Previous Article | Next Article 
Journal of Bacteriology, May 2005, p. 3581-3585, Vol. 187, No. 10
0021-9193/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JB.187.10.3581-3585.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Purification and Properties of the Klebsiella aerogenes UreE Metal-Binding Domain, a Functional Metallochaperone of Urease
Scott B. Mulrooney,1
Sarah K. Ward,1 and
Robert P. Hausinger1,2*
Department of Microbiology and Molecular Genetics,1
Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan 48824-43202
Received 29 November 2004/
Accepted 10 February 2005

ABSTRACT
Klebsiella aerogenes UreE, a metallochaperone that delivers
nickel ions during urease activation, consists of distinct "peptide-binding"
and "metal-binding" domains and a His-rich C terminus. Deletion
analyses revealed that the metal-binding domain alone is sufficient
to facilitate urease activation. This domain was purified and
shown to exhibit metal-binding properties similar to those of
UreE lacking only the His-rich tail.

TEXT
Urease is a Ni enzyme that catalyzes the hydrolysis of urea,
thus contributing to the volatilization of ammonia from urea-based
fertilizers and to the virulence of several human pathogens
(
9,
14). From studies with the archetypal bacterial urease from
Klebsiella aerogenes, Ni is inserted into the apoprotein (UreABC)
in a GTP-dependent process that requires the action of UreD,
UreF, and UreG and is facilitated by UreEa putative metallochaperone
that delivers Ni (
8,
11,
15). Homologues of
ureE are conserved
in almost all urease-producing microbes (
14,
17), and cells
containing partial
ureE deletions exhibit reduced urease specific
activities and yield purified enzyme with reduced Ni stoichiometry
(
11).
K. aerogenes UreE binds up to 6 Ni molecules per dimer
(
12), but a truncated form lacking the 15 C-terminal His-rich
residues (H144*UreE) still binds up to three Ni molecules per
dimer and is fully competent in facilitating Ni-dependent activation
of urease in vivo and in an in vitro reconstituted system (
1,
20). H144*UreE has been studied in detail by spectroscopic (
2),
kinetic (
4), site-directed mutagenic (
3), and crystallographic
(
19) methods. Of significance to the present work, the protein
contains a region that has been termed the peptide-binding domain
(residues 1 to 70) and a metal-binding domain (residues 71 to
143, which also comprise the dimer interface region) (Fig.
1).
This work examines the functional roles of the two domains of
UreE by analysis of deletions and by characterization of the
isolated metal-binding domain.
Constructions.
Oligonucleotide primers were designed to create specific deletions
of
ureE within pTBEFH144* (
1) by using PCR methods. Reactions
were carried out with the QuikChange mutagenesis kit (Stratagene)
according to the manufacturer's instructions, and the blunt-ended
products were ligated to recircularize the linear fragments
containing the desired deletions (Table
1). Plasmid DNAs from
deletion constructs were verified by sequencing. Residues 2
to 136 were deleted by using a similar strategy, eliminating
potential complications of the His-rich C-terminal region in
the interpretation of metal-binding experiments while leaving
the
ureF start site undisturbed. To study
ureE deletions while
leaving the other six urease genes unaltered, restriction fragments
containing the

2-158,

2-69,

70-158, and

2-136f
ureE deletions
were substituted for the corresponding fragment in pACT-KKWT,
which contains the entire urease operon cloned into pACT3 (
6).
This expression plasmid contains a p15A
ori gene which allows
for complementation experiments using two compatible plasmids.
An expression plasmid for production of the metal-binding domain
was constructed by replacing
ureE of pETWT

G (analogous to pETH144*

G
as described in reference
3, except it carries full-length
ureE)
with a similar fragment encoding only the metal-binding domain,
to yield plasmid pET

2-69

G-20.
Effects of ureE deletions on in vivo urease activation.
Escherichia coli DH5

cells containing plasmids carrying the
K. aerogenes urease gene cluster with deletions of
ureE were
grown in Luria-Bertani medium (30 to 40 ml in 125-ml flasks)
containing 30 µg/ml chloramphenicol with shaking at 37°C.
After 30 min, IPTG (isopropyl-ß-
D-thiogalactopyranoside)
was added to 0.1 mM, and shaking was continued. Due to sequestering
of metal ions by components in this medium, no significant urease
activity was observed, even in cells containing the wild-type
K. aerogenes urease operon (
11). When turbidity reached an
A600 of

