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Journal of Bacteriology, July 2004, p. 4528-4534, Vol. 186, No. 14
0021-9193/04/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JB.186.14.4528-4534.2004
Copyright © 2004, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
The Bacillus subtilis yqjI Gene Encodes the NADP+-Dependent 6-P-Gluconate Dehydrogenase in the Pentose Phosphate Pathway
Nicola Zamboni,1 Eliane Fischer,1 Dietmar Laudert,2 Stéphane Aymerich,3 Hans-Peter Hohmann,2 and Uwe Sauer1*
Institute of Biotechnology, ETH Zürich, Zürich,1
DSM Nutritional Products Inc., Basel, Switzerland,2
Génétique Moléculaire et Cellulaire, INRA-CNRS (URA1925), Thiverval-Grignon, France3
Received 1 February 2004/
Accepted 15 April 2004

ABSTRACT
Despite the importance of the oxidative pentose phosphate (PP)
pathway as a major source of reducing power and metabolic intermediates
for biosynthetic processes, almost no direct genetic or biochemical
evidence is available for
Bacillus subtilis. Using a combination
of knockout mutations in known and putative genes of the oxidative
PP pathway and
13C-labeling experiments, we demonstrated that
yqjI encodes the NADP
+-dependent 6-P-gluconate dehydrogenase,
as was hypothesized previously from sequence similarities. Moreover,
YqjI was the predominant isoenzyme during glucose and gluconate
catabolism, and its role in the oxidative PP pathway could not
be played by either of two homologues, GntZ and YqeC. This conclusion
is in contrast to the generally held view that GntZ is the relevant
isoform; hence, we propose a new designation for
yqjI,
gndA,
the monocistronic gene encoding the principal 6-P-gluconate
dehydrogenase. Although we demonstrated the NAD
+-dependent 6-P-gluconate
dehydrogenase activity of GntZ,
gntZ mutants exhibited no detectable
phenotype on glucose, and GntZ did not contribute to PP pathway
fluxes during growth on glucose. Since
gntZ mutants grew normally
on gluconate, the functional role of GntZ remains obscure, as
does the role of the third homologue, YqeC. Knockout of the
glucose-6-P dehydrogenase-encoding
zwf gene was primarily compensated
for by increased glycolytic fluxes, but about 5% of the catabolic
flux was rerouted through the gluconate bypass with glucose
dehydrogenase as the key enzyme.

INTRODUCTION
The carbon-rearranging transaldolase and transketolase reactions
in the nonoxidative branch of the pentose phosphate (PP) pathway
constitute the exclusive route for catabolism of pentoses. During
growth on hexoses, the PP pathway becomes a major source of
pentose phosphates for nucleotide biosynthesis and of the anabolic
redox cofactor NADPH, the reducing equivalent for biosynthesis
reactions (
21,
22). For this purpose, two consecutive NADP
+-dependent
dehydrogenase reactions convert glucose-6-P into ribulose-5-P
in the oxidative branch of the PP pathway. Because of its important
role in central metabolism, the PP pathway has been investigated
in great biochemical and genetic detail (
18,
19), and more recently
it has also been investigated from a metabolic systems perspective
(
5,
26,
41) in the gram-negative model bacterium
Escherichia coli.
The PP pathway in the gram-positive model bacterium Bacillus subtilis, in contrast, has received very little attention, and most evidence has been indirectly inferred by comparison to E. coli (17). In particular, no biochemical data are available on the enzymes of the oxidative PP pathway, glucose-6-P dehydrogenase and 6-P-gluconate dehydrogenase, and there is no genetic evidence for the gene(s) encoding the 6-P-gluconate dehydrogenase. Based on sequence similarity, the distal gntZ gene of the gluconate operon was classified as a 6-P-gluconate dehydrogenase gene (38). Despite the presence of three homologues in the genome (35) and the homology-based suggestion that B. subtilis contains two 6-P-gluconate dehydrogenases with different cofactor specificities (47), gntZ has been considered the relevant gene (4, 35). Additionally, a P-gluconolactonase may be involved in the oxidative PP pathway of B. subtilis, but no gene is known to date and the reaction may also proceed by spontaneous hydrolysis (30) (Fig. 1).
