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Journal of Bacteriology, February 2004, p. 875-879, Vol. 186, No. 3
0021-9193/04/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JB.186.3.875-879.2004
Copyright © 2004, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Department of Biological Sciences, Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, Louisiana 70803
Received 28 August 2003/ Accepted 29 October 2003
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A glucose-tolerant strain of Synechocystis sp., PCC 6803 (15), was used as a parental control and as the DNA recipient strain in the present study. Cells of both the control strain and the derivative photosynthetic mutants were maintained under photoheterotrophic growth conditions at 30°C with a light intensity of 20 µmol of photons m-2 s-1 (fluorescent light) in liquid BG-11 growth medium (ATCC medium 616) supplemented with 10 mM TES [N-tris(hydroxymethyl)methyl-2-aminoethanesulfonic acid]-KOH (pH 8.2), 5 mM glucose, and 10 µM DCMU [N-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-N'-dimethylurea]. Liquid cultures were bubbled continuously with air. For autotrophic cell culture, the glucose and DCMU were omitted. For cultures grown on plates, the BG-11 medium was supplemented with 1.5% agar and 0.3% sodium thiosulfate. When appropriate, kanamycin was included in the media at a final concentration of 10 µg/ml.
A Synechocystis genomic library which had been subjected to in vitro transposon mutagenesis and then amplified in Escherichia coli (1, 2) was kindly provided by D. Bhaya at the Carnegie Institute. This DNA was used to transform parental Synechocystis cells which are naturally competent and which exhibit high rates of homologous recombination (15). After selection on kanamycin-containing photoheterotrophic growth medium, followed by multiple transfers to allow sorting out, ca. 10,000 individual kanamycin-resistant cell lines were screened for the ability to grow photoautotrophically on agar plates. Those cell lines that repeatedly failed to grow photoautotrophically but which did grow photoheterotrophically (17 cell lines) were identified as putative photosynthetic mutants and selected for further analysis.
Southern blot analysis indicated that all 17 cell lines exhibited single transposon insertions (data not shown). The location of the transposon insertion was identified either by direct genomic sequencing (1) or by inverse PCR (8). Since the Synechocystis genome has been sequenced (11), the identification of the genes disrupted by the transposon mutagenesis is facile. Growth rates in liquid culture under both photoheterotrophic and photoautotrophic conditions at 30°C with a light intensity of 20 µmol of photons m-2 s-1 were monitored for 10 days. The cell sizes of the control strain and the mutants were similar (±10%) as determined by differential interference contrast microscopy. O2 evolution activity during mid-log-phase growth was assayed by oxygen polarography with 1 mM bicarbonate as an electron acceptor.
We have determined the transposon insertion sites for 14 out of 17 mutants which we have isolated (Table 1). For three of the mutants, both direct genomic sequencing and inverse PCR failed repeatedly. Among the 14 identified mutants, 13 mutants each had a single insertion within the protein-encoding region, resulting in a premature truncation of the encoded protein. The 4YE2 mutant, unlike the other 13 mutants, had the single insertion in the 3' noncoding region of the psbB gene. It should also be noted that for three genes, menB, menE, and ccmK4, multiple independent transposon insertions were observed (Table 1).
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TABLE 1. Photosynthetic mutants identified in this study
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In addition to these components, insertional inactivation of the me gene (slr0721), which encodes the malic enzyme (decarboxylating malate oxidoreductase, EC 1.1.1.39), leads to a loss of optimal photoautotrophy. This enzyme catalyzes the oxidative decarboxylation of malate into pyruvate. It is unclear, at this time, why inactivation of this gene would cause the loss of optimal photoautotrophic growth. At least two hypotheses could explain this result. First, the malic enzyme could participate in the carbon-concentrating mechanism of Synechocystis. Recently Yang et al. (16) have hypothesized that a C4-like pathway may operate in Synechocystis involving phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase and the malic enzyme. Their hypothesis was based on results obtained from metabolic flux analysis of the metabolism of 13C-labeled glucose under photoheterotrophic and mixotrophic conditions. Second, it is possible that the malic enzyme is involved in photorespiratory glycolate metabolism (6). Further studies testing these (and other) possibilities are ongoing.
The growth characteristics of the mutants 4YD9, 3ZA12, 4BA2, and CG4, which bear transposon insertions in the hypothetical genes slr1125, slr1306, sll0804, and sll1495, respectively, were further characterized. Figure 1 shows the growth curves which were obtained for these mutants in liquid culture under either photoheterotrophic (Fig. 1A) or photoautotrophic (Fig. 1B) conditions. Under photoheterotrophic conditions all of the mutants grew at rates very similar to that observed for the control strain. Under photoautotrophic conditions, however, all of the mutants exhibited significantly retarded growth rates compared to the control. The control strain grew about 4 times faster than the mutants 4BA2 and 3ZA12 and 12 times faster than the mutant 4YD9.
