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Journal of Bacteriology, May 2005, p. 3039-3044, Vol. 187, No. 9
0021-9193/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JB.187.9.3039-3044.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Department of Biochemistry, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, 1300 Morris Park Avenue, Bronx, New York 10461
Received 30 November 2004/ Accepted 21 January 2005
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-N-acetyl-L-glutamate. Initial velocity studies reveal that Rv2747 proceeds through a sequential kinetic mechanism, with Km values of 280 mM for L-glutamine and 150 µM for acetyl-coenzyme A and with a kcat value of 200 min1. Initial velocity studies with L-glutamate showed that even at concentrations of 600 mM, saturation was not observed. Therefore, only a kcat/Km value of 125 M1 min1 can be calculated. Inhibition studies reveal that the enzyme is strongly regulated by L-arginine, the end product of the pathway (50% inhibitory concentration, 26 µM). The enzyme was completely inhibited by 500 µM arginine, with a Hill coefficient of 0.60, indicating negatively cooperative binding of L-arginine. |
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In prokaryotes, the arginine biosynthetic pathway proceeds from glutamate via initial N-acetylation of L-glutamate (Fig. 1). Acetylation acts as a protecting group strategy, preventing the spontaneous cyclization of the glutamate semialdehyde intermediate, thus precluding the formation of the proline precursor pyrroline-5-carboxylate (4). Two alternative pathways have evolved for the subsequent removal of the acetyl group and regulation of metabolic flow through the pathway. The "linear pathway" found in Enterobacteriaceae (12), Vibrionaceae (31), Myxococcus xanthus (16), and the archaeobacterium Sulfolobus solfataricus (28) includes an N-acetylornithine deacetylase, encoded by argE, to catalyze the metal-dependent hydrolysis of the acetamide group to form the arginine precursor L-ornithine and acetate (18). In these organisms, the first enzyme in the pathway, N-acetylglutamate synthase, is the target of feedback inhibition by arginine (21). In contrast, in other prokaryotes and simple eukaryotes such as yeast, the pathway has evolved to be energetically more economic, using an "acetyl recycling" pathway in which the acetyl group is recycled through transfer from N-acetylornithine to L-glutamate, yielding N-acetylglutamate and ornithine (12). This reaction is catalyzed by an
-N-acetyl-ornithine-L-glutamate acetyltransferase encoded by the argJ gene. In such reactions, once
-N-acetylornithine is synthesized the action of the N-acetylglutamate synthase (argA) becomes superfluous and regulation of the metabolic pathway is achieved by arginine feedback inhibition of the second enzyme in the pathway, N-acetylglutamate 5-phosphotransferase (27) (encoded by argB), or by feedback inhibition of ArgJ by ornithine (24).
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FIG. 1. Arginine biosynthetic pathways in microorganisms. The "linear pathway" found in Enterobacteriaceae and in S. solfataricus (28) and the alternative "acetyl recycling" pathway found in B. stearothermophilus (23), S. coelicolor (17), and T. thermophilus (6). Dashed lines indicate further biosynthesis via intermediates.
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We have attempted to functionally identify genes involved in amino acid biosynthesis, including L-arginine biosynthesis, in M. tuberculosis. A potential L-glutamate
-N-acetyltransferase, encoded by Rv2747, is a member of the GCN5-related N-acetyltransferase superfamily, as identified by sequence alignment. This gene has been shown to be an essential gene by Himar1-based transposon mutagenesis (25). Rv2747 shows homology (29% identity) to the C terminus of argA of Pseudomonas aeruginosa. However, argA from P. aeruginosa codes for a 48-kDa protein (14), whereas Rv2747 encodes a much smaller, 19-kDa protein. Herein we report the cloning, expression, purification, and characterization of Rv2747 and delineation of its function as a novel
-N-acetylglutamate synthase.
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General methods. Solution pH values were measured at 25°C with an Accumet model 20 pH meter and Accumet combination electrode standardized at pH 7.0 and 4.0 or 10.0. Protein purification was performed at 4°C using a fast protein liquid chromatography system (Amersham-Pharmacia Biotech). Spectrophotometric assays were performed using a UVIKON XL double beam UV-vis spectrophotometer (BIO-TEK Instruments). 1H nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectra were recorded on a Bruker DRX300 spectrometer at 300 MHz, 1H NMR spectra. Electrospray ionization mass spectra were recorded on a ABI QSTAR Pulsar qQTOF spectrometer.
