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Journal of Bacteriology, October 2005, p. 7155-7160, Vol. 187, No. 20
0021-9193/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JB.187.20.7155-7160.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Ilaria Marinoni,
Elisa Galli,
Anna Colosimo, and
Alessandra M. Albertini*
Dipartimento di Genetica e Microbiologia, Università degli Studi di Pavia, Pavia, Italy
Received 22 June 2005/ Accepted 2 August 2005
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In the salvage or recycling pathway, NA, deriving from NAD dissociation or of exogenous origin, is reconverted to NaMN by a NA phosphoribosyltransferase (PncB in Escherichia coli; previously YueK in Bacillus subtilis) and reinserted in the enzymatic chain downstream of the reaction catalyzed by NadC (22).
In a comparative study in 1968, Saxton et al. revealed that the enzymatic activities of NadB, NadA, and PncB of E. coli are subject to inhibition by NA, while the inhibited enzymes for B. subtilis are NadB, NadA, and NadC but not PncB (29).
In E. coli and Salmonella species, the regulation of NAD biosynthesis is exerted by the trifunctional protein NadR, which transcriptionally represses the nadB, nadA (de novo pathway), and pncB (salvage pathway) genes and increases the uptake of nicotinamide-ribose and its conversion to nicotinamide mononucleotide and subsequently to NAD when the NAD concentration is low (7, 11, 12, 23, 25, 38).
A protein homologous to NadR is not present in Bacillus subtilis, in which, presumably, a different mechanism of NAD biosynthesis regulation is active. In the gram-positive bacterium, the nadB, nadA, and nadC genes are organized in an operon whose operator-promoter region is overlapping the operator-promoter region of the divergent dicistronic operon nifS-yrxA (17, 32) (http://genolist.pasteur.fr/SubtiList/).
NifS is a homologue of IscS cystein desulfurases and is supposed to be involved in the in vivo maturation of Fe-S clusters, possibly necessary to assemble an active form of the QA synthetase complex formed by NadB and NadA (21, 32). YrxA was classified as a potential transcriptional regulator (1), but the protein has no homologues in gram-negative bacteria, while genes for similar proteins are present in all the sequenced genomes of bacilli and other pathogenic gram-positive bacteria (genera Listeria, Streptococcus, and Enterococcus).
In 1993, Sun and Setlow (32) showed that in the presence of NA, the transcription of the nadB and nifS genes is abolished. The pncB gene (besides nadD, nadE, and nadF) was classified as essential for Bacillus subtilis by Kobayashi et al. (16): the authors speculated that the accumulation of NA, when pncB is inactivated, might repress NAD de novo synthesis and cause the bacterium's death.
We hypothesized that YrxA, due to its similarity with other transcriptional regulators able to bind small molecules as effectors (1), is, in the presence of NA, the repressor of nadBCA and nifS-yrxA transcription, allowing the recycling of the pyridinic ring from NA present in the medium and the availability of aspartic acid for protein synthesis.
Our genetic analysis shows that the pncB gene is essential only when B. subtilis is grown in the presence of NA and that the inactivation of yrxA bypasses its requirement. We show that YrxA represses the transcription of the two operons nadBCA and nifS-yrxA in vivo and that it binds in vitro to their overlapping promoters in the site of the putative operator sequence, using NA as a cofactor.
Construction of a pncB mutant. pncB, the gene previously named yueK, coding for NA phosphoribosyltransferase of the recycling pathway, was classified as essential in B. subtilis (16). We constructed a conditional-lethal mutant by transforming wild-type (wt) PB168 (trpC2) competent cells with the integrative plasmid pMUTIN4/pncB', obtained by cloning into pMUTIN4 (37) the 410-bp sequence coding for the N terminus of PncB (from 3259589c to 3259999c, SubtiList coordinates [http://genolist.pasteur.fr/SubtiList/]).
