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Journal of Bacteriology, April 2006, p. 3149-3152, Vol. 188, No. 8
0021-9193/06/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JB.188.8.3149-3152.2006
Copyright © 2006, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Characterization of a Gene Encoding an Acetylase Required for Pyoverdine Synthesis in Pseudomonas aeruginosa
Iain L. Lamont,*
Lois W. Martin,
Talia Sims,
Amy Scott,
and
Mary Wallace
Department of Biochemistry, University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand
Received 16 December 2005/
Accepted 6 February 2006

ABSTRACT
Strains of
Pseudomonas aeruginosa secrete one of three pyoverdine
siderophores (types I to III). We have characterized a gene,
pvdYII (for the
pvdY gene present in type II
P. aeruginosa strains),
that is only present in strains that make type II pyoverdine.
A mutation in
pvdYII prevented pyoverdine synthesis. Bioinformatic,
genetic, and biochemical approaches indicate that the PvdYII
enzyme catalyzes acetylation of hydroxyornithine. Expression
of
pvdYII is repressed by the presence of iron and upregulated
by the presence of type II pyoverdine. Characterization of
pvdYII provides insights into the molecular basis for production of
different pyoverdines by different strains of
P. aeruginosa.

TEXT
Pyoverdines are siderophores that are secreted by fluorescent
pseudomonads and are efficient iron-scavenging compounds (
6,
19). Over 50 pyoverdines are known, and all of these contain
a dihydroxyquinoline-type chromophore; this is attached to a
strain-specific peptide that contains unusual amino acids, such
as D-isomers and amino acids that are not usually found in biomolecules,
and an acyl group that varies depending on the growth conditions
(Fig.
1). Ferri-pyoverdine complexes are recognized by receptor
proteins located at the surfaces of the cells, and the iron
is taken up by the bacteria in an energy-dependent process (reviewed
in reference
27). Pyoverdines contribute to the ability of
P. aeruginosa to cause infection (
17,
32).
Strains of
P. aeruginosa secrete one of three pyoverdines (types
I to III) (
18). Genes and enzymes required for pyoverdine synthesis
in strain PAO, which secretes type I pyoverdine, have been characterized
experimentally (
1,
4,
12,
15,
16,
21,
23,
31,
34,
35). This
has revealed a biosynthetic pathway in which a pyoverdine precursor
is assembled by nonribosomal peptide synthetases (NRPSs), with
other enzymes providing the unusual amino acid substrates for
the NRPSs and modifying the precursor peptide to yield the mature
pyoverdine. Genomic analyses imply that the pathway of synthesis
is similar in outline in other
Pseudomonas species (
25), and
this is supported by experimental evidence (
2,
21,
24). Pyoverdine
synthesis has not been studied experimentally in strains of
P. aeruginosa other than PAO1. However, recent genomic analysis
shows that strains that make different pyoverdines share many
pyoverdine synthesis genes with strain PAO, but they contain
additional genes that are not present in strain PAO and are
proposed to be required for pyoverdine synthesis (
29).
In strain PAO, the pvdS gene is adjacent to a gene, pvdY, that is of unknown function, although a mutation in pvdY resulted in reduced pyoverdine synthesis (23). pvdY is also adjacent to pvdX (Fig. 2), a gene of unknown function. The same arrangement of genes has been demonstrated in strains of P. aeruginosa that make other pyoverdines (29). In strains that make type II pyoverdine, the pvdY gene (unlike the pvdS and pvdX genes) has very little sequence similarity to the pvdY gene in strains that make type I or type III pyoverdines, and it is not alignable by pairwise alignment (29) (L. W. Martin, M. Wallace, and I. L. Lamont, unpublished data).
The
pvdY gene present in type II strains is referred to here
as
pvdYII. The aim of this research was to investigate the function
of
pvdYII in
P. aeruginosa strain Pa4 that makes type II pyoverdine
(
18). We first amplified a DNA fragment carrying the gene from
genomic DNA from
P. aeruginosa strain Pa4 by PCR using suitable
primers (5'-CCC
TCTAGACAAGGAACTGGGCGTCTCG-3' and 5'GGG
AAGCTTCTGAACTGCATCCACCACCTG-3',
with introduced XbaI and HindIII restriction sites shown in
boldface). This gave rise to a product of about 1.5 kb that
was cloned into pGEM-T Easy (Promega) using the manufacturer's
protocol. DNA sequencing (Allan Wilson Centre Genome Service,
Palmerston North, New Zealand) and analysis revealed the presence
of the
pvdYII gene flanked by the
pvdS and
pvdX genes (Fig.
2), as is found in other strains that produce type II pyoverdine.
Alignment of the
pvdS and
pvdX gene sequences shows a very high
(>99%) degree of nucleotide sequence identity (Fig.
2 and
data not shown), as has been found for other genes that are
present in multiple strains of
P. aeruginosa (
10,
30). The amount
of sequence similarity changes abruptly (at the end of
pvdX)
or slightly more gradually (towards the end of
pvdS) (Fig.
