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Journal of Bacteriology, August 2005, p. 5129-5135, Vol. 187, No. 15
0021-9193/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JB.187.15.5129-5135.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Laboratory of Molecular Microbiology, Department of Biological Sciences, Faculty of Science, Kanagawa University, 2946 Tsuchiya, Hiratsuka, Kanagawa 259-1293, Japan,1 Research Institute for Integrated Science, Kanagawa University, 2946 Tsuchiya, Hiratsuka, Kanagawa 259-1293, Japan2
Received 14 February 2005/ Accepted 22 April 2005
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PHB-producing bacteria contain intracellular PHB depolymerases. Intracellular PHB depolymerases have been found in Rhodospirillum rubrum (15), Paracoccus denitrificans (4), and Wautersia eutropha (19) (formerly Ralstonia eutropha). In W. eutropha H16, a gene encoding an intracellular PHB depolymerases, phaZ1 (19), and a gene encoding a 3HB-oligomer hydrolase, phaZb (formerly phaZ2) (10, 20), have been cloned, and some properties of their products have been reported. Both hydrolases showed hydrolytic activity for amorphous PHB. PhaZb hydrolyzed 3HB oligomers at a high specific activity and degraded PHB into 3HB monomers at a lower specific activity.
The function of PhaZ1 or PhaZb in vivo has been examined by constructing a phaZ1 or phaZb deletion strain (5, 10, 19). The deletion mutants exhibit considerably less degradation of PHB in vivo in some conditions. However, even a PhaZ1-PhaZb double-deletion mutation did not completely inhibit the mobilization of PHB (10). Therefore, it has been suggested that there are other depolymerases or related hydrolases (10).
Since the amino acid sequence of the first intracellular PHB depolymerase, PhaZ1, was reported for W. eutropha H16, several isoenzymes have been found. Recently, the genome sequences of W. eutropha and related bacteria have become available. Four putative PHB depolymerase genes homologous to phaZ1 have been identified using the genome sequence of Wautersia metallidurans (32), the sequence of the megaplasmid of W. eutropha (25), and the incomplete genome sequence of W. eutropha (17).
These putative intracellular PHB depolymerases have been identified based on the amino acid sequence of PhaZ1. In this study, a novel 3HB-oligomer hydrolase of W. eutropha was discovered using the amino acid sequence of an intracellular 3HB-oligomer hydrolase of Acidovorax sp. strain SA1 (27) as a probe. From a BLAST search using this probe, a candidate for an intracellular 3HB-oligomer hydrolase gene was identified in the genome sequence of Ralstonia solanacearum, a close relative of W. eutropha. The counterpart in W. eutropha, designated phaZc, was cloned by colony hybridization and sequenced. The gene product, PhaZc, was characterized, and a deletion mutant was examined to confirm that PhaZc is involved in the mobilization of PHB.
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TABLE 1. Bacterial strains and plasmids
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Design of probes to identify the 3HB-oligomer hydrolase gene. A candidate 3HB-oligomer hydrolase gene was identified by a BLAST comparison using a 3HB-oligomer hydrolase of Acidovorax sp. strain SA1 (accession number AB044565) (27) and the genome sequence of R. solanacearum, which has recently become available in its entirety (accession number NC_003295) (22). A putative hydrolase (protein ID number CAD152761) of R. solanacearum exhibited a high level of similarity to the 3HB-oligomer hydrolase. The DNA sequence 400 bp upstream and C terminal of the putative hydrolase gene was used to design a set of primers, forward primer 5'-GCGCATCATGTCCCTCGATCTCGGCAGC-3' and reverse primer 5'-CGCGCTTCAGGGTGTTGGTGCTCATG-3'. With chromosomal DNA of W. eutropha as the template, these primers were used to amplify an approximately 1.3-kbp fragment that included the equivalent gene, phaZc. The PCR product was 32P labeled and used as a probe in Southern hybridization and colony hybridization. W. eutropha genomic DNA was completely digested with BamHI, EcoRI, KpnI, SalI, SmaI, or XbaI. The resulting fragments were subjected to Southern hybridization.