In recent years, there has been a resurgence of interest in
the oxidative PP pathway that has been driven largely by the
ability to estimate the metabolic flux through this pathway
from novel
13C-labeling experiments (
8,
40,
49,
50). For glucose-grown
B. subtilis, such flux analyses have revealed highly variable
fluxes through the oxidative PP pathway, ranging from an almost
complete absence during slow growth under nitrogen limitation
(
12) or when glucose and intermediates of the tricarboxylic
acid cycle are cometabolized (
11) to PP pathway fluxes that
may exceed the glycolytic flux under phosphate limitation (
12)
or in certain riboflavin-producing strains (
42). Generally,
the flux through the PP pathway does not appear to be regulated
by the cellular demand for NADPH and/or pentoses in
B. subtilis but rather is determined by the kinetic properties of the enzymes
at the glucose-6-P branch point (
11), as has been shown for
Corynebacterium glutamicum (
33,
34). During standard batch growth
in minimal medium, around 30 to 40% of the consumed glucose
is catabolized through the oxidative PP pathway flux in
B. subtilis (
52), which is more than the amount catabolized in
E. coli (
16)
or other bacilli (
9).
To identify the physiological function of enzymes in the oxidative PP pathway, we constructed B. subtilis knockout mutants with mutations in the zwf gene encoding the glucose-6-P dehydrogenase and in three homologues of the 6-P-gluconate dehydrogenase gene (gntZ, yqjI, and yqeC). In addition to physiological characterization and in vitro enzyme assays, metabolic flux ratio analysis by gas chromatography (GC)-mass spectrometry (MS) was used to determine the in vivo role of these enzymes by quantifying the ratio of glycolysis to oxidative PP pathway flux at the glucose-6-P branch point by performing [1-13C]glucose experiments (15).

MATERIALS AND METHODS
Bacterial strains, growth conditions, and media.
The
B. subtilis wild-type strain used, a close relative of strain
168, and mutants derived from it are listed in Table
1. Chromosomal
genes were inactivated by replacement with neomycin (
27) and
spectinomycin resistance cassettes (
23) or by using the integrative
vector pMUTIN that bears an erythromycin resistance marker (
48).
Both
zwf and
yqjI were removed from the start codon to the stop
codon, and bp 45 to 1391 of the
gntZ open reading frame (bp
1 to 1404) was removed. For all physiological and
13C-labeling
experiments, frozen stocks were used to inoculate 5 ml of Luria-Bertani
broth (
24) that contained neomycin (final concentration, 5 mg
liter
1), spectinomycin (final concentration, 100 mg liter
1),
or erythromycin (final concentration, 0.5 mg liter
1).
After 8 h of shaking at 37°C, 250-µl portions of precultures
were used to inoculate 50-ml portions of M9 minimal medium (
24)
with 10 g of glucose liter
1 in 500-ml baffled shake flasks.
After about 12 h, 250 µl was withdrawn from each flask
and used to inoculate 50 ml of M9 medium with 5 g of glucose
liter
1 for an actual growth experiment. All cultures
were incubated at 37°C on a gyratory shaker at 250 rpm.
For
13C-labeling experiments, glucose was added as the 1-
13C-labeled
isotope isomer (Euriso-Top, Gif-sur-Yvette, France). Leucine
and methionine were each added to M9 medium cultures at a final
concentration of 50 mg liter
1.
Analytical techniques.
Cell growth was monitored by measuring the optical density with
a Klett-Summerson colorimeter (Bel-Art, Pequannock, N.J.) with
a green filter (520 to 580 nm). The glucose and acetate concentrations
in the culture supernatant were determined enzymatically with
commercially available kits (Beckman, Palo Alto, Calif.), and
the acetoin concentrations were determined by GC analysis by
using a Carbowax MD-10 column (Macherey-Nagel). Specific consumption
and production rates were calculated as described previously
(
44) by using an experimentally determined correlation curve
for cellular dry weight and Klett units.