2)
so that there is no significant sequence similarity in the intergenic
regions or between the
pvdY genes. The genetic mechanisms that
led to
pvdY replacing (or being replaced by)
pvdYII during the
evolution of
P. aeruginosa genomes are not clear.
The similarity of pvdYII to siderophore synthesis genes (see below) and its linkage to pvdS raised the possibility that pvdYII is required for pyoverdine synthesis by Pa4. This hypothesis was tested by engineering a Pa4 mutant strain in which the wild-type allele was replaced by a mutant allele. The XbaI-HindIII restriction fragment containing pvdYII was excised from the pGEM-T Easy clone and subcloned into pEX18Gm (8) using standard methods (26). A promoterless lacZ gene cassette was excised from pZ1918 (28) using SphI and was cloned into the unique SphI site in pvdYII in the pEXGm plasmid; two alleles were obtained, with lacZ in the sense (pvdYII::lacZ) or antisense (pvdYII::Zcal) orientation. Wild-type pvdYII in strain Pa4 was then replaced with the mutant alleles using methods described elsewhere (8). Replacement of the wild-type gene by the mutant alleles was confirmed by Southern blotting (data not shown).
The resulting pvdYII mutants failed to make detectable pyoverdine and were unable to grow in the presence of the iron-chelating compound ethylenediamine(o-hydroxy)phenylacetic acid (EDDHA) that inhibits growth of Pvd mutants (12) (Table 1), showing that pvdYII is indeed required for pyoverdine synthesis by Pa4. The wild-type pvdYII gene was subcloned as a HindIII-XbaI fragment from pGEM-T Easy into the mini-CTX2 vector and then integrated into the chromosome of the Pa4 pvdYII::lacZ mutant strain as described previously (9). This restored the ability of the bacteria to make pyoverdine and to grow on medium containing EDDHA (Table 1), confirming that the inability of the mutant to synthesize pyoverdine was due to the absence of functional pvdYII.
Expression of pyoverdine synthesis genes in
P. aeruginosa strain
PAO is dependent on the alternative sigma factor PvdS (
13,
20),
and it is likely that the same is true in other strains of
P. aeruginosa. The
pvdYII open reading frame in strain Pa4 is preceded
by a DNA sequence (TAAAT-N16-CGT) that is present in PvdS-dependent
promoters (
23,
36,
37), so that it is very likely that expression
of
pvdYII is dependent at least in part on PvdS. The Pa4
pvdYII mutant contains a
pvdYII::
lacZ reporter gene fusion, and this
was used to investigate gene expression using the same methods
as those described previously (
11,
37). In three independent
experiments, bacteria grown in Kings B broth gave 3,137 U of
ß-galactosidase (standard deviation [SD], 306 U).
Assays with the Pa4
pvdYII::
Zcal strain, in which the
lacZ reporter
gene is in the antisense orientation to
pvdYII, gave 29 U of
ß-galactosidase, consistent with
lacZ expression in
the Pa4
pvdYII::
lacZ strain being dependent on the
pvdYII promoter.
Growth of the Pa4
pvdYII::
lacZ strain in Kings B broth containing
FeCl
3 (60 µg ml
1) gave 568 U (SD, 88 U), showing
that iron results in repression of
pvdYII gene expression in
strain Pa4. This reflects
pvd gene expression in strain PAO
which is strongly down-regulated in iron-replete cells due to
the Fur protein that represses expression of
pvdS (
22).
In P. aeruginosa strain PAO, PvdS-dependent gene expression is lower in Pvd mutants than in wild-type bacteria and can be increased to wild-type levels by the addition of pyoverdine (11). This is due to a pyoverdine-responsive transmembrane regulatory system that controls the activity of PvdS. The addition of type II pyoverdine to Pa4 pvdYII::lacZ bacteria growing in Kings B broth resulted in 5,861 U of ß-galactosidase (SD, 1,001 U), an increase in pvdYII::lacZ gene expression relative to bacteria without added pyoverdine. This is consistent with the existence of a pyoverdine-inducible signaling pathway, although the increase in gene expression was less than twofold. This is less than that seen with the pvdE gene in strain PAO, where the increase in expression is about fivefold (11), or with the psbA pyoverdine biosynthesis gene in P. fluorescens strain B10 (3), although it should be noted that expression of the pvdA gene in P. aeruginosa PAO1 did not show increased expression when pyoverdine was added (3).
The predicted product of pvdYII is a 39-kDa protein. BLAST searches (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/BLAST/) showed that this protein has highest sequence similarities with acetyl transferases that are involved in siderophore synthesis. These include IucB that is required for aerobactin synthesis in Escherichia coli (7) (41% amino acid identity), RhbD, a putative acetyltransferase involved in rhizobactin synthesis in Sinorhizobium meliloti (14) (52% amino acid identity), and an acetylase that is involved in siderophore synthesis in P. fluorescens (21) (69% amino acid identity). IucB and the P. fluorescens enzyme have been shown to catalyze acetylation of hydroxylamine groups to form iron-binding hydroxamate end groups. The pyoverdine synthesized by strain Pa4 does not contain acetyl hydroxamate groups but contains a cyclic hydroxamate (Fig. 1). We hypothesized that pvdYII catalyzes acetylation of N-hydroxyornithine as part of the process of synthesis of this hydroxamate.
