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Journal of Bacteriology, November 2007, p. 8139-8144, Vol. 189, No. 22
0021-9193/07/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JB.01275-07
Copyright © 2007, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Isolation and Characterization of Unsaturated Fatty Acid Auxotrophs of Streptococcus pneumoniae and Streptococcus mutans
Silvia Altabe,1
Paloma Lopez,2 and
Diego de Mendoza1*
Instituto de Biología Molecular y Celular de Rosario and Departamento de Microbiología, Facultad de Ciencias Bioquímicas y Farmacéuticas, Universidad Nacional de Rosario, Rosario, Argentina,1
Departamento de Estructura y Función de Proteínas, Centro de Investigaciones Biológicas (C.S.I.C.), Madrid, Spain2
Received 7 August 2007/
Accepted 31 August 2007

ABSTRACT
Unsaturated fatty acid (UFA) biosynthesis is essential for the
maintenance of membrane structure and function in many groups
of anaerobic bacteria. Like
Escherichia coli, the human pathogen
Streptococcus pneumoniae produces straight-chain saturated fatty
acids (SFA) and monounsaturated fatty acids. In
E. coli UFA
synthesis requires the action of two gene products, the essential
isomerase/dehydratase encoded by
fabA and an elongation condensing
enzyme encoded by
fabB. S. pneumoniae lacks both genes and instead
employs a single enzyme with only an isomerase function encoded
by the
fabM gene. In this paper we report the construction and
characterization of an
S. pneumoniae 708
fabM mutant. This mutant
failed to grow in complex medium, and the defect was overcome
by addition of UFAs to the growth medium.
S. pneumoniae fabM mutants did not produce detectable levels of monounsaturated
fatty acids as determined by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry
and thin-layer chromatography analysis of the radiolabeled phospholipids.
We also demonstrate that a
fabM null mutant of the cariogenic
organism
Streptococcus mutants is a UFA auxotroph, indicating
that FabM is the only enzyme involved in the control of membrane
fluidity in streptococci. Finally we report that the
fabN gene
of
Enterococcus faecalis, coding for a dehydratase/isomerase,
complements the growth of
S. pneumoniae fabM mutants. Taken
together, these results suggest that FabM is a potential target
for chemotherapeutic agents against streptococci and that
S. pneumoniae UFA auxotrophs could help identify novel genes encoding
enzymes involved in UFA biosynthesis.

INTRODUCTION
cis unsaturated fatty acids (UFAs) have crucial roles in membrane
biology in organisms ranging from bacteria to humans. The relative
abundance of UFAs in cellular phospholipids has a major influence
on the physical properties of most biological membranes. UFAs
have a much lower transition temperature than saturated fatty
acids because the steric hindrance imparted by the rigid kink
of the
cis double bond results in much poorer packing of the
acyl chains Thus, UFAs are key molecules in the regulation of
cellular membrane fluidity (
2). There are two major mechanisms
by which living organisms synthesize UFAs; most organisms use
an oxygen-dependent pathway, whereas many prokaryotes, including
Escherichia coli, synthesize UFAs anaerobically. The anaerobic
UFA synthesis in
E. coli occurs through introduction of a double
bond into the growing acyl chain by two specialized proteins,
FabA and FabB, in a bacterial type II biosynthetic pathway (
9).
These proteins were first defined by isolation and characterization
of UFA auxotrophs (
8,
13 ). FabA is a bifunctional dehydratase/isomerase
enzyme that introduces the double bond in the 10-carbon intermediate.
This enzyme catalyzes both the dehydration of ß-hydroxyacyl
acyl carrier protein (ß-hydroxyacyl-ACP) to
trans-2-unsaturated
acyl-ACP and also the isomerization of
trans-2-decenoyl-ACP
to
cis-3-decenoyl-ACP, the key step of the classical anaerobic
UFA biosynthetic pathway. FabB is a ß-ketoacyl-ACP
synthase I that elongates the unsaturated biosynthetic intermediates
made by FabA. In
fabA and
fabB mutants saturated fatty acid
(SFA) synthesis persists due to the presence of another dehydratase,
FabZ, and another condensing enzyme, FabF. However, other bacteria
lacking
fabA synthesize UFAs under anoxic conditions. Like
E. coli, the human pathogen
Streptococcus pneumoniae produces straight-chain
SFAs and monounsaturated fatty acids. This organism does not
utilize a FabA-like mechanism for introducing a double bond
into the growing acyl chain; instead, it employs a single enzyme
with only an isomerase function encoded by the
fabM gene (
16).
Although the function of
S. pneumoniae FabM was inferred from
biochemical analysis, this pathway has not yet been confirmed
in vivo, and there is no information concerning whether FabM
is the only enzyme involved in UFA synthesis in this organism.
On the other hand, recent studies have shown that a
fabM mutant
of the cariogenic organism
Streptococcus mutans is viable, although
it exhibits an increased doubling time compared to the parental
strain (
10). This mutant does not produce UFAs, but it contains
a much larger amount of nonidentified fatty acids than the wild-type
parental strain (
10). Since UFAs are essential in bacteria producing
straight-chain fatty acids, these data raise the possibility
that
S. mutans fabM mutants could switch the product distribution
of the pathway to generate significant amounts of other fatty
acids, i.e., low-melting-point fatty acids, which partially
compensate for the absence of UFAs in their membranes.
For these reasons and in order to more definitely establish the role of fabM in type II fatty acid biosynthesis in streptococci, we isolated and characterized null fabM mutants of S. pneumoniae and S. mutans. Our data indicate that these mutants are UFA auxotrophs, demonstrating that FabM is an essential enzyme in streptococci. In addition, we found that the fabN gene of Enterococcus faecalis, which does not complement the growth of E. coli fabA mutants (18), is able to functionally complement S. pneumoniae fabM mutants. Therefore, S. pneumoniae UFA auxotrophic strains could help identify novel genes encoding enzymes involved in UFA biosynthesis.

