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Journal of Bacteriology, June 2004, p. 3570-3577, Vol. 186, No. 11
0021-9193/04/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JB.186.11.3570-3577.2004
Copyright © 2004, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138,1 Department of Chemistry, Williams College, Williamstown, Massachusetts 012672
Received 26 January 2004/ Accepted 24 February 2004
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As a means of understanding the pathways responsible for differentiation in this important bacterial genus, over the past 30 years several screening analyses for developmental mutants have been carried out with the model species Streptomyces coelicolor (6, 15, 26, 32, 37). Most recently, an effective method for insertional mutagenesis of S. coelicolor has been developed (12), and this method continues to reveal novel loci involved in various aspects of this organism's growth and development (12, 13, 39). It is noteworthy that the vast majority of the developmental genes identified to date appear to encode proteins with gene-regulatory functions (sigma factors, response regulators, etc.) (reviewed in references 8 and 9). This is despite the fact that there is experimental evidence, at least on rich media such as R2YE medium, that there is an extensive cascade of extracellular signaling molecules that govern the early stages of S. coelicolor differentiation during which the aerial mycelium is formed (31, 44). The identities of the enzymes and/or structural proteins involved in the synthesis of and response to these proposed signals remain to be determined.
Using the insertional mutagenesis protocol (12), we continued the search for genes involved in the fundamental processes of aerial mycelium formation, sporulation, and antibiotic production in S. coelicolor. We discovered three loci not previously implicated in developmental events that encode a likely vitamin B12-dependent methionine synthase, an acyl coenzyme A (CoA) dehydrogenase, and a methyltransferase. The products of these genes are therefore promising targets for future investigations of the metabolic changes that occur in developing colonies and also possibly for delineation of the pathways responsible for biosynthesis of the previously proposed extracellular signaling molecules.
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glkA119 bldM::hyg SCP1 SCP2) was the source of the bldM::hyg allele (27). J1915 (
glkA119 SCP1 SCP2) was the parent of the J2151 strain (18). Strain DB2321 (bldM::hyg SCP1 SCP2) was one of eight identical transformants generated by transformation of M145 with genomic DNA isolated from J2151 (19, 33). S. coelicolor strains were typically propagated on R2YE solid medium (19) at 30°C. Auxotrophy was assessed on solid minimal medium (19), and Escherichia coli-S. coelicolor conjugation experiments were conducted on MS-MgCl2 solid medium (11, 19).
Mutagenesis of S. coelicolor. Insertional mutagenesis of M145 was conducted as described previously by in vitro transposition with Tn5apr of plasmid libraries of S. coelicolor DNA and subsequent introduction of the mutagenized libraries into M145 cells by either protoplast transformation or conjugation from E. coli (12). Transformants and exconjugants were selected by growth on R2YE and MS-MgCl2 media, respectively, flooded with apramycin (25 µg/ml). Colonies were visually screened for colonies with defects in the developmental process, and analysis was continued for the defective strains that also exhibited double-crossover marker replacement with a transposon-disrupted allele (apramycin-resistant, spectinomycin-sensitive colonies). In each case, linkage of the transposon insertion to the developmental mutation was tested by genomic DNA transformation (33). Genomic DNA was prepared from each mutant and used to transform M145 protoplasts (19). For the mutants described here, all of the resulting transformants exhibited phenotypes identical to that of the original mutant (DB2571, 3 transformants; DB5931, 4 transformants; AG1440, 285 transformants; NY247, 34 transformants; NY1868, 19 transformants). The chromosomal locations of the Tn5apr insertions were determined by sequencing the transposon-flanking DNA (12). The deduced chromosomal locations were verified by PCR amplification of the transposon-disrupted alleles.