To prepare crude cell extracts for the 6-P-gluconate dehydrogenase activity assay, cultures were grown in 50 ml of either M9 or VY medium containing 25 g of veal infusion broth liter1, 5 g of yeast extract liter1, and 15 g of glucose liter1. Cultures were centrifuged at 3,500 x g for 10 min, washed once with 0.9% (wt/vol) NaCl-10 mM MgSO4, and frozen for future use or resuspended in assay buffer containing 100 mM triethanolamine (pH 7.6), 4 mM MgCl2, 4 mM phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride, and 1 mM dithiothreitol (3). Cells were disrupted by passage through a French press (SLM Aminco, SLM Instruments) and centrifuged at 14,000 x g and 4°C for 30 min. In vitro 6-P-gluconate dehydrogenase activity in the crude cell extracts was assayed within 1 h at a 1:10 dilution. Background activity was determined at 340 nm for a few minutes after addition of either NAD+ or NADP+ (
= 6.2 mM1 cm1) to a final concentration of 1 mM. The reaction assay then was started with 6-P-gluconate at a final concentration of 1 mM and was monitored for at least 3 min. The protein concentrations in the samples were determined colorimetrically (Beckman).
Determination of metabolic flux ratios.
Culture aliquots (2 ml) were harvested at about 200 Klett units (equivalent to an optical density at 600 nm of 1.5 to 2.0) by centrifugation at 14,500 x g for 5 min, washed at least twice with double-distilled H2O, and hydrolyzed in 1.5 ml of 6 M HCl at 105°C for 24 h in sealed microtubes. The hydrolysate was dried at 60°C and derivatized for 1 h at 85°C in a solution containing 50 µl of dimethylformamide and 50 µl of N-(tert-butyldimethylsilyl)-N-methyl-trifluoroacetamide (15). Derivatized amino acids were measured with a series 8000 GC combined with an MD 800 mass spectrometer (Fisons Instruments, Beverly, Mass.) as described previously (15). The mass distributions in the amino acids were corrected for naturally occurring stable isotopes to obtain the mass distribution vectors (MDV), which, in turn, were used for metabolic flux ratio analysis to determine the split ratio between the fluxes through glycolysis and the PP pathway at the glucose-6-P branch point (15, 52). In particular, the following equation was used to determined the fraction (f) of serine derived through the PP pathway (15):
 | (1) |
where MDV
(C-C-C) and MDV
(C-C-13C) are the mass
distributions of natural and 3-
13C-labeled C
3 fragments, respectively,
and Serine
(1-3) is the MDV of the C
3 backbone of serine. Since
MDV are vectors,
f represents the least-squares solution. To
correct for the nonproportional withdrawal of
13C label in dihydroxyacetone-P
for the biosynthesis of phosphatidylglycerol, Serine
(1-3) in
equation
1 was replaced by the MDV of the triose-P pool [Triose-P
(1-3)]
estimated by using the following equation:
 | (2) |
where
v1 is the flux from dihydroxyacetone-P to glycerol (in this
case exclusively for phosphatidylglycerol biosynthesis) and
v2 is the flux from glyceraldehyde-3-P to 1,3-di-P-glycerate.
At a growth rate of 0.4 h
1 and a biomass yield of 0.3
g/g (as seen for the
zwf gntZ mutant),
v1 is only about 2% of
v2 (
10). This correction is more important for METAFoR analysis
of organisms that secrete glycerol into the medium.

RESULTS
Knockout of glucose-6-P dehydrogenase.
As the first enzyme of the oxidative PP pathway, the
zwf-encoded
6-P-glucose dehydrogenase plays a pivotal role in the branching
between glycolysis and the PP pathway during glucose catabolism.
To quantify the intracellular carbon flux distribution in the
absence of a functional oxidative PP pathway, we deleted
zwf in
B. subtilis wild-type 1012 by partial replacement with a
spectinomycin resistance cassette; successful deletion was verified
by the complete absence of in vitro 6-P-glucose dehydrogenase
activity (data not shown). Since analysis of the surrounding
chromosomal sequence indicated that
zwf is monocistronic, polar
effects of the deletion are unlikely. Similar to the results
obtained for
E. coli (
41), the maximum specific growth rate
of the
zwf mutant was about 35% lower than that of the parent
on glucose (Fig.
2A).