0.1 to 0.25, spectinomycin was added to 100 µg/ml to
stop protein synthesis (so only preformed urease apoprotein
and accessory proteins would participate in activation, Ni was
added, and shaking was continued for 20 to 40 min.
For Ni dependence experiments (Fig. 2A), 10-ml aliquots were transferred into sterile flasks containing premeasured NiSO4 concentrations, shaken for 4 h at 37°C, harvested by centrifugation, washed in 20 mM phosphate buffer (pH 7.4) containing 0.5 mM EDTA and 1 mM ß-mercaptoethanol, disrupted by sonication, and assayed for urease activity. Cells carrying pACT-KKWT or pACT-KKH144* exhibited the highest activities with increasing Ni concentrations. Cells harboring pACT-KK
2-69 had lower activities, especially below 1.0 mM Ni2+. Cells carrying the pACT-KK
2-136f plasmid with a totalureE deletion showed the smallest amount of activation overall, but this was complemented with H144*UreE from a second plasmid, resulting in activities nearly equivalent to that from pACT-KKH144*-containing cells. These results are qualitatively comparable to those of earlier studies (1, 11) in which the urease gene cluster was cloned into higher-copy plasmids, cultures were grown overnight rather than for 4 h, and the plasmid constructs contained unsequenced deletions within ureE. Thus, full-length or H144* forms of UreE facilitate activation of urease, while deletions of ureE do not eliminate urease activation. Significantly, UreE missing both the peptide-binding domain and the His-rich region supported an intermediate level of urease activation consistent with a critical role of the metal-binding domain.
For time dependence studies (Fig.
2B), cultures were supplemented
with 1 mM NiSO
4 and assayed at various time intervals. Cells
with wild-type and H144* forms of UreE showed the highest specific
activities throughout the time course, while cells containing
pACT-KK

