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Journal of Bacteriology, July 2007, p. 4764-4773, Vol. 189, No. 13
0021-9193/07/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JB.00287-07
Copyright © 2007, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.

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Nunilo Cremades,5,6,
Matthew A. Croxen,1,2,3
Gary Sisson,3
Javier Sancho,5,6 and
Paul S. Hoffman1,2,3,4*
Department of Medicine, Division of Infectious Diseases and International Health,1 Department of Microbiology, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia 22908,2 Department of Microbiology and Immunology,3 Department of Medicine, Division of Infectious Diseases, Faculty of Medicine, Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada B3H 4H7,4 Departamento de Bioquímica y Biología Molecular y Celular, Facultad de Ciencias, Universidad de Zaragoza,5 Biocomputing and Physics of Complex Systems Institute, Zaragoza Spain6
Received 23 February 2007/ Accepted 19 April 2007
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These microaerophiles efficiently colonize and thrive within the gastrointestinal mucus and tend to concentrate deep in the crypts and near the underlying epithelial cells. Accordingly, the central intermediary metabolism of these organisms is very conserved and optimized for this microaerobic environment. Both C. jejuni and H. pylori utilize organic acids and amino acids as primary carbon and energy sources and rely on gluconeogenic pathways to provide the necessary intermediates for biosynthesis of cell wall material, vitamins, and nucleic acids (1, 11, 17, 19, 27, 39). Other general features of these pathogens include (i) a strictly respiratory form of metabolism; (ii) reliance on molecular hydrogen as a key energy source (14, 17, 18, 20, 28); (iii) a preference for NADPH, rather than NADH, as the primary electron donor; and (iv) pyruvate oxidation via a reversible pyruvate:ferredoxin oxidoreductase (PFOR) (6, 20). While the PFOR of H. pylori is composed of four subunits encoded by the porGDAB operon (20, 23, 37), the PFOR of C. jejuni is the product of a single gene, similar to the PFORs of anaerobic bacteria and amitochondriate protozoan parasites (21). The preference for flavodoxin as an electron carrier distinguishes the epsilonproteobacteria from other PFOR-containing organisms, which utilize low-redox-potential ferredoxins (10). It is the low-redox-potential ferredoxins that reduce the antimicrobial prodrug metronidazole to toxic, DNA-damaging hydroxylamine adducts (38).
The microaerophilic nature of the epsilonproteobacteria has been linked to intrinsic oxygen toxicity resulting from inactivation of PFOR, iron sulfur proteins, and other respiratory components and to the activities of NADPH oxidases, flavoproteins, and nitroreductases (8, 16, 27, 42). Our previous studies established that alkyl hydroperoxide reductase (AhpC) activity of H. pylori was dependent on the thioredoxin/thioredoxin reductase system (HP0824/HP0825) and displayed a preference for NADPH (2). Further inspection of the H. pylori KE26695 genome reveals two thioredoxin reductase genes (trxR1 [HP0825] and trxR2 [HP1164]) (1, 2, 39). However, HP1164 lacks the catalytic CXXC motif required for thioredoxin reductase activity and, unlike trxR1, is essential for viability (2, 6, 9). HP1164 contains motifs that place it in the general class of NADPH oxidase/disulfide reductases of unknown function (2).
Here we show that HP1164, which is uniquely conserved among the epsilonproteobacteria (6), exhibits strong NADPH flavodoxin and quinone reductase activity, and we designate it FqrB (flavodoxin quinone reductase). Our studies show that FqrB is coupled by flavodoxin to the PFOR system and catalyzes pyruvate-dependent production of NADPH. Moreover, the reverse reaction produces pyruvate via CO2 fixation, perhaps the major route of carbon assimilation by capnophilic members of the epsilonproteobacteria. Finally, we show that in the presence of oxygen, FqrB mediates single-electron reduction of quinones, generating stoichiometric concentrations of superoxide anions that may contribute to oxygen toxicity.