The metabolic impact of the mutation was then detected by metabolic
flux ratio analysis by GC-MS (
15) with batch cultures grown
on 100% [1-
13C]glucose. This isotopic tracer is optimally suited
to determine the flux splitting between glycolysis and the oxidative
PP pathway (
7,
16); glycolytic breakdown of [1-
13C]glucose yields
50% unlabeled triose-P and 50% [3-
13C]triose-P, while catabolism
via the oxidative PP pathway yields unlabeled trioses exclusively,
because the label is lost as CO
2 in the P-gluconate dehydrogenase
reaction. Specifically, we determined the split ratio between
glycolysis and the PP pathway from the fractional labeling of
serine (
15), whose C
3 is derived from the C
3 of the triose-P
pool (
32). A value of 0% serine derived through the PP pathway
corresponded to 100% catabolic flux through glycolysis, as was
expected for the
zwf mutant. The relative oxidative PP pathway
flux in the mutant, however, was 9% serine derived through the
PP pathway, compared to 33% serine in the parent (Fig.
2B).
Since no glucose-6-P dehydrogenase isoenzymes or
zwf homologues
are known and since no in vitro activity was detected in mutant
extracts (data not shown), this residual flux could potentially
be catalyzed by the direct oxidation of glucose to gluconate
via the
gdh-encoded glucose dehydrogenase or homologues of this
enzyme (Fig.
1) (
17,
29,
35). To test this possibility, we blocked
the potential bypass by introducing a gluconate kinase (
gntK)
mutation. In the
zwf gntK double mutant, the glycolysis-to-PP
pathway split ratio was further reduced to 5% ± 1%, revealing
the small but not negligible contribution of the gluconate bypass
to glucose catabolism in the
zwf mutant.
The calculated remaining fraction of about 5% serine derived through the PP pathway in the zwf gntK mutant was based on a higher fraction of unlabeled serine than was expected from exclusive breakdown of [1-13C]glucose via glycolysis (15). Unexpectedly, MS analysis of glycerol, another triose-3-P-derived compound in the total-cell hydrolysates, revealed a higher fraction of 13C label than the fraction in serine (Table 2). Since glycerol is synthesized from dihydroxyacetone-P and serine is synthesized from glyceraldehyde-3-P, the two triose-3-P pools were apparently not fully equilibrated via the rapid triose-3-P isomerase reaction. Because the exchange of trioses via isomerase is a rapid reaction, this is not overly surprising because the net glycolytic flux is from dihydroxyacetone-P to glycerol-3-P. As a consequence, the PP pathway contribution to serine synthesis was slightly overestimated because glycolysis produces [3-13C]dihydroxyacetone-P and unlabeled glyceraldehyde-3-P from [1-13C]glucose. To correct for the small withdrawal of [3-13C]dihydroxyacetone-P for glycerol biosynthesis that was not seen in serine, we considered the net carbon fluxes from dihydroxyacetone-P to glycerol-3-P and from glyceraldehyde-3-P into glycolysis. Since glycerol-3-P is required only for the biosynthesis of phosphatidylglycerol in B. subtilis (14, 43), this biosynthetic flux was very small (10), and the corrected values for serine derived through the PP pathway were only 1% lower than the values shown in Fig. 2B. The remaining small, but not negligible fraction of 4% serine derived through the PP pathway in the zwf gntK mutant may thus be explained by (i) minor secretion of glycerol into the medium and/or (ii) the gluconate bypass if another, GntK-independent kinase phosphorylates gluconate.
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TABLE 2. Mass distributions in serine and glycerol of whole-cell hydrolysates from wild-type B. subtilis and the zwf gntK mutant during growth on [1-13C]glucose
|
Knockout of 6-P-gluconate dehydrogenase.
In contrast to the first reaction of the oxidative PP pathway,
the second major reaction, catalyzed by 6-P-gluconate dehydrogenase,
cannot be bypassed via the gluconate pathway. The major isoform
of this enzyme is generally considered to be encoded by
gntZ,
the distal gene in the catabolic gluconate operon that is weakly
induced in the presence of glucose (
4,
35,
51). A second homologue
is encoded by the monocistronic
yqjI gene that is adjacent to
zwf. Based on sequence homology, YqjI has been suggested to
encode an NADP
+-dependent 6-P-gluconate dehydrogenase (
47),
but this function is not generally recognized (
4,
35,
45). To
identify the catabolic roles of both homologues, we grew single
gntZ and
yqjI mutants in minimal medium with glucose as the
sole carbon source. While the
gntZ mutant had no detectable
physiological phenotype (Fig.