Transformants were selected on tryptose blood agar base (TBAB) medium (Difco) with erythromycin (Ery) (0.3 µg/ml) in the presence of 1 mM isopropyl-ß-D-thiogalactoside (IPTG); the clones where Eryr was brought from the vector were screened on 100 µg/ml Ery. One of the clones, verified by PCR, was named PB1934 (trpC2
pncB'::pMUTIN4, Eryr). When PB168 competent cells were transformed with chromosomal DNA of PB1934, Eryr colonies grew only on medium supplemented with 1 mM IPTG. This result confirmed that pncB is essential when B. subtilis is grown on rich medium (16). To investigate whether NA plays a role in causing pncB to be essential (as hypothesized in references 16 and 29), we selected Eryr transformants on minimal medium (MM) (5) with or without NA (50 µg/ml). No colonies were visible in presence of NA (Fig. 1, bottom left), while very small colonies appeared on MM plates without NA after 48 h at 37°C (Fig. 1, top left) with roughly the same frequency observed in the plates where IPTG was added (Fig. 1, top right).
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FIG. 1. Selection of Eryr (0.3 µg/ml erythromycin) colonies using DNA of PB1934 ( pncB'::pMUTIN4) to transform PB168 (wt) competent cells on MM (5) in the presence or absence of IPTG (1 mM) and NA (50 µg/ml). Only sporadic spontaneous Eryr mutants can be observed on the bottom left in MM with NA. Very small colonies can be observed in the absence of NA (top left) after 48 h of incubation at 37°C. When IPTG is added to the medium, the colonies observed in the presence of NA are smaller (bottom right) than the ones observed in absence of NA (top right).
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ynaB'::pMUTIN4 trpC2 [16]). These in vivo experiments showed that pncB is essential only when NA is present, and this gene/metabolite combination suppresses de novo NAD biosynthesis and causes the bacterium's death. NAD cannot be synthesized due to the unavailability of NaMN, the end product of the de novo (nadBCA-dependent) or recycling (pncB-dependent) pathways. In particular, NA could act as a cofactor for a transcriptional regulator that represses nadBCA transcription. |
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TABLE 1. Growth of single and double mutants on MM with or without NA and 1 mM IPTGa
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In a
yrxA context, the pncB gene is no longer essential.
To verify the possible role of YrxA in the regulation of NAD biosynthesis, a
yrxA mutant was constructed by substituting the central region of the gene with the cat (chloramphenicol acetyltransferase) cassette by a PCR-based technique. The cat gene was amplified from plasmid pJM105A (24) using the oligonucleotides 5'-cat (5'-TCTTCAACTAAAGCACCCATT-3') and 3'-cat (3'-ACAGTCGGCATTATCTCATATT-3'). A 473-bp fragment from nucleotide (nt) 368 of the coding sequence (CDS) of yrxA to nt 607 of the CDS of the downstream gene pheA was amplified using the oligonucleotides yrxA-5'cat (5'-ATGGGTGCTTTAGTTGAAGAAGGCACCCGGAAAGAAGTT-3'; underlined linker sequence homologous to the 5' region of cat) and 3'-pheA (5'-TTAATGGTCATGATGGTCCCGCA-3'), while a 585-bp fragment from nt 707 of the nifS CDS to nt 127 of the yrxA CDS was amplified with the oligonucleotides 5'-iscS (5'-TAAATGTTCCCGGGATCGGTG-3') and yrxA-3'cat (5'-TATGAGATAATGCCGACTGTAACCTGTCTTGAGACGTTCGCT-3'; underlined linker sequence homologous to the 3' region of cat). The three PCR products were denatured together for three minutes at 94°C and slowly renatured by decreasing the temperature (6°C/min) to the annealing temperature of the 3'-pheA and 5'-iscS primers, used to amplify the mutagenic fragment. Five hundred nanograms of the pheA::cat::iscS mutagenic fragment were used to transform 0.5ml of B. subtilis PB168 competent cells. Cmr clones were obtained with a frequency of 1 x 102 per µg of DNA on nutrient broth (Difco) plates with 5 µg/ml chloramphenicol. One deletion-insertion
yrxA::cat mutant candidate, obtained by double crossover, was verified by PCR and named PB1932 (trpC2
yrxA::cat, Cmr). To demonstrate that yrxA inactivation suppresses pncB essentiality and abolishes the repression role of NA, a double mutant was then created by transforming PB1932 competent cells with chromosomal DNA of PB1934. As expected, Eryr clones grew on TBAB with erythromycin (0.3 µg/ml) with or without IPTG (Fig. 2). One of the Eryr Cmr clones obtained, verified by PCR, was named PB1935 (trpC2
pncB'::pMUTIN4
yrxA::cat). The double mutant PB1935 also grew on MM with NA without IPTG: the addition of 0.5 or 50 µg/ml of NA did not impair the strain growth, since colonies were visible after 24 h (Table 1). PB1935 grew faster than the control strain BFS2652, suggesting that in a PncB+ strain, NA repression of de novo synthesis reduces the total NAD availability. These in vivo experiments support the hypothesis that yrxA, probably in cooperation with NA, is the repressor of NAD de novo synthesis. Constitutive expression of the nadBCA operon supports NAD synthesis even in the absence of the recycling pathway (
pncB'::pMUTIN4).