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DNA techniques. DNA manipulations were carried out by the general techniques described by Sambrook et al. (35). Plasmid DNA was isolated with the QiaPrep Spin minikit (QIAGEN). DNA fragments and amplicons from PCR were purified from agarose gels with the QIAquick gel extraction kit (QIAGEN). Oligonucleotide primers used in this study are listed in Table 1. PCR mixtures generally contained (in 25 µl) 10 ng of H. pylori genomic DNA, 50 pmol of each primer, 200 µM (each) deoxynucleoside triphosphates, and 1 U of Taq DNA polymerase in standard PCR buffer (MBI Fermentas). Thirty amplification cycles were performed (94°C for 30 s, 53°C for 30 s, and 72°C for 1 min, with a final extension for 10 min) in a Perkin-Elmer 2400 thermal cycler.
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TABLE 1. Oligonucleotide primers
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Spectral analysis of FqrB and cofactor determination. Absolute spectra were recorded for the His6-tagged FqrB protein suspended in 1 ml of 100 mM Tris buffer (pH 8.0), and to ensure complete oxidation, 1 mM hydrogen peroxide was added. The protein concentration was 20 µM. To obtain a reduced spectrum, a few crystals of sodium hydrosulfite were added to the sample. The reference cuvette contained buffer. The spectral range scanned was 250 to 700 nm. The flavin cofactor was identified by spectral characteristics following protein denaturation in trichloroacetic acid and comparison with flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD), flavin mononucleotide (FMN), and riboflavin standards.
FqrB substrate specificity.
The activity of His6-tagged FqrB was monitored spectrophotometrically in a modified Cary 14 spectrophotometer (OLIS, Bogart, GA) at 23°C, either by following the decrease in absorbance at 340 nm resulting from the oxidation of NADPH or by following the reduction of substrate at a specified wavelength. The reduction of various substrates was monitored at appropriate wavelengths, which include the following: metronidazole, 320 nm (
= 9.0 mM1 cm1); nitrofurazone, 400 nm (
= 12.6 mM1 cm1); furazolidone, 400 nm (
= 18.8 mM1 cm1); horse heart cytochrome c, 550 nm (
= 18.9 mM1 cm1); riboflavin or FMN, 450 nm (
450 = 11.4 mM1 cm1); 5,5'-dithio-bis-2-nitrobenzoic acid (DTNB), 412 nm (
= 13.6 mM1 cm1); and nitazoxanide (NTZ), 418 nm (
= 18.6 mM1 cm1). Substrates assayed by following the oxidation of NADPH included menadione, benzoquinone, o-nitrophenol, oxygen, purified thioredoxin (E. coli), thioredoxin (Spirulina), and H. pylori thioredoxins 1 and 2 (a gift from Leslie Poole, Wake Forest University). Specific activity measurements were performed in 1-cm-path-length quartz cuvettes in buffer A (Tris buffer [100 mM; pH 8.0] and NaCl [100 mM]) containing NADPH (300 µM) and appropriate substrate (100 µM). The reactions were initiated by addition of an appropriate dilution of His6-tagged FqrB, to a final reaction volume of 1.0 ml.
Quinone-cytochrome c reduction assay. NADPH quinone reductase activity was measured with cytochrome c as an electron acceptor at 550 nm under aerobic conditions. The reaction mixture in buffer A contained 200 µM NADPH, 30 µM horse heart cytochrome c, and His6-tagged FqrB (165 µg protein), and the reaction was started by addition of 100 µM menadione. To assess superoxide anion participation in the reduction of cytochrome c, 200 U superoxide dismutase (SOD) was added to the reaction mixture. The difference in the rates of cytochrome c reduction in the presence and absence of SOD was used to compute the rate of superoxide anion generation.