3A), the maximum specific growth
rate of the
yqjI mutant was significantly lower than that of
the parent (Fig.
3A), suggesting that YqjI is the major isoenzyme
of the 6-P-gluconate dehydrogenase in
B. subtilis. When it was
first cultivated in minimal medium with glucose, the
yqjI mutant
exhibited an unusually long lag phase (at least 24 h), and this
lag phase was seen again upon subcultivation in complex media.
On glucose plates, few
yqjI clones appeared after about 24 h,
but we were unable to isolate stable suppressor mutants. Thus,
it appears that an adaptation (or an unstable suppressor) is
necessary to enable growth of the mutant on glucose as the sole
carbon source, and such adapted
yqjI cultures are indicated
below with an asterisk.
Consistent with the growth phenotype, disruption of
gntZ had
only a marginal effect on the flux partitioning at the glucose-6-P
branch point, but
yqjI* cultures did not use the PP pathway
at all (Fig.
3B). Notably, both the maximum growth rate and
the glycolysis-to-PP pathway split ratio of the
yqjI* knockout
were comparable to those of the
zwf gntK complete PP pathway
knockout mutant (compare Fig.
2B and
3B); hence, the undefined
adaptation did not involve increased PP pathway fluxes. Combining
both mutations in the
yqjI* gntZ double-knockout mutant had
no further detectable impact on either the phenotype or the
PP pathway flux (Fig.
3), providing further evidence for the
conclusion that
yqjI encodes the major 6-P-gluconate dehydrogenase
during growth on glucose. Since GntZ apparently has no function
during growth on glucose, we investigated the phenotype on gluconate
plates. Like the results for growth on glucose, the
gntZ mutant
and the glucose-adapted
yqjI* mutant were indistinguishable
from the wild type. The unadapted
yqjI mutant, in contrast,
formed only very small colonies within 24 h, and there were
no rapidly growing clones such as those seen on glucose plates.
This residual growth of a
yqjI mutant was independent of GntZ
because the
yqjI gntZ double knockout was indistinguishable
from the single
yqjI deletion. Thus, YqjI is also the major
6-P-gluconate dehydrogenase isoenzyme during growth on gluconate.
The slow growth of the
yqjI gntZ mutant on gluconate may be
explained either by catabolic flux to riboses catalyzed by YqeC
or by catabolic flux to glucose via the reverse gluconate bypass
(Fig.
1).
Next, we wondered whether both isoenzymes were differentially expressed and to what extent they contributed to NADPH generation, the major function of the oxidative PP pathway. Therefore, we assayed 6-P-gluconate dehydrogenase activity in crude cell extracts of B. subtilis mutants grown in complex and minimal media (Fig. 4). Unlike most bacteria, wild-type B. subtilis had a high activity with either NADP+ or NAD+ as the electrons acceptor in complex media (Fig. 4A). In minimal medium with glucose, however, the NAD+-dependent activity was low (Fig. 4B). Under both conditions, knockout of gntZ and knockout of yqjI eliminated the NAD+- and NADP+-dependent 6-P-gluconate dehydrogenase activities, respectively. Thus, YqjI appears to be the exclusive NADPH-producing isoform in B. subtilis, as was hypothesized previously based on sequence comparison (47). While GntZ appears to be the exclusive NADH-producing isoform in the wild type, the significant NAD+-dependent 6-P-gluconate dehydrogenase activity in the yqjI* gntZ double mutant in the presence of glucose was probably related to YqeC (Fig. 4B). Although NAD+-dependent activity was clearly present in the yqjI mutant, it could not compensate for the yqjI mutation during growth on glucose. The necessary adaptation of yqjI* cultures was not related to altered regulation or activity of GntZ or YqeC because the growth rates of yqjI* gntZ and yqjI* mutants on glucose were identical (Fig. 3A) and the oxidative PP pathway flux was virtually zero during growth on glucose (Fig. 3B).
Multispecies alignment of 6-P-gluconate dehydrogenases.