Complementation of mutants. Complementation plasmids were constructed by using the integrating vector pSET152S (13). To test the complementation of NY1868, the SCO6938 and SCO6939 genes were PCR amplified from M145 genomic DNA with the following primer pairs: 5'-GCTCTAGAGCTGGGCGACGCGTTGCAGGGT-3' and 5'-GGAATTCCAGTGCACAGGTGATGGACCACATC-3' (for SCO6938) and 5'-GCTCTAGAGCCATCAGGTCGGCGATCTTGCTTT-3' and 5'-CGGAATTCCGTGAATTGCGCCGCCACCACTAA-3' (for SCO6939). These genes were cloned between the XbaI and EcoRI sites of pSET152S to obtain pSET152S-SCO6938 and pSET152S-SCO6939. These plasmids were then introduced into NY1868 by conjugation from E. coli ET12567(pUB307) (11), and complementation in spectinomycin-resistant exconjugants was visually assessed after several days of growth on R2YE medium.
The complementation of NY247 was assessed in a similar manner except that primers 5'-GCTCTAGAACCAGGAAGTGCTCCTCGTACATGTC-3' and 5'-GGAATTCTACAGACCTCGTTGCCCTGT-3' were used for construction of pSET152S-SCO2525 and primers 5'-GCTCTAGAACCAGGAAGTGCTCCTCGTACATGTC-3' and 5'-GGAATTCCGAAGACCAGCACGCTCACACCTCCT-3' were used for construction of pSET152S-SCO2525+24.
Scanning electron microscopy. Microscopy was performed with an environmental scanning electron microscope (FEI Quanta 400). Individual colonies were cut from R2YE agar plates and fixed in 4% glutaraldehyde in 0.1 M HEPES buffer (pH 7.2). Colonies were rinsed in HEPES buffer several times, incubated for 1 h in 1% osmium tetroxide, and then rinsed in progressively higher concentrations of ethanol (50 to 100%) (5 min each time). A final rinse for 5 min in hexamethyldisilazane was performed prior to air drying. Colonies were sputter coated with gold-palladium for 30 s (E5200 Polaron SEM autocoating unit). Microscopy was performed under a high vacuum at 10.0 kV.
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FIG. 1. Comparison of wild-type S. coelicolor and five insertion mutants. The wild-type (WT) parent strain, M145, and the mutants were grown on solid R2YE medium plates at 30°C for 2 days (A) and 5 days (B). The mutant phenotypes were caused by transposon disruption of an unknown gene in the case of NY247 and NY1868, transposon disruption of metH in the case of AG1440, transposon disruption of bldM in the case of DB2571, and transposon disruption of bldA in the case of DB5931.
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TABLE 1. Genes identified
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In the case of DB2571, which has a disruption in bldM, we also observed a developmental phenotype different from that reported for a previously constructed knockout strain (J2151) (27). J2151 had a bld phenotype with a complete block in differentiation and a lack of aerial mycelium formation (Fig. 2) (27), like J3146, a bldM derivative of M600 (M. Elliot and M. Buttner, personal communication). In contrast, DB2571 formed an aerial mycelium, but the aerial hyphae did not initiate sporulation (Fig. 2 and data not shown). To confirm this difference, the bldM::hyg allele from J2151 was moved to the M145 background by genomic transformation. The resulting strain, DB2321, could likewise form an aerial mycelium but could not sporulate (Fig. 2 and data not shown). The originally isolated bldM point mutants, also generated in M145, had phenotypes similar to those of DB2571 and DB2321, and the locus was originally designated whiK (37). Thus, although bldM is clearly essential for complete differentiation, the genetic background appears to have a strong influence on the bldM null mutant phenotype.
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FIG. 2. Comparison of bldM alleles in different genetic backgrounds. The strains were grown on R2YE solid medium at 30°C for 4 days. A bldM::hyg allele was previously introduced into the J1915 genetic background to obtain bald strain J2151, which is blocked for aerial mycelium formation (27). Transfer of the bldM::hyg allele to M145 by genomic transformation yielded strain DB2321, which produces an aerial mycelium but fails to sporulate. Strain DB2571, which bears a bldM::Tn5apr allele and was generated in the M145 genetic background, also produces a nonsporulating aerial mycelium.
