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Journal of Bacteriology, August 2008, p. 5339-5352, Vol. 190, No. 15
0021-9193/08/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JB.00400-08
Copyright © 2008, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.

INRS-Institut Armand Frappier, 531 Boulevard des Prairies, Laval, Québec H7V 1B7, Canada,1 Department of Microbiology and Infectious Diseases, Faculty of Medicine, University of Calgary Health Sciences Centre, 3330 Hospital Drive, NW, Calgary, Alberta T2N 4N1, Canada2
Received 20 March 2008/ Accepted 14 May 2008
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P. aeruginosa produces a large variety of HAQs belonging to various families characterized by the presence of a hydrogen or hydroxyl group at the 3 position, an N-oxide group in place of the quinoline nitrogen, and an unsaturation on the alkyl side chain (32). Among these compounds, 3,4-dihydroxy-2-heptylquinoline (Pseudomonas quinolone signal [PQS]) and 4-hydroxy-2-heptylquinoline (HHQ) act as signaling molecules and are implicated in the regulation of the expression of multiple virulence genes in this bacterium (17, 39). The pqsABCDE operon encodes the primary proteins mediating HAQ biosynthesis (Fig. 1) (14, 22). PqsA is probably an anthranilate-coenzyme A (CoA) ligase (33), while pqsB, pqsC, and pqsD encode proteins similar to β-keto-acyl-acyl carrier protein synthases (22). The last gene of the operon, pqsE, is not involved in the biosynthesis of HAQs but is instead required for the cellular response to these compounds (13, 14, 22).
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FIG. 1. (A) Biosynthetic pathway of HAQs in P. aeruginosa and HMAQs in Burkholderia. (B) Comparison of the P. aeruginosa PA14 (http://pseudomonas.com) region containing the pqsABCDE operon with the B. ambifaria AMMD region containing the hmqABCDEFG operon (http://burkholderia.com). Values represent identities/similarities between the different gene products of these operons. Searches for identity and similarity were performed using the BLAST algorithm (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/BLAST/bl2seq/). a, indicates that, as reported in the text, HmqB exhibits identity/similarity only with the amino-terminal half of PqsB.
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Formerly included in the pseudomonad family, the Burkholderia genus, of the Betaproteobacteria, comprises more than 40 species that inhabit remarkably diverse ecological niches, as they have been isolated from soil, plant rhizosphere, water, insects, fungi, hospital environments, and infected humans. Many Burkholderia species have developed beneficial interactions with their plant hosts and have considerable ecological importance: several species of Burkholderia have proven to be very efficient biocontrol and bioremediation agents (7, 53). In contrast, a number of Burkholderia species, especially members of the Burkholderia cepacia complex, are also increasingly prevalent opportunistic human pathogens that cause severe respiratory infections in people suffering from cystic fibrosis (CF) or chronic granulomatous disease (8). In addition, two other species, B. mallei and B. pseudomallei, are well-characterized primary pathogens of animals and humans. B. mallei is the etiological agent of glanders, which is mainly a horse disease but affects humans in rare cases (44). The saprophyte B. pseudomallei is the causative agent of melioidosis, a potentially fatal septicemic infection of animals and humans (6). B. thailandensis is very closely related to B. pseudomallei but is generally considered to be avirulent (4).
Not surprisingly, these versatile bacteria release a large variety of extracellular products including proteases, siderophores, toxins, antifungals, and antimicrobials, many of which are under QS control (56). While many Burkholderia strains, including B. ambifaria, carry only one QS system homologous to the P. aeruginosa Las and Rhl systems, some strains, such as B. pseudomallei and B. thailandensis, harbor five different QS transcriptional regulators and three acyl homoserine lactone (AHL) synthases (19). Evidence that the QS systems operating in Burkholderia are crucial for full virulence in various animal models has accumulated over the past few years.
With the help of a bioassay, HAQs similar to those produced by P. aeruginosa were recently detected in concentrated extracts of B. pseudomallei and B. thailandensis cultures (16). We have investigated the abilities of Burkholderia species to produce HAQ-like molecules. The present work describes the precise identification of the distinct HAQ derivatives produced by three Burkholderia species, including B. ambifaria, a member of the B. cepacia complex, and unique insights into their biosynthetic pathway. We found that in contrast with those of P. aeruginosa, Burkholderia HAQs contain predominantly an unsaturated aliphatic side chain and are typically methylated (at the 3 position), hence their designation as 4-hydroxy-3-methyl-2-alkylquinolines (HMAQs). This methylation results from the presence of a putative methyltransferase encoded by the last gene of the hmqABCDEFG operon. Finally, we show that the synthesis of HMAQs negatively regulates the production of AHLs in B. ambifaria and consequently modulates QS-regulated phenotypes.