The presence of three 6-P-gluconate dehydrogenases with different
cofactor specificities and hence potentially different functions
in the PP pathway of
B. subtilis motivated us to investigate
the distribution of orthologues in microbes. A conserved arginine
residue (R-34 in YqjI) is generally necessary to bind and stabilize
the 2'-phosphate of NADP
+ in the NADP
+-dependent 6-P-gluconate
dehydrogenase homologues (
1,
47). In NAD
+-dependent GntZ-like
isoforms, this arginine residue is replaced by a tyrosine (Fig.
5) that is specific for NAD
+-dependent isoforms (
25). Among
the presently available prokaryotic and eukaryotic protein sequences
in the GenBank database (
2), only two other tyrosine-34 orthologues
were identified; they were found in
Bacillus licheniformis and
Oceanobacillus iheyensis, and the latter also contains a YqjI
homologue (Fig.
5). Unlike the findings for
B. subtilis, we
detected only the NADP
+-dependent 6-P-gluconate dehydrogenase
activity in crude cell extracts of
O. iheyensis (data not shown).
B. subtilis YqeC is the prototype of a third class of less conserved
homologues (Fig.
5). In contrast to the YqjI and GntZ classes,
the conserved basic residue at position 33 is replaced by an
acidic aspartate. The YqeC homologues are about one-third shorter
than members of the other two classes, and they appear to lack
key residues for binding to the phosphate group of 6-P-gluconate
at the C terminus. Mainly for this reason, they were previously
hypothesized to encode 3-hydroxyacid dehydrogenases (
25,
47).
More recently, however, it was demonstrated that the YqeC orthologue
of
Methylobacillus flagellatus is essential for the NAD
+-dependent
oxidation of 6-P-gluconate (
6). Further evidence for the 6-P-gluconate
dehydrogenase function of YqeC homologues comes from
Pseudomonas species, in which a 6-P-gluconate dehydrogenase is active and
neither YqjI nor GntZ is present but YqeC homologues are encoded
in the genome (Table
3).
B. subtilis YqeC also probably has
a 6-P-gluconate dehydrogenase function because 6-P-gluconate
dehydrogenase activity was detected in the
yqjI* gntZ mutant
during growth on glucose alone but not in complex media (Fig.
4). The absence of PP pathway flux in
yqjI* cultures (Fig.
3B)
demonstrates, however, that YqeC does not participate in the
PP pathway of
B. subtilis under the conditions tested here.
This conclusion was confirmed by the lack of a detectable phenotype
and an unaltered glycolysis-to-PP pathway split ratio in a
B. subtilis yqeC mutant (data not shown).
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TABLE 3. Occurrence of B. subtilis Gnd, GntZ, and YqeC homologues with at least 40% identity in selected microorganismsa
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DISCUSSION
The two major functions of the oxidative PP pathway are considered
to be supply of biosynthetic precursors and supply of the anabolic
redox cofactor NADPH (
21). As in
E. coli (
41), neither function
was essential for
B. subtilis during growth on glucose because
mutants with mutations in key enzymes without oxidative PP pathway
fluxes grew rapidly, although the growth was about one-third
slower than that of the parent. Using isotopic tracer experiments,
we demonstrated that glycolysis was the primary pathway for
glucose catabolism in glucose-6-P dehydrogenase mutants but
that about 5% of the catabolic flux was catalyzed through the
gluconate bypass that is typically found in pseudomonads (
31).
A similar in vivo flux observation was made with
E. coli zwf mutants (
15,
41), although in vitro gluconate bypass activities
were described to be below the level of detection in a related
E. coli strain (
53). Knockout of the second major oxidative
PP pathway enzyme, 6-P-gluconate dehydrogenase, was exclusively
compensated for by flux rerouting through glycolysis, which
is in contrast to what happens in
E. coli, in which the rerouting
occurs to a large extent via the Entner-Doudoroff pathway (
28).