Kinetic analysis of FqrB. Initial-velocity kinetic assays were performed in triplicate for FqrB with the substrates NADPH, benzoquinone, and menadione by following the oxidation of NADPH at 340 nm under the following conditions: NADPH (5 to 150 µM) at a saturating menadione concentration (150 µM), benzoquinone (10 to 140 µM) at a saturating NADPH concentration (150 µM), and menadione (5 to 100 µM) at a saturating NADPH concentration (300 µM). The reactions were initiated by addition of His6-tagged FqrB to a final concentration ranging from 10 to 125 ng/ml. The values of Km (mM) and Vmax (mM min1) were determined from plots of the initial velocity versus substrate concentration by nonlinear regression analysis using the program KaleidaGraph v. 3.5 (Synergy Software). Values for kcat (s1) were determined from Vmax by using the predicted molecular mass of 37,051 Da for the C-terminally His6-tagged FqrB protein. The reported error is the standard deviation. All enzyme activities reported are within 5% error, and this includes variation from batch to batch purified by these methods.
Substrate inhibition assays with menadione and NADPH were performed in 1-cm-path-length quartz cuvettes in buffer A and were initiated by addition of His6-tagged FqrB to a final concentration of 50 ng/ml. Kinetic constants were determined at eight different concentrations of menadione (1,2, 5, 10, 20, 30, 40, and 60 µM) and at NADPH concentrations of 5, 10, 20, 40, and 60 µM. Apparent values of Vmax (Vmaxapp) were determined by nonlinear regression analysis, and 1/Vmaxapp was replotted against the reciprocal substrate inhibitor concentration (1/[NADPH] or 1/[menadione]) to determine values for Km,A and Km,B, respectively. The replots were derived from the following equation describing the forward velocity for a ping-pong bi-bi system in the absence of products, where NADPH is substrate A and oxidized menadione is substrate B: V = (VmaxAB)/(Km,AB + Km,BA + AB).
Coupled PFOR:FldA:FqrB assays.
Cloning of the porGDAB operon, expression, and purification from E. coli have been previously described (20, 37). H. pylori flavodoxin (FldA) was purified from E. coli as previously described (10). PFOR (EC 1.2.7.1) was assayed at 23°C under anaerobic conditions with 100 mM potassium phosphate (pH 7.0), 10 mM sodium pyruvate, 5 mM benzyl viologen (BV) (
= 9.2 mM1 cm1 at 546 nm), 0.18 mM coenzyme A (CoA), and 1 mM MgCl2 as previously described (20, 37). Mixtures for coupled enzyme reactions contained PFOR (0.1 mg/ml), FldA (10 µM), and FqrB (2 µg/ml), and the reaction was started by adding 3 mM NADP to the assay mixture (to get a final concentration of 300 µM). Enzymatic assays were conducted under strict anaerobic conditions using a specially designed anaerobic cuvette that is coupled to an anaerobiosis device. Several cycles of vacuum and argon flow ensured the total absence of oxygen in the cuvette. Under these conditions, the reaction was initiated by introducing CoA, initially located in a separate compartment of the cuvette, to the PFOR assay mixture. The course of the reaction was followed in a diode array spectrophotometer (Agilent/HP 8453) with the cuvette closed to maintain strict anaerobiosis.
The mixture for the reverse reaction (pyruvate forming) contained 300 µM NADPH, 0.1 mM acetyl-CoA, and 5 mM bicarbonate. Alternatively, CO2 was bubbled into the cuvette prior to addition of NADPH to initiate the reaction. The dependence on each enzyme and each substrate in the forward and reverse reactions was determined in independent experiments. The reverse reaction was also monitored by A232 by following the appearance of reduced CoA (
= 4.5 mM1 cm1). Enzymatic activities are reported as units/mg of protein (nmol or µmol min1) for each of the enzymes added to the reaction mix. All assays were performed in triplicate, and means and standard deviations were computed. Variation in enzyme activity from batch to batch was also examined in triplicate in bacterial extracts prepared on different days.