Cloning, expression, and purification of Rv2747. The M. tuberculosis gene Rv2747 was amplified by PCR using the primers 5-tactgtttcacatatgaccgaacgtccacgggat-3 and 5-gtcttctcgccaagcttcagcaccagcagcat-3, which were designed to create NdeI and HindIII restriction endonuclease sites (underlined). The PCR product was digested with NdeI and HindIII and was subjected to agarose (0.8%) gel electrophoresis. The amplified DNA product was ligated into the pCR-Blunt plasmid and transformed into One Shot TOP10 cells. Plasmid DNA isolated from these cells was then digested with NdeI and HindIII, and the purified insert was ligated into purified plasmid pET-23a(+) previously linearized with the same restriction enzymes, yielding an expression plasmid for M. tuberculosis Rv2747 with a C-terminal His6 tag.
The plasmid pET-23a(+):Rv2747 was then isolated, sequenced, and used to transform E. coli Rosetta 2 (DE3) pLysS cells. Transformed cells were grown overnight in 50 ml of LB broth containing 100 µg ampicillin and 34 µg of chloramphenicol. One-liter cultures were then inoculated to an A600 of
0.05. The cells were grown at 37°C to an A600 of 0.8. Cells were cooled for 1 h at 4°C, and protein expression was subsequently induced by the addition of 0.5 mM isopropyl-ß-D-thiogalactopyranoside (IPTG) and left to grow for a further 16 h at 20°C. Expression of the protein was confirmed by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE).
All protein purification steps were carried out at 4°C. The cell pellet (30 g) was resuspended in 50 ml 20 mM triethanolamine (TEA), 100 mM ammonium sulfate, 10 mM imidazole, pH 7.8, containing two tablets of Complete protease inhibitor cocktail (Roche). The cells were disrupted on ice by sonication using a Branson Sonifier 450. The suspension was then centrifuged (10,000 x g for 30 min) to remove cell debris. The supernatant was then filtered using a 0.2-µm-pore-size syringe filter. The filtered supernatant was applied to a preequilibrated (Buffer A; 20 mM TEA, 100 mM ammonium sulfate, 10 mM imidazole, pH 7.8) QIAGEN Ni-NTA Superflow Column (20 by 1,200 mm). The column was washed at 1 ml min1 with 4 column volumes of the same buffer and then eluted with a linear gradient of imidazole (10 mM to 500 mM over 10 column volumes) in Buffer A. Protein was detected with an on-line detector monitoring A280, and column fractions were collected and analyzed by SDS-PAGE. Fractions containing the ca. 20-kDa protein were pooled and dialyzed twice against 4 liters of 20 mM TEA, 100 mM ammonium sulfate, 1 mM EDTA, pH 7.8 and concentrated using a YM10 Amicon ultrafiltration membrane to a final concentration of 20 mg/ml and stored in 50% glycerol at 20°C.
Determination of protein concentration.
The enzyme concentration was determined from
280 nm = 17780 M1 cm1 for native Rv2747, and turnover numbers are based on an enzyme monomer. The concentration of enzyme was also determined using the bicinchoninic acid (BCA) protein assay (Pierce) with bovine serum albumin as a standard, which agreed favorably with the value obtained by A280.
Measurement of enzyme activity.
Reaction rates were determined spectrophotometrically by measuring the increase in absorbance at 412 nm due to the formation of 5-thio-2-nitrobenzoate resulting from the reaction between the free sulfhydryl group of CoASH, generated by the amino acid acetylating activity, and 5,5-dithio-bis(2-nitrobenzoic acid) (DTNB). The reaction was continuously monitored spectrophotometrically. Assay mixtures contained 40 mM TEA, 100 mM ammonium sulfate, 500 mM NaCl (NaCl was included in order to maintain a constant ionic strength at high substrate concentrations), pH 8, and 0.2 mM DTNB in addition to substrates and inhibitors. Reactions were initiated by the addition of 30 nM enzyme in a total volume of 1 ml and were maintained at 25°C. Initial velocity kinetic data were fitted using SigmaPlot. Equations 1 and 2 were used to fit initial velocity patterns, where the concentrations of both substrates were varied. Equation 3 was used to determine 50% inhibitory concentration (IC50) values:
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Analytical gel filtration. Analytical gel filtration was preformed using a Pharmacia Superose 12 1.4/30 cm gel filtration column, calibrated with Bio-Rad gel filtration standards. The column was run in 20 mM TEA, 100 mM ammonium sulfate, pH 8.0, at a flow rate of 0.5 ml/min.
Product purification and analysis.
L-glutamine (8 mg, 54 µmol) and acetyl-CoA (20 mg, 25 µmol) were dissolved in buffer (1,000 µl of 50 mM TRIS, pH 8.0) and Rv2747 (10 mg) was added, the solution was flushed with nitrogen, and the reaction was stirred at 30°C for 8 h. The reaction mixture was passed through an Amicon YM10 spin filter (13,000 rpm, 30 min at 4°C). The flowthrough was applied to a Poros HQ50 anion exchange column (3 ml; Perceptive Biosystems) and eluted with linear gradient of ammonium bicarbonate from 5 to 250 mM over 45 column volumes (135 ml) at a flow rate of 10 ml min1. Amino acids were detected at 230 nm. Fractions containing
-N-acetylglutamine typically eluted around 125 mM bicarbonate. Relevant samples were concentrated, and ammonium bicarbonate was removed by lyophilization to yield the required compounds as their ammonium salts.