In
B. subtilis, we could exclude the possibility that there
was a functional Entner-Doudoroff pathway under the conditions
investigated because we never observed [1-
13C]alanine in experiments
with [1-
13C]glucose (
15), even in the
yqjI mutant. Although
B. subtilis contains a homologue of the second pathway enzyme,
2-keto-3-deoxygluconate-6-P aldolase (
37), the absence of a
6-P-gluconate dehydratase homologue and our results suggest
that the pathway does not exist in
B. subtilis.
Based on 13C-labeling data from isogenic knockouts, we demonstrated that the major 6-P-gluconate dehydrogenase isoenzyme is encoded by the yqjI gene in B. subtilis. This conclusion contrasts with the generally held perception of the oxidative PP pathway in B. subtilis (4, 35, 45); hence, we propose a new designation for yqjI, gndA, the monocistronic gene encoding the principal 6-P-gluconate dehydrogenase. For growth on glucose, YqjI was important, but an unidentified adaptation permitted growth without an active oxidative PP pathway. The second isoform, GntZ, could not substitute for a knockout of yqjI, possibly because of different enzyme kinetics. Although in vitro enzyme data demonstrated the presence of GntZ on complex media, GntZ was seemingly not involved in the necessary adaptation of yqjI* cultures for growth on glucose because the oxidative PP pathway flux was at the level of detection. Moreover, a double yqjI* gntZ mutant had essentially the same phenotype as the yqjI* mutant. A role for the third, yqeC-encoded 6-P-gluconate dehydrogenase is unlikely because the PP pathway flux was at or below the detection limit in yqjI* cultures. Confirming previous observations (20, 45), GntZ was apparently not relevant even during gluconate catabolism because a gntZ mutant exhibited no phenotype and GntZ could not substitute for a knockout of yqjI that severely impaired growth on this substrate. Thus, the metabolic functions of GntZ and YqeC remain obscure.
By using in vitro enzyme assays with crude cell extracts of B. subtilis knockout mutants, the yqjI-encoded 6-P-gluconate dehydrogenase was shown to be NADP+ dependent, as was hypothesized previously from sequence comparisons (47), while the gntZ-encoded dehydrogenase was NAD+ dependent. Gram-negative genomes usually encode a single NADP+-dependent 6-P-gluconate dehydrogenase of the Gnd (or YqjI) class (Table 3). Pseudomonads and some bacilli (Fig. 5) appear to be an exception to this and rely exclusively on the truncated YqeC class. From the sequence, the preferred YqeC cofactor remains unclear because the acidic aspartate at position 33 favors binding of NAD+, while the basic arginine at position 34 stabilizes the phosphate group of NADP+, assuming that the same three-dimensional fold is adopted by the enzymes of the three classes and that the positions of residues 33 and 34 are the same in these proteins (Fig. 5). Indeed, the 6-P-gluconate dehydrogenase of Pseudomonas fluorescens was shown to be active with either NAD+ and NADP+ (46), and the described NAD+-dependent activity in Streptomyces and heterofermentative lactic acid bacteria (13, 36) probably originated from the YqeC homologue (Table 3). In contrast to pseudomonads, gram-positive bacteria exhibit a much wider spectrum of combinations. While many gram-positive bacteria contain a member of the NADP+-dependent Gnd (YqjI) class, most gram-positive organisms contain a member of the truncated YqeC class. At this time B. subtilis is unique because it contains a homologue of all three classes. Here, we demonstrated NAD+- and NADP+-dependent activities encoded by the gntZ and yqjI genes of B. subtilis, respectively. Furthermore, the first evidence that there is a yqeC-encoded NAD+-dependent activity in B. subtilis comes from the significant residual 6-P-gluconate dehydrogenase activity in the yqjI* gntZ mutant (Fig. 4B). In principle, the coexistence of NAD+- and NADP+-dependent isoenzymes would enable flexible adjustment of NADP+ or NAD+ reduction in the PP pathway to the overall metabolic requirement of the cell, a function that is performed in E. coli by transhydrogenases (41) that have not been identified in B. subtilis yet.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We thank Simon Tännler and Tobias Fuhrer for technical
assistance.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Institute of Biotechnology, ETH Zürich, Zürich, Switzerland. Phone: 41-1-633 3672. Fax: 41-1-633 1051. E-mail:
sauer{at}biotech.biol.ethz.ch.


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Journal of Bacteriology, July 2004, p. 4528-4534, Vol. 186, No. 14
0021-9193/04/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JB.186.14.4528-4534.2004
Copyright © 2004, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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