Construction of pE3ReZc. To express phaZc, the gene was amplified by PCR with a pair of primers, primers phaZcf (5'-CCGGAATTCATATGTCTGCCAGTCCGCGTCTCGG-3') and phaZcr (5'-CGAATTCTCGAGTCAGGCCCCGGTAAAGAACTGCGAGG-3'). The products were digested with NdeI and XhoI and inserted into corresponding sites of pET23b (Novagen, Madison, WI). The resulting plasmid was designated pE3ReZc.
Purification of PhaZc from Escherichia coli. Expression of phaZc was induced by isopropyl-ß-D-thiogalactopyranoside as described previously (10) with E. coli BLR(DE3)/pLysS transformed with pE3ReZc. Bacteria were harvested and resuspended in 20 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.0). The cell suspension was sonicated and centrifuged at 10,000 x g for 20 min. The supernatant (crude extract) was mixed with glycerol at a final concentration of 50% (vol/vol) and stored at 20°C prior to use.
The enzyme was purified in two steps: hydrophobic column chromatography and ion-exchange column chromatography. Ammonium sulfate was added to the crude extract at a final concentration of 1 M, and the mixture was centrifuged at 10,000 x g for 20 min. The supernatant was loaded onto a Toyopearl ether-650M column (15 by 170 mm) that was preequilibrated with 10 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.0) containing 1 M ammonium sulfate. After one wash with the same buffer, the enzyme was eluted with a linear gradient of ammonium sulfate (200 ml, 1 to 0 M). The active fractions were collected and dialyzed against 10 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.0). The sample was further purified on a Toyopearl DEAE-650M column (15 by 60 mm) that was preequilibrated with 10 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.0). The active fractions that were eluted with a linear gradient of NaCl (200 ml, 0 to 0.5 M) were collected and stored at 20°C in 50% (vol/vol) glycerol.
Preparation of substrates. Semicrystalline PHB was isolated from W. eutropha H16 and purified by hypochlorite treatment (26). Artificial amorphous PHB granules were prepared from purified semicrystalline PHB granules described by Horowitz and Sanders (6, 10). Native PHB was isolated from W. eutropha H16 and purified by glycerol density gradient (5). The 3HB oligomers were prepared as described previously (28).
Enzyme assays. 3HB-oligomer hydrolase activity and PHB depolymerase activity were assayed based on the amount of 3HB or 3HB oligomers released from the 3HB oligomers or PHB, as described previously (10, 31). The reaction mixture (50 µl) was composed of 100 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.5), PHB granules (0.5 mg/ml as a solid), and enzyme. The reaction was started by addition of substrate at 30°C. For 3HB-oligomer hydrolase activity, all 3HB oligomers were dissolved in distilled water at a concentration of 10 mM and used as substrates at a concentration of 2 mM instead of PHB granules. The rate of hydrolysis of p-nitrophenyl esters was determined spectrophotometrically, and lipase activity was assayed by titration of the acid released from olive oil, as described previously (33).
Electrophoresis and immunoblot analysis. Sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE) and immunoblot analysis were performed by the procedure of Laemmli (12) and the method of Towbin et al. (29), respectively. Polyclonal antibody against PhaZc was prepared from rabbits.
Construction of deletion mutants. A 291-bp deletion of phaZc was generated by PCR using the following primers: ReZc-dmNF (5'-GCTCTAGAATGTCTGCCAGTCCGCGTCTCG), ReZc-dmNR (5'-CGGAATTCGTTGAGCCGCGCAATCAGCGTGAC), ReZc-dmCF (5'-CGGAATTCGCCTGGAATGGGGCTTGCATTACG), and ReZc-dmCR (5'-AACTGCAGTCAGGCCCCGGTAAAGAACTGCG). The truncated gene was treated with XbaI and PstI and inserted into the corresponding site of pLO3 (13). E. coli S17-1 was transformed using the resulting plasmid, pLO3dmZc. pLO3dmZc was transferred to W. eutropha H16 by conjugation, and the transformant was selected based on tetracycline resistance and auxotrophy. Deletion mutants were obtained by selection of sucrose-resistant colonies on LB agar containing 15% sucrose, as described Lenz and Friedrich (13). The mutant was verified by Southern and PCR analyses. The phaZc deletion mutant obtained was designated TK0120. A double-deletion mutant lacking phaZb and phaZc, H16DZbc1, was constructed from the phaZc deletion mutant using pJPPOH, as described previously (10).