2-69 had intermediate rates of activation and cells harboring
pACT-KK

2-136f exhibited the lowest activation rates. The final
specific activities differ from those shown in Fig.
2A, reflecting
the wide variation obtained with these in vivo experiments;
nevertheless, the trends shown were quite reproducible. As with
the Ni dependence studies, pTBEFH144* partially complemented
the complete
ureE deletion, though not to wild-type levels.
Western blot analyses of culture samples with anti-UreE antibodies
(
12) detected UreE in cells containing the two plasmids (data
not shown). Similar results showing lower-than-wild-type specific
activities have been seen in other complementation experiments
with urease accessory protein genes (
11,
16).
Characterization of the UreE metal-binding domain.
H144*UreE was purified from cultures containing pETH144*
G (3) as previously described, except that E. coli C41(DE3) (13) was used as the host. The UreE metal-binding domain was purified by the same procedure using E. coli C41(DE3) carrying plasmid pET
2-69
G-20. Protein concentration was determined by using the bicinchoninic acid protein assay kit (Pierce) with bovine serum albumin as the standard. The purity of the sample was assessed by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (10) using 18% running and 4.5% stacking gels with Bio-Rad broad-range molecular weight standards; the metal-binding domain produced a single band of the expected size (Mr, 8,372). The yield of metal-binding domain was 1.9 mg from 2 liters of cells, compared to approximately 47 mg of H144*UreE from 1 liter of culture. The low yield of the single-domain protein may result from its decreased stabilization in the absence of the N-terminal domain.
Native molecular weight estimations of the metal-binding domain utilized gel permeation chromatography with a Protein-Pak 125 column (7.8 by 300 mm; Waters) connected to a Waters Breeze chromatography system and a buffer of 20 mM Tris-0.2 M NaCl-10 µM NiSO4 (pH 7.8). To test the effects of Ni on the native molecular weight of the UreE metal-binding domain, some samples were chromatographed in 20 mM Tris-0.2 M NaCl-0.1 mM EDTA (pH 7.8). Mixtures of protein molecular weight standards (Bio-Rad and Calbiochem) were chromatographed under identical conditions. Major and minor species of metal-binding domain (36,000 ± 5,000 kDa and 17,600 ± 3,000 Da) were consistent with tetrameric and dimeric structures. The presence of 10 µM Ni2+ or 0.1 mM EDTA did not affect the quaternary structure.
Metal ion-binding properties of H144*UreE and the metal-binding domain.
H144*UreE and the metal-binding domain (10 µM subunit in 50 mM Tris, pH 7.9, containing 85 mM NaCl) were subjected to equilibrium dialysis as described previously (3) using a 3,500-kDa cutoff membrane (Spectrapor), and the data were analyzed by fitting to a two-cooperative-site Adair equation (3). H144*UreE bound 3.1 ± 0.1 mol of Ni per mole of dimer with a Kd1 of 16.7 ± 3.1 µM and a Kd2 of 4.3 ± 1.3 µM. This stoichiometry is in excellent agreement with the crystal structure (19), although it exceeds the 1.9 mol of Ni/mole of dimer determined in an earlier equilibrium dialysis study (1). The binding constants are close to the previously published numbers. The isolated metal-binding domain bound 2.3 ± 0.1 mol of Ni/mole of dimer with a Kd1 of 16.7 ± 6.5 µM and a Kd2 of 2.5 ± 1.2 µM. If the metal-binding domain were to form a dimeric structure in the same way as H144*UreE, a maximum of three mol of Ni would be expected to be bound. Since this domain behaves mostly as a tetramer, it is conceivable that some metal-binding sites are inaccessible in the larger aggregate (i.e., 4 to 5 mol of Ni/mole of tetramer). Another possibility is that a small fraction of the metal-binding domain does not fold properly in the absence of its N-terminal peptide-binding domain.
