AM1) were obtained by using template DNA from Methylococcus capsulatus Bath, Methylomonas rubra 15sh, Methylococcus thermophilus IIIp, and Methylobacillus flagellatum KT. The PCR products were cloned and sequenced. They showed sequence identities to other Mch proteins, with highest identity to Mch from Methylobacterium extorquens AM1. From the newly obtained bacterial Mch sequences, additional heterologous primers were designed and used for PCR. Using these new primers, positive PCR products were obtained for Methylophilus methylotrophus AS1 and H. methylovorum GM2 (see Materials and Methods).
The mch genes of Methylobacterium organophilum XX and X. autotrophicus were cloned directly from the chromosome as complete genes by using heterologous oligonucleotide probes for Southern hybridization and constructing partial clone banks. The mch gene of Methylosinus trichosporium OB3b was cloned in part directly from the chromosome by using a heterologous oligonucleotide probe and in part by inverted PCR. For Methylococcus capsulatus Bath and Methylobacillus flagellatum KT, the complete mch genes were cloned and sequenced after the partial sequence was obtained by PCR (see Materials and Methods).Phylogenetic analysis of Mch sequences. In Fig. 1, an alignment of partial Mch fragments from bacteria and archaea is shown. Approximately 15% of the amino acids are conserved in the region studied for all bacterial and archaeal fragments, while approximately 30% of the amino acids are conserved in all bacterial fragments.
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-proteobacteria. Although the fragments from the
two Methylobacterium species show 84% identity, the other
pairwise comparisons in this group show only 48 to 63% identity. In
contrast, the identities between the fragments for the two
-proteobacteria are 97% and those for the four
-proteobacteria are 71 to 86%. The lowest sequence identity between different proteobacteria was found to be 48% between an
-proteobacterium (Methylosinus trichosporium OB3b) and a
-proteobacterium
(Methylococcus thermophilus IIIP) as well as two
-proteobacteria (Methylosinus trichosporium OB3b and
H. methylovorum GM2). Positioning of some
-proteobacterial sequences turned out to be uncertain, consistent with the greater divergence of sequence identities in this group. However, the sequences of the
- and
-proteobacteria form distinct clusters within the bacterial sequences. Within the group of archaea, sequence identities from 52 to 73% between different species were found. The identity between the bacterial and the archaeal Mch sequences is in the 26 to 42% range.
For those mch genes which were cloned from the chromosome,
the genomic arrangement was determined and found to be conserved with
respect to Methylobacterium extorquens AM1 for M. organophilum XX and the
-proteobacterium Methylococcus
capsulatus Bath. Upstream of mch, an
as-yet-unidentified but conserved open reading frame designated
orfY (11) was found with identities only to open reading frames from methanogenic archaea. Downstream of mch,
an open reading frame (orf5) with similarity to that coding
for the ribosomal S6 modification protein was found. The gene
arrangement is different in X. autotrophicus in that
orf5 overlaps mch by 64 nucleotides, while
upstream of mch a gene similar to mtdA (10, 47) was found. In M. extorquens AM1, mtdA
was shown to encode the NADP-dependent methylene H4MPT
dehydrogenase and is located approximately 35 kb upstream of
mch. These results show that the genomic arrangement of
genes for H4MPT-dependent enzymes is not strictly conserved
among all methylotrophic proteobacteria. In contrast to the clustered
occurrence of genes that are proposed to be involved in a
H4MPT-dependent formaldehyde oxidation pathway in bacteria,
in methanogenic archaea and the sulfate-reducing archaeon
Archaeoglobus fulgidus, those genes are widely scattered over the chromosome.
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DISCUSSION |
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In this report, we demonstrate that the H4MPT-dependent enzymes involved in formaldehyde oxidation are not restricted to serine cycle methylotrophs like Methylobacterium species. These enzymes were also found in the methylotrophic proteobacteria assimilating formaldehyde by the ribulose monophosphate cycle. Even autotrophic Xanthobacter strains were found to contain H4MPT-dependent enzyme activities and the respective genes.
The methylotrophs tested in this study that are known to contain
thiol-dependent formaldehyde oxidation systems did not contain detectable levels of H4MPT-dependent enzyme activities.
These include Rhodopseudomonas acidophila,
Rhodobacter sphaeroides, and Paracoccus
denitrificans, all
-proteobacterial methylotrophs that grow
autotrophically on methanol via the Calvin-Benson-Bassham cycle and
that contain a glutathione-dependent formaldehyde dehydrogenase (3, 32, 36). In the latter two cases, this enzyme has been shown to be required for methylotrophic growth (3, 32). In addition, the gram-positive methylotroph Amycolatopsis
methanolica contains a mycothiol-dependent formaldehyde
dehydrogenase (27, 28). The other methylotrophs in which
H4MPT-dependent enzyme activities could not be detected
have not yet been tested for thiol-dependent formaldehyde oxidation
systems, and so the extent of this correlation is not yet known.
