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Journal of Bacteriology, October 1999, p. 6197-6199, Vol. 181, No. 19
0021-9193/99/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1999, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Characterization of the Phthalate Permease OphD
from Burkholderia cepacia ATCC 17616
Hung-Kuang
Chang and
Gerben J.
Zylstra*
Biotechnology Center for Agriculture and the
Environment, Cook College, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, New
Jersey 08901-8520
Received 24 May 1999/Accepted 15 July 1999
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ABSTRACT |
The ophD gene, encoding a permease for phthalate
transport, was cloned from Burkholderia cepacia ATCC 17616. Expression of the gene in Escherichia coli results in the
ability to transport phthalate rapidly into the cell. Uptake inhibition
experiments show that 4-hydroxyphthalate, 4-chlorophthalate,
4-methylphthalate, and cinchomeronate compete for the phthalate
permease. An ophD knockout mutant of 17616 grows slightly
more slowly on phthalate but is still able to take up phthalate at
rates equivalent to that of the wild-type strain. This means that 17616 must have a second phthalate-inducible phthalate uptake system.
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TEXT |
Phthalate degradation by
Burkholderia cepacia DBO1 (ATCC 29424) has been well studied
at both the genetic (3, 4) and biochemical levels (1,
6, 10, 18). The four genes encoding the pathway enzymes are
arranged in at least three operons (3), and a fourth operon
codes for a quinolinate phosphoribosyl transferase that enhances the
ability of DBO1 to grow on phthalate (4). Analysis of the
nucleotide sequence identified a gene (ophD) encoding a
nonfunctional putative permease containing a frameshift mutation (3). Since DBO1 is able to transport phthalate into the cell at wild-type levels even when this frameshifted permease gene is
deleted (3), there must be an as-yet-unidentified mechanism for transporting phthalate into the cell. B. cepacia ATCC
17616 is also able to grow on phthalate and shows a restriction
fragment length polymorphism pattern identical to that of DBO1 when
probed with the cloned DBO1 genes for phthalate degradation. The
present work was performed to investigate the ability of 17616 to
transport phthalate into the cell.
The frameshifted putative permease in DBO1 synthesizes two
polypeptides, designated Orf1 and OphD (3). The region
encoding these two proteins was PCR amplified from both DBO1 and 17616 by using the primers ophD-N (5'-GGCATATGGCACATTCAACGTTGCACTCCG-3') and ophD-C (5'-CCCTGCAGTGTCACGCGCCGGATCGCTGCG-3')
according to standard procedures (3). The ophD-N
primer contains the existing translation initiation codon ATG within a
new NdeI site, and the ophD-C primer contains the existing
stop codon TGA followed by a new PstI site. The PCR products
were cloned into the pCRII-TOPO plasmid (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, Calif.),
and the sequences of several clones were examined. The nucleotide
sequence of this region from 17616 (GenBank accession no. AF152094) is
only 1 base different from the DBO1 sequence (3): it has an
additional A at position 301, numbering from the ATG initiation codon.
The 17616 nucleotide sequence with the additional base thus codes for a
"normal" permease rather than the two polypeptides seen in DBO1
(3). Comparison of the OphD of 17616 to other proteins
reveals that it belongs to the major facilitator superfamily (MFS) of
transport proteins (16). It has 12 membrane-spanning
-helices (11, 23), typical of members of MFSs. The OphD
of 17616 is most closely related (Fig. 1)
to permeases for transport of acidic compounds in the anion:cation
symporter (ACS) family (16) such as the putative phthalate
transporter Pht1 from Pseudomonas putida NMH102-2 (57.7% identity and 67.1% similarity), putative tartrate transporters (TtuB)
from Agrobacterium vitis AB3 (39% identity and 50.9%
similarity) and AB4 (42.2% identity and 53.6% similarity), and the
putative p-hydroxyphenylacetate permease HpaX from
Escherichia coli (36.0% identity and 47.2% similarity).