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pir (thi-1 thr leu tonA lacY supE recA::RP4-2-Tc::Mu Kmr
pir) served as a donor for conjugation experiments (51). Unless otherwise stated, B. thailandensis and B. cepacia complex strains were routinely grown in tryptic soy broth (TSB) (Difco) at 37°C with shaking (240 rpm) or on TSB agar plates. B. pseudomallei strain 1026B and B. mallei strain ATCC 23344 were grown with shaking (200 rpm) in LB broth (Difco) for 36 h at 37°C. When required, chloramphenicol was used at 40 µg/ml for B. ambifaria HSJ1 and at 100 µg/ml for B. thailandensis E264. |
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TABLE 1. Burkholderia strains used in this study
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Assays with 6-FABA. Anthranilic acid analogue 6-fluoro-2-aminobenzoic acid (6-FABA) stock was prepared at a concentration of 300 mM in methanol. B. ambifaria cells were grown as previously described in TSB minus or plus 6-FABA. Concentrations of 0.25 mM, 0.5 mM, and 1 mM were tested. Samples were taken when the maximum production of HMAQs is normally achieved (stationary phase) and prepared for liquid chromatography (LC)/mass spectrometry (MS) analysis as explained below. Cultures were performed in triplicate.
The competing concentration of anthranilic acid used for complementation was twice that of the analogue. Samples were taken at the beginning of the exponential phase and prepared for LC/MS analysis. Cultures were performed in triplicate.
Construction of hmqA and hmqG mutants. Briefly, a 757-bp internal fragment of hmqA and a 525-bp fragment of hmqG were amplified from B. ambifaria HSJ1 using primers hmqAKOF, with an XbaI site (Table 2), and hmqAKOR, with a KpnI site, for the hmqA gene and using primers hmqGR and hmqGF with the same restriction sites for the hmqG gene. The PCR products were digested with KpnI and XbaI and ligated into the XbaI and KpnI sites of the suicide vector pKNOCK-Cm (1). The construct was then electroporated in E. coli SM10 cells. The resulting plasmid was mobilized from E. coli SM10 into B. ambifaria HSJ1 cells by mating. Single-crossover insertion mutants were selected on TSB agar containing 20 µg/ml gentamicin and 40 µg/ml chloramphenicol. The insertion of the plasmid into the target gene was confirmed by PCR.
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TABLE 2. Primers used in this study
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LC/MS analyses. For HAQ quantification, culture samples were prepared, as described previously (14, 31), by adding methanol containing 20 mg/liter internal standard (PQS-d4 [5,6,7,8-tetradeutero-3,4-dihydroxy-2-heptylquinoline]) to culture samples for a final concentration of 50%. The mixture was centrifuged for 10 min, and the supernatant was collected for analysis. For B. pseudomallei 1026b and B. mallei GB8, cell-free supernatants were obtained by centrifugation at 10,000 x g for 20 min. Five milliliters of the supernatants was acidified by the addition of glacial acetic acid (20 µl/ml medium), and this was extracted three times with ethyl acetate (1:1, vol/vol); the extracts were combined and evaporated at 35°C under a gentle stream of nitrogen. The residue was then resuspended in 5 ml of methanol. For AHL quantification, 480 µl of culture samples was mixed with 120 µl of acetonitrile containing 50 mg/liter of internal standard (PQS-d4) for a final concentration of 10 mg/liter.
