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Journal of Bacteriology, August 2003, p. 4930-4937, Vol. 185, No. 16
0021-9193/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JB.185.16.4930-4937.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Haemophilus influenzae Rd Lacks a Stringently Conserved Fatty Acid Biosynthetic Enzyme and Thermal Control of Membrane Lipid Composition
Haihong Wang1 and John E. Cronan1,2*
Departments of Microbiology,1
Biochemistry, University of Illinois, Urbana, Illinois 618012
Received 20 March 2003/
Accepted 10 May 2003

ABSTRACT
The organization of the fatty acid synthetic genes of
Haemophilus influenzae Rd is remarkably similar to that of the paradigm
organism,
Escherichia coli K-12, except that no homologue of
the
E. coli fabF gene is present. This finding is unexpected,
since
fabF is very widely distributed among bacteria and is
thought to be the generic 3-ketoacyl-acyl carrier protein (ACP)
synthase active on long-chain-length substrates. However,
H. influenzae Rd contains a homologue of the
E. coli fabB gene,
which encodes a 3-ketoacyl-ACP synthase required for unsaturated
fatty acid synthesis, and it seemed possible that the
H. influenzae FabB homologue might have acquired the functions of FabF.
E. coli mutants lacking
fabF function are unable to regulate the
compositions of membrane phospholipids in response to growth
temperature. We report in vivo evidence that the enzyme encoded
by the
H. influenzae fabB gene has properties essentially identical
to those of
E. coli FabB and lacks FabF activity. Therefore,
H. influenzae grows without FabF function. Moreover, as predicted
from studies of the
E. coli fabF mutants,
H. influenzae is unable
to change the fatty acid compositions of its membrane phospholipids
with growth temperature. We also demonstrate that the
fabB gene
of
Vibrio cholerae El Tor N16961 does not contain a frameshift
mutation as was previously reported.

INTRODUCTION
The fatty acid synthetic pathway of
Escherichia coli has provided
a very successful model for fatty acid synthesis in bacteria
and plant chloroplasts (
13,
38). Indeed, not only are the sequences
of the
E. coli fatty acid synthetic proteins highly conserved
in other bacteria, but surprisingly, in many cases the arrangements
of the genes encoding the synthetic enzymes are also conserved.
As discussed elsewhere (
7), the major exception to the
E. coli paradigm is in the synthesis of unsaturated fatty acids. In
E. coli, synthesis of the normal fatty acid content requires
three enzymes, the products of the
fabA,
fabB, and
fabF genes.
FabA is the key enzyme of the classic anaerobic pathway of unsaturated
fatty acid synthesis (
2) and introduces the
cis (or
Z) double
bond into a 10-carbon intermediate (Fig.
1). This intermediate
is then elongated by FabB and FabF to form the unsaturated fatty
acids found in the membrane phospholipids (
14,
15,
18) and (at
low growth temperatures) in lipid A (
9). FabB and FabF are 3-ketoacyl-acyl
carrier protein (ACP) synthase (KAS) enzymes (often referred
to as condensing enzymes) that catalyze fatty acid chain elongation
by the addition of two-carbon units originally derived from
acetyl coenzyme A until the ACP-bound chains become 12, 14,
16, or 18 carbons in length and are then substrates for incorporation
into complex lipids (
11). The
fabB gene is defined by a class
of mutants defective in unsaturated fatty acid synthesis and
encodes 3-KAS I (KAS I) (
12,
18,
19). The
E. coli fabF gene
encoding synthase II (KAS II) was found to be defective in a
class of mutants defective in the elongation of palmitoleic
acid (
cis-9-hexadecenoic acid) to
cis-vaccenic acid (
cis-11-octadecenoic
acid), a phenotype expected for a defect in chain elongation
(i.e., KAS) activity (
18-
20). Therefore, FabB and FabF have
distinct and nonoverlapping roles in
E. coli unsaturated fatty
acid synthesis (Fig.
