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Journal of Bacteriology, February 2004, p. 1191-1196, Vol. 186, No. 4
0021-9193/04/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JB.186.4.1191-1196.2004
Copyright © 2004, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Physical and Enzymological Interaction of Bacillus subtilis Proteins Required for De Novo Pyridoxal 5'-Phosphate Biosynthesis
Boris R. Belitsky*
Department of Molecular Biology and Microbiology, Tufts University School of Medicine, Boston, Massachusetts 02111
Received 31 July 2003/
Accepted 5 October 2003

ABSTRACT
Bacillus subtilis synthesizes pyridoxal 5'-phosphate, the active
form of vitamin B
6, by a poorly characterized pathway involving
the
yaaD and
yaaE genes. The
pdxS (
yaaD) mutant was confirmed
to be a strict B
6 auxotroph, but the
pdxT (
yaaE) mutant turned
out to be a conditional auxotroph depending on the availability
of ammonium in the growth medium. The PdxS and PdxT proteins
copurified during affinity chromatography and apparently form
a complex that has glutaminase activity. PdxS and PdxT appear
to encode the synthase and glutaminase subunits, respectively,
of a glutamine amidotransferase of as-yet-unknown specificity
essential for B
6 biosynthesis.

INTRODUCTION
Pyridoxal 5'-phosphate (PLP), the biologically active form of
vitamin B
6, is an essential cofactor for numerous metabolic
enzymes (
17). Two pathways of de novo PLP synthesis are known.
The PdxA/PdxJ pathway, comprising six dedicated steps, has been
extensively characterized in
Escherichia coli (
9,
15). Genes
encoding similar enzymes can be found in the genomes of many
other gram-negative bacteria. A second pathway of PLP synthesis,
PDX1/PDX2, has been recently discovered in fungi through identification
of two proteins (PDX1/SNZ/SOR1/PYROA and PDX2/SNO) that are
required for PLP synthesis (
2,
10,
11,
27,
31). Genes coding
for similar proteins are highly conserved in plants, sponges,
plasmodia, archaea, and many bacteria (
12,
25,
36,
37).
The adjacent Bacillus subtilis genes, yaaD and yaaE, homologous to PDX1 and PDX2, respectively, have recently been shown to be required for PLP biosynthesis (33). We present evidence here that YaaD (renamed PdxS) and YaaE (renamed PdxT) form a glutamine amidotransferase of as-yet-unknown specificity required for the pathway of de novo PLP synthesis.

Construction and characterization of the pdxS null mutant.
To create a deletion mutation within the
pdxS gene, pBB1181
(Fig.
1) was cut with AatII and HindIII and religated after
filling in the ends. The actual deletion endpoint in the resulting
plasmid, pBB1185 (Fig.
1), as determined by sequencing, turned
out to be beyond the HindIII site; the sequence removed was
606 bp long and did not alter the reading frame of
pdxS. pBB1218,
a truncated version of pBB1185 (Fig.
1), was used to replace
the wild-type
pdxS gene of
B. subtilis strain SMY with the
pdxS
allele, resulting in strain BB2253. Methods for plasmid isolation,
agarose and polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, use of restriction
and DNA modification enzymes, DNA ligation, PCR, and electroporation
of
E. coli JM107 cells were as described by Sambrook et al.
(
35). Growth of
B. subtilis cells, transformation by plasmid
DNA, and procedures for gene replacement were as described previously
(
4,
5).
Strain BB2253 (
pdxS) lost the ability to grow in minimal medium,
even if the medium was enriched with amino acids; growth was
fully restored by addition of 0.2 µM pyridoxal (PL). This
result is consistent with the phenotype of the
pdxS insertion
mutant (
33) and the documented role in PLP biosynthesis of fungal
pdxS homologs (
2,
10,
27,
31). Pyridoxine (PN) was 1,000-fold
less effective in restoration of BB2253 growth, indicating that
B. subtilis cells utilize exogenous PN for PLP biosynthesis
weakly or not at all (growth in the presence of PN may be due
to PL contamination or to oxidation of PN to PL). Pyridoxamine
was several times less effective than PL (probably due to the
specificity of the pyridoxal kinase required for phosphorylation
of all simple B
6 vitamers [
45] or the corresponding transport
system).

