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Journal of Bacteriology, October 2002, p. 5513-5517, Vol. 184, No. 19
0021-9193/02/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JB.184.19.5513-5517.2002
Copyright © 2002, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
The Escherichia coli metD Locus Encodes an ABC Transporter Which Includes Abc (MetN), YaeE (MetI), and YaeC (MetQ)
Christophe Merlin, Gregory Gardiner, Sylvain Durand, and Millicent Masters*
University of Edinburgh, Institute for Cell and Molecular Biology, Edinburgh EH9 3JR, Scotland
Received 4 March 2002/
Accepted 2 July 2002

ABSTRACT
We report that the genes
abc,
yaeC, and
yaeE comprise
metD,
an
Escherichia coli locus encoding a
DL-methionine uptake system.
MetD is an ABC transporter with Abc the ATPase, YaeE the permease,
and YaeC the likely substrate binding protein. Expression of
these genes is regulated by
L-methionine and MetJ, a common
repressor of the methionine regulon. We propose to rename
abc,
yaeE, and
yaeC as
metN,
metI, and
metQ, respectively.

TEXT
Although most open reading frames (ORFs) on the
Escherichia coli chromosome have now been identified, the functions of the
proteins encoded by nearly half of them are either uncertain
or completely unknown. In addition, several hundred approximately
mapped loci have not been matched with ORFs (
1). As part of
a program to discover the functions of
E. coli genes, we have
been trying to match these loci with their corresponding ORFs.
We present our analysis of the
metD locus here.
MetD is a methionine transport system. Early biochemical and kinetic studies demonstrated that methionine uptake in E. coli involves at least two specific transporters: the high-affinity MetD and low-affinity MetP transport systems (10, 11). Both are regulated by the internal methionine pool size and, for MetD, MetJ-mediated repression has been inferred (12, 14). D-Methionine transport is both ATP dependent and osmotic shock sensitive, the latter suggesting the involvement of periplasmic protein(s) (13). These attributes are characteristic of ABC transporters. Although both MetD and MetP import L-methionine, MetD, but not MetP, can also import D-methionine, which can be converted to L-methionine in the cell. Competition experiments suggest that MetD possesses a distinct substrate-binding site for each stereoisomer (14). A D-methionine transporter with the same uptake properties has also been described in Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium and has also been suggested to be an ABC transporter (6). Both metD loci map to corresponding chromosomal locations; genetic studies of Salmonella metD mutants suggest four complementation groups (6, 8). Figure 1 shows a model for methionine transport based on these observations.
Kadner and Watson (
11) mapped the
metD locus to between 3.6
and 5.6 min. The extensive later use of
metD to map other loci
has allowed us to refine the position of
metD as between
proS (4.7 min) and
rrnH (4.8 min) (
3,
7). We analyzed this region
by using the GenBank sequence database (accession no.
U00096)
and found six genes of unknown function:
yaeBCDEF and
abc (Fig.
2A). According to the SwissProt web site (
http://www.expasy.ch/sprot/),
YaeB displays no defining features. YaeD has been recently characterized
as GmhB, a
D,
D-heptose 1,7-bisphosphate phosphatase (
15). YaeC
and YaeF are annotated as hypothetical lipoproteins of the PS00013
Prosite family (
http://ca.expasy.org/prosite/) with a recognizable
lipobox in positions 19 to 23 and 17 to 21, respectively. YaeC
is included in the TIGRFAM lipoprotein family "TIGR00363." At
http://www.tigr.org/TIGRFAMs/index.shtml, sequence alignments
with other lipoproteins are available. Abc and YaeE display
features of an ABC transporter ATPase and permease, respectively.
The Abc protein is a member of the PS00211 Prosite family of
ABC ATPases, and its sequence possesses the canonical ABC ATPase
motifs: a Walker A motif, a linker peptide (or ABC signature),
and a Walker B motif at positions 38 to 46, 141 to 149, and
161 to 167, respectively. YaeE, a member of the PS00402 Prosite
family of ABC permeases, contains five potential transmembrane
domains at positions 21 to 41, 58 to 78, 81 to 101, 152 to 172,
and 186 to 206. It has previously been suggested, based on bioinformatic
analysis, that Abc, YaeE, and YaeC form an ABC transporter of
unknown specificity (
21;
www.biology.ucsd.edu/
ipaulsen/transport/ecoli.html).
ABC transporters require three activities combined in one or
more proteins: a permease, an ATPase, and a substrate-binding
domain (
4,
9). The last of these vary greatly, since they differ
in substrate specificity, and, not surprisingly, none of the
unknown genes in the
proS-rrnH region shares similarity with
a known substrate-binding protein. Because both
yaeC and
yaeF are close to
abc and
yaeE, we surmised that one of them might
be the
D-methionine-binding protein and examined their co-occurrence
with
yaeE and
abc. When the YaeC protein sequence is compared
to the entire bacterial database by BlastP (
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov:80/BLAST/),
all of its orthologs are encoded by genes associated with an
abc-like gene and a
yaeE-like gene. Figure
2B shows the genetic
organization of the
yaeC neighboring sequences among the best
BLAST hits. Although
yaeC,
yaeE, and
abc genes are always clustered,
the colocalization of
yaeB and
yaeD with
abc and
yaeE is limited
to the