Other methods. PhaZ1 and PhaZb were purified as described previously (10). The protein concentration was determined by the method of Lowry et al. (14) or Bradford (2) with reagents obtained from Bio-Rad Laboratories (Hercules, CA). The N-terminal amino acid sequence was determined with a Procise 491-HT (Applied Biosystems, Tokyo, Japan) used according to the instructions in the manual. The PHB content was quantitated as crotonic acid by high-pressure liquid chromatography as described by Karr et al. (8). Cell dry weight was determined with freeze-dried whole cells.
Nucleotide sequence accession number. The phaZc sequence has been deposited in the GenBank/EMBL/DDBJ databases under accession no. AB180691.
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FIG. 1. Comparison of PhaZc amino acid sequences. A BLAST search using an intracellular 3HB-oligomer hydrolase amino acid sequence of Acidovorax sp. strain SA1 revealed several putative 3HB-oligomer hydrolases from PHB-accumulating bacteria. (A) Results of a multiple alignment using the Clustal W program (1.8.2). The candidate catalytic center is indicated by boldface type, and the lipase box is underlined. Asterisks indicate residues that are conserved in all proteins; colons indicate substitution of amino acid residues with very similar residues; and periods indicate substitution of amino acid residues with residues that are slightly less similar. (B) Phylogenetic tree. The cluster analysis was based on the neighbor-joining method. The numbers at the nodes are percentages of 1,000 bootstrap resamplings (only values greater than 50% are shown). The following proteins were included in the analyses: 3HB-oligomer hydrolase from Acidovorax sp. strain SA1 (SA1), predicted hydrolases from W. metallidurans (Wmet), R. solanacearum (Rsol), R. rubrum (Rrub), and R. sphaeroides (Rsph), and PhaZc from W. eutropha cloned in this study (Weut). The accession numbers of these proteins are AB044565, ZP_00276649, NP_519695, ZP_00268816, ZP_00007013, and AB180691, respectively.
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Properties of PhaZc.
E. coli transformed with pE3ReZc was used to produce PhaZc. SDS-PAGE of the cytosolic fraction of E. coli/pE3ReZc resulted in a thick
32-kDa band whose size corresponded to the size of PhaZc deduced from the amino acid sequence (Fig. 2, lane 1). PhaZc was purified with a hydrophobic column and an anion-exchange column. The results of the purification are summarized in Table 2. The final preparation exhibited apparent homogeneity on an SDS-polyacrylamide gel (Fig. 2, lane 1). The N-terminal amino acid sequence of the purified enzyme was determined chemically to be SASPRLGFV, which corresponded to the deduced amino acid sequence except for the first methionine. Immunostaining of the crude extract from W. eutropha showed that the molecular mass was the same as the molecular mass of purified PhaZc from E. coli.
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FIG. 2. SDS-PAGE analysis of purified PhaZc from E. coli harboring pE3ReZc. E. coli overexpressing phaZc was sonicated and centrifuged, and the soluble crude extract (14 µg) (lane 1) was purified on a hydrophobic column (2 µg) (lane 2) and an anion-exchange column (1 µg) (lane 3). The arrow indicates the position of PhaZc. Lane M contained molecular mass markers.
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TABLE 2. Purification of PhaZc from E. coli harboring pE3ReZca
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TABLE 3. Substrate specificity of PhaZc
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FIG. 3. Degradation of artificial amorphous PHB granules by PhaZc. The 3HB released during PHB degradation was measured enzymatically. Symbols: x, no PhaZc; , 0.46 µg of PhaZc; , 1.2 µg of PhaZc; , 4.6 µg of PhaZc; , 4.6 µg of boiled PhaZc (100°C, 5 min). The error bars indicate standard deviations of the means based on three independent measurements.
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After cultivation for 2 days in the MSF medium, the PHB-accumulating cells were harvested and sonicated. The resultant disrupted cells were fractionated with a linear sucrose gradient (1 to 2 M). The fractions were analyzed by immunostaining (Fig. 4). Antisera against PhaZ1 and 3HB dehydrogenase used as controls for the protein in PHB inclusion bodies and in the cytosol of the cell, respectively. PhaZc was found mainly in the cytosolic fraction, but some PhaZc was also detected in the fraction containing PHB inclusion bodies. The subcellular localization of PhaZc is different from that of PhaZ1 or PhaZb (10).