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FIG. 3. Scanning electron micrographs showing the colony surfaces of wild-type S. coelicolor and a metH mutant. The aerial mycelium of wild-type strain M145 produces abundant spores (A), while the aerial hyphae of metH mutant AG1440 appear to be wrinkled and lack any visible signs of sporulation (B). Colonies were grown on solid R2YE medium for 4 days at 30°C prior to scanning electron microscopy.
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Sequencing revealed disruption of a previously uncharacterized gene in NY1868, SCO6939 (SC1G8.11c), which encodes a protein whose function is unknown (Fig. 4A). The four genes immediately upstream of, and overlapping, SCO6939 (cvnA8 to cvnD8) have been designated a conservon to reflect the conserved clustering and probable operon structure of these genes and the 12 other paralogous clusters in the genome (4), and the cvn9 cluster has recently been implicated in aerial mycelium development in both S. coelicolor and Streptomyces griseus (22). Analysis of the sequence of the SCO6939 product by a BLAST search (2) indicated that its closest homologs were in Streptomyces, including SCO6798 (SC1A2.07) in S. coelicolor (whose corresponding gene is also located immediately downstream of a conservon, cvnA7 to cvnD7).
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FIG. 4. Genomic location of the insertion in mutant NY1868 and complementation of the insertion. (A) The Tn5apr transposon was found to be inserted into the 3' end of the SCO6939 gene in the chromosome of NY1868. This gene and the flanking genes are shown, and the scale at the top indicates the base pair positions of these genes in the S. coelicolor chromosome sequence determined by the Sanger Centre genome sequencing project (4). The Sanger Centre annotation is indicated below each gene. The DNA regions that were PCR amplified, cloned into pSET152S, and used in complementation experiments are indicated at the bottom. (B) The delay in development exhibited by NY1868 was not complemented by a pSET152S derivative containing SCO6939 but was complemented by a construct containing SCO6938. The strains were grown on R2YE solid medium at 30°C for 2 days. WT, wild type.
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Putative methyltransferase is required for proper aerial mycelium formation and colony morphology. Insertion mutant NY247 had a number of abnormalities in morphological differentiation compared to the morphological differentiation of the corresponding wild-type strain (Fig. 1). An aerial mycelium formed at the proper time. However, under low magnification the hyphae appeared to be shorter and/or more matted than those of the wild-type strain (data not shown); these aerial hyphae also developed a lavender pigmentation, in contrast to the progression from white to grey observed in normal sporulating hyphae. These unusual hyphae were capable of forming spores. Another striking phenotype of this mutant was that by 4 days of growth, cracks began to develop throughout the colony surface. Overall, this mutant appeared to be quite similar to a strain that has been described previously, AG24 (12), which also produced short, purple aerial hyphae and cracked colonies.
Sequencing revealed that the insertion in NY247 was different from that in AG24 that was characterized previously (12). In the case of NY247, the transposon disrupted the SCO2525 (SCC121.28c) gene (Fig. 5A). To confirm that this gene is necessary for normal growth and development in S. coelicolor, NY247 was transformed with integrating plasmids containing either SCO2525 DNA alone or a combination of this gene and its downstream open reading frame (SCO2525+24). The multiple defects observed in NY247 were complemented by SCO2525 either alone or in combination with the downstream gene (Fig. 6).
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FIG. 5. Genomic location of the insertion in mutant NY247. The Tn5apr transposon was found to be inserted into gene SCO2525 in the chromosome of NY247. (A) SCO2525 gene and flanking genes. The scale bar at the top indicates the base pair positions in the S. coelicolor genome sequence (4). SCO2525 and SCO2524 have been annotated as unknown hypothetical proteins, while SCO2526 has been annotated as a possible acetyltransferase by the Sanger Centre. The DNA regions that were PCR amplified, cloned into pSET152S, and shown to complement the defects in NY247 are indicated at the bottom. (B) Partial alignment of SCO2525 with human PNMT (hPNMT). Identical residues are shaded, and residues that participate in binding to the SAM cofactor in human PNMT are indicated by asterisks (24). These active site residues are well conserved in the two proteins.