1). FabB is thought to elongate the product
of the FabA gene to the C
12 unsaturated intermediate, whereas
FabF is required to convert the C
16 unsaturated species to the
C
18 species, which is the key reaction in the thermal adaptation
response of
E. coli lipids (
18-
20). Strains of
E. coli having
deletions of either the
fabB or
fabF gene synthesize saturated
fatty acids normally (
15,
18-
20), which indicates that either
KAS I or KAS II can do all of the elongation reactions of the
saturated fatty acid synthetic pathway. These findings suggested
that double mutants deficient in both FabB and FabF would be
defective in overall long-chain fatty acid synthesis, and this
defect has been demonstrated previously (
41). Strains carrying
null mutations in both
fabB and
fabF are nonviable; thus, a
temperature-sensitive
fabB allele was used together with a null
allele of
fabF.
Consistent with the above picture, the
fabA and
fabB genes show
covariance within organisms;
fabB genes are found only in genomes
that contain
fabA (
7). Indeed, in the genomes of the alpha-proteobacteria
and pseudomonads,
fabA and
fabB are adjacent genes and are probably
cotranscribed (which has been demonstrated for
Pseudomonas aeruginosa [
26]). Thus far, the
fabA and
fabB genes are restricted to the
alpha- and gamma-proteobacteria, and it remains a mystery how
most other organisms capable of anaerobic growth (e.g., clostridia)
make unsaturated fatty acids. In contrast, FabF homologues are
found throughout the bacteria and are considered the generic
KAS of long-chain fatty acid synthesis (
7,
23,
31). However,
members of the
Pasteurellaceae of gamma-proteobacteria lack
a FabF homologue recognizable by sequence alignments. Indeed,
each of the complete genomes of
Haemophilus influenzae (
17)
and
Pasteurella multocida (
29) contains only a single FabB/FabF
homologue that appears to be a FabB protein (the sequences are
74% identical with that of
E. coli FabB versus 38% with
E. coli FabF). Moreover, no FabF homologues have yet been found in the
incomplete genome sequences of other
Pasteurellaceae:
Haemophilus ducreyi,
Haemophilus somnus,
Mannheimia haemolytica, and three
serovars of
Actinobacillus actinomycetemcomitans. All of these
organisms have
fabA genes, which together with sequence alignments
argues that the FabB/FabF homologue is a FabB protein. Do the
Pasteurellaceae FabB proteins also do the job of FabF in these
organisms, or is KAS II activity simply not required? The unique
function that FabF plays in
E. coli is its role in the thermal
regulation of fatty acid composition (
14,
16).
E. coli cultures
grown at low temperatures have considerably more unsaturated
fatty acids than cultures grown at higher temperatures.
E. coli strains with
fabF null mutations are viable, although these
strains are unable to regulate their unsaturated fatty acid
contents upon shifts in growth temperature (
28,
37). Therefore,
thermal regulation of fatty acid composition plays a growth
optimization function in free-living bacteria. However, the
Pasteurellaceae grow only in commensal association with warm-blooded
animals and are locked into this ecological niche by their inability
to synthesize several essential metabolites. Therefore, it seems
possible that these organisms have dispensed with the thermal
regulation of fatty acid composition.
However, the situation is not straightforward since other bacteria commensal with warm-blooded animals (e.g., Helicobacter pylori and Neisseria meningitidis) contain fabF genes. Moreover, the sequence distinctions between genes encoding FabB versus those encoding FabF are based only on gross alignments, not on the conservation (or lack of conservation) of residues known to be responsible for the differing substrate specificities that the E. coli enzymes display in vivo. Indeed, despite the fact that we have high-resolution-X-ray crystal structures of both the E. coli FabB and FabF proteins, the structural basis of the differing specificities of the two enzymes remains unclear (27, 31, 32, 34, 35). Therefore, it may be possible for a FabB protein to gain the specificity of FabF by undergoing only a few mutational alterations. In H. influenzae and P. multocida, this seemed a distinct possibility since the FabB proteins of these organisms showed somewhat more divergence from their E. coli homologue than did their covariant FabA partners. The FabBs of Pasteurellaceae were 74% identical to those of E. coli, whereas the FabAs were 80 to 83% identical. Finally, there are KAS-encoding sequences present in other bacteria that are difficult to label as either FabBs or FabFs (7), suggesting that proteins that perform the functions of both FabB and FabF may exist.