subdivision of the
Enterobacteriaceae, while
yaeF does
not colocalize with these genes other than in
E. coli. The clustering
of
yaeC,
yaeE, and
abc suggests a common function; the existence
of a MetJ-binding sequence upstream of
abc (
16) suggests that
the common function could be the uptake of
D-methionine.
The six candidate genes for the metD locus, abc, yaeC, yaeB, yaeD, yaeE, and yaeF, were independently replaced by a selectable and removable reporter cassette (FLKP2: FRT-lacZ-aph-Plac-FRT) (18) in strain EDCM367 (Table 1) to create six replacement strains. The gene deletion-replacement procedure has been extensively described previously (18). The sequences of the primers used can be obtained from the authors. Each replacement strain was made auxotrophic for methionine by P1 transduction (17) of the metE::Tn10 marker from CAG18491 (Table 1). The FLKP2 cassettes were removed by the Flp recombinase provided on plasmid pCP20, as described previously (5, 18), where required to minimize possible polar effects caused by interruption of metD.
Each MetE
- deletant was tested for growth in VB (
22) minimal
medium with 1% glucose (MM) supplemented with either
L- or
D-methionine.
All deletants were able to grow in the presence of
L-methionine,
since MetP transport remains active. However, when
D-methionine
is the sole methionine source, only strains with an active MetD
transport system are expected to grow. We found that of the
deletants, the
abc,
yaeE, and
yaeC strains were unable to grow
normally when dependent on
D-methionine (Fig.
3). For
abc and
yaeE deletion strains, growth was greatly impaired at 20 µg
of
D-methionine per ml, although it did not entirely cease.
The
yaeC strain exhibited reduced growth at this methionine
concentration, but failed to grow at all at 2 µg of
D-methionine
per ml. The reference strain EDCM367
metE::Tn
10 grew at the
same reduced rate at both 20 and 2 µg/ml. Thus, it appears
that these three genes behave as part of the
D-methionine transport
system, while the neighboring genes
yaeB,
yaeD, and
yaeF do
not. We propose to rename the
metD genes
abc,
yaeE, and
yaeC as
metN,
metI, and
metQ, respectively, with the deduced functions
of ATPase,
D-methionine permease, and
D-methionine-binding protein
of the
D-methionine ABC transporter. We suggest that
metD be
retained as the name of the locus.
The
proS-rrnH region was originally annotated with a single
consensus Met box (5'-AGACGTCT-3') between
abc and
yaeD, suggesting
possible transcriptional regulation by the repressor MetJ (GenBank
accession no.
U00096). MetJ binding requires at least two Met
boxes; a second box at this site has been proposed in a recent
model for MetJ repressor binding site recognition (
16). If MetJ
represses expression of the
metD genes, transcription of the
genes should increase upon deprivation of its corepressor, methionine.
To test this, we measured the expression of all six genes by
using the EDCM367 derivatives in which the ORFs are replaced
by the FLKP2 cassette (containing a
lacZ reporter gene). For
the replacements
abc