MATERIALS AND METHODS
Bacterial strains, plasmids, and growth conditions.
The strains and plasmids used in this study are listed in Table
1.
S. pneumoniae 708 and its derivatives were grown in AGCHYE
medium (
11) or on brain heart infusion (BHI) agar with 5% sheep
blood. AGCHYE medium was prepared with fatty acid-free bovine
serum albumin for all experiments unless indicated otherwise.
Antibiotics were added at the following concentrations: chloramphenicol
(Cm), 3 µg ml
–1; and spectinomycin (Sp), 500 µg
ml
–1.
S. mutans UA159 and its derivatives were maintained
on BHI (Difco) agar plates or in Todd-Hewitt broth with 0.3%
yeast extract (THYE) (Difco) at 37°C. The antibiotic concentrations
used for
S. mutans strains were 50 µg ml
–1 Sp and
1 mg ml
–1 kanamycin (Km). Overnight cultures were inoculated
from –70°C glycerol stocks. The following day fresh
cultures were started by washing and diluting the overnight
cultures 1:10.
E. coli strains were grown in Luria-Bertani medium
supplemented when needed with 50 µg ml
–1 Sp and
100 µg ml
–1 ampicillin. UFAs neutralized with KOH
were added to the medium at the concentrations indicated below.
All chemicals were purchased from Sigma Chemical Co.
Construction of mutant strains.
Plasmid pLB1, used to disrupt the
fabM gene in
S. pneumoniae (Table
1), was constructed as follows. Two sets of primers were
designed to amplify the predicted FabM coding sequence plus
additional flanking regions from the
S. pneumoniae genome. The
710-bp upstream fragment containing the 5' region of the
fabM gene was amplified by PCR with primers L1 (5'-TGCATCCGATACCATTTTGGTTAAAGTAGGCAGCA-3')
and L2 (5'-TTGAAGAGATTTCGAAGA
GGATCCACTGCTTAT-3'; BamHI site
underlined). The 870-bp downstream fragment containing the 3'
region of the
fabM gene was amplified by PCR with primers 5'-ACTGAACCTACAGAATC
GCATGCTCAAACAGAGGATTTCA-3'
(SphI site underlined) and 5'-CGAGCAGCTGTAGA
GGGCCCCATCGAATCTGGAGTA-3'
(ApaI site underlined). The PCR products were cloned in the
pGEMT Easy (Promega Life Science) vector, yielding pSL1 and
pSL2, respectively, and sequenced. The syn Cm resistance cassette
(
7) was excised from plasmid pUC18SCATS and inserted downstream
of the insert between the BamHI and SphI sites of pSL1, yielding
plasmid pSL3. Then the insert of pSL2 was located downstream
of the
cat gene by insertion within the ApaI and SphI sites
of pSL3. The resulting plasmid, pLB1, was transformed in
E. coli, and transformants were selected for Cm resistance. Plasmid
DNA was prepared using the Wizard DNA purification system (Promega
Life Science), linearized, and transferred to
S. pneumoniae strain 708 by transformation as described by Lacks and Greenberg
(
11). The transformed cells were mixed with BHI-blood agar with
3 µg ml
–1 of Cm, plated, and incubated at 37°C.
As a result of the expected double crossover, the Cm resistance
cassette replaced part of the chromosomal copy of the target
gene, thereby creating a gene knockout (Fig.
1). Gene replacement
in mutant clones was confirmed by PCR using primers that annealed
outside the DNA region used for mutant construction. The
fabM mutant of
S. mutans was constructed by allelic replacement mutagenesis
using the Km resistance cassette method described by Song et
al. (
17). Briefly a Km resistance cassette (904 bp) from
