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Journal of Bacteriology, November 2006, p. 7470-7476, Vol. 188, No. 21
0021-9193/06/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JB.00800-06
Copyright © 2006, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Evolution of Transmembrane Protein Kinases Implicated in Coordinating Remodeling of Gram-Positive Peptidoglycan: Inside versus Outside
Greg Jones and
Paul Dyson*
School of Medicine, University of Wales Swansea, Singleton Park, Swansea SA2 8PP, United Kingdom
Received 5 June 2006/
Accepted 16 August 2006

ABSTRACT
Members of a family of serine/threonine protein kinases (STPKs),
unique to gram-positive bacteria, comprise an intracellular
kinase domain and reiterated extracellular PASTA (for "penicillin-binding
protein and serine/threonine kinase associated") domains. PASTA
domains exhibit low affinity for ß-lactam antibiotics
that are structurally similar to their likely normal ligands:
stem peptides of unlinked peptidoglycan. The PASTA-domain STPKs
are found in the actinobacteria and firmicutes and, as exemplified
by PknB of
Mycobacterium tuberculosis, they are functionally
implicated in aspects of growth, cell division, and development.
Whereas the kinase domains are well conserved, there is a wide
divergence in the sequences of the multiple PASTA domains. Closer
inspection reveals position-dependent evolution of individual
PASTA domains: a domain at one position within a gene has a
close phylogenetic relationship with a domain at a similar position
in an orthologous gene, whereas neighboring domains have clearly
diverged one from one another. A similar position-dependent
relationship is demonstrated in the second family of proteins
with multiple PASTA domains: the high-molecular-weight type
II penicillin-binding protein (PBP2x) family. These transpeptidases
are recruited to the division site by a localized pool of unlinked
peptidoglycan. We infer that protein localization is guided
by low-affinity interactions between structurally different
unlinked peptidoglycan stem peptides and individual PASTA domains.
The STPKs possess a greater multiplicity and diversity of PASTA
domains, allowing interactions with a wider range of stem-peptide
ligands. These interactions are believed to activate the intracellular
kinase domain, allowing an STPK to coordinate peptidoglycan
remodeling and reproduction of a complex cell wall structure.

INTRODUCTION
Of all infectious diseases, tuberculosis is the biggest killer
worldwide. The causative agent, the gram-positive bacterium
Mycobacterium tuberculosis, can lie quiescent in unidentified
sites in the human host for years without producing overt disease
and then revive to cause lesions and, in many cases, progressive
tuberculosis. To improve the outlook for combating this pathogen,
it is particularly important to understand the genes that govern
the cell cycle and latency state of infection. Serine/threonine
protein kinases (STPKs) play an important part in bacterial
signaling pathways, particularly in more complex prokaryotes
such as
Mycobacterium and
Streptomyces, which possess multiple
STPK genes (reviewed in reference
1). One family of these STPKs,
unique to gram-positive bacteria, consists of transmembrane
proteins, with the N-terminal kinase domain inside the cell
and a C-terminal sensory component outside the cell (Fig.
1).
The extracellular component is made up of three or four reiterated
PASTA (for "penicillin-binding protein and serine/threonine
kinase associated") domains (
30). These domains were first identified
associated with a high-molecular-weight type II penicillin-binding
protein, PBP2x, in another medically important gram-positive
bacterium
Streptococcus pneumoniae. Indeed, PBP2x, which has
two C-terminal PASTA domains, is the only protein for which
the PASTA domain structure has been determined by X-ray crystallography
(
25). Each domain consists of an alpha helix and three beta
strands, with a loop region of variable length between the first
and second strands. A further crystal structure was determined
in the presence of cefuroxime, a ß-lactam antibiotic
(
13). Surprisingly, two molecules of the antibiotic were bound:
one as a covalent complex with the active-site serine residue,
the second associated by Van de Waal's interactions between
the ß-lactam ring and the first PASTA domain. This
part of the antibiotic structurally resembles an unlinked peptidogylcan
stem peptide, the likely normal ligand of a PASTA domain.