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FIG. 2. Selection of Eryr transformants (0.3 µg/ml erythromycin) on TBAB medium with or without IPTG (1 mM): in the top part of the figure, transformation of PB168 (wt) competent cells with chromosomal DNA of PB1934 ( pncB'::pMUTIN4), colonies are visible only on plates containing IPTG. When the same DNA was used to transform PB1932 ( yrxA) competent cells, the same number of colonies grew on TBAB plates with or without IPTG (lower part of the figure).
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yrxA) cells were grown at 37°C in PY broth (Penassay antibiotic medium 3; Difco), 0.5% glucose, to an optical density at 600 nm of 0.3; they were then washed and incubated for a further two hours at 37°C in MM with or without NA (50 µg/ml). RNA was extracted from cells by using the High Pure RNA isolation kit (Roche), and 1 µg of total RNA for each sample was retrotranscribed with the oligonucleotides NadBa2 (5'-CTCGTTCATTGCGGTCGAATG GAAATCC-3') for the nadB transcripts and 3'-iscS (5'-TGAAGACAGGTGTTGAATGG-3') for the nifS transcripts. cDNAs were then reamplified with primers NadBa2 and 3'NadB (5'-ATTGCAGTCATCGGTTCAGG-3') for nadB, giving a 297-bp fragment, and with primers 3'-iscS and 5'-iscS (5'-TTATTTAGATTATGCAGCGACAACG-3') for nifS, producing a 480-bp fragment. The nadB and nifS genes were not transcribed when the wt strain was grown in the presence of NA, while in strain PB1932 (
yrxA), both genes were transcribed even in the presence of NA (Fig. 3). This experiment confirms that YrxA is, in the presence of NA, the repressor of nadBCA and nifS-yrxA operons transcription. According to our results, the persistence of nad transcription regulation in the
nifS::erm mutant created by Sun and Setlow (32) could be explained by the absence of a polar effect on the downstream yrxA gene: the expression and the regulatory function of YrxA were evidently maintained. On the other hand, the authors did not specify if the disruption on nifS they performed introduced a strong transcription terminator: read-through from the nif promoter or from the ermC promoter itself cannot be ruled out.
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FIG. 3. RT-PCR experiments on the transcripts of the nifS/iscS and nadB genes in the PB1932 ( yrxA::cat) mutant and PB168 (wt) strains, grown in MM medium with or without NA (50 µg/ml). S, Mass Ruler DNA ladder (low range; Fermentas). yrxA, RT-PCR on RNA extracted from PB1932 cells; WT, RT-PCR on RNA extracted from PB168 cells. A product of 297 bp indicates the presence of nadBCA operon transcripts, and a product of 480 bp indicates the presence of nifS/iscS transcripts.
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-32P]CTP (3,000 Ci/mMol) in the PCR and used as a probe in an electrophoresis mobility shift assay (EMSA) to test if YrxA binds to the promoter region. YrxA, glutathione S-transferase (GST) tagged at the N terminus, was overexpressed into BL21(DE3) E. coli cells after the cloning into the pGEX- 6p1 expression vector (Amersham Biosciences) of the yrxA CDS, amplified from genomic wt DNA with primers 5'ByrxA- GEX1 (5'-CGGGATCCTTGACCGAAGAATTAAAGCTA-3') and 3'yrxA-GEX (5'-CGGAATTCTTATTAATTAAAAATG CCGGCTTCT-3'), including the first of the two Met residues (Met-1 and Met-8) identified as a putative YrxA start codon (32). The YrxA-GST fusion protein was isolated by chromatography on glutathione Sepharose 4B columns (Amersham Biosciences), and after treatment with Prescission protease (Amersham Biosciences) and elution, a 90% pure YrxA protein was recovered. This 20.1-kDa YrxA protein (including five additional amino acids at the N-terminal end) was used in EMSA assays. All attempts made in expressing the untagged form of the protein failed, probably due to the instability of the protein in its native form. The 87-bp OP labeled fragment, purified with a PCR purification kit (QIAGEN), was incubated (37°C for 20 min) at a concentration of 1.7 nM with increasing concentrations of the YrxA protein in a 20-µl reaction volume in binding buffer (20mM Tris HCl [pH 8], 5 mM MgCl2, 100 mM KCl, 0.5 mM dithiothreitol, 0.05 mg/ml bovine serum albumin, 0.05% NP-40, 10% [vol/vol] glycerol). The reactions were loaded on a 6% polyacrylamide non denaturing gel in 0.5x Tris-Borate EDTA. Electrophoresis was performed at 70 V for 90 min.