Construction and characterization of the pdxT null mutant.
A deletion-insertion mutation within the
pdxT gene was created
by replacing the 135-bp SphI-EcoRI fragment of pBB1213 (Fig.
1) with a 1.4-kb SphI-EcoRI
ble cassette determining resistance
to phleomycin, excised from pJPM136 (
5). pBB1217 was introduced
into
B. subtilis SMY, and strain BB2256 (
pdxT::
ble) was isolated
as described previously (
5).
In contrast to strain BB2253 (pdxS), strain BB2256 (pdxT) behaved in minimal medium as a conditional PL auxotroph depending on ammonium availability. Virtually no growth was observed in glucose-glutamate or glucose-1 mM NH4Cl medium, but growth at almost the wild-type rate was observed in the presence of 60 to 120 mM NH4Cl (Fig. 2); intermediate growth was observed in glucose-0.2% (37.4 mM) NH4Cl medium. Growth of strain BB2256 was restored to the wild-type rate by addition of PL. Similarly, less severe effects of fungal PDX2 gene defects on PLP synthesis, compared with what is seen with PDX1 defects, have been described previously (11, 31, 40). In fact, the B6 dependency of the Aspergillus nidulans PYROB (similar to PDX2; GenBank accession number AAK50016) mutant was also rescued by a high concentration of ammonium (1). The partial B6 auxotrophy of pdxT mutants and the poor capacity of B. subtilis cells to utilize PN explain the ability of 50 µM PN to relieve the growth defect of the pdxT mutant but not that of the pdxS mutant (33).
A
Bacillus circulans mutant defective in the
yaaE (
pdxT) gene
has been described recently. Though the function of the gene
was not determined, a conditional growth defect dependent on
ammonium availability was also observed for this mutant (
41).
The authors of this earlier study tried to relieve the growth
defect by adding PN but failed in accord with the very poor
ability of
B. subtilis cells to utilize PN.
A strain (BB2254) carrying a deletion of parts of both pdxS and pdxT was constructed as described above by using pBB1190, which lacks the 898-bp fragment of pBB1181 starting at the AatII site (Fig. 1). BB2254 had the same strict PL auxotrophy as a single pdxS null mutant. No pseudorevertants of such mutants have been found. Because both pdxS and pdxST deletions cause a strict requirement for B6 vitamers, we conclude that only one pathway of de novo PLP synthesis, which cannot be easily bypassed due to mutations in other genes, operates in B. subtilis.
B. subtilis mutants requiring PN, PL, or pyridoxamine for growth have been isolated previously (30) but have not been characterized genetically. The B6 requirement of most such mutants was partially or completely alleviated by isoleucine or isoleucine plus low concentrations of PN (30). In our work, no effect on the growth of the pdxS or pdxT mutants was observed when isoleucine (500 µg/ml), with or without a suboptimal amount of PN, was added (data not shown), suggesting that our mutants are different from the ones isolated previously.
The fact that PL is utilized preferentially and PN only very poorly correlates well with an apparent lack in B. subtilis of the E. coli pdxH-like gene and the corresponding pyridoxine 5'-phosphate oxidase activity (29, 30) required for conversion of PN to PLP. No genes likely to encode pyridoxine 5'-phosphate oxidase can be found in most bacteria harboring the pdxS- and pdxT-like genes (data not shown). It is likely that all such bacteria will prove to depend on PL if their de novo pathway of PLP synthesis becomes inactivated. In accord with this conclusion, several lactic acid bacteria whose genomes lack pdxH and the genes for de novo PLP synthesis were shown to use PL preferentially (38).