The analyses were performed with a Quattro II (Waters, Mississauga, Ontario, Canada) triple-quadrupole mass spectrometer in positive electrospray ionization mode. Collision-induced dissociation was performed with argon as the collision gas at 2 x 10–3 mTorr. The mass spectrometer was coupled to an HP 1100 (Agilent Technologies, Saint Laurent, Quebec, Canada) high-performance liquid chromatograph equipped with a 3- by 150-mm C8 Luna (Phenomenex, Torrance, CA) reverse-phase column. The flow rate was 0.4 ml/min split to 10% through a Valco Tee. A water-acetonitrile gradient with 1% acetic acid was used as the mobile phase. Analysis of all the HMAQs and HAQs was performed in full scan mode using the response factor of 4-hydroxy-3-methyl-2-nonenylquinoline (HMNQ) and using PQS-d4 as an internal standard (31). Assays of cultures were carried out in triplicate, and detailed quantification of HMAQs/HAQs was performed at the time of maximum production of HMAQs (for B. ambifaria and B. thailandensis) or at the early stationary phase (B. pseudomallei). For B. pseudomallei and B. mallei, a single analysis was made from cultures sampled at 18 and 36 h, respectively. For AHL, data acquisition was performed in full scan mode with a scanning range of 130 to 350 Da. The precise quantification of C8-HSL was performed with tandem MS (MS/MS) as described previously (13).
NMR. HMNQ was dissolved in deuterochloroform for nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) analysis. The NMR apparatus was a Bruker SpectroSpin model operating at 500 MHz.
Phenotype assays. Antifungal and proteolytic activities of the culture supernatants were measured by a zone-of-inhibition assay. Proteolytic and antifungal activities were evaluated on agar plates containing 1% skim milk powder and on TSB agar plates inoculated with 100 µl of Candida albicans culture, respectively. Briefly, B. ambifaria strains were grown in TSB until an OD600 of 5.0 (end of the exponential phase) was achieved. After centrifugation and filter sterilization, supernatant samples were loaded into wells made by removing agar plugs. The plates were incubated for 24 h at 30°C. Antifungal and proteolytic activities were estimated from the area (mm2) of the inhibition zone surrounding the wells. This experiment was performed in triplicate and repeated twice with similar results.
Siderophore production was determined by use of the Chrome Azurol S (CAS) assay. On CAS agar, siderophores remove iron from the CAS dye complex, resulting in a blue-to-orange color change in zones surrounding the colonies (50). B. ambifaria strains were grown in TSB until an OD600 of 2.0 was reached and were spotted (3 µl) onto CAS agar. The plates were incubated for 24 h at 37°C. The production of siderophores was estimated by measuring the area of the halo (mm2) surrounding the colonies. After 24 h, the number of CFU present in each colony was determined by plating serial dilutions on TSB agar, and siderophore production values were corrected for the number of CFU. Eight colonies per strain were examined, and the experiment was repeated twice, with similar results.
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In several other Burkholderia genomes, especially strains belonging to the Burkholderia cepacia complex and B. mallei, putative homologues of pqsA, pqsB, pqsC, and pqsD are found dispersed throughout the genomes, but none carries a homologue of pqsE, which encodes the response effector.
Apart from the homology with pqsABCDE, the genomic context surrounding this operon is quite different in these bacteria compared with P. aeruginosa. The phnAB operon, encoding anthranilate synthase, is not found near pqsABCDE homologues or elsewhere in the genomes. Furthermore, no homologue of mvfR, which codes for the transcriptional regulator of pqsABCDE and phnAB in P. aeruginosa, is present in close vicinity of the Burkholderia pqsABCDE homologues. Instead, this operon contains two additional genes at the end in all strains of Burkholderia where a putative pqsABCDE operon was identified. In silico analysis did not reveal the presence of a putative promoter upstream from these two open reading frames. These two genes are well conserved among the strains of Burkholderia carrying the pqsABCDE homologues, e.g., 72% and 75% identity, respectively, between the B. ambifaria AMMD and the B. pseudomallei K96243 homologues. Homologues to these two genes are not found in any other sequenced Burkholderia or P. aeruginosa species. In B. ambifaria and B. thailandensis, we confirmed their inclusion as part of the polycistronic operon by reverse transcription-PCR (data not shown). Accordingly, a GC-rich hairpin-forming sequence followed by several thymines, which could function as a transcriptional terminator, lies only at the 3' end of the last gene of this operon in B. ambifaria AMMD.
Because HAQ derivatives produced by these bacteria are usually methylated (as described below) and are thus responsible for the synthesis of HMAQs, we named this operon hmqABCDEFG, with hmqF and hmqG as the two additional genes (Fig. 1).
LC/MS and LC/MS/MS identification and characterization of HMAQs produced by Burkholderia species. We tested the following Burkholderia species for the production of HAQ derivatives: B. pseudomallei, B. thailandensis, B. mallei, and 14 other strains covering most of the species belonging to the B. cepacia complex (Table 1). HMAQs were found only in cultures of the species carrying an hmqABCDEFG operon: B. pseudomallei, B. thailandensis, and B. ambifaria.