NADP reduction in cell extracts. Crude cell extracts of C. jejuni and H. pylori were prepared from liquid culture, and PFOR activities were assessed by rapid BV assay as described previously (20, 23, 37). Briefly, ca. 2 g (wet weight) bacterial pellet was suspended, disrupted by sonication, and subjected to low-speed centrifugation to remove cellular debris and unbroken cells. High-speed supernatant was prepared by ultracentrifugation at 100,000 x g for 1 h. Pyruvate-dependent PFOR activity was assayed by following the reduction of BV or NADP under anaerobic conditions. To confirm that NADPH production resulted from the activity of the PFOR-FldA-FqrB complex, the PFOR inhibitor NTZ (5 and 10 µM) was added to extracts. The endogenous NADP reductase activity of the extract was determined in the absence of pyruvate by following the reduction of NADP at 340 nm. Similarly, NADPH oxidase activity was measured in extracts in the absence of added pyruvate.
Bioinformatic analyses.
Whole genome sequences for H. pylori KE26695, H. pylori J99, Helicobacter hepaticus ATCC 51449, C. jejuni NCTC 11168, C. jejuni RM1221, and Wolinella succinogenes DSM 1740 were screened for common genes (e15) by using the lineage-specific algorithm of Emu Web Services (http://emu.imb.uq.edu.au/index.php). From this list of common genes were subtracted all genes in common at a cutoff of e25 with matches with any genes of E. coli K-12, Staphylococcus aureus MW2, or Pseudomonas aeruginosa. The short list (
300 genes), including fqrB (HP1164), represents highly conserved genes unique to this group of microaerophiles. Motif searches utilized SMART software (36), homology searches used BLAST of microbial genomes (www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sutils/genom_table.cgi), and alignments of closely related sequences were done with CLUSTAL-W (www.ebi.ac.uk/clustalw/). Protein-protein interactions were evaluated using the PimRider (Hybrigenics), and gene organization was examined on the Pedant web site (http://pedant.gsf.de/).
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Phylogenetic analysis. Concordance analyses of whole genomes of epsilonproteobacteria revealed that HP1164 (FqrB) was among some 300 uniquely conserved genes that are most likely associated with a microaerobic lifestyle. Figure 1 presents an alignment of the FqrB orthologs, highlighting regions that are highly conserved and pointing out putative functional domains. The group shared identities in amino acid conservation of 45 to 51% and similarities ranging from 66 to 69%. The closest matches outside this group were with members of the genus Bacillus, with best identities of 24% and similarities of 43%. FqrB showed no similarity with nitroreductases or other quinone reductases encoded within the H. pylori genome. Similarities with TrxR1 (HP0825) suggest that FqrB has diverged from thioredoxin reductases. The annotation error relates to a conserved region of HP1164 that contains the sequence INDC in H. pylori and VSDC in W. succinogenes (Fig. 1), which are similar to the CXXC motif found in thioredoxins. In Campylobacter species and other species of Helicobacter, this motif lacks the one cysteine and these sequences no longer match thioredoxin reductases by BLAST search.
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FIG. 1. Clustal W alignment of FqrB in epsilonproteobacteria. The protein sequences were obtained from the Pedant website. The boldface region contains a single cysteine in H. pylori (INDC) and W. succinogenes FqrB orthologs, a region in thioredoxin reductase proteins that contains a CXXC motif. In the C-terminal region there is a highly conserved cysteine (bold) that is likely involved in catalysis.
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36-kDa protein. To confirm FqrB as a flavoprotein, absolute spectra were collected using the scanning mode of the Cary 14 spectrophotometer. As can be seen in Fig. 2, a typical flavin spectrum was obtained with protein treated with 1 mM H2O2 to completely oxidize the flavin. The flavin spectrum was bleached by addition of several grains of sodium hydrosulfite (spectrum not presented). The spectral properties of His6-tagged FqrB were very similar to those previously described for FldA (10). However, spectral analysis of the cofactor, released from the protein, showed an absorption maximum at 450 nm rather than 445 nm (typical of FMN), suggesting that the cofactor is FAD (data not presented).