The binding of Cu2+ or Ni2+ to H144*UreE and UreE metal-binding domain proteins was monitored in a Shimadzu 2401PC spectrophotometer with a 160-µl cuvette (Starna) in 50 mM Tris buffer, pH 7.9, containing 85 mM NaCl. Binding of Cu2+ to H144*UreE results in a significant absorbance increase centered at 366 nm (2) attributed to a thiolate-to-Cu2+ charge transfer transition involving Cys79, since mutation or chemical modification of this residue eliminated the spectral changes. This same feature was observed for the isolated metal-binding domain (Fig. 3A). Plots of the absorbance changes at 366 nm versus Cu2+ concentration revealed sigmoid effects for both samples (Fig. 3B and C), with lower midpoint Cu concentrations (2.48 ± 0.03 mol of Cu2+/mole of monomer) for H144*UreE than for the metal-binding domain (3.0 ± 0.1 mol of Cu2+/mole of monomer).
Ni titration of H144*UreE and the metal-binding domain resulted
in less-intense absorbance changes than for Cu (Fig.
4). The
spectral changes of the control sample were somewhat more pronounced
than what was observed in earlier studies (
2) and led to the
development of a defined peak at 366 nm. This Ni-induced absorbance
is consistent with a weak thiolate-to-Ni
2+ charge transfer transition,
as reported in other Ni-containing proteins (
7,
22) and model
compounds (
5), and suggests that Ni
2+ can coordinate to Cys79
when present at a high concentration. Maximal absorption of
this chromophore required six equivalents of Ni
2+ per H144*
dimer, suggesting that Ni binds to Cys79 only after the first
three binding sites approach full occupancy. Addition of Ni
to the isolated metal-binding domain produced a general increase
in absorbance at 320 to 400 nm with no distinct peak observed.
The Ni concentrations resulting in a half-maximal absorbance
change for the metal-binding domain (14.4 ± 0.6 mol of
Ni
2+/mole of dimer) is significantly greater than that for the
control H144*UreE sample (3.8 ± 0.4 mol of Ni
2+/mole
of dimer). These results suggest that aggregation of the metal-binding
protein hinders access of Ni to the thiol associated with this
chromophore.
Conclusions.
The presence of UreE facilitates urease activation in cells
that are grown in media with low Ni availability; however, deletion
of the entire
ureE gene did not eliminate urease activity. Similar
results were noted in the case of a
Helicobacter pylori ureE chromosomal knockout that produced urease at about 1% of wild-type
levels (
21). Cells containing the urease operon with only the
UreE metal-binding domain possessed higher activities than cells
with complete
ureE deletion, demonstrating that the single domain
protein can deliver Ni to urease apoprotein and the N-terminal
domain is not required. The isolated metal-binding domain is
primarily a tetramer, in contrast to the dimeric wild-type UreE
or H144*UreE. It is worth noting that a concentration- and metal
ion-dependent dimer-tetramer equilibrium has been observed for
the full-length
Bacillus pasteurii UreE (
18,
23). The
K. aerogenes UreE metal-binding domain exhibits
Kd values nearly identical
to those of the H144*UreE control sample, consistent with retention
of the three high-affinity Ni-binding sites observed in the
crystal structure (Fig.
1). The absorbance changes revealed
by UV/visible spectroscopy upon Cu
2+ and Ni
2+ binding involve
a distinct metal-binding site associated with Cys79. Differences
in the two samples are consistent with decreased access of metals
to this binding site in the tetrameric protein. Our overall
results indicate that the fold of the purified metal-binding
domain closely resembles that of H144*UreE, allowing it to function
in urease activation.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We thank Merhawit Negussie for assistance with the initial phases
of these studies.
This study was supported by National Institutes of Health grant DK45686.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Microbiology and Molecular Genetics, 6193 Biomedical Physical Sciences, Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI 48824-4320. Phone: (517) 355-6463, ext. 1610. Fax: (517) 353-8957. E-mail:
hausinge{at}msu.edu.