The OphD of 17616 shows little similarity to members of the
well-studied aromatic acid:H+ symporter (AAHS) family
(16) such as the P. putida p-hydroxybenzoate and
protocatechuate transporter PcaK and the Acinetobacter sp. benzoate transporter BenK (Fig. 1). MopB, a 4-methylphthalate-specific permease from B. cepacia Pc701, is able to transport both
4-methylphthalate and phthalate into the cell (19). However,
despite the fact that it transports phthalate, MopB shows low
similarity to the OphD of 17616 and falls into the
metabolite:H+ symporter (MHS) family (16).

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FIG. 1.
Dendrogram showing the relationship of the 17616 ophD gene product to selected transport proteins. Permeases
involved in aromatic acid transport fall into three families as defined
by Pao et al. (16): the ACS family, the AAHS family, and the
MHS family. The ACS family includes the phthalate transporter OphD from
B. cepacia 17616 (this work), the putative phthalate
transporter Pht1 from P. putida NMH102-2 (15),
the putative tartrate transporters (TtuB) from A. vitis AB3
(20) and AB4 (7), the putative
p-hydroxyphenylacetate permease HpaX from E. coli
(17), and the putative transporter B2246 from E. coli (2). The MHS family includes the 4-methylphthalate
transporter MopB from B. cepacia Pc701 (19), the
citrate transporters CitH from Klebsiella pneumoniae
(24) and CitA from Salmonella typhimurium
(22), the -ketoglutarate transporter KgtP from E. coli (21), the proline/betaine transporter ProP from
E. coli (8), and the dicarboxylate transporter
PcaT from P. putida PRS2000 (GenBank accession no. U48776).
The AAHS family includes the p-hydroxybenzoate and
protocatechuate transporter PcaK from P. putida
(14), the putative aromatic acid transporter PcaK from
Acinetobacter sp. strain ADP1 (12), the benzoate
transporter BenK from Acinetobacter sp. strain ADP1
(5), the putative vanillate transporter VanK from
Acinetobacter sp. strain ADP1 (GenBank accession no.
AF009672), the muconate transporter MucK from Acinetobacter
sp. strain ADP1 (25), and the 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetate
transporter TfdK from Ralstonia eutropha (13).
The amino acid sequences were aligned with the Pileup program of the
Genetics Computer Group package (9), the alignment was
confirmed by visual inspection, and the phylogenetic tree was
calculated with the PAUP program by using the minimal-distance
method.
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The cloned 1.3-kb PCR products containing
orf1/ophDDBO1 and
ophD17616 were moved separately into the
expression vector pALTER-Ex1 (Promega, Madison, Wis.) by using the
added NdeI and PstI cutting sites. E. coli JM109 carrying either clone (designated pGJZ1351 and
pGJZ1352, respectively) was cultured in Luria broth containing 15 µg
of tetracycline/ml until the cell optical density at 600 nm reached
0.5. Isopropyl-
-D-thiogalactopyranoside (IPTG) (1 mM)
was then added to induce gene expression. The cells were collected 1.5 h after induction and washed twice with 50 mM phosphate
buffer. Phthalate transport assays were performed as described earlier (3) except that 100 µl of cells rather than 300 µl was
added to the assay mixture. JM109 expressing the OphD of 17616 rapidly transported phthalate into the cell, while JM109 expressing Orf1 and
OphD of DBO1 or carrying the vector pALTER-Ex1 showed no accumulation of phthalate (Fig. 2). This data
demonstrates that the frameshift in Orf1 and OphD of DBO1 results in
loss of the ability of this protein to transport phthalate and proves
that the OphD of 17616 is functional for transporting phthalate into
the cells.

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FIG. 2.
Phthalate uptake by IPTG-induced E. coli
JM109 containing the cloned 17616 ophD ( ), the cloned
DBO1 orf1/ophD ( ), or the vector pALTER-Ex1 ( ). Error
bars, standard deviation from three independent experiments.