Genes similar to the H4MPT-dependent enzymes were not
present in other nonarchaeal microbial genome sequences that are
currently available, which include a yeast genome and representatives
from 10 of the major branches of the bacteria. Therefore, a
H4MPT-dependent C1 pathway does not appear to
be widespread in bacteria as a whole but is present in most of the
proteobacterial methylotrophs tested. The broad distribution of
H4MPT-dependent enzymes in methylotrophic proteobacteria
leads to speculation on the potential function of this pathway. In
Methylobacterium extorquens AM1, the
H4MPT-dependent formaldehyde oxidation system appears to be
the main dissimilatory pathway during growth on C1
substrates (11, 47). This pathway is indispensable for
methylotrophic growth, and the enzymes are present at high activities
in methylotrophically grown cells as compared to cells grown on
succinate (11). Methylobacterium extorquens AM1
also contains a functionally analogous H4F-linked pathway,
albeit with much lower enzyme activities (11). Mutant evidence suggests that in Methylobacterium extorquens AM1,
both pathways are involved in methylotrophy (unpublished data), and so
the H4F-linked pathway may also contribute to formaldehyde dissimilation or detoxification. It seems likely that the
H4MPT-dependent formaldehyde oxidation system plays a
similar role in other serine cycle methylotrophs and in the
Xanthobacter strains, since they do not contain sufficiently
high activities of enzymes from other potential formaldehyde oxidation
pathways to account for their growth rate on C1 substrates.
A similar argument follows for the methanotrophic bacteria containing
the ribulose monophosphate cycle, since they also lack sufficient
enzyme activities of alternative oxidative pathways (48).
However, the presence of the H4MPT-dependent formaldehyde
oxidation system in the
-proteobacteria is surprising, since these
bacteria have been proposed to employ a cyclic route of formaldehyde
oxidation (1, 4). The results reported here show that like
the serine cycle methylotrophs, these ribulose monophosphate cycle
methylotrophs contain two possible formaldehyde oxidation pathways.
Mutagenesis studies will be necessary to address the role of these two
pathways in the
-proteobacterial methylotrophs. The potential role
of the H4MPT-dependent oxidation pathway in formaldehyde
dissimilation in methylotrophs is consistent with the apparent absence
of this pathway in methylotrophs that contain a thiol-linked
formaldehyde oxidation system. These results suggest that
methylotrophic bacteria have either one or the other of these formaldehyde oxidation pathways but may also have a second pathway as
in the
-proteobacterial methylotrophs (cyclic oxidation pathway) and
the serine cycle nonmethanotrophs (H4F-linked pathway).
However, we cannot rule out completely the possibility that the absence of H4MPT-dependent enzyme activities might be due to the
presence of a modified pterin in these methylotrophic bacteria that is not functional with the H4MPT that was used in this study,
which was isolated from the methanogenic archaeon
Methanobacterium thermoautotrophicum. Methylobacterium
extorquens AM1 was shown to contain a modified H4MPT
that lacks the
-hydroxyglutaryl phosphate unit, although enzyme
activity was detected with both pterins (11, 47).
The data presented here show the presence of functional H4MPT-dependent enzymes in three branches of the proteobacteria. Phylogenetic analysis revealed that the bacterial and archaeal branches in the tree of mch genes are clearly separated but that bacterial and archaeal mch genes are clearly related. H4MPT and H4MPT-dependent enzymes were previously thought to be a specific attribute of archaea. Their sparse occurrence among the bacteria in general and the proteobacteria in particular raises the question of the evolutionary process underlying this phylogenetic distribution. In principle, it is possible that the common ancestor of archaea and bacteria possessed H4MPT, Mch, and other H4MPT-dependent enzymes and that countless parallel losses have occurred in independent lineages. This would mean that these enzymes and their corresponding cofactors were retained throughout the trunk of bacterial and archaeal evolution but have only been retained in selected lineages that use these pathways for C1 metabolism today.
Alternatively, it is possible that the genes for these enzymes and
cofactors have been transferred between bacteria and archaea by
horizontal gene transfer (14, 22). The information available at this time is not sufficient to distinguish between these
possibilities. However, it is noteworthy that Mch and H4MPT
are ubiquitous among methanogenic archaea, where they are integral to
the ecologically specialized energy metabolism of this group, while in
contrast, results to date suggest that only some proteobacteria possess this gene and the cofactor. This finding led to the suggestion that
proteobacteria may have acquired Mch and functionally related genes of
typically methanogenic C1 metabolism through lateral transfer from archaeal donors (11). If so, the small sample of sequences studied here would be more supportive of a single rather
than multiple transfer events, because the bacterial and archaeal genes
are distinct rather than interleaved in the tree. It was previously
noted that bacterial Mch is activated 20-fold by 1.2 M potassium
phosphate (31). This is an unusual property for
-proteobacterial enzymes but is a property of some enzymes from
methanogenic archaea, which require such salt concentrations for
activity (40). Activation of Mch by 1.2 M potassium
phosphate would be consistent with the hypothesis of lateral transfer
from methanogens to proteobacteria. However, at this time we can state with confidence only that the two major lineages of these genes, bacterial and archaeal, show separate evolution.
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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We thank Stefanie Pluschkell, University of Minnesota, for providing cell mass from methanol-grown Bacillus methanolicus. We thank William Martin, Technische Universität Braunschweig, for many helpful discussions.
This work was supported by a grant from NIH (GM36296) and the Max-Planck-Gesellschaft. J.A.V. was the recipient of a fellowship from the Max-Planck-Gesellschaft.
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FOOTNOTES |
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* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of Chemical Engineering, University of Washington, Seattle, WA 98195. Phone: (206) 616-5282. Fax: (206) 616-5721. E-mail: lidstrom{at}u.washington.edu.
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REFERENCES |
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