REFERENCES
1 - Brayman, T. G., and R. P. Hausinger. 1996. Purification, characterization, and functional analysis of a truncated Klebsiella aerogenes UreE urease accessory protein lacking the histidine-rich carboxyl terminus. J. Bacteriol. 178:5410-5416.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
2 - Colpas, G. J., T. G. Brayman, J. McCracken, M. A. Pressler, G. T. Babcock, L. J. Ming, C. M. Colangelo, R. A. Scott, and R. P. Hausinger. 1998. Spectroscopic characterization of metal binding by Klebsiella aerogenes UreE urease accessory protein. J. Biol. Inorg. Chem. 3:150-160.[CrossRef]
3 - Colpas, G. J., T. G. Brayman, L. J. Ming, and R. P. Hausinger. 1999. Identification of metal-binding residues in the Klebsiella aerogenes urease nickel metallochaperone, UreE. Biochemistry 38:4078-4088.[CrossRef][Medline]
4 - Colpas, G. J., and R. P. Hausinger. 2000. In vivo and in vitro kinetics of metal transfer by the Klebsiella aerogenes urease nickel metallochaperone, UreE. J. Biol. Chem. 275:10731-10737.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
5 - Desrochers, P. J., R. W. Cutts, P. K. Rice, M. L. Golden, J. B. Graham, T. M. Barclay, and A. W. Cordes. 1999. Characteristics of five-coordinate nickel-cysteine centers. Inorg. Chem. 38:5690-5694.[CrossRef]
6 - Dykxhoorn, D. M., R. St Pierre, and T. Linn. 1996. A set of compatible tac promoter expression vectors. Gene 177:133-136.[CrossRef][Medline]
7 - Gencic, S., and D. A. Grahame. 2003. Nickel in subunit beta of the acetyl-CoA decarbonylase/synthase multienzyme complex in methanogens. J. Biol. Chem. 278:6101-6110.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
8 - Hausinger, R. P., G. J. Colpas, and A. Soriano. 2001. Urease: a paradigm for protein-assisted metallocenter assembly. ASM News 67:78-84.
9 - Hausinger, R. P., and P. A. Karplus. 2001. Urease, p. 867-879. In A. Messerschmidt (ed.), Handbook of metalloproteins. John Wiley & Sons, Ltd., West Sussex, United Kingdom.
10 - Laemmli, U. K. 1970. Cleavage of structural proteins during the assembly of the head of bacteriophage T4. Nature (London) 227:680-685.[CrossRef][Medline]
11 - Lee, M. H., S. B. Mulrooney, M. J. Renner, Y. Markowicz, and R. P. Hausinger. 1992. Klebsiella aerogenes urease gene cluster: sequence of UreD and demonstration that four accessory genes (ureD, ureE, ureF, and ureG) are involved in nickel metallocenter biosynthesis. J. Bacteriol. 174:4324-4330.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
12 - Lee, M. H., H. S. Pankratz, S. Wang, R. A. Scott, M. G. Finnegan, M. K. Johnson, J. A. Ippolito, D. W. Christianson, and R. P. Hausinger. 1993. Purification and characterization of Klebsiella aerogenes UreE protein: a nickel-binding protein that functions in urease metallocenter assembly. Protein Sci. 2:1042-1052.[Medline]
13 - Miroux, B., and J. E. Walker. 1996. Over-production of proteins in Escherichia coli: mutant hosts that allow synthesis of some membrane proteins and globular proteins at high levels. J. Mol. Biol. 260:289-298.[CrossRef][Medline]
14 - Mobley, H. L. T., M. D. Island, and R. P. Hausinger. 1995. Molecular biology of microbial ureases. Microbiol. Rev. 59:451-480.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
15 - Mulrooney, S. B., and R. P. Hausinger. 2003. Nickel uptake and utilization by microorganisms. FEMS Microbiol. Rev. 27:239-261.[CrossRef][Medline]
16 - Mulrooney, S. B., and R. P. Hausinger. 1990. Sequence of the Klebsiella aerogenes urease genes and evidence for accessory proteins facilitating nickel incorporation. J. Bacteriol. 172:5837-5843.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
17 - Musiani, F., B. Zambelli, M. Stola, and S. Ciurli. 2004. Nickel trafficking: insights into the fold and function of UreE, a urease metallochaperone. J. Inorg. Biochem. 98:803-813.[CrossRef][Medline]
18 - Remaut, H., N. Safarov, S. Ciurli, and J. Van Beeumen. 2001. Structural basis for Ni2+ transport and assembly of the urease active site by the metallochaperone UreE from Bacillus pasteurii. J. Biol. Chem. 276:49365-49370.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
19 - Song, H. K., S. B. Mulrooney, R. Huber, and R. P. Hausinger. 2001. Crystal structure of Klebsiella aerogenes UreE, a nickel-binding metallochaperone for urease activation. J. Biol. Chem. 276:49359-49364.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
20 - Soriano, A., G. J. Colpas, and R. P. Hausinger. 2000. UreE stimulation of GTP-dependent urease activation in the UreD-UreF-UreG-urease apoprotein complex. Biochemistry 39:12435-12440.[CrossRef][Medline]
21 - Voland, P., D. L. Weeks, E. A. Marcus, C. Prinz, G. Sachs, and D. Scott. 2003. Interactions among the seven Helicobacter pylori proteins encoded by the urease gene cluster. Am. J. Physiol. Gastrointest. Liver Physiol. 284:G96-G106.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
22 - Wang, S. C., A. V. Dias, S. L. Bloom, and D. B. Zamble. 2004. Selectivity of metal binding and metal-induced stability of Escherichia coli NikR. Biochemistry 43:10018-10028.[CrossRef][Medline]
23 - Won, H. S., Y. H. Lee, J. H. Kim, I. S. Shin, M. H. Lee, and B. J. Lee. 2004. Structural characterization of the nickel-binding properties of Bacillus pasteurii urease accessory protein (Ure)E in solution. J. Biol. Chem. 279:17466-17472.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
Journal of Bacteriology, May 2005, p. 3581-3585, Vol. 187, No. 10
0021-9193/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JB.187.10.3581-3585.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
This article has been cited by other articles:
-
Stingl, K., Schauer, K., Ecobichon, C., Labigne, A., Lenormand, P., Rousselle, J.-C., Namane, A., de Reuse, H.
(2008). In Vivo Interactome of Helicobacter pylori Urease Revealed by Tandem Affinity Purification. Mol. Cell. Proteomics
7: 2429-2441
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Yu, G.X., Snyder, E.E., Boyle, S.M., Crasta, O.R., Czar, M., Mane, S.P., Purkayastha, A., Sobral, B., Setubal, J.C.
(2007). A versatile computational pipeline for bacterial genome annotation improvement and comparative analysis, with Brucella as a use case. Nucleic Acids Res
35: 3953-3962
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Kim, J. K., Mulrooney, S. B., Hausinger, R. P.
(2006). The UreEF Fusion Protein Provides a Soluble and Functional Form of the UreF Urease Accessory Protein. J. Bacteriol.
188: 8413-8420
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Kim, J. K., Mulrooney, S. B., Hausinger, R. P.
(2005). Biosynthesis of Active Bacillus subtilis Urease in the Absence of Known Urease Accessory Proteins. J. Bacteriol.
187: 7150-7154
[Abstract]
[Full Text]