Staphylococcus aureus ATCC 43300 was amplified with primers Kan-F (5'-AACAGTGAATTGGAGTTCGTCTTGTTATA-3)
and Kan-R (5'-GCTTTTTAGACATCTAAATCTAGGTA-3). Two pairs of gene-specific
primers, L-F/L-R and R-F/R-R, were used to amplify the left
and right flanking regions of the target gene, generating PCR
products that were 500 bp long. Primers L-R and R-F each consisted
of 21 nucleotides (5-GACGAACTCCAATTCACTGTT-3 and 5-AGATTTAGATGTCTAAAAAGC-3,
respectively) identical to a segment of the promoter region
and the 3' end of the Km
r gene plus 29 nucleotides of the
fabM sequence. PCR DNA amplifications were performed as described
by Song et al. (
17), and the linear fused product was cloned
in the pGEMT vector, yielding plasmid pLB2, and sequenced. Transformation
and gene disruption of
S. mutans were performed as described
by Ahn et al. (
3). To this end, overnight cultures were diluted
20-fold in prewarmed THYE supplemented with 5% heat-inactivated
horse serum and incubated at 37°C until the optical density
at 600 nm was approximately 0.2. Competence of the cultures
was induced by addition of 1 µg of synthetic competence-stimulating
peptide (
3) and incubation for 20 min. Then transformation was
performed by incubating the cultures for 30 min with linearized
plasmid pLB2 (Sp
r Km
r). To allow expression of the antibiotic
resistance marker before plating, cultures were incubated for
2 h after addition of 0.5 ml of fresh THYE supplemented with
5% heat-inactivated horse serum. Transformants were selected
by plating cultures on BHI-blood agar supplemented with 1 mg
ml
–1 Km and incubating the preparations at 37°C for
48 h. Gene replacement in mutant clones was confirmed by PCR.
Genomic DNAs of mutant and wild-type strains were used as templates
for PCR amplification with primers L-F and R-R to verify correct
incorporation of the fused construct into the mutant genome.
Fatty acid analysis.
For measurement of fatty acid biosynthesis cells were grown
in AGCHYE medium to mid-exponential phase and labeled for one
generation time with 2 µCi of [1-
14C]acetate. Lipids were
extracted, converted to methyl esters, and separated into unsaturated
and saturated fractions by chromatography on 10% silver nitrate-impregnated
Silica Gel G plates (thickness, 0.5 mm; Analtech) developed
with toluene at –20°C (
1). Radioactivity on the plates
was visualized using a Typhoon 9200 PhosphorImager screen and
was quantified using ImageQuant software (version 5.2). Lipid
species were identified by comigration with standards. To analyze
the fatty acid profiles, streptococci were grown to mid-log
phase in AGCHYE medium containing 0.8% sucrose at 37°C.
Total cellular fatty acids were prepared by the method of Bligh
and Dyer (
6). The fatty acid methyl esters were prepared by
transesterification of glycerolipids with 0.5 M sodium methoxide-methanol
and then analyzed with a Perkin Elmer Turbo Mass gas chromatograph-mass
spectrometer using a capillary column (30 m by 0.25 mm [inside
diameter]) containing 100% dimethylpolysiloxane (PE-1; Perkin
Elmer Co). Helium at a flow rate of 1 ml min
–1 was used
as the carrier gas, and the column temperature was programmed
to increase at a rate of 4°C min
–1 from 140 to 240°C.
The spectra were recorded in the electron impact mode at 70
eV, using 1-s scans of
m/z 40 to 400 (
5). The SFAs and UFAs
used as reference compounds were obtained from Sigma Chemical
Co.

RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
cis-trans isomerase FabM is essential in S. pneumoniae and S. mutans.
The
fabM gene of
S. pneumoniae codes for the FabM enzyme proposed
to be essential for UFA biosynthesis based on its vitro enzymatic
activity (
15). To directly test the role of this enzyme in the
physiology of
S. pneumoniae, we disrupted the
fabM gene with
a Cm resistance cassette. The resulting strain, designated SH9,
did not exhibit a colony phenotype on BHI-blood agar plates,
and it autolysed faster than the parental strain. More importantly,
fabM mutants completely failed to grow in AGHYE complex medium
unless it was supplemented with UFAs (Fig.
2). The growth defect
of SH9 could be overcome by supplementing the medium with oleate
or linoleate (Fig.
2A). On the other hand, SFAs were unable
to support the growth of SH9 (data not shown), indicating that
this strain is a UFA auxotroph.
To confirm the UFA auxotrophy of SH9, this strain was grown
in AGCHYE medium supplemented with 0.1 mM oleic acid, and its
fatty acid composition was determined by gas chromatography-mass
spectrometry (Table
2). The membrane of wild-type strain 708
contained 89% UFAs, including three C
16:1 fatty acids with double
bonds at positions

7,

9, and

11 and three C
18:1 fatty acids
with double bonds at positions

9,

11, and

13 (Table
2), while
the UFA content of the mutant strain membrane was 84% and the
membrane was composed almost exclusively of oleic acid. In addition,
strain SH9 produced a larger amount of shorter-chain C
12:0 and
C
14:0 saturated fatty acids than the parental strain (6% versus
1%). We verified that the UFA composition changes arose from
alterations in de novo fatty acid synthesis by labeling strains
708 and SH9 with [1-
14C]acetate. The lipids were extracted,
and the distribution of label in the fatty acyl methyl esters
was determined by argentation chromatography. As shown in Fig.
3, the parent strain (lanes 1 and 4) incorporated radioactivity
into both SFAs and UFAs, whereas SH9 (lanes 2 and 5) incorporated
radioactivity only into SFAs. These results provided a direct
demonstration that SH9 failed to synthesize UFAs.
We confirmed that the deficiency in UFA synthesis of strain
SH9 was due to the absence of a functional pneumococcal FabM
protein by introducing into strain SH9 a plasmid that expressed
the wild-type
fabM gene. Expression of
fabM in strain SH9 (strain
SH11) completely eliminated its growth deficiency in AGCHYE
medium (Fig.
2B) and reestablished the synthesis of UFAs (Fig.
3, lane 3). As shown in Table
2 and Fig.
3, strain SH11 synthesized
a smaller amount of UFAs than wild-type strain 708. This was
likely due to the fact that the His-tagged version of FabM expressed
by strain SH11 (Table
1) was less active than native FabM. In
any case, we concluded from these data that
fabM is an essential
gene in
S. pneumoniae and that the absence of FabM was the sole
cause for the biochemical and growth phenotypes exhibited by
strain SH9.
It has recently been reported that a fabM mutant of S. mutans is viable, although it exhibited an increased doubling time compared to the wild-type parent strain (10). This result could indicate that S. mutans has the ability to synthesize other fatty acids that partially overcome the deficiency of UFAs in the absence of the fabM gene product. To test this possibility, we constructed the S. mutans SA20 strain, which is a fabM insertional null mutant derivative of the UA159 streptococcal strain (see details in Materials and Methods). Mutant strain SA20 was still able to generate small colonies on BHI-blood agar, but we found that it required supplementation with UFAs for growth in AGCHYE complex medium (data not shown). SFAs did not cure the growth defect of SA20 in AGCHYE medium, indicating that this strain is an UFA auxotroph. The inability of the fabM strain to synthesize UFAs was verified by in vivo labeling of the fatty acids with [1-14C]acetate, followed by argentation chromatography. While SA20 synthesized only SFAs (Fig. 4, lane 2), the control strain synthesized both SFAs and UFAs (Fig. 4, lane 1). We also examined the membrane lipid composition of the S. mutans strains by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry analysis (Table 3). We found that like S. pneumoniae, S. mutans UA159 synthesized straight-chain saturated and monounsaturated fatty acids, but the carbon atom chain lengths of the UFAs were predominately 18 and 20 (Table 3). As shown in Table 3, when SA20 was grown in AGCHYE medium supplemented with oleate, the UFA content of the mutant strain was 19% oleate and 14% C20:1, the elongation product of oleic acid. Although these data are fully consistent with the conclusion that fabM is an essential gene in S. mutans, they are not in agreement with recent results of Fozo and Quivey (10), who reported that a fabM S. mutans strain, UR117, is able to grow in complex medium without a UFA supplement. Since these experiments were performed in TY rich medium, we reexamined whether the UFA auxotrophy of SA20 could be relieved in this medium. However, this was not the case, since in TY medium SA20 was still unable to grow without addition of exogenous UFAs (data not shown). We cannot readily explain why our results differ from those of Fozo and Quivey (10). A possible explanation is that the growth medium used in the experiment of Fozo and Quivey contained contaminant fatty acids that partially met the UFA requirement of UR117. In agreement with this possibility, it was reported that UR117 contains almost 40% nonidentified fatty acids in its membranes (10). These unknown fatty acids could in some way partially support the growth of UR117.