For these reasons, we believed that direct analyses were needed to test the inferences of genomic analyses. In this paper, we report the expression of the H. influenzae FabB protein in E. coli, having found that the in vivo properties of this protein are indistinguishable from those of E. coli FabB and distinct from those of E. coli FabF. Therefore, it is clear that H. influenzae lacks a protein having FabF activity. As expected from the E. coli paradigm, H. influenzae was shown to be deficient in the temperature adaptation of its membrane phospholipids in comparison to E. coli. We have also reexamined the report (24) that Vibrio cholerae has a frameshift in fabB, which by analogy with E. coli FabB should result in an inactive protein since the active site would be destroyed. Upon assembly and expression of the gene in E. coli, we found that the encoded protein is fully functional and show that the prior conclusion was due to a sequencing error.

MATERIALS AND METHODS
Bacterial strains, plasmids, and growth media.
The
E. coli strains and plasmids used in this study are listed
in Table
1. Luria-Bertani medium (
30) was used as the rich medium
for
E. coli growth. The phenotypes of
fab strains were assessed
on rich broth (RB) medium (
41). Oleate neutralized with KOH
was added to RB medium at a final concentration of 0.1% and
solubilized by the addition of Brij 58 detergent to a final
concentration of 0.1 to 0.2%. Antibiotics were used at the following
concentrations (in milligrams per liter): 100 for sodium ampicillin,
30 for chloramphenicol, 30 for kanamycin sulfate, and 25 for
tetracycline-HCl. Strains HW1, HW2, and HW3 were constructed
by transduction of strains K1060(pHW1), K1060(pHW2), and CY1049,
respectively, with a P1
vir phage lysate grown on strain MR52
with selection for kanamycin resistance.
H. influenzae Rd strain
KW20 (ATCC 51907) was obtained from the American Type Culture
Collection.
Genetic and recombinant DNA techniques.
Phage P1 transduction was done according to the method of Miller
(
30). Restriction enzymes, T4 DNA ligase, and
Taq polymerase
were obtained from Invitrogen and New England Biolabs. All enzymatic
reactions were carried out according to the manufacturers' specifications.
Plasmid DNA was purified by using a Plasmid Mini Kit from QIAGEN.
Plasmids were introduced by CaCl
2-mediated transformation. DNA
sequencing and the synthesis of oligonucleotides were done at
the University of Illinois Keck Center.
Function of V. cholerae fabB in E. coli.
Two plasmids, pCCX51 and pCER86, which contain overlapping fragments of the fabB gene of V. cholerae, were obtained from the American Type Culture Collection (no clone containing the complete gene was available). We assembled an intact fabB gene from the fragments by using a ClaI site within the fabB sequence that was common to the two gene fragments. Since this ClaI site overlaps a Dam methylation site, plasmid DNA was prepared from strain CY487, which lacks the Dam methylase. The BamHI-ClaI fragment from pCER86 was inserted into pSU21 (1) digested with both enzymes to give pWY11. The EcoRI-HindIII fabB fragment in pWY11 was then inserted into pUC18 digested with both enzymes to give pUWY11. The EcoRI-HindIII fragment of pUWY11 was then cloned between the same sites of pHSG576 (40) to give pH 6W12. A HindIII fragment of p34S-Km encoding a kanamycin resistance determinant was then ligated to HindIII-digested pH 6W12, and the ligation mixture was transformed into strain CY487 (to obtain DNA lacking Dam modification), which resulted in pH 6W12-Km. The HindIII-ClaI fragment of pH 6W12-Km was replaced with the HindIII-ClaI fragment from pCCX51 to give plasmid pHW4, which carries the intact V. cholerae fabB. Plasmid pHW4 was transformed into E. coli fabB(Ts) or fabB(Ts) fabF mutant strains, and the growth of these transformants was scored on RB and RB-oleate plates. Although fabB was oriented such that it could be transcribed from the vector lac promoter, the lac promoter was not induced and the copy number of the plasmid is such that effective titration of the cellular supply of LacI should not occur. Hence, it seems likely that transcription largely originated in the V. cholerae sequences upstream of the coding region.
Phospholipid fatty acid compositions.