The multiple PASTA domain STPKs are found in the firmicutes
and actinobacteria. PknB of
M. tuberculosis is representative
of one of the two different PASTA domain STPKs commonly found
in the latter and has been the most extensively studied. A
pknB (Rv0014c) ortholog is found in all sequenced actinomycete genomes
in a highly conserved gene context and location, close to the
chromosomal origin of replication,
oriC. The gene is linked
with others involved in signaling: its cognate phosphatase gene
and two genes coding for fork-head-associated (FHA) proteins,
mediators of serine and threonine phosphorylation (
9,
24). In
addition, the conserved gene cluster contains critical morphogenetic
genes:
pbpA, encoding a penicillin-binding protein important
for growth and cell division (
5); a
rodA gene; and an ortholog
of
crgA, a gene implicated in the control of cell division in
Streptomyces (
6,
7). PknB undergoes autophosphorylation and
is dephosphorylated by its cognate phosphatase in vitro (
3).
It can in turn phosphorylate FHA domains, including that of
the neighboring gene Rv0020c in vitro (
14), and also two threonine
residues of PbpA (
5). Overexpressing PknB in mycobacterial cells
alters cell division and cell wall synthesis to produce swollen
cells with incomplete division septa that also show occasional
branching, whereas partial depletion results in long, thin cells
(
16).
pknB and the neighboring
rodA are both essential genes
in
M. tuberculosis (
27).
The firmicutes generally contain a single multiple-PASTA-domain STPK. A null mutation of the Bacillus subtilis kinase gene prkC results in a decrease in stationary-phase cell density and of loss of efficiency in the formation of spores and biofilms (11, 19). In Streptococcus pneumoniae, the orthologous kinase (StkP) is implicated in virulence (10). A likely target for phosphorylation by StkP is phosphoglucosamine mutase, GlmM, involved in cell wall synthesis (23).
We have undertaken the first study of how these STPKs have evolved. Our analysis reveals an unexpected diversity among the PASTA domains and allows us to predict how they may function.

MATERIALS AND METHODS
Sequence selection.
Bacterial species containing multiple PASTA domain proteins
were identified by using the Conserved Domain Architecture Retrieval
Tool (CDART [
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Structure/lexington/lexington.cgi?cmd = rps]). The protein sequence of the PASTA domains from
S. coelicolor was used as a query sequence. The same sequence was used to
perform BLAST searches against the individual genomes. A representative
sample of genomes was selected by using the genomes list at
the GOLD database (
http://www.genomesonline.org/) (
2).
Mycobacterium smegmatis sequences were obtained by using BLAST searches at
TIGR (
http://www.tigr.org). Sequences giving an e-value of

0.0001
were selected, and the domain architecture was checked by using
the SMART tool (
18). Only proteins showing N-terminal kinase,
transmembrane and C-terminal PASTA domains were selected, as
well as PBP2x orthologs. Representative samples of firmicute
and actinomycete multiple PASTA domain proteins were selected
for further detailed analysis (Table
1) . Transmembrane domains
were confirmed by using TMpred (
http://www.ch.embnet.org/software/TMPRED_form.html).
Sequences of individual domains were retrieved from the SMART
alignment. The DNA sequences encoding these domains were obtained
by aligning the reverse-translated protein sequences with the
actual gene sequence.
Data analysis.
Alignments were obtained by using MEGA3 software (
17) for analysis
in DNASP (
26); these alignments were checked with the version
of CLUSTALX current at the time. Maximum-likelihood trees were
obtained by using PHYML (
15) and visualized by using MEGA3.
Sliding window analysis was achieved by using DNASP, comparing
each sequence against all others in the data set in a pairwise
manner. K
a/
Ks values were calculated by using the Nei-Gojobori
method (
22), using the Jukes-Cantor correction for substitutions
at multiple sites. Average K
a/
Ks values were calculated from
individual values of all pairwise comparisons between all members
of each data set. Some comparisons were made impossible due
to a high (>75%) proportion of synonymous substitutions,
thus preventing the use of the Jukes-Cantor correction. These
comparisons were excluded from the analysis. For
pknB orthologs,
the differences between K
a/
Ks values for kinase and extracellular
domains were tested for significance by using a paired
t test,
while the K
a/
Ks values for the PASTA domains of
pbp2x orthologs
and
pknB orthologs were compared by using a Mann-Whitney U test.