Type I pyoverdine contains two formyl hydroxamate groups, and synthesis of these is catalyzed by the PvdF enzyme, which formylates a hydroxyornithine precursor (15). As PvdF and pvdYII may catalyze synthesis of different hydroxamate groups (formyl- or acetyl-hydroxamate, respectively), we tested the possibility that pvdF from strain PAO could substitute for pvdYII from strain Pa4 and vice versa. A 1.5-kb DNA fragment containing the pvdF gene from P. aeruginosa PAO was amplified by PCR using primers flanking the gene (5'-GCGTCTAGATCATAGTTGCTTCCCGGA, with an introduced XbaI site shown in boldface, and 5'-ACGGCAACGTCTACGAG-3'), cloned into pGEM-T Easy, and then subcloned into the mini-CTX2 vector. This construct was then integrated into the chromosomes of PAO pvdF and Pa4 pvdYII mutant strains, and the mini-ctx::pvdYII construct was integrated into the chromosome of the PAO pvdF mutant. The resulting strains were tested for the ability to synthesize pyoverdine (Table 1). The ctx::pvdYII construct restored the ability of the PAO pvdF mutant to make pyoverdine, but the ctx::pvdF construct did not enable synthesis of pyoverdine by the Pa4 pvdYII mutant.
Pyoverdine produced by the PAO pvdF(ctx::pvdYII) strain, as well as that made by PAO pvdF(ctx::pvdF) and Pa4 pvdYII(ctx::pvdYII), was purified as described previously (18). The pyoverdines were analyzed at the Protein Microchemistry Facility of the University of Otago by matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization-time of flight mass spectrometry (average of at least five runs) using a Thermo Finnigan Lasermat 2000 in conjunction with an alpha-cyano-4-hydroxycinnamic acid matrix and the internal calibrants Bradykinin (1,060.2 Da) and Renin substrate (1,759.0 Da); in addition, for the pyoverdine produced by the PAO pvdF(ctx::pvdYII) strain, electrospray mass spectrometry was performed using a Thermo Finnigan LCQ Deca. The pyoverdine produced by PAO pvdF(ctx::pvdF) was 1,336 Da, and that produced by Pa4 pvdYII(ctx::pvdYII) was 1,094 Da. These are the same as type I and II pyoverdines (5, 33), showing that complementation of the genes resulted in synthesis of wild-type pyoverdines. The PAO pvdF(ctx::pvdYII) pyoverdine had a mass of 1,364 Da by mass spectrometry. This is consistent with a form of type I pyoverdine in which the formyl pvdYII residues have been replaced by acetyl hydroxyornithine, which would increase the Mr by 28. This pyoverdine was also analyzed by electrospray mass spectrometry, which gave an Mr of 1,362.5.
Collectively, these data provide strong evidence that pvdYII is required for synthesis of type II pyoverdine by P. aeruginosa strain Pa4 and that it catalyzes acetylation of hydroxyornithine. The pvdYII gene is restricted to strains of P. aeruginosa that make type II pyoverdine (29), and its characterization advances our understanding of the molecular basis for production of different pyoverdines by different strains of P. aeruginosa. Type II pyoverdine does not contain acetyl hydroxyornithine but does contain a terminal cyclized hydroxyornithine (Fig. 1). Our current model is that acetyl hydroxyornithine is incorporated into a peptide precursor of type II pyoverdine by the relevant NRPS, with the acetyl group being removed during release of the peptide from the NRPS and concomitant cyclization of the hydroxyornithine. Alternatively, the substrate of the NRPS may be ornithine itself, with pvdYII catalyzing its acetylation following incorporation into the precursor peptide but prior to the release of the peptide from the NRPS. In either case, absence of acetyl hydroxyornithine is likely to preclude the cyclization of the terminal hydroxyornithine derivative and release of the precursor peptide from the NRPS. A requirement for acetyl hydroxyornithine prior to cyclization of the ornithine residue would explain the observation that pvdYII could complement a pvdF mutation in P. aeruginosa PAO but pvdF could not complement a pvdYII mutation.
Nucleotide sequence accession numbers.
The Pa4 pvdYII sequence reported here has been assigned the GenBank accession number DQ328792.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We are very grateful to Jean-Marie Meyer for providing strain
Pa4, to Herbert Schweizer for providing plasmids, and to Paul
Beare for his assistance with purification of pyoverdine.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of Biochemistry, University of Otago, P.O. Box 56, Dunedin, New Zealand. Phone: 64-3-479-7869. Fax: 64-3-479-7866. E-mail:
iain.lamont{at}stonebow.otago.ac.nz.

Present address: Christchurch School of Medicine, University of Otago, Christchurch, New Zealand. 

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Journal of Bacteriology, April 2006, p. 3149-3152, Vol. 188, No. 8
0021-9193/06/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JB.188.8.3149-3152.2006
Copyright © 2006, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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