A mixture of PdxS and PdxT has glutaminase activity.
PdxT and other PDX2-like proteins are similar to some glutamine
amidotransferases (
47), consistent with the observation that
in some fungi and bacteria the nitrogen group of PLP originates
in glutamine (
42). In
E. coli and some other bacteria, the nitrogen
group of PLP comes from glutamate (
42) through the SerC-catalyzed
transamination step (
21); in
B. subtilis, SerC aminotransferase
is not involved in B
6 synthesis (
34).
The sequence of pdxT suggests that this gene is unlikely to encode a full glutamine amidotransferase by itself. It is more likely to encode a glutaminase subunit of a heteromultimeric glutamine amidotransferase responsible for hydrolysis of glutamine to glutamate and ammonia and for channeling the latter to the corresponding synthase subunit. The location of pdxS adjacent to pdxT makes pdxS the most likely candidate to encode the synthase subunit of this glutamine amidotransferase of a novel, as-yet-unknown specificity. The phenotypes of pdxS and pdxT null mutants (strict and conditional requirements for B6 vitamers, respectively) are entirely consistent with this suggestion as (i) most glutamine amidotransferases are able to utilize ammonium, though with low efficiency, as a substitute for glutamine, (ii) the glutaminase subunit is completely dispensable when ammonium is the substrate, and (iii) inactivation of glutaminase subunits of other glutamine amidotransferases often leads to conditional, ammonium-dependent phenotypes of corresponding mutants (46).
In the absence of precise knowledge of the reaction catalyzed by the putative PdxST complex, we tested a known partial activity of glutamine amidotransferases, the glutaminase reaction which frequently occurs in the absence of other substrates (46). A His6-tagged version of B. subtilis PdxS (the predicted molecular mass of the unmodified protein is 31.6 kDa) was overproduced in E. coli LMG194 (ara) cells (14) containing pBB1261 (Fig. 1) after addition of 0.2% L-arabinose to Luria broth cultures at an A600 of 0.25 to 0.4 and incubation for 4 h. The cells were pelleted, washed in 50 mM Tris-Cl (pH 8.0)-5% glycerol, and disrupted by sonication in 20 mM Tris-Cl (pH 7.9)-500 mM NaCl-5 mM imidazole-5% glycerol-1 mM phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride-0.1% Nonidet P-40. The supernatant was clarified by low-speed centrifugation, and PdxS was purified to virtual homogeneity on a Ni2+ affinity column (HisBind resin; Novagen) as described by the manufacturer, using 485 mM imidazole for elution (Fig. 3, lane 1). A His6-tagged version of B. subtilis PdxT (the predicted molecular mass of the unmodified protein is 21.4 kDa) was purified from E. coli (pBB1256) cells in a similar manner using 385 mM imidazole for elution (Fig. 3, lane 3). The modified proteins, when expressed in B. subtilis cells, were active and could complement null mutations in the corresponding chromosomal genes (data not shown).
Glutaminase activity was detected in a coupled reaction with
bovine glutamate dehydrogenase as the increase in optical density
at 363 nm due to reduction of 3-acetylpyridine adenine dinucleotide
(APAD), which accompanies conversion of glutamine-derived glutamate
to 2-ketoglutarate. Samples were assayed at room temperature
in 1 ml of 50 mM Tris-Cl (pH 8.2)-10 mM glutamine-0.6 mM APAD
containing 1 U of bovine glutamate dehydrogenase (Sigma). The
use of APAD, an analog of NAD, shifts the unfavorable equilibrium
of the glutamate dehydrogenase reaction (
44). The data were
corrected for very low reduction of APAD in reactions lacking
Pdx proteins. Protein concentration was determined using a Bio-Rad
protein assay with bovine serum albumin as a standard.
Neither PdxT (Fig. 4, curve 1) nor PdxS (data not shown) alone had glutaminase activity when glutamine was provided as the only substrate. When PdxS and PdxT were both present, significant glutaminase activity was observed. Higher glutaminase activity was obtained when the ratio of PdxS to PdxT was increased (Fig. 4, curves 2 and 3).
Glutaminase subunits of some other glutamine amidotransferases
are also activated by the presence of the corresponding synthase
subunits (
18,
46). This result strongly confirms our hypothesis
that PdxS and PdxT are components of the same enzyme. Additionally,
we conclude that the conditional growth phenotype of the
pdxT-like
mutants reflects the ammonium-dependent activity of PdxS in
the absence of its cognate glutaminase subunit.

PdxS and PdxT interact physically.
An
E. coli strain containing pBB1252 (Fig.
1) and overproducing
the wild-type version of the
B. subtilis PdxS protein and a
His
6-tagged version of PdxT was used for purification of the
PdxT-His
6 protein by Ni
2+ affinity chromatography. Wild-type
PdxS, which by itself had no affinity for the Ni
2+ affinity
column, copurified with PdxT-His
6 (though not in the stoichiometric
amount), indicating that the two proteins form a complex that
does not completely dissociate even under the high salt conditions
(0.5 M NaCl, 0.4 M imidazole) used for purification (Fig.
3,
lane 2). This result is consistent with the postulated interaction
of yeast PDX1 and PDX2 homologs, as deduced from experiments
with two-hybrid systems (
28). No protein copurified with PdxT-His
6 if part of the
pdxS gene was deleted from pBB1252, as in pBB1256
(Fig.
1 and
3, lane 3).