The cultures were grown aerobically at 37°C in RB medium overnight. Cultures (10 ml) were harvested and washed three times with RB at room temperature. The phospholipids were extracted for 1 h with 6 ml of chloroform-methanol at 2:1 (vol/vol). Then the supernatant was added to 2 ml of water and 2 ml of chloroform, and the solution was mixed and centrifuged. The top aqueous phase was removed, and an equal volume of 2 M KCl was added, followed by mixing and centrifugation. The top phase was removed, and an equal volume of water was added, followed by mixing and centrifugation. The resulting top phase was removed, and the bottom organic phase was dried under a stream of nitrogen in a fume hood. Collision-induced dissociation electrospray mass spectrometry (CID ES-MS) was performed on a VG Quattro instrument by using the negative ion mode. Samples were dissolved in chloroform-methanol at a dilution of 1/2 (vol/vol). MS results were acquired with a cone voltage of 50 V over the m/z range of 650 to 800 in 1 s. In-source collusion-induced dissociation was achieved by increasing the cone voltage to 150 V, with the quadrupole being scanned from 100 to 400 mass units in 1 s. The values for any cyclopropane fatty acids present were added to the values for the unsaturated species from which they were derived (20).
For analysis of radioactive fatty acids, cultures were grown overnight in the presence of 5 µCi of sodium [1-14C]acetate (52 mCi/mmol; American Radiolabeled Chemicals) per ml. The medium used for H. influenzae Rd was brain heart infusion medium (BHI medium; Difco) supplemented with NADH and hemin. Both untreated and lipid-depleted BHI media were used, with equivalent results. RB medium was used for E. coli K-12. The phospholipids were extracted as described above. The acyl chains were then converted to their methyl esters, which were separated by argentation thin-layer chromatography and autoradiography (20, 41).
Nucleotide sequence accession number. The corrected DNA sequence determined by this study has been communicated to GenBank (accession no. AY290864) and TIGR.

RESULTS
Fatty acid composition of H. influenzae.
To our knowledge, no fatty acid composition has previously been
published for any
H.
influenzae strain; therefore, we have determined
the composition of the chloroform-methanol-extractable lipids
of strain Rd KW20 (the strain of known genome sequence) of this
organism. The primary method used was CID ES-MS, which gave
a very simple fatty acid composition (Fig.
2): 23% tetradecanoic
acid (C
14:0, myristic acid); 17% hexadecanoic acid (C
16:0, palmitic
acid); and 55% monounsaturated hexadecenoic acid (C
16:1, probably
cis-9-hexadecenoic or palmitoleic acid from the
E. coli paradigm)
with a small amount (5%) of octadecanoic acid (C
18:0, stearic
acid) and only traces of a monounsaturated octadecenoic acid,
which is
cis-11-octadecenoic (
cis-vaccenic) acid (see below).
Fragments of higher mass (data not shown) indicate that the
major phospholipids of the organism are phosphatidylethanolamine
and phosphatidylglycerol, as was expected from the genomic sequence
(
17) and analysis of
Haemophilus parainfluenzae (
42). However,
a concern was that the very rich BHI medium generally used for
growth of this organism could contain sources of fatty acids
that could be incorporated into the lipids of the bacterium.
H. influenzae encodes a protein with strong homology to
E. coli FadD (acyl coenzyme A synthetase), so it seemed possible that
H. influenzae might be able to take up fatty acids from the
medium and incorporate them into the membrane phospholipids.
However, the lipids of
H. influenzae cells grown in BHI medium
showed no oleic or linoleic acids, unsaturated fatty acids that
are major components of the lipids of the eucaryotic sources
from which the medium is derived. Although the lack of oleic
and linoleic acids in the bacterial lipids argued against the
medium as a source of
H. influenzae membrane lipid fatty acids,
it remained possible that the putative fatty acid uptake and
incorporation proteins of
H. influenzae discriminate against
these fatty acids (although both acids are readily incorporated
by
E. coli). Therefore, we prepared a lipid-extracted form of
BHI medium by acidification with acetic acid (to decompose any
fatty acid salts present) followed by several extractions with
chloroform. Residual chloroform and much of the acetic acid
were removed by autoclaving. The pH was then adjusted to 7.0
with NaOH. The medium was then supplemented with NAD plus hemin
and sterilized by filtration through a 0.25-µm pore-size
filter. The lipid-extracted medium supported growth well, and
the cells had the same fatty acid composition as cells grown
on the standard BHI medium. An independent means to confirm
that the fatty acids observed were the products of de novo synthesis
rather than incorporation from the medium was provided by biosynthetic
incorporation of a radioactive precursor into lipids.