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FIG. 6. Requirement of SCO2525 for proper aerial mycelium formation and colony morphology. The defects apparent in NY247 (upper right) were complemented by introduction of pSET152S derivatives bearing SCO2525 either alone or in combination with the downstream gene (lower half). The strains were grown on R2YE solid medium for 5 days at 30°C. WT, wild type.
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The methionine auxotroph isolated here, AG1440, not only failed to grow vegetatively on minimal medium but on rich medium developed an aerial mycelium that could not sporulate. A methionine requirement for sporulation has also been described previously for a Streptomyces fradiae mutant (42). This strain was not an auxotroph but did require addition of methionine for sporulation to occur. The authors speculated that this mutant was defective in conversion of homocysteine to methionine, the reaction catalyzed by the metH gene product that is disrupted in AG1440, since biosynthetic intermediates upstream of methionine did not allow sporulation.
The discovery that disruption of metH blocks sporulation in aerial hyphae of S. coelicolor provides further evidence that the levels of methionine and/or SAM play an important role in both morphological differentiation and secondary metabolite production. It was recently demonstrated that in both S. coelicolor and Streptomyces lividans increased levels of SAM due to either overexpression of the SAM synthetase gene metK or exogenous addition can inhibit sporulation of aerial mycelia and cause overproduction of actinorhodin (20, 34). The metH mutant AG1440 likewise did not sporulate and appeared to produce increased amounts of blue actinorhodin. SAM is synthesized from methionine and ATP via the action of the SAM synthetase, and in E. coli SAM serves as a corepressor of the methionine biosynthetic genes (43). Repression of SAM synthetase activity by methionine has been demonstrated in Streptomyces hygroscopicus (21). If the regulation of methionine biosynthesis in S. coelicolor is similar to the regulation of methionine biosynthesis in these other organisms, then high intracellular levels of SAM may cause methionine concentrations to be reduced in the cell and vice versa. This would explain how both metK overexpression (high SAM levels) and metH disruption (low methionine levels) could cause the same developmental phenotype. The overproduction of actinorhodin elicited by high SAM concentrations has been explained by increased transcription of the actII-ORF4 gene, whose product activates transcription of the actinorhodin biosynthetic genes (20, 34). It will be interesting to determine if the transcription of actII-ORF4 and other genes that regulate morphological differentiation is likewise altered in this metH mutant.
We also identified a putative methyltransferase, an enzyme that uses SAM as a cofactor to transfer a methyl group to a substrate molecule, which is required for proper colony morphology, aerial mycelium formation, and pigmentation. There is a high degree of conservation between the active-site residues of human PNMT and SCO2525. PNMT catalyzes the final step in the biosynthetic pathway of the hormone adrenaline, in which tyrosine is hydroxylated to form 3,4-dihydroxyphenylalanine (DOPA), DOPA is decarboxylated to give dopamine, dopamine is hydroxylated to give noradrenaline, and finally noradrenaline is N methylated to form adrenaline (29). Does the SCO2525 methyltransferase participate in a similar pathway for production of a metabolite or signal molecule required for proper streptomycete colony growth and development? And if so, what is the enzyme's physiological substrate? The SCO2525 sequence contains, in addition to many of the SAM binding residues, several of the amino acid residues that have been modeled to contact the human PNMT noradrenaline substrate (24). These include residues that interact with the aromatic ring and the amine of noradrenaline (human PNMT F182, N39, and Y222) but not the residues that interact with the ß-hydroxyl group that arises from hydroxylation of the dopamine precursor (human PNMT E219 and D267).