The reconstructed total-ion chromatogram (TIC) obtained from the supernatant of B. thailandensis cultivated until the maximum production of HMAQs was achieved reveals a large number of peaks dominated by one presenting a pseudomolecular ion at m/z 284. The corresponding molecule was isolated by flash chromatography and by high-performance LC, and its NMR was found to correspond to HMNQ, including the trans configuration of the double bond between the 2' and 3' carbons of the side chain (42). The MS/MS spectrum of HMNQ shows an intense ion at m/z 173 along with other ions of decreasing intensities at m/z 184, 186, 198, and 212. Having characterized this compound, we found two other compounds with pseudomolecular ions at m/z 256 and 312 that present the same MS/MS spectra as HMNQ. In addition to these three compounds, four additional ones are found, which present pseudomolecular ions at m/z 228, 242, 270, and 298 in B. ambifaria culture supernatants. They present the same MS/MS spectra as HMNQ and occur at regular intervals in the TIC chromatograms. All these characteristics are typical of compounds belonging to a family of molecules sharing a common structure and differing from one another by 14 Da, which corresponds to the addition of a methylene unit on a side chain (Fig. 2). B. pseudomallei also produces many molecules belonging to family A (Fig. 2).
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FIG. 2. Chemical structures, retention times, and concentrations (mg/liter) of the various congeners of the five families of HMAQs and HAQs identified in Burkholderia cultures. a, chromatographic retention time (Ret.) (minutes); b, B. ambifaria (Ba); c, B. thailandensis (Bt); d, B. pseudomallei (Bp); e, standard deviations of triplicate assays (in parentheses); f, not detected.
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FIG. 3. Production in function of growth of the major HMAQs produced by B. thailandensis (A) and B. ambifaria (B). Production was monitored until the stationary phase was reached. Error bars represent the standard deviations of data for triplicate cultures.
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In order to confirm that the double bond of the other members of family A is indeed between the 2' and 3' carbons of the side chain, as in HMNQ, and to further support the hypothesis that compounds from family B are saturated analogues of family A, the culture supernatants were hydrogenated using deuterium gas. The ions at m/z 228, 242, 256, 270, 284, 298, and 312 disappeared and new ions appeared at m/z 232, 246, 260, 274, 288, 302, and 316 at the same retention time as those of their corresponding saturated analogues. The MS/MS spectra of these deuterated compounds all presented fragment ions at m/z 173, 187, and 202. These results confirmed the hypothesis that family B congeners are linear saturated analogues of family A.
Cultures of B. thailandensis and B. pseudomallei also contain another family of congeners (family C) presenting pseudomolecular ions at m/z 272, 286, 300, 314, and 328 (Fig. 2). The molecular masses of these ions are 16 Da higher than those of the corresponding congeners of family A, indicating that they could be analogues of HMNQ containing an N-oxide and an unsaturated alkyl chain in C7, C8, C9, C10, and C11. Their MS/MS spectra present fragment ions at m/z 172, 173, 184, 186, and 198. Upon treatment of the B. thailandensis supernatant with zinc in acetic acid, conditions known to reduce N-oxides, these pseudomolecular ions disappeared, and the levels of pseudomolecular ions of family A increased, supporting the hypothesis that family C congeners are N-oxide derivatives. Interestingly, no family C congeners are produced by B. ambifaria. Since in P. aeruginosa, the production of HAQ N-oxides requires the presence of pqsL (32), we analyzed the Burkholderia genomes and found genes coding for proteins with a very good level of homology to PqsL in B. pseudomallei K96243 (BPSS0829) (52% identity and 64% similarity) and B. thailandensis E264 (BTH_II1576) (51% identity and 65% similarity) but, consistently, none in B. ambifaria.
HHQ along with its saturated C8 and C9 congeners (family D), typically produced by P. aeruginosa, are found only in B. ambifaria cultures and at very low levels (Fig. 2). However, another family of congeners presenting pseudomolecular ions at m/z 242, 270, and 298 (family E) was detected in B. thailandensis and B. ambifaria but not in B. pseudomallei (Fig. 2). These congeners are structurally related to family D but with an unsaturated C7, C9, and C11 side chain. The retention times of these compounds are slightly different from those bearing the double bond between the 1' and the 2' carbons of the