These statistical analyses were done by using SPSS.
Structural analysis.
Structures of PASTA domains were determined by using the NPS server (4), using the MLRC, DSC, and PHD programs to give a consensus secondary structure prediction.

RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
Evolutionary comparison of the intracellular and extracellular components of actinomycete pknB orthologs.
A comparison of the amino acid sequences of the cytoplasmic
kinase domains of four actinomycete (
S. coelicolor,
S. avermitilis,
M. tuberculosis, and
Corynebacterium diphtheriae) PknB orthologs
revealed 55% conservation of identical residues and 11.8% conservation
of similar residues, with an overall similarity of 66.8%. In
contrast, the predicted extracellular portion of these proteins,
consisting of four reiterated PASTA domains, has only 24.5%
overall similarity, with 10.7% conserved residues and 13.8%
similar residues. This suggests that different selection pressures
are acting on either side of the plasma membrane. To quantify
these differences, we examined the ratio of nonsynonymous (K
a)
and synonymous (
Ks) nucleotide changes in 14 orthologs of
pknB (Table
1). Figure
1 illustrates the average values for K
a/
Ks ratios using a window size of 72 and a step size of 21 nucleotides.
When the sliding-window K
a/
Ks ratios are mapped against the
domain structure of the protein, clear differences in the values
either side of the membrane are evident. Overall, the intracellular
STPK domain is under much tighter selective constraint than
the juxtamembrane, transmembrane, or extracellular (PASTA) domains.
Indeed, the average K
a/
Ks value for
pknB kinase domains is 0.266,
whereas for the extracellular reiterated PASTA domains the value
is 0.787. When the two sets of pairwise comparisons for PASTA
and kinase domains were examined, the values were found to be
significantly different at the 95% confidence level using the
paired
t test (df = 90,
t = 16.5).
Position-dependent evolution of individual PASTA domains.
Phylogenetic comparison of the individual PASTA domains from actinobacterial STPKs reveals that they cluster according to their position in orthologous genes, rather than with neighboring domains in the same gene. This is clearly shown in the maximum-likelihood tree drawn for five mycobacterial pknB orthologs (Fig. 2), and trees drawn for other genera give a similar outcome. A large subset of the actinobacteria contains a second transmembrane kinase gene that lies within 20 genes of the division cell wall gene cluster. In these organisms each PASTA domain is more related to its orthologous domain than its homologous domain (results not shown). The positional clustering of PASTA domains is also true for pbp2x orthologs. Comparison of the nucleotide sequences of PBP2X- and STPK-associated PASTA domains of seven bacilli species (Table 1) reveals orthologous clustering of PASTA domains (Fig. 3), with PBP2X-associated domains forming their own unique clusters. However, the nucleotide diversity for the STPK-associated PASTA domain 2 is too great to allow grouping together with any degree of confidence. The nucleotide diversity is also too great to allow comparisons between PASTA domains from the same protein family from different genera.
The significantly higher average K
a/
Ks value for multiple STPK-associated
PASTA domains compared to that for the kinase domains could
be explained by either positive selection or relaxation of purifying
selection. However, the phylogenetic analysis indicating position-dependent
evolution of individual PASTA domains could only be consistent
with positive selection favoring PASTA domain diversity. We
hypothesize that each domain has evolved a binding affinity
toward a specific stem peptide ligand. The complement of PASTA
domains associated with a particular protein is specific to
each genus, and this is likely to reflect differences in peptidoglycan
composition existing between families of bacteria (see below).
Moreover, the complement of PASTA domains is specific to each
family of gene orthologs within a genus. For example, the actinomycete
pknB orthologs have a distinct complement of PASTA domains compared
to the division cell wall-linked STPKs from the same bacteria.
This is consistent with a particular complement of PASTA domains
recognizing a specific set of the stem peptide ligands. In this
way, the diversity of gram-positive peptidoglycan composition
may influence the function of the various PASTA domain proteins
in different ways.
Identification of variable regions within PASTA domains.