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FIG. 2. Optical spectrum of FqrB showing the flavin. Absolute spectra were collected under oxidized conditions and a protein concentration of 1.75 mg/ml. Major peaks were detected at 378 nm and 462 nm, and a shoulder was detected at 465 nm. Comparison of the spectrum of the released cofactor with those of FAD, FMN, and riboflavin suggests that the cofactor is FAD.
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20 nmol min1 mg protein1). To determine whether FqrB was a thioredoxin reductase, the purified enzyme was monitored for NADPH thioredoxin reductase activity in the presence of several thioredoxins. FqrB did not reduce commercially available thioredoxins from E. coli and Spirulina, nor was it able to reduce Trx2 from H. pylori. The enzyme demonstrated weak activity with Trx1 from H. pylori (
10 nmol min1 mg protein1), well below that which would be expected of a true substrate (2).
Several electron acceptors were examined as potential substrates in the presence of NADPH. A low enzyme-catalyzed basal rate of NADPH oxidase activity (
5 nmol min1 mg protein1), in the absence of any added electron acceptors, implies that oxygen serves as a poor terminal electron acceptor. Low oxygen-specific activity is typical of most flavoproteins. The basal rate in the presence of oxygen was eliminated by purging the system with nitrogen or argon. Both cytochrome c and DTNB served as weak electron receptors for FqrB, with specific activities of 0.3 and 0.7 µmol min1 mg protein1, respectively. The purified enzyme exhibited no measurable activity with nitrofurans, o-nitrophenol, or metronidazole. As a control for these reactions, we examined the substrate preferences for the His6-tagged NfsB, the nitroreductase of E. coli, which exhibited nitroreduction of nitrofurans and o-nitrophenol but, like FqrB, exhibited no activity with metronidazole (data not presented). FqrB displayed the highest specific activity with purified flavodoxin (FldA) from H. pylori (126 µmol min1 mg protein1), suggesting a possible role as a flavodoxin reductase. However, riboflavin and FMN were not substrates of FqrB.
FqrB also displayed a high specific activity with the quinone substrates menadione and benzoquinone (112.5 and 124 µmol min1 mg protein1, respectively). These substrates gave specific activities nearly 3 orders of magnitude greater than those observed for the other examined substrates, implying that FqrB may also function as a quinone-specific oxidoreductase. NfsB also exhibited quinone reductase activity, as previously reported (43), and a specific activity nearly double that of FqrB (249 µmol min1 mg protein1). In the presence of menadione, NADPH quinone reduction could also be followed by monitoring cytochrome c reduction by His6-tagged FqrB under aerobic conditions. Since oxidation of semiquinones often generates superoxide anions by single-electron transfers, SOD was added to the reaction mixture to test this possibility. SOD inhibited cytochrome c reduction by 90% (from 58.5 to 7.6 µmol min1 mg protein1), confirming single-electron transfer to oxygen and raising the possibility that substantial superoxide (
50 µmol min1 mg protein1) could be generated in whole cells during periods of oxidative stress.
The kinetic constants for menadione, benzoquinone, and NADPH in the presence of a saturating second substrate are reported in Table 2. Assuming that Km is representative of the binding affinity, at saturating NADPH, FqrB binds menadione with sixfold-greater affinity than it does benzoquinone, while it turns over benzoquinone at a rate approximately fourfold greater than it does for menadione. The catalytic efficiencies (kcat/Km) are approximately equal for benzoquinone and menadione. The enzyme displays a relatively high affinity for all three substrates, with Km values on the micromolar scale. Such high binding affinities for the two quinone substrates, combined with catalytic efficiencies of 106 M1 s1, are further evidence favoring the quinone-based substrates as the true substrates for FqrB. Kinetic analysis of FqrB reduction of flavodoxin (FldA) also indicated reduction of the FMN of FldA to the semiquinone and quinone in a two-step reaction under anaerobic conditions. Given the two possible functions for HP1164, we named the protein FqrB to reflect flavodoxin and quinone reductase activities.