As shown in Fig. 4A, the mobility of the 87-bp OP fragment was shifted as a function of the YrxA concentration, increasing from 3 nM to 3.4 µM. The binding was specific, since the addition to the YrxA-probe reaction of increasing concentrations (5, 10, and 20 ng) of the specific cold competitor SC (a150-bp fragment, including the 87-bp OP region, amplified with primers BSnadB 5'-CCCCTGAACCGATGACTGCA-3' and BSnifS 5'-GGCGTTGTCGCTGCATAATC-3'), progressively eliminated the shift of labeled OP. The addition of the nonspecific cold competitors AC1 (a 318-bp fragment internal to the nadB coding region, amplified with primers NadBa2, the same used for RT-PCR, and 5'nadB 5'-CACCAATGTCTA AAAAGACGATTG-3') and AC2, (330-bp fragment included in the nifS CDS, amplified with primers IscSex [5'-GGTTAACCA TATGATTTATTTAGATTATGCAG-3'] and Nif2 [5'-AAA GCAGCGCAATTATGAAT-3']) had no effect on fragment mobility (Fig. 4B). Finally, to identify which molecule could act as an effector in the repression action of YrxA, NA, NA analogues, intermediates, or end products of NAD biosynthesis, were added to the reaction at a concentration of 300 µM. When 300 µM NA was added to the YrxA/DNA reaction mixture, the mobility of the labeled OP fragment had a supershift (Fig. 4C), while the addition of the other compounds didnot alter OP mobility. Both a higher concentration of YrxA (6.8 µM) alone and the addition to the reaction of NA (>150 µM) in the presence of 3.4 µM YrxA caused a "supershift" in EMSA (data not shown), while addition of NAD up to a concentration of 1.3 mM had no effect. The way in which NA favors YrxA binding to the operator-promoter region suggests a multimeric cooperative interaction, which is to be investigated further.
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FIG. 4. Electrophoresis mobility shift assays. Panel A: band shift induced by YrxA. Increasing concentrations of the protein (0.003, 0.034, 0.34, 0.77, and 3.4 µM) induce an increasing retardation of the 32P OP DNA-labeled fragment (1.7 nM) migration in the gel. Panel B: competition in EMSA between 32P-labeled 87-bp OP fragment and cold specific SC1 DNA (a 170-bp fragment spanning from just upstream to just downstream OP, including the 87-bp fragment) or nonspecific DNA (AC1, a 318-bp fragment covering a region in nadB outside OP; and AC2, a 330-bp fragment in nifS). The YrxA concentration was 50 nM, NA was 150 µM, and the increasing concentrations of competitors were, respectively, 2, 5, and 10ng in 20 µl. Panel C: band shift and "supershift" in the presence of NA and analogues, intermediates, or end products of NAD synthesis (added at a concentration of 300 µM). Lanes: 1, no cofactors, no YrxA; 2, only YrxA; 3, 150 µM NA; 4, 300 µM NA; 5, nicotinamide; 6, quinolinic acid; 7, isoniazide; 8, nicotinic acid hydrazide; 9: pyrazynamide; 10, nicotinamide mononucleotide; 11, NAD; 12, NADH. A plus sign indicates the presence of 3.4 µM YrxA.
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This work first ascribes a biological function to the previously unknown yrxA gene and opens an interesting working hypothesis for developing new therapeutic and antimicrobial strategies for the gram-positive pathogenic bacteria (33) in which homologues of YrxA, and probably similar NAD regulation strategies, have been recognized in silico.
We thank Elisabetta Andreoli for expert technical assistance.
Present address: Dipartimento Materno Infantile e di Biologia-Genetica, Università di Verona, Verona, Italy. ![]()
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