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FIG. 4. Subcellular localization of PhaZc determined by using a sucrose density gradient. Sonicates from PHB-rich cells were fractionated by ultracentrifugation in a sucrose gradient (1 to 2 M; total volume, 11 ml). Each fraction (1.1 ml) was collected and analyzed by Western blotting and immunostaining with antiserum against PhaZc, PhaZ1, or 3HB dehydrogenase (3HBDH); 100% corresponded to PHB and protein concentrations of 65 and 3.7 mg/ml, respectively.
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phaZc) and phaZb (
phaZb) deletion mutants and a phaZb-phaZc (
phaZbZc) double-deletion mutant were examined for the accumulation of PHB when they were grown in N-rich or MSF medium for several days (Fig. 5). When cultured in N-rich medium, the wild type and all of the mutants temporarily accumulated PHB in the logarithmic phase and then rapidly degraded it, consistent with previous reports (19, 20). During the logarithmic phase, the PHB content of all mutants was higher than that of the wild type, and in the stationary phase, all mutants except the
phaZbZc mutant showed elevated levels of PHB. In the logarithmic phase, the
phaZb mutant accumulated the largest amount of PHB, and the
phaZc and
phaZbZc mutants deposited the least. In the stationary phase, the amount of PHB in the
phaZbZc mutant was almost the same as the amount in the wild type (Fig. 5B). When cultured in MSF medium (PHB accumulation conditions), all mutants contained higher PHB levels than the wild type. Although the tendency of PHB to accumulate in each mutant was similar to the results obtained in N-rich medium, the difference between the PHB content of each mutant and that of the wild type was less than difference in N-rich medium. In these conditions, all strains accumulated PHB with growth, and temporary accumulation of PHB was not observed in the logarithmic phase (Fig. 5D).
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FIG. 5. Growth and accumulation of PHB in various W. eutropha phaZ deletion mutants in the nutrient-rich medium and the PHB accumulation medium. (A and B) Nutrient-rich medium. (C and D) PHB accumulation medium (mineral salt medium containing 2% [wt/vol] fructose and 0.1% [wt/vol] ammonium sulfate). (A and C) Cell dry weight. (B and D) PHB content. Symbols: , wild type; , TK0120 ( phaZc mutant); , OH1 ( phaZb mutant); , H16DZbc1 ( phaZb phaZc mutant). The data are means for three independent measurements. The error bars indicate standard deviations.
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Besides PhaZ1, PhaZ2 to PhaZ5 have been identified as intracellular PHB depolymerases in W. eutropha (17, 25, 32). These depolymerases, however, are actually PhaZ1 homologs; they resemble PhaZ1 in amino acid sequence, the active site residues, and molecular mass (45 to 47 kDa) (except PhaZ4, which has a molecular mass of 27 kDa). PhaZ4 exhibits similarity with the C-terminal side of PhaZ1, but it lacks the N-terminal side consisting of about 150 amino acid residues compared with the other homologs. These homologs should be classified as type 1 intracellular PHA depolymerases. In this study, to avoid confusion over the nomenclature, the 3HB-oligomer hydrolase (formerly PhaZ2) (10, 20) was renamed PhaZb. The 3HB-oligomer hydrolase found in this study was designated PhaZc. In the future, new types of enzymes involved in the degradation of PHB may be designated PhaZd, PhaZe, and so on because it is reasonable to classify enzymes based on type or properties (amino acid sequence, molecular mass, structure, activity, etc.). It is preferable that PhaZ1 homologs be designated PhaZa1 to PhaZa5. The type "a" enzyme (PhaZ1) hydrolyzes PHB but is not active with 3HB oligomers. The type "b" enzyme (PhaZb), which has a high molecular mass (78 kDa), efficiently hydrolyzes 3HB oligomers and degrades amorphous PHB at a lower rate. The b type enzyme has been found only in members of the genus Wautersia, such as W. eutropha or W. metallidurans, so far. The type "c" enzyme (molecular mass, about 30 kDa) exhibits strong 3HB-oligomer hydrolase activity compared with other PHB depolymerases or 3HB-oligomer hydrolases. Some enzymes (PhaZc in this study, PhaZcWeu) hydrolyze the 3HB pentamer most efficiently and exhibit weak hydrolytic activity with amorphous PHB, but another PhaZc in Acidovorax sp. strain SA1 (PhaZcAsp) (27) hydrolyzes the 3HB dimer at a high rate with no PHB-hydrolyzing activity. The type c enzyme was found in many other PHB-producing or PHB-degrading bacteria based on the BLAST search. In addition, three proteins whose molecular masses are about 30 kDa were reported to be 3HB-oligomer hydrolases in Pseudomonas lemoignei (3), Zoogloea ramigera (28), and Pseudomonas denitrificans (30). These enzymes also could be homologous to PhaZc. Although the substrate specificities of PhaZc homologs vary, the widespread distribution may reflect the importance of the PhaZc-like enzymes in the mobilization of PHB.