H. influenzae was grown on the lipid-extracted BHI medium supplemented with
[1-
14C]acetate. The lipids were extracted, and the fatty acid
moieties were then converted to their methyl esters. The radioactive
methyl esters were then separated by argentation thin-layer
chromatography by using a fatty acid methyl ester mixture derived
from the phospholipids of an
E. coli strain defective in cyclopropane
fatty acid synthesis (
10) as the standard. Argentation chromatography
readily discriminates monounsaturated fatty acids on the basis
of the double-bond configuration and position relative to the
ester function (
22,
33). The thin-layer plates were autoradiographed
(Fig.
3) and showed fatty acid components that were consistent
with those of the mass spectroscopic analyses. Moreover, since
the unsaturated fatty acids were cochromatographed with those
of
E. coli, the unsaturated fatty acids were identified as palmitoleic
(
cis-9-hexadecenoic) and
cis-vaccenic (
cis-11-octadecenoic)
acids.
Putative H. influenzae fabB complements E. coli fabB mutants.
The fatty acid composition data suggested that the putative
H. influenzae fabB encodes a protein with properties very similar
to those of
E. coli FabB. That is, the
H. influenzae enzyme
should catalyze a key step in unsaturated fatty acid synthesis
but has little or no ability to catalyze elongation of
cis-9-hexadecenoyl-ACP.
The
H. influenzae fabB gene was cloned into two vectors, pHSG576,
which has the replication origin of pSC101 and thus a low copy
number (1 to 5 copies/cell), and pSU19, a p15a origin plasmid
(

15 copies/cell), to give plasmids pHW2 and pHW1, respectively.
Although in both plasmids
fabB was oriented such that it could
be transcribed from the vector
lac promoter, we did not induce
the
lac promoter, and the copy numbers of these plasmids are
too low to effectively titrate the cellular supply of LacI.
Hence, it seems likely that transcription largely originated
in the
H. influenzae sequences upstream of the coding region.
These plasmids were then introduced into several
E. coli fabB strains by transformation. The
fabB mutations tested included
two point mutant strains, one of which gives temperature-sensitive
growth. All of the resulting transformants grew in the absence
of unsaturated fatty acid supplementation, and growth was identical
to that given by introduction of pCY9, a plasmid carrying the
E. coli fabB gene (Fig.
4). The plasmids were then introduced
into a
fabB(Ts)
fabF strain and plated on medium containing
the unsaturated fatty acid oleate at the nonpermissive temperature
and subsequently tested on media containing or lacking oleate
at 42°C. Growth at 42°C in the presence of oleate indicates
complementation of the
fabF mutation, whereas growth in the
absence of oleate indicates complementation of the
fabB mutation.
The transformants grew at 42°C in the presence or absence
of oleate (data not shown); thus, only the
fabB mutation had
been complemented. However, it remained possible that the putative
H. influenzae Rd FabB protein could replace the functions of
both
E. coli genes. If so, this replacement would be reflected
only in the fatty acid compositions of the complemented strains
(
41). If the
H. influenzae protein possessed FabF activity in
addition to FabB activity, then high levels of
cis-vaccenate
would be synthesized. Low levels of
cis-vaccenate would indicate
that only the
fabB mutation was complemented (
41).
The fatty acid compositions of
fabB(Ts)
fabF E. coli strains
carrying various FabB-containing plasmids were determined by
CID ES-MS (Fig.
5). The complemented strains clearly synthesized
unsaturated fatty acids when they were grown at 42°C, the
nonpermissive temperature (Fig.
5A). Indeed, the level of unsaturated
fatty acid synthesis was similar to that seen upon introduction
of a plasmid that encoded
E. coli FabB (Fig.
5A). Moreover,
despite the differing copy numbers, the two plasmids encoding
H. influenzae Rd FabB gave similar levels of unsaturated fatty
acids (Fig.
5B). Similar results were seen in another
fabB(Ts)
fabF strain, strain JWC275 (data not shown). Since expression
of
H. influenzae FabB from these plasmids did not give the large
increase in
cis-vaccenate expected of FabF function, it seemed
that this KAS enzyme did not possess the ability to perform
the function of FabF as well as that of FabB.