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FIG. 1. Growth of the mutants CG4, 4YD9, 4BA2, and 3ZA12 in comparison to the parental control Synechocystis strain. (A) Photoheterotrophic growth. (B) Photoautotrophic growth. Symbols: , control strain; , CG4; , 4YD9; , 4BA2; , 3ZA12. These data are the averages of three experiments; standard deviations are represented by vertical bars. Please note that in some instances the error is smaller than the symbols used.
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We have also measured the whole-chain electron transport rates (H2O to CO2) in these mutants and the control strain. For most of the mutants, only modest decreases in electron transport were observed (70 to 80% of wild-type rates). In all cases, the observed rates were somewhat lower for the photoautotrophically grown cells than for those grown photoheterotrophically. Apparently, the lesions which engender the loss of optimal photoautotrophy in these mutants do not dramatically affect the ability to carry out whole-chain electron transport. Other systems such as cofactor assembly-stability, membrane assembly, photosynthate utilization, etc., must be affected in these mutants, leading to the loss of optimal photoautotrophic growth. The 4YD9 mutant, however, did exhibit significant loss of whole-chain electron transport activity, evolving oxygen at about 35% of the control rate when grown under photoautotrophic conditions. Additionally, this mutant exhibited an olive-green color which was significantly different from the brilliant blue-green coloration of the control strain and other mutant strains. Whole-cell absorption spectra for this mutant and the control strain at constant cell numbers are shown in Fig. 2. The mutant cells contain less than one-half of the chlorophyll a and no detectable phycobiloproteins. We hypothesize that this mutant may possess a defect in thylakoid membrane assembly-stability. A more complete description of the defects present in this mutant will appear elsewhere.
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FIG. 2. Absorption spectrum of the control Synechocystis strain (solid line) and the mutant 4YD9 (dashed line). The control strain has been offset for clarity.
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FIG. 3. Structural features of the four hypothetical genes slr1125 (A), slr1306 (B), slr0804 (C), and slr1495 (D) disrupted in the mutants 4YD9, 3ZA12, 4BA2, and CG4, respectively. Open reading frames in the vicinity of the targeted gene are shown, and the broken line below a gene indicates the direction of transcription. Putative functional domains are indicated by solid arrows. Tn, transposon; DAO, D-amino acid oxidase domain; FAD, flavin adenine dinucleotide binding domain; ATP/GTP, nucleotide-binding domain. Domains and/or motif assignments were obtained at http://www.pedant.gsf.de or, after BLAST searches, at http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov.
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The mutant 4BA2 contains a transposon insertion in the sll0804 gene (Fig. 3C), which encodes a hypothetical protein of 453 amino acids. The protein contains an ATP-GTP-binding-site motif A (P loop) and has some similarities (up to 49% identical amino acids) to several other hypothetical cyanobacterial proteins including Alr0904 from Nostoc and Sll0503 from Synechocystis. This protein is predicted to be localized to the inner membrane by PSORT-B and is predicted to contain two transmembrane
-helices in the C-terminal third of the protein. Additionally, it contains two strongly predicted coiled-coil motifs (http://www.ch.embnet.org [12]).
The mutant CG4 bears a transposon insertion in the sll1495 gene (Fig. 3D), which encodes a hypothetical protein of 397 amino acids. The Sll1495 protein appears to be a dehydrogenase and contains both a D-amino acid oxidase (DAO)-binding motif and a flavin adenine dinucleotide-binding domain. The protein has a high level of similarity (70% identical amino acids) to Alr2826 from Nostoc sp. Additionally, it shares strong similarity (50% identity) to a number of proteins which have been identified as possible transcriptional regulators, including a putative
-aminobutyrate DTP gene cluster repressor from Salmonella sp. and the putative transcriptional regulator VCA0147 from Vibrio cholerae. This raises the interesting possibility that the Sll1495 protein may be a redox-active transcriptional regulator. No direct evidence supporting this hypothesis, however, is available at this time.
The sll1495 gene is flanked by sll1496 (mannose-1-phosphate guanyltransferase) and a valyl tRNA. These three genes could be organized in a possible operon. The insertion of the transposon in the sll1495 gene could give rise to polar effects with respect to the sll1496 gene, yielding the observed phenotype. To test this possibility, insertional mutagenesis was used to introduce a kanamycin resistance cassette in the noncoding DNA located between the sll1495 and sll1496 genes. The phenotype of this insertional mutant was identical to that of the control strain (data not shown). This indicated that the transposon insertion into the sll1495 gene was responsible for the observed phenotype of the CG4 mutant and that polar effects with respect to sll1496 were not occurring.
Transposon mutagenesis has proved to be a useful tool in the identification of genes required for photoautotrophy. In most genomes which have been sequenced, 30 to 40% of the identified genes have no known function. The identification of a substantive phenotype for such hypothetical genes is a required first step toward the elucidation of their role in cellular metabolism. While the specific functions of the hypothetical genes which we have identified in this study have not, at this time, been determined, it is clear that they are required for optimal photoautotrophic, but not photoheterotrophic, growth. We hypothesize that these genes may function in the regulation, assembly, and/or turnover of the proteins involved in the photosynthetic process.
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