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Sequence analysis. Orthologues of Rv2747 are present in a number of actinomycetes, including S. coelicolor (60% amino acid identity) and the thermophilic bacterium T. thermophilus (40% amino acid identity). Sequence alignment studies of functionally characterized ArgA proteins from E. coli and P. aeruginosa, Rv2747, and its orthologue from S. coelicolor show an alignment of the actinomyces sequences with the C-terminal region of the Enterobacteriaceae sequences (Fig. 2). A further domain search of the E. coli ArgA revealed that the protein consists of two separate domains. The N-terminal region of the protein shows homology (60% aligned over 234 residues) to the amino acid kinase family of proteins. The C-terminal region of the protein shows significant homology (98% over 83 residues) to the GNAT family of proteins (Fig. 3). This appears to indicate that the C-terminal portion of the E. coli ArgA protein is in fact the catalytic acetyltransferase domain.
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FIG. 2. Multiple alignment of ArgA proteins using the program Multalin (10). The first column lists the organism. Species name abbreviations are TB, M. tuberculosis (NP_217263); SC, S. coelicolor (NP_627584); EC, E. coli (NP_417295); PA, P. aeruginosa (NP_253891). Residues in boldface indicate similarity, residues in black indicate conserved residues. National Center for Biotechnology Information accession numbers are shown in brackets.
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FIG. 3. Schematic representation of the E. coli argA gene reveals that the gene consists of two separate domains. The N-terminal region of the protein shows homology (60% aligned over 234 residues) to the amino acid kinase family of proteins. The C-terminal region of the protein shows significant homology (98% over 83 residues) to the GNAT family of proteins, with the relative position of Rv2747 overlaid at the C terminus (3).
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-l-Gly, L-Glu-L-Gln, and L-Gln-L-Glu were assayed and shown not to function as substrates. Reactions catalyzed by acetyl-CoA-dependent acetyltransferases are known to proceed through two distinct mechanisms (29). One is a ping-pong mechanism, which involves the transfer of the acetyl group to a cysteinyl residue of the enzyme and the formation of an acetylthioenzyme intermediate. The other is a sequential mechanism, where a ternary complex of enzyme, acetyl-CoA, and substrate forms and the acetyl group of acetyl-CoA is directly transferred to a substrate. The reactions catalyzed by the members of the GNAT superfamily studied so far, including ArgA (5), proceed through a sequential kinetic mechanism (29), with the notable exception of ESA1 histone acetyltransferase, which proceeds through a ping-pong kinetic mechanism (32).
Although L-glutamate and L-glutamine served as substrates for Rv2747, they were relatively poor substrates compared to the kinetic parameters exhibited by other ArgA enzymes (E. coli Glu Km, 3.7 mM; kcat, 100 s1) (21). Initial velocity studies of Rv2747 with L-glutamate showed that even at concentrations of 600 mM, saturation was not observed. Therefore, only a kcat/Km value of 125 ± 2 M1 min1 can be calculated. Interestingly, L-glutamine served as a significantly better substrate compared to L-glutamate. The following steady-state parameters were obtained by fitting the data of Fig. 4 to equation 1; Km of L-glutamine, 280 ± 40 mM; of acetyl-CoA, 150 ± 30 µM; kcat, 200 ± 15 min1; KiacetylCoA, 15 ± 15 µM; and Kiglutamine, 30 ± 30 mM. The kcat/Km value was 700 ± 70 M1 min1 for L-glutamine (5.5-fold better than L-glutamate). The initial velocity plots revealed, on the basis of the standard errors for the fitted parameters as well as visual inspection of the two fits, that the data best fits equation 1 for intersecting lines, diagnostic of a sequential mechanism (Fig. 4) in which both substrates must bind to the enzyme before chemistry can take place, rather than equation 2 for parallel lines, indicative of a ping pong mechanism.
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FIG. 4. Reciprocal initial velocity pattern of L-glutamine N-acetylation by Rv2747. The symbols are experimentally determined values, while the solid lines are fits of the data to equation 1 (sequential) and the dotted lines are fitted to equation 2 (Ping Pong) using SigmaPlot. L-glutamine was varied (50 mM, ; 100 mM, ; 200 mM, ; 500 mM, ) at five fixed levels (0.05, 0.100, 0.200, 0.400, and 1.00 mM) of acetyl-CoA.