However, in
E. coli, FabF is fully functional only at low growth
temperatures, and since FabF function in the temperature-sensitive
strains could be tested only at 42°C (where the mutant FabB
is inactive), this assay lacked sensitivity. To avoid this complication,
we constructed
fabB fabF strains with an unconditional
fabB mutation (
39). Since strains lacking both FabB and FabF activities
are nonviable (
41), we first introduced plasmids pHW1 and pHW2
into a strain carrying the
fabB mutation and then introduced
a
fabF null mutation by transduction with phage P1. These recombinant
strains (called HW1 and HW2, respectively) grew well over a
wide temperature range, which allowed us to more definitively
test
H. influenzae FabB for FabF function. The two strains showed
no marked increase in
cis-vaccenate synthesis with decreased
growth temperatures (Fig.
6). Although the strain carrying the
plasmid with the higher copy number (Fig.
6A) showed a modest
increase in
cis-vaccenate when it was grown at lower temperatures,
the total
cis-vaccenate content was fourfold lower than that
seen in a wild-type
E. coli strain. Moreover, the strain carrying
the lower-copy-number
H. influenzae fabB plasmid had the opposite
behavior: the level of
cis-vaccenate decreased with decreased
growth temperature (Fig.
6B).
H. influenzae Rd is unable to thermally control membrane lipid composition.
The data we obtained by expression of the
H. influenzae fabB gene in mutant strains of
E. coli indicated that the activity
of the
H. influenzae enzyme did not respond to temperature as
does
E. coli FabF (
16,
18). Since the genomic data argued that
this was the sole gene encoding a long-chain 3-KAS in
H. influenzae,
it seemed likely that
H. influenzae might lack the ability to
regulate its fatty acid composition with growth temperature.
To test this hypothesis, we grew
H. influenzae Rd strain KW20
at various temperatures. The range of temperatures over which
the organism grew in the lipid-depleted medium was surprisingly
broad, given its ecological niche. The extreme temperatures
examined were 18 and 39°C. The organism failed to grow at
42°C, and temperatures below 18°C were not tested. Cells
were isolated from cultures grown for at least five generations
at a given temperature. The lipids were extracted and analyzed
by CID ES-MS, and the fatty acid compositions did not significantly
vary with temperature (Fig.
7). These results indicate that
H. influenzae Rd lacks the ability to change its fatty acid
composition with temperature.
V. cholerae possesses a fully functional fabB gene.
The
V. cholerae El Tor N16961 genome sequence (
24) indicates
that the
fabB gene of this organism contains an authentic frameshift
that blocks synthesis of the last third of the protein. If true,
V. cholerae should be unable to make unsaturated fatty acids
since the protein would lack both of the histidine residues
of the His-His-Cys catalytic triad (
34-
36). We suspected that
the reported frameshift was the result of sequencing errors
for the following reasons. First, it seemed unlikely that
V. cholerae could survive as an unsaturated fatty acid auxotroph
in its native environment, the waters of marine estuaries. Second,
a reading frame downstream of the putative frameshift could
be translated into a protein segment more than 70% identical
to that of the last third of
E. coli FabB. If the gene had truly
undergone a frameshift, there would have been no selection to
preserve this amino acid sequence over the time elapsed since
the divergence of
V. cholerae and
E. coli. Therefore, we assembled
a full-length gene from the plasmid carrying the appropriate
sequenced gene segments that had been deposited in the American
Type Culture Collection. The assembled gene was then expressed
in each of the
E. coli fabB and
fabB fabF strains in Table
1.
All transformed strains grew readily under nonpermissive conditions
in the absence of oleate; thus, the
V. cholerae gene functionally
complemented the
E. coli fabB mutations (data not shown). Moreover,
the fatty acid compositions of the complemented
E. coli strains
showed high levels of unsaturated fatty acids as determined
by CID ES-MS (data not shown). Finally, to test the possibility
that the gene with the frameshift somehow retained activity,
we intentionally truncated the reconstructed gene by inserting
a gene cassette encoding kanamycin resistance into the unique
BssHII site located close to and downstream of the reported
frameshift. This resulted in disruption of the coding sequence
starting 30 bp downstream of the putative frameshift. This disruption
construct was transformed into several
E. coli fabB mutant strains
and was found to completely lack complementation activity (data
not shown). Finally, we sequenced both strands of the assembled
full-length gene. We found that our construct has a G at base
711 of the open reading frame that is missing from the published
TIGR genome sequence. Thus, in our sequence the deduced sequence
of residues 231 to 240 of
V. cholerae FabB is GGGGMVVVEE, a
sequence identical to that found in
E. coli FabB, whereas the
sequence from TIGR gives the sequence GGGGMVVLKS for this segment
of the protein.