Some of the enzymatic properties of PhaZc in vitro clearly suggest that the enzyme is a specific 3HB-oligomer hydrolase, not a lipase or nonspecific esterase, and it may function partly as a PHB depolymerase. Although the enzyme hydrolyzed 3HB oligomers efficiently, it also degraded artificial amorphous PHB (Table 3 and Fig. 3), and a certain amount of PhaZc was found in native PHB inclusion bodies (Fig. 2). The PHB depolymerase activity with artificial amorphous PHB observed in vivo does not necessarily mean that PhaZc has weak activity with native PHB in the cell; the amorphous PHB in native PHB inclusion bodies probably differs from the artificial amorphous PHB in terms of accessibility and degradability. In a previous report, we showed that PhaZ1 and PhaZb synergistically hydrolyze PHB (10). For these reasons, PhaZ1, PhaZb, and PhaZc may work together and hydrolyze PHB efficiently, as well as 3HB oligomers in the cell.
There was a significant difference in the accumulation of PHB between various mutants, including the
phaZc mutant and the wild type. Under both nitrogen-rich and PHB accumulation conditions, all deletion mutants showed higher PHB levels than the wild type, and the maximal level was observed in the
phaZb mutant. The effect of the mutation on accumulation indicates that PhaZc and PhaZb contribute to the mobilization of PHB. It has been reported that accumulation and degradation of PHB occur at the same time (9). It seems that deletion of phaZc and phaZb leads to an imbalance in accumulation and degradation, lowering the degradative activity for PHB or 3HB oligomers in the cell, with the result that a large amount of PHB accumulates. The difference between the
phaZb and
phaZc mutants in terms of PHB content may be caused by the difference in subcellular localization. Whereas PhaZc mainly localizes in the cytosol, PhaZb is present in both the cytosol and PHB inclusion bodies (10). Although the substrate specificities of PhaZc and PhaZb are similar in vitro, it seems that PhaZb is more concerned with polymer degradation than PhaZc in the cell. Interestingly, the
phaZc mutant and the
phaZbZc mutant showed similar accumulations of PHB when they were cultured in MSF medium and during the logarithmic phase in N-rich medium. Furthermore, the
phaZbZc mutant deposited an amount of PHB similar to the amount deposited by the wild type in the stationary phase in nitrogen-rich conditions. It is not clear why the
phaZbZc mutant contains less PHB than the
phaZb mutant and shows rapid loss of PHB after accumulation. However, it is possible that the mobilization of PHB is regulated by the concentration of 3HB in the cell. Because both PhaZb and PhaZc efficiently hydrolyze 3HB oligomers, it is clear that the concentration of the 3HB monomer in the cell is changed by these enzymes. The proportions of 3HB, 3HB oligomers, and PHB in deletion mutants should be different from those in the wild type. For these reasons, not only the carbon or nutrient concentration in the culture but also the 3HB oligomers or 3HB concentration in the cell may regulate the mobilization of PHB. The low concentration of 3HB in the cell may be one of the signals for mobilization. In the
phaZbZc mutant, the PHB content decreased to almost zero, like the content in the wild type, after temporal accumulation of PHB in N-rich medium. Given that the PHB assay used in this study cannot distinguish PHB, 3HB oligomers, and 3HB, the decrease in the PHB content in the
phaZbZc mutant may have been due to a decrease in the 3HB oligomer content caused by an unknown hydrolase(s).
The PHB mobilization system in W. eutropha H16 is very complex and still unclear. Certainly more study is needed.
We thank A. Sugiyama and M. Takanashi for providing 3HB oligomers and 3HB dehydrogenase, respectively.
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