S. coelicolor may produce molecules whose structures are related to the structures of adrenaline pathway intermediates that could serve as substrates for the SCO2525 methyltransferase. Streptomyces species typically are able to synthesize DOPA from tyrosine, and the DOPA is then utilized in melanin pigment biosynthesis (17). While S. coelicolor does not make melanin, its genome does contain the melC2 gene, whose product is a monophenol monooxygenase (tyrosinase) that should be capable of catalyzing DOPA production (35). It is also possible that S. coelicolor possesses a DOPA decarboxylase that could convert DOPA to dopamine. The first bacterial example of an L-DOPA decarboxylase was found in Sorangium cellulosum (28), and the product of the S. coelicolor SCO2782 (SCC105.13) gene is very similar to this myxobacterial enzyme (although BLAST searches have indicated that it is more similar to 2,4-diaminobutyrate decarboxylases and glutamate decarboxylases than to aromatic amino acid decarboxylases [38]). S. coelicolor also possesses a homolog of the S. griseus epoA (SCO6712 or SC4C6.22) gene, which encodes a phenol oxidase that uses DOPA as a substrate to produce an unidentified compound that can stimulate aerial mycelium formation in both S. griseus and S. coelicolor (10). Finally, certain Streptomyces species have been found to produce large amounts of the aromatic compound phenylethylamine, which lacks the ß-hydroxyl and catechol groups of noradrenaline and may be generated from the decarboxylation of phenylalanine (1, 41). Biochemical studies are necessary to determine if SCO2525 can catalyze methyl transfer to phenylethylamine, DOPA, derivatives of DOPA, or some other molecule.
If the SCO2525 gene product is necessary for methylation of a cellular metabolite that participates in colony development, it might be expected that this gene is not expressed during vegetative growth but rather is expressed during aerial mycelium formation. Huang and colleagues performed a global analysis of gene expression of S. coelicolor grown in liquid culture (16). While aerial mycelium formation and sporulation do not occur under these culture conditions, antibiotic production does take place, and some of the genes involved in morphological differentiation were shown to be upregulated upon the switch from primary to secondary metabolism as the culture progressed toward the stationary phase. Notably, expression of the SCO2525 methyltransferase gene increased more than threefold during the stationary phase compared to expression during the logarithmic growth. The timing and magnitude of SCO2525 induction observed were comparable to the timing and magnitude of induction of the actinorhodin biosynthetic genes. The gene encoding the SCO2782 pyridoxal-dependent decarboxylase likewise showed induction during the stationary phase.
As described here, an acyl-CoA dehydrogenase (SCO6938) has been implicated in initiation of aerial mycelium formation and actinorhodin production in S. coelicolor. Acyl-CoA dehydrogenases involved in the catabolism of branched-chain fatty acids have been described as enzymes that are important for generating acyl-CoAs used to synthesize antibiotics in Streptomyces (45). It therefore seems possible that the dehydrogenase identified in this study participates in the formation of acyl-CoA species necessary for synthesis of a secondary metabolite that stimulates aerial mycelium formation and actinorhodin production in S. coelicolor. It has also previously been shown that in S. coelicolor an acyl-CoA synthetase, another enzyme involved in fatty acid catabolism, is necessary for timely actinorhodin production (3).
In the screening analysis described in this paper we identified new genes whose products contribute to the developmental process in S. coelicolor. Not surprisingly, we also identified previously described developmental loci. However, disruption of these previously described loci gave phenotypes that were perceptibly different from those observed previously in other genetic backgrounds, highlighting the importance of considering the background when the role of putative developmental genes is investigated. The new genes described here, unlike many previously described developmental genes, encode proteins with proposed enzymatic activities that may contribute to synthesis of cellular metabolites that promote aerial mycelium formation and subsequent sporulation. The phenotypes of the corresponding mutants were too leaky to assess the position of the new genes in the previously described extracellular signaling cascade that initiates aerial mycelium formation (i.e., none of the mutants exhibited a true aerial mycelium-negative, bld phenotype [44]). However, future biochemical characterization of the encoded enzymes should provide insight into the molecular events that govern the progression of a streptomycetes colony from vegetative growth to aerial mycelium formation and finally culminate in sporulation.
This work was supported by grant MCB-0110090 to R.L. from the National Science Foundation. A.M.G. was supported in part by the Cancer Research Fund of the Damon Runyon-Walter Winchell Foundation Fellowship (grant DRG-1524).
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