DISCUSSION
The
H. influenzae Rd
fabB gene encodes a protein that fully
complements several
E. coli fabB mutant strains, but the protein
is unable to complement the
fabF mutation of a
fabB fabF strain.
Upon expression of
H. influenzae FabB in
E. coli fabB fabF strains,
no increase in
cis-vaccenate content is observed at the nonpermissive
temperature, showing that
H. influenzae FabB does not have the
properties of FabF. Therefore, the straightforward prediction
from study of the genome is confirmed:
H. influenzae Rd has
indeed dispensed with the generic long-chain 3-KAS and retained
the specialized enzyme. The result of the loss of FabF function
is that
H influenzae Rd is completely defective in the thermal
regulation of the fatty acid composition of its membrane phospholipids
and almost totally lacks
cis-vaccenate. Therefore, relative
to
E. coli,
H. influenzae Rd is a natural
fabF mutant. The loss
of this regulatory mechanism seems likely to be due to the lack
of environmental selection, since
H. influenzae exists in nature
only in extremely close association with warm-blooded animals.
This loss also seems likely to be the case in the other species
of the family
Pasteurellacae, since sequences encoding FabB
but not FabF are found in these genomes and the sole unsaturated
fatty acid reported in these cells is palmitoleic acid (
3-
6,
42). Indeed, species within the
Pasteurellaceae cannot be distinguished
by their fatty acid compositions (
6). Except for
fabF, the genes
required for fatty acid synthesis in
E. coli are completely
conserved in the completed genomes available for
Pasteurellaceae (
H. influenzae Rd and
P. multocida PM70). Indeed, even the
fadR regulatory gene required for full expression of
fabA and
fabB in
E. coli (
8,
25) is conserved in these genomes, whereas the
alpha-proteobacteria and pseudomonads lack a FadR homologue.
The arrangements of the genes within the
H. influenzae and
P. multocida fab gene clusters, which encode most of the fatty
acid synthetic proteins, are extremely similar to those found
in
E. coli. The order of the genes,
fabH fabD fabG acpP, is
the same as that seen in
E. coli, but rather than finding a
fabF gene downstream of
acpP as in
E. coli,
H. influenzae and
P. multocida have a gene encoding a putative membrane transporter.
Therefore, it seems that
fabF was deleted from the genomes of
the
Pasteurellaceae during the shrinking of the ancestral genome
that accompanied adoption of a commensal lifestyle (
E. coli and
H. influenzae are thought to have diverged about 680 million
years ago). It should be noted that the
Pasteurellaceae also
lack a second highly conserved gene of lipid synthesis, the
cfa gene that encodes the enzyme catalyzing cyclopropane fatty
acid synthesis (
21). None of the genomic sequences available
for this group of organisms contains a
cfa gene homologue, and
our lipid analyses (Fig.
2) as well as those available in the
literature (
3-
6,
42) show that no cyclopropane fatty acids are
present. The synthesis of cyclopropane fatty acids is thought
to protect cells from environmental stresses and has been shown
to allow
E. coli to better survive shifts to low-pH environments
(
10). Therefore, the
Pasteurellaceae lack two distinct mechanisms
used by organisms to adapt their membrane lipids to environmental
changes, indicating that the constant environment of the commensal
lifestyle of these organisms has removed the necessity to select
for retention (or reacquisition) of the
fabF and
cfa genes.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This work was supported by National Institutes of Health grant
AI15650.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of Microbiology, University of Illinois, B103 Chemical and Life Sciences Laboratory, 601 S. Goodwin Ave., Urbana, IL 61801. Phone: (217) 333-7919. Fax: (217) 244-6697. E-mail:
j-cronan{at}life.uiuc.edu.


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Journal of Bacteriology, August 2003, p. 4930-4937, Vol. 185, No. 16
0021-9193/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JB.185.16.4930-4937.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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