FLKP2,
yaeC

FLKP2, and
yaeE

FLKP2, a 1.5-
to 2.5-fold increase in expression followed removal of
L-methionine
(i.e., in the presence of
D-methionine or in the absence of
supplement). For the other three replacements, gene expression
remained at the same level under all growth conditions (Table
2).
In order to test whether this expression is MetJ regulated,
the reporter cassettes
abc

FLKP2,
yaeC

FLKP2, and
yaeE

FLKP2
were P1 transduced to the
metJ strain JAHK9 and to its parent,
ZIP514 (Table
1), and the progeny were assayed for ß-galactosidase
activity. (The
metJ mutation appears to adversely affect growth
or survival, since overnight cultures require many hours to
achieve the parental growth rate [data not shown].) In the MetJ
+ strains (ZIP514 derivatives),
abc,
yaeC, and
yaeE exhibited
a 1.5- to 2.5-fold increase in activity when deprived of
L-methionine
as in the EDCM367 derivatives. In the
metJ strains (JAHK9 derivatives),
levels of expression were five- to sevenfold higher than were
the
L-methionine repressed levels in the MetJ
+ controls (Table
2). Repression by
L-methionine is, as expected, no longer seen
in the
metJ strains. In addition, expression levels in the MetJ
- strains were increased two- to fourfold compared to the derepressed
levels in the MetJ
+ controls. Because the
metJ mutation is deleterious,
we measured the expression of
yaeB

FLKP2, which is not affected
by
L-methionine level. Its expression was increased 1.5-fold
in the MetJ
- strains, accounting for a part, but not all, of
the increase in the expression of the
metD genes in these strains.
MetN is the putative ATPase and MetI is the membrane-spanning region of the MetD ABC transporter. We would thus expect the third component, MetQ, to contain the substrate-binding domain. The D-methionine concentration dependence of the
yaeC mutant is consistent with this. As described above, YaeC is a putative lipoprotein. In gram-positive bacteria, where substrate-binding proteins are anchored outside the single membrane by a lipid tail, lipoprotein substrate-binding proteins are common. Since they have not been previously reported in gram-negative bacteria, further study to determine whether YaeC is a membrane-anchored lipoprotein would be worthwhile.
The three metD genes are regulated by the MetJ repressor. Although the presence of a good putative MetJ binding site upstream of abc suggests that its action is direct, further molecular study would be needed to confirm the binding of the repressor in this particular location. Kadner and Winkler have shown (12, 14) that the level of MetD transporter is regulated by the intracellular methionine pool, with the possible involvement of MetJ. Consistent with these observations, we show here that the expression of abc (metN), yaeE (metI), and yaeC (metQ) is increased in the absence of methionine in a MetJ-dependent fashion. Kadner also suggested that MetD contains two distinct substrate-binding domainsone for each methionine stereoisomer. Although YaeC seems to bind D-methionine, what binds L-methionine in the MetD transport system remains an open question. YaeC itself might contain two distinct binding sitesone for each stereoisomer. Alternatively, the binding protein may be separately encoded, either in this region (i.e., yaeB) or elsewhere. Further analysis of L-methionine transport will first require the identification of the ORFs that constitute metP. We are attempting to do this now.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This work was supported by a Project grant from the British
Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC) to M.M. and a Vacation
scholarship from the Society of General Microbiology to G.G.
S.D. was supported by a short-term ERASMUS fellowship.
We thank Mary Berlyn for bringing MetD to our attention.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: University of Edinburgh, Institute of Cell and Molecular Biology, Darwin Building, King's Buildings, Mayfield Rd., Edinburgh EH9 3JR, Scotland. Phone: 44 (0)131 650 5355. Fax: 44 (0)131 650 8650. E-mail:
M.Masters{at}ed.ac.uk.


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Journal of Bacteriology, October 2002, p. 5513-5517, Vol. 184, No. 19
0021-9193/02/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JB.184.19.5513-5517.2002
Copyright © 2002, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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