Analysis of the PdxST pathway.
All gram-positive bacteria have either the PdxST pathway or
no PLP synthetic pathway; most other bacteria have the PdxA/PdxJ
pathway (data not shown; published genome sequence data were
searched by using the National Center for Biotechnology Information
Blast server available at
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/BLAST;
preliminary sequence data were searched at
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sutils/genom_table.cgi and
http://www.sanger.ac.uk/DataSearch). Some lactic acid bacteria
and
Clostridium spp. are known to be B
6 auxotrophs (
6,
19,
26,
38), consistent with the absence of the genes of de novo PLP
synthesis in their genomes. No single bacterial genome has genes
coding for all components of both pathways. Some bacteria with
the PdxST pathway have a PdxA homolog; it is likely that these
orphan PdxA-like proteins, as well as additional PdxA paralogs
in some gram-negative bacteria (data not shown), have a dehydrogenase
activity unrelated to PLP synthesis. The
pdxS- and
pdxT-like
genes are linked in all bacterial genomes except that of
Mycobacterium leprae (
8).
In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, a glucose-derived five-carbon-containing compound and a triose are utilized for PLP synthesis (13, 48). No other components of the PDX1/PDX2 pathway, other than glutamine, are known, and it is unclear whether all steps of the PDX1/PDX2 pathway are common in different organisms. In our work, we demonstrated that the PdxST complex is likely to catalyze the corresponding glutamine amidotransferase reaction though neither the additional substrate(s) nor the products of the reaction have been identified. PdxS may have a phosphate-binding site (12), implicating a phosphorylated compound as a substrate; another possible role for this site is binding of flavin mononucleotide (FMN; the IPR003009 motif available at www.ebi.ac.uk/interpro).The latter designation may be misleading, however. Many enzymes containing the IPR003009 motif are not known to bind FMN; instead, they have pent(ul)ose 5-phosphate derivatives as their substrates. Since FMN contains a ribityl-5-phosphate group, we suggest that the IPR003009 motif reflects binding of a five-carbon unit phosphorylated at position 5. In that case, one of the PdxST substrates, in addition to glutamine, is a phosphorylated five-carbon carbohydrate derivative, as has been suggested by tracer experiments for yeast (13). Guanylylation of a protein that turned out to be PdxS by extracts of B. subtilis cells has been reported (24). The physiological role of this modification remains unknown.
In yeast grown anaerobically, glutamine does not serve as B6 precursor (16). It is possible that under these conditions the yeast PdxS-like SNZ protein uses ammonium as its substrate. Interestingly, the genomes of several bacteria, such as Fusobacterium nucleatum, Corynebacterium efficiens, Clostridium botulinum, and Treponema denticola, include pdxS-like genes but no pdxT-like gene (data not shown). PdxS proteins of these organisms may operate as ammonium-dependent synthases of the PLP pathway, may use other types of glutaminase subunits, or may not synthesize PLP in vivo. The tight B6 requirement of the pdxT null mutant in the absence of ammonium indicates that no other B. subtilis glutaminase can substitute for PdxT.
1-Deoxy-D-xylulose-5-phosphate, whose formation is catalyzed by the dxs gene product (22, 39), is required for PLP synthesis in E. coli (7, 20). Most bacteria that have pdxS- and pdxT-like genes have dxs orthologs, but no orthologs of dxs can be found in the genomes of archaea, Staphylococcus aureus, or Streptococcus pneumoniae, all of which apparently utilize the PdxST pathway (data not shown). Moreover, the B. subtilis conditional dxs mutant was not impaired in B6 synthesis (32). Additionally, the five-carbon-containing compound utilized for PLP synthesis in yeast is derived from glucose as an intact unit (13); in contrast, 1-deoxy-D-xylulose-5-phosphate originates from condensation of pyruvate and glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate (9, 15). Therefore, Dxs-produced 1-deoxy-D-xylulose-5-phosphate is an unlikely intermediate in the PdxST-dependent pathway of PLP synthesis. Though an alternative route of 1-deoxy-D-xylulose-5-phosphate synthesis was described in E. coli, its physiological role is unknown (43).
Exogenous 2'-hydroxypyridoxine can be converted to PLP in yeast (49). It is possible that 2'-hydroxypyridoxine 5'-phosphate is an immediate precursor of PLP in B. subtilis. If so, the putative five-carbon intermediate of the PdxST pathway should have a hydroxyl group at its 1 position.

ADDENDUM IN PROOF
The crystal structure of the
B. subtilis PdxT (YaaE) protein
was determined recently (J. A. Bauer, E. M. Bennett, T. P. Begley,
and S. E. Ealick, J. Biol. Chem., in press).

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
I am grateful to A. L. Sonenshein and J. Smith for many helpful
discussions and for careful reading of the manuscript.
This work was supported by a grant from the National Science Foundation (MCB-0110651) to B.R.B.

FOOTNOTES
* Mailing address: Department of Molecular Biology and Microbiology, Tufts University School of Medicine, 136 Harrison Ave., Boston, MA 02111. Phone: (617) 636-3618. Fax: (617) 636-0337. E-mail:
bbelit02{at}granite.tufts.edu.


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Journal of Bacteriology, February 2004, p. 1191-1196, Vol. 186, No. 4
0021-9193/04/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JB.186.4.1191-1196.2004
Copyright © 2004, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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