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TABLE 2. Kinetic constants for menadione, benzoquinone, and NADPH in the presence of a saturating second substratea
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FIG. 3. Initial velocity of FqrB at fixed [NADPH]. Menadione was the variable substrate, and NADPH was the fixed variable substrate at 5 µM ( ), 10 µM ( ), 20 µM ( ), 40 µM ( ), and 60 µM (). Inset, replot of the reciprocal of Vmaxapp (obtained from nonlinear regression fit of the initial-velocity data) versus 1/[NADPH], yielding a value of 29.5 µM for the reciprocal of the x intercept.
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FIG. 4. Initial velocity of FqrB at fixed [menadione]. NADPH was the variable substrate, and menadione was the fixed variable substrate at 1 µM ( ), 2 µM ( ), 5 µM ( ), 10 µM ( ), 20 µM ( ), 30 µM ( ), 40 µM ( ), and 60 µM (). Inset, replot of the reciprocal of Vmaxapp (obtained from nonlinear regression fit of the velocity-velocity data) versus 1/[menadione], yielding a value of 10.2 µM for the reciprocal of the x intercept.
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300 µM (20), and when the reaction was optimized for FqrB, the specific activity was 24.5 µmol min1 mg FqrB protein1. FqrB showed some residual activity which might be attributable to weak nonspecific reduction of FldA or weak interaction of reduced PFOR directly with FqrB. The specific activity of purified PFOR with artificial electron acceptors (BV), when corrected for single-electron transfer, is equivalent to the activities determined for the complex. As previously established, there is a low rate of NADP reductase activity associated with FqrB that is evident in the absence of PFOR and FldA (Table 3). We also noted in these studies that PFOR becomes inactivated in the presence of molecular oxygen, as reflected in assays that did not strictly exclude oxygen from the reaction (Table 3). We had recently shown that the antiparasitic/antibacterial drug NTZ is a noncompetitive inhibitor of PFOR (20). These studies were performed with the artificial electron acceptor BV. To determine if the coupled reaction and NADPH production were also inhibited by NTZ, concentration-dependent inhibition was determined by following the appearance of NADPH with time. At a concentration of 5 µM, NTZ inhibited the coupled reaction by nearly 50% (Table 3), indicating that PFOR activity was necessary for FqrB function. |
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TABLE 3. Pyruvate-dependent NADP reduction
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FIG. 5. (A) Initial velocity of PFOR:FldA:FqrB. The reduction of NADP was followed at 340 nm in the presence of pyruvate, reduced CoA, and NADP in saturation as described in the text. Data are shown for the complete reaction (), the complete reaction with NAD substituted for NADP ( ), the reaction without PFOR ( ), the reaction without flavodoxin ( ), the reaction without FqrB ( ), the reaction without pyruvate ( ), and the reaction without reduced CoA (*). The reactions were run under strict anaerobic conditions in a cuvette flushed with argon gas. (B) Acetyl-CoA consumption in reverse PFOR complete reaction. The consumption of acetyl-CoA was monitored at 232 nm under anaerobic conditions in 100 mM potassium phosphate (pH 7), 1 mM MgCl2, 0.1 mM acetyl-CoA, 5 mM bicarbonate, 0.3 mM NADPH, 0.3 mg/ml of PFOR, 0.9 µM flavodoxin, 0.15 µM FqrB, and CO2 bubbled into the cuvette.