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FIG. 5. IC50 determination of Rv2747 by L-arginine. L-glutamine and acetyl-CoA were fixed at 10 mM and 1 mM, respectively, and with variable levels (0.01, 0.02, 0.05, 0.1, 0.2, 0.5, 1, 5, 10, 20, 50, 100, 500, 1,000 µM) of L-arginine. The experimental points were fitted to equation 3 to determine the IC50 value.
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-acetylglutamine by comparison of the spectral data with those of authentic N-
-acetylglutamine. |
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-N-acetyl-ornithine-L-glutamate acetyltransferase and N-acetylglutamate synthase activity, thus allowing the initial synthesis of N-acetylglutamate (23). However, in organisms such as S. coelicolor and T. thermophilus, the pathway is not fully understood as no readily identifiable ortholog of argA can be identified by sequence analysis in such organisms, thus posing the question of how N-acetylornithine is synthesized. The M. tuberculosis genome encodes a putative argJ, which is 56% identical to the monofunctional S. coelicolor argJ (17) and only 37% identical to the bifunctional B. stearothermophilus enzyme (23). Although the M. tuberculosis argJ-encoded enzyme has not been functionally characterized, the high degree of amino acid identity between the S. coelicolor and M. tuberculosis enzymes suggests that M. tuberculosis argJ is monofunctional. In organisms with monofunctional ArgJ enzymes, such as S. coelicolor (17) and T. thermophilus (6), orthologues of Rv2747 appear to be present, posing the question of whether Rv2747 or its orthologues catalyze the initial acetylation of glutamate in order to "prime" the pathway with N-acetyl-glutamate for subsequent arginine synthesis. Rv2747 has been shown to be an essential gene by Himar1-based transposon mutagenesis (25), and furthermore orthologues of the enzyme are found in all mycobacterial species, including M. leprae (9), providing further evidence that the gene is essential.
Amino acid sequence alignment studies of Rv2747 with E. coli ArgA indicates that Rv2747 appears to be missing
150 amino acids from its N terminus and could be considered an N-terminally truncated form of the E. coli ArgA enzyme. A domain search of the E. coli gene showed some sequence similarity between the N terminus of ArgA and amino acid kinase proteins (ArgB). The N-terminal region of the E. coli protein thus might be involved in regulation or may function in the second biosynthetic reaction, the phosphorylation of the 5-carboxyl group. The C-terminal region of the E. coli ArgA is clearly a GNAT domain that functions as the acetyltransferase.
M. tuberculosis Rv2474 was shown to be able to
-N-acetylate L-glutamine and L-glutamate, although it is unclear why glutamate was a poorer substrate, as logically this should be the physiological substrate for the reaction. However, it is possible that N-acetyl-glutamine could be converted to N-acetyl glutamate either enzymatically by a glutaminase, which can selectively hydrolyze the amide group from N-acetyl-glutamine to yield N-acetyl glutamate, similar to that observed in Bacillus circulans (19), or by a nonenzymatic deamidation (7). The enzyme was strongly inhibited by arginine with an IC50 value of 26 µM, a result arguing for a bona fide physiological role of the enzyme in L-arginine biosynthesis. However, one of the key questions posed by the results of this study was why the Km value for acyl acceptor (L-glutamate) was so high. Typical Km values for L-glutamate for reactions catalyzed by ArgA enzymes range from
1 to 10 mM (22), which is 100-fold lower than the observed value for Rv2747. If Rv2747 is functioning as an
-N-acetylglutamate synthase as we propose, the high Km value could be due to a number of reasons. Although as yet functionally uncharacterized, the presence of an argJ homologue in M. tuberculosis might suggest that once even a small amount of
-N-acetyl-L-glutamate was formed, the "acetyl recycling" pathway would provide sufficient biosynthetic flux to provide L-arginine for protein synthesis. Thus, the ArgA enzyme would not need to bind the relatively abundant amino acid glutamate tightly to generate the small amount of N-acetylglutamate that would suffice to "prime" the pathway. Another reason might be that Rv2747 requires a protein partner for efficient and more selective acetylation of L-glutamate. This has been observed for ArgA from S. cerevisiae, where the
-N-acetylglutamate synthase activity requires complex formation with
-N-acetylglutamate kinase (1), and in the case of Synechococcus elongates, where complex formation between the PII signaling protein and
-N-acetyglutamate kinase is required for catalytic activation (11). Therefore, a similar mechanism may have evolved in M. tuberculosis, where a protein partner is required for Rv2747 to function as an efficient catalysis, potentially explaining the high Km value observed. This is currently under investigation.
This work was supported by NIH grant AI33696.
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-acetyl ornithinase. J. Bacteriol. 182:1609-1615.
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