The variability of peptidoglycan structure in gram-positive bacteria is likely to provide a selection pressure for the rapid evolution of PASTA domains. Indeed, the pbp2x-associated PASTA domains of penicillin-resistant S. pneumoniae isolates are mutational hotspots (8, 30). More than 70% of the stem peptides in these isolates can consist of abnormal branched structures (12), and PASTA domain mutations presumably allow these structures to be recognized. Uniquely for the first PASTA domain of this pbp2x, there is experimental data on amino acid residues that contact the ß-lactam cefuroxime (13, 30) and also the positions of amino acid substitutions present in variants that recognize abnormal stem peptides in penicillin-resistant strains (8). To identify regions of variability in this domain that could be evolving to recognize different ligands, a sliding-window analysis of Ka/Ks ratios was performed for the first PASTA domain sequence of S. pneumoniae pbp2x compared to the same domain of 27 other firmicute pbp2x orthologs (Table 1). Using a window size of 12 and a step size of three nucleotides, codon-by-codon analysis of variability could be mapped against the corresponding domain structure, with attention to amino acid residues implicated in Van der Waal's interactions with cefuroxime and the positions of amino acid substitutions present in pbp2x genes from penicillin-resistant isolates (Fig. 4). Of particular note is a correlation between the highly variable regions of this domain (Ka/Ks > 1) with the locations of amino acid substitutions. Moreover, the most divergent sequence aligns to the first half of the
-helix containing two amino acids involved in interactions with the ß-lactam antibiotic. The analysis is consistent with the evolution of PASTA domain diversity to recognize different peptidoglycan stem peptides.
The overall average K
a/
Ks values for the first and second PASTA
domains of 28 firmicute
pbp2x orthologs belonging to 11 genera
are 0.659 and 0.524, respectively. In contrast, the overall
average K
a/
Ks values for the 14 actinomycete
pknB-associated
PASTA domains from 7 genera are 0.895 (domain 1), 0.722 (domain
2), 0.779 (domain 3), and 0.859 (domain 4). With the exception
of the comparison between the values for
pknB-associated PASTA
domain 2 and
pbp2x-associated PASTA domain 1, in all other comparisons
the diversity of the
pknB-associated PASTA domains is significantly
greater than that of the
pbp2x-associated PASTA domains (at
the 95% confidence level using a Mann-Whitney U test). A sliding-window
codon-by-codon analysis of each
pknB-associated domain revealed
many more regions within each domain with K
a/
Ks values greater
than 1 than were present in either
pbp2x-associated PASTA domain
(results not shown). When mapped against domain structure, no
consistent patterns of variability could be identified, although
in general regions with K
a/
Ks values of greater than 1 mapped
to linker regions. Hence, regions of high variability appear
to be largely constrained by protein tertiary structure.
The complexity of peptidoglycan in gram-positive bacteria: a clue to PASTA domain multiplicity, diversity, and function.
Peptidoglycan is a highly complex and essential macromolecule of bacterial cell walls (except mycoplasma, which coincidentally lack PASTA domain proteins) that contributes to cell shape and confers rigidity and resistance to osmotic pressure. It is constantly remodeled to allow cell growth and division. Whereas gram-negative bacteria have a single or few peptidoglycan layers composed of a uniform primary structure, gram-positive bacteria have up to 40 layers that can exhibit a great variation in composition and structural arrangement (28). Species-to-species differences are attributed to variation in the composition of the stem peptide linked to the glycan backbone. For example, the diamino acid component at position 3 of the peptide that is critical for cross-linking peptidoglycan chains can be any one of six different amino acids, or it can be unsubstituted, requiring that cross-linking is via a trifunctional amino acid at position 2. Moreover, a further increase in structural complexity is provided by frequent cross-bridges that link two chemically distinct stem-peptides. A corollary to this is that, in contrast to gram-negative peptidoglycan, the composition of murein in a gram-positive species can be nonuniform. In addition, the composition can be modified in response to environmental pressures. For example, up to 22 novel stem peptides are observed after the induction of vancomycin resistance in S. aureus (29), and heritable changes to peptidoglycan structure are a basis for resistance to ß-lactam antibiotics (8).