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A number of compounds were tested for the ability to inhibit transport
of radiolabeled phthalate by JM109 expressing the OphD of 17616 (Table
1). In a control experiment, a 20-fold
excess of unlabeled phthalate inhibited the rate of transport of
radiolabeled phthalate by 91%. Phthalate substituted at the 4 position
with either a hydroxyl, a methyl, or a chloro group inhibited phthalate transport significantly when present in a 20-fold excess (86, 66, and
32%, respectively). Phthalate substituted with large polar substituent
groups at the 4 position (4-sulfophthalate and 4-nitrophthalate) inhibited phthalate transport less than 10%. It is surprising that the
structurally similar compound quinolinate (2,3-pyridinedicarboxylic acid) showed no detectable effect on phthalate transport, while cinchomeronate (3,4-pyridinedicarboxylic acid) inhibited phthalate transport 27%. This may be due to a disrupting effect of a nitrogen atom in the aromatic ring near the carboxyl groups. The structurally similar compounds o-chlorobenzoate and salicylate did not
inhibit phthalate transport, probably because two carboxyl groups are required for substrate binding. The fact that compounds with two carboxyl groups, such as tartrate and maleic acid, did not inhibit phthalate transport implies that the aromatic ring structure is important for substrate recognition.
It was previously shown that DBO1 has an inducible phthalate
transporter and that deletion of orf1 and ophD
had no effect on either growth or the phthalate transport rate
(3). It is thus possible that 17616 has a second
phthalate-inducible transport system. A 17616 ophD knockout
mutant was constructed by gene replacement with a kanamycin resistance
gene cassette by following the same procedure as that used to make the
analogous mutant of DBO1 (3). One strain resulting from a
double crossover, designated 17616-CZ1, was saved for analysis. The
mutant strain grows slightly more slowly on minimal medium
(26) with 10 mM phthalate than does the wild type (doubling
time, 113 ± 4 min versus 97 ± 1 min). Transport assays with
17616 grown on phthalate showed a rapid accumulation of phthalate at
the rate of 5.6 nmol/min/mg of protein (Fig.
3). In contrast, 17616 grown on 10 mM
p-hydroxybenzoate did not transport phthalate at any
measurable rate (Fig. 3), demonstrating that the phthalate transport
ability of 17616, like that of DBO1, is inducible. Interestingly, the
knockout mutant 17616-CZ1 took up phthalate at the same rate as the
wild-type strain, 17616 (Fig. 3). The data indicates that although
17616 has a functional phthalate transporter encoded by
ophD, a second phthalate transport system exists. That this
transport system is specific for phthalate is shown by the fact that
17616 grown on p-hydroxybenzoate did not show any ability to
take up phthalate in the transport assay. It is entirely probable that,
despite the fact that 17616 and DBO1 were independently isolated on
different coasts of the United States, they have a common ancestor with
two phthalate transporters and that DBO1 for some reason gained a
frameshift mutation in ophD, resulting in a nonfunctional
protein product.

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FIG. 3.
Phthalate uptake by B. cepacia 17616 (wild
type) following growth on phthalate ( ) or
p-hydroxybenzoate ( ) and by 17616-CZ1 (ophD
knockout mutant) following growth on phthalate ( ). Error bars,
standard deviation from three independent experiments.
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Nucleotide sequence accession number.
The nucleotide sequence
of ophD from B. cepacia ATCC 17616 has been
deposited in the GenBank database under accession no. AF152094.
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
This material is based on work supported by the National Science
Foundation under grants CHE-9810248 and MCB-9257750.
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FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Biotechnology
Center for Agriculture and the Environment, Foran Hall, 59 Dudley Rd., Cook College, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, NJ 08901-8520. Phone:
(732) 932-8165, ext. 320. Fax: (732) 932-0312. E-mail: zylstra{at}aesop.rutgers.edu.
Center for Environmental BioInorganic Chemistry (CEBIC) publication 4.
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Journal of Bacteriology, October 1999, p. 6197-6199, Vol. 181, No. 19
0021-9193/99/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1999, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
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