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TABLE 4. Pyruvate synthesis (reverse reaction)
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Since fqrB is both unique to the epsilonproteobacteria and essential in H. pylori (2, 6), the biological role for this protein must be highly specialized. This distinction is important, since FqrB also displays NADPH quinone reductase activity and may also participate in electron transport reactions. In this regard, H. pylori expresses many redox-active enzymes and quinone reductases, many of which are not essential (37, 41). In contrast, porGDAB and fldA are also essential genes and together with FqrB appear to form a novel pyruvate-metabolizing pathway. We provide the following evidence to suggest that these three enzymes represent unique adaptations in the epsilonproteobacteria: (i) PFORs of this group utilize FldA (rather than ferredoxin) as an electron carrier, (ii) phylogenetic studies indicate that FldA and FqrB are highly conserved, and (iii) pyruvate formation through CO2 fixation is consistent with both the capnophilic nature of these organisms and their unique requirement for pyruvate to satisfy gluconeogenic demands (ribose and hexose sugars).
Our studies also indicate that FqrB might inadvertently contribute to the microaerophilic nature of the epsilonproteobacteria by its ability to reduce quinones during periods of oxidative stress. The subsequent single-electron oxidation of semiquinones has the potential to generate mM levels of superoxide anions, as demonstrated in assays of SOD inhibition of cytochrome c reduction. Quinones play a central role in respiratory metabolism by cycling electron transfers between the dehydrogenases and the redox centers and cytochromes of the electron transport system (7, 16, 17, 29). Redox cycling by FqrB might also deplete pools of NADPH during periods of oxidative stress. FqrB exhibits no similarity with MdaB (HP0630), a previously described NADPH-specific quinone reductase that is nonessential and appears to function in protection from oxidative stress (42). Further studies will be required to fully assess the role (if any) of FqrB in oxygen toxicity and oxidative stress.
The annotation error in the two genome sequences of H. pylori arises from a conserved region of FqrB, which in thioredoxin reductases contains a catalytic CXXC motif (2). In H. pylori and W. succinogenes, the motifs INDC and VSDC, respectively (Fig. 1) have amino acid I or V in place of C within a conserved 60-amino-acid stretch, which accounts for the low-probability match of e15 (1, 2, 39). In species of Campylobacter, there are no cysteine residues in this region and similarities are even lower. FqrB activity is robust with quinone substrates (nearly double that of MdaB) and together with a near absence of thioredoxin reductase activity with authentic thioredoxins from H. pylori strongly supports annotation as either a quinone or flavodoxin reductase. The enzyme did exhibit weak activity with DTNB that was above that in the background nonenzymatic reaction with thiol residues of the protein. Often DTNB reduction is attributed to thioredoxin reductases (33, 34). In contrast to NfsB, FqrB exhibited no nitroreductase activity with the substrates tested. Kinetic studies support a ping-pong catalytic mechanism based on parallel double-reciprocal plots with quinone substrates and NADPH. This mechanism is common to flavoproteins and nitroreductases (26, 34) and for FqrB likely involves redox-active FAD and a conserved cysteine located in the C-terminal region of the protein (Fig. 1). The ping-pong mechanism must hold true for flavodoxin as both electron donor and receptor. Further studies are required to distinguish functions in pyruvate metabolism from functions in quinone reduction and electron transport.
Several studies have examined CO2/bicarbonate fixation in H. pylori. Acetyl-CoA carboxylase activity was studied by Burns et al. (4) and confirmed by Hughes et al. (22). The product of the carboxylase is malonyl-CoA, which is speculated to participate in fatty acid biosynthesis (4). Hughes et al. (22) also examined H14CO3 incorporation by cell extracts and concluded that a pyruvate-dependent isotope exchange was catalyzed by PFOR. In reviewing the data, it is evident that the incorporation of radiolabel into pyruvate resulted from the bidirectional nature of PFOR and the fact that the incorporation was dependent on acetyl-CoA, NADP, and pyruvate but not on malate dehydrogenase or NADH (22). Pyruvate oxidation would be expected to generate NADPH by FqrB, and at some point, the reverse reaction (pyruvate synthesis) would have catalyzed incorporation of labeled bicarbonate. Taken together, our studies support the conclusions of Hughes et al. that PFOR plays a major role in CO2 fixation in H. pylori. While our studies did not specifically address the possibility of NADPH production from oxoglutarate:ferredoxin oxidoreductase, which is also highly conserved between Helicobacter and Campylobacter species, previous studies of this enzyme would suggest that FldA and FqrB reversibly participate in this reaction. In general the metabolism of CO2 and molecular hydrogen has been understudied, but both gases are abundant in the gastrointestinal tract, and it is highly likely that these organisms have evolved the ability to capitalize on them (14, 22, 28).