Given the chemical diversity of gram-positive peptidoglycan, how is the cross-linked polymer assembled reproducibly? Mechanisms are required during cell growth and division to ensure that peptidoglycan is remodeled in a manner to reproduce a specific template. De novo peptidoglycan synthesis is preceded by localized murein hydrolysis, involving the breakage of existing cross-bridges, to allow the insertion of newly synthesized polymers that can then be cross-linked with "old" strands. For growth (elongation), the extent of incorporation of newly synthesized peptidoglycan is limited, but occurs at many sites, whereas multiple new strands are inserted at the two poles of a cell during septation. Genetic and cytological evidence suggests that these two processes are mediated by separate enzyme machinery. It is vital that appropriate peptidoglycan-synthesizing machinery is produced at the requisite time in the cell cycle and correctly positioned to allow for either growth or division.
The PASTA domains of PBP2x are likely to have a critical role in the positioning of this FtsI ortholog at the division site in S. pneumoniae. In this organism, deletion of the small carboxypeptidase, PBP3, thought to be responsible for generating a tripeptide stem transpeptidation substrate of PBP2x, leads to frequent incorrect positioning of the transpeptidase (20). Normally, PBP2x colocalizes with FtsZ and FtsW, and this positioning is due to recruitment by the localized pool of substrate stem peptides. Low-affinity binding to the substrate by a PASTA domain can thereby guide the localization of PBP2x to the division site. A second PASTA domain, recognizing an alternative stem peptide ligand, can provide greater specificity for PBP2x guidance, contributing to the reproduction of a nonuniform peptidoglycan template.
In comparison to the PBP2x orthologs, the STPKs possess a greater number of PASTA domains, and these exhibit even greater diversity (higher overall Ka/Ks ratios), suggesting evolution to recognize a wider spectrum of ligands. In actinobacteria, PknB is likely to function by sensing unlinked peptidoglycan in order to direct synthesis and/or localization of the machinery required for cell wall modification to permit growth. Likely ligands for the four PASTA domains of the STPK are unlinked stem peptides of different composition resulting either from the action of modifying endopeptidases on cross-linked peptidoglycan or from the synthesis of new peptidoglycan. Another potential source of ligands is the release of muropeptides. Recent research on resuscitation-promoting factors of actinobacteria has revealed that their biological activity in stimulating the revival of quiescent bacteria correlates with their murolytic activity (21). Extremely low concentrations of these cytokines are required for their biological activity, indicating that a limited release of muropeptides is likely to trigger a signaling cascade that amplifies the response. PknB is a good candidate as a kinase that can trigger such a phosphorelay and thus may be crucial in signaling the switch between latency and the onset of progressive tuberculosis.
In addition to growth and cell division, various developmental processes in prokaryotes also demand peptidoglycan remodeling. The PASTA domain STPKs of firmicutes appear to be dedicated to these changes, with evidence for a coordinating role in developing competence, biofilm formation, and sporulation. We postulate that different unlinked stem peptides may participate in the activation of these STPKs, leading to remodeling of the peptidoglycan appropriate to a specific developmental pathway.
Concluding remarks.
Even for the uniform and relatively simple cell wall structure of E. coli, our understanding of peptidoglycan remodeling associated with growth and division is limited. The increased chemical complexity and variety of the gram-positive cell wall would appear to demand a higher-order coordination of peptidoglycan remodeling. The evolution of proteins with multiple diverse PASTA domains that can recognize different unlinked stem peptides is likely to have been driven by the complexity and variety of gram-positive murein. The multiple PASTA domains of the STPKs can contribute to the reproduction of complex peptidoglycan by interaction with diverse stem-peptide ligands. As a consequence, signaling pathways can be triggered that coordinate the remodeling machinery. Since these interactions are important in pathogenic organisms such as M. tuberculosis, this underlines the importance of investigating the nature of the ligands that individual PASTA domains recognize.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We thank David Skibinski for help and encouragement.
G.J. was supported by a BBSRC studentship.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: School of Medicine, University of Wales Swansea, Singleton Park, Swansea SA2 8PP, United Kingdom. Phone: 44 1792 295667. Fax: 44 1792 295447. E-mail:
p.j.dyson{at}swansea.ac.uk.

Published ahead of print on 25 August 2006. 

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Journal of Bacteriology, November 2006, p. 7470-7476, Vol. 188, No. 21
0021-9193/06/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JB.00800-06
Copyright © 2006, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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