The isolation of UFA growth-dependent
fabM null mutants of
S. pneumoniae demonstrated that FabM is essential for growth and
cell viability of this bacterium and that the role of UFAs cannot
be filled by other fatty acids synthesized by this organism.
In addition, under the conditions used in this work we found
that
fabM is also essential in
S. mutans, indicating that FabM
is the only enzyme involved in the control of membrane fluidity
in streptococci.
Functional replacement of S. pneumoniae FabM by E. faecalis FabN.
The gram-positive bacterium E. faecalis has a fatty acid composition very similar to that of E. coli, but it lacks FabA, FabB, and FabM homologues (18). However, it contains a protein, FabN, which is a bifunctional dehydratase/isomerase capable of introducing a double bond into a growing acyl chain (18). It has been demonstrated that FabN can produce UFAs in E. coli fabA cells, but the low level of UFAs produced was unable to support growth (18). Here we investigated whether expression of the FabN enzyme corrected the FabM deficiency of S. pneumoniae SH9. To do this, we transformed S. pneumoniae SH9 with plasmid pDLfabN containing the fabN coding sequences from E. faecalis. The resulting transformant, strain SH13 (Table 1), was selected on a BHI-blood agar plate containing the appropriate antibiotics (see Materials and Methods) and tested for growth in AGCHYE medium in the absence of a UFA supplement. As shown in Fig. 2B, fabN was able to complement the growth defect of the SH9 fabM mutant. Analysis of the de novo synthesis of [1-14C]acetate-labeled fatty acids by argentation thin-layer chromatography and quantification of the spots revealed that strain SH13 produced about 22% UFAs. The UFAs synthesized by SH13 were identified as C16:1
9 and C18:1
11 (Fig. 3, lane 6), which are identical to the UFAs produced by E. faecalis (18). These data indicate that FabN functionally replaces the S. pneumoniae FabM protein. Our experiments also demonstrate that in S. pneumoniae FabM-deficient cells expressing FabN, the synthesis of UFAs was not strongly decreased by competition for trans-2-decenoyl-ACP between FabN and the host enoyl-ACP reductase FabK. This was not the case in E. coli, where FabN was unable to complement the UFA auxotrophy of a fabA mutant strain because the FabI enoyl reductase efficiently competed with FabN for trans-2-decenoyl-ACP (14). It should be noted that the fabN-complemented fabM SH13 strain synthesized about 20% of the UFAs synthesized by the wild-type strain (Fig. 3). This appears to indicate that S. pneumonie requires smaller amounts of UFAs for growth than E. coli. Therefore, this observation could also explain the finding that fabN functionally complements the growth of S. pneumonie but not the growth of E. coli. In any case, it is clear from our work that UFA auxotrophs of S. pneumoniae could be helpful in the identification of novel genes involved in the anaerobic synthesis of UFAs in organisms that lack recognizable homologues of FabA or FabM genes in their genomes.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We gratefully acknowledge Ying-Jie Lu for sending plasmid pDL278
fabN and Charles Rock for helpful discussions and suggestions. We
also thank Monica Hourcade for technical support and Antonio
Uttaro for critically reading the manuscript.
This work was supported by Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas (CONICET, Argentina) and Agencia de Promoción Científica y Tecnológica (FONCYT, Argentina). S.A. and D.D.M. are Career Investigators at CONICET. D.D.M. is an International Research Scholar of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute. The work at the Centro de Investigaciones Biológicas was supported by the Spanish Fondo de Investigación Sanitaria (grant PI040808 to P.L.).

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Instituto de Biología Molecular y Celular de Rosario and Departamento de Microbiología, Facultad de Ciencias Bioquímicas y Farmacéuticas, Universidad Nacional de Rosario, Suipacha 531, 2000-Rosario, Argentina. Phone: 54-341-4351235, ext. 111. Fax: 54-341-4300465. E-mail:
demendoza{at}ibr.gov.ar 
Published ahead of print on 7 September 2007. 

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Journal of Bacteriology, November 2007, p. 8139-8144, Vol. 189, No. 22
0021-9193/07/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JB.01275-07
Copyright © 2007, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.