There has been considerable interest in the intermediary metabolism of small-genome organisms such as H. pylori, where few redundancies or backup pathways are available to circumvent metabolic pathway deficiencies (1, 6, 39). For example, H. pylori lacks the genes encoding phosphofructokinase and pyruvate kinase, which are involved in key steps in the forward direction of the glycolytic pathway (the reverse gluconeogenic pathway is complete), and it appears to compensate by routing glucose catabolism through the Entner Doudorof pathway (1, 6, 11, 18, 39). Ironically, glucose is sparingly utilized by H. pylori, whereas amino acids and organic acids serve as the major carbon and energy sources (1, 6, 11, 18, 39). H. pylori also lacks anaplerotic enzymes that typically connect the Krebs cycle with gluconeogenesis (e.g., oxaloacetate 
phosphoenolpyruvate [PEP]) and must rely on phosphoenolpyruvate synthase (pyruvate
PEP) to satisfy gluconeogenic demands, as depicted in Fig. 6. Our studies suggest that CO2 fixation by the PFOR:FldA:FqrB pathway must play a central role in this process and may partly explain the capnophilic nature of this pathogen. In the case of asaccharolytic C. jejuni, which lacks phosphofructokinase and phosphoenolpyruvate synthase, organic acids enter the gluconeogenic pathway via PEP carboxykinase (oxaloacetate 
PEP) (18, 19, 40). As shown in Fig. 6, PEP synthesis from pyruvate is possible through the oxaloacetate intermediate via pyruvate carboxylase and PEP carboxykinase (40). The fate of PEP (catabolic versus gluconeogenic) appears to be regulated through allosteric effectors that modulate pyruvate kinase activity (40). In both organisms, the demand for acetyl-CoA for CO2 fixation can be satisfied through both fatty acid catabolism and synthesis of acetyl-CoA from acetate (acetate kinase and acetyl-CoA synthetase) (1, 11, 19, 39). For systems biologists who have modeled the metabolic activities of H. pylori, it will be of interest to see how pyruvate synthesis (CO2 fixation) by PFOR alters carbon flow predictions. Thus, FqrB is a reminder that in silico modeling is only as good as the accuracy and completeness of existing functional genomic information and underscores the need for rigorous biochemical analysis of genes of unknown function.
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FIG. 6. Reversible PFOR:NADPH reductase complex. All reactions are shown as reversible, with FldA shuttling reducing equivalents between PFOR and FqrB. FldARd indicates the reduced form, and FldAOx indicates the oxidized form. Pyruvate formation (reverse reaction) may be favored due to the unique gluconeogenic nature of central metabolism in microaerophiles. The dashed lines indicate pyruvate carboxylation (pyruvate carboxylase [PYC]) and oxaloacetate (OAA) decarboxylation (phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase [PCK]) enzymes found in C. jejuni and phosphoenolpyruvate synthase (PPS) found only in H. pylori. C. jejuni also expresses pyruvate kinase (not depicted). Sources of acetyl-CoA include fatty acid catabolism and free acetate and the associated enzymes.
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This work was supported by grants from the Canadian Institutes for Health Research and the National Institutes of Health (DK073823) to P.S.H. and by grants BFU2004-01411 (Spanish Government) and PM076/2006 (Aragonese Government) to J.S. N.C. was supported by an FPU fellowship (Spain).
Published ahead of print on 27 April 2007. ![]()
Present address: Department of Biochemistry, University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI 53706. ![]()
Martin St. Maurice and Nunilo Cremades contributed equally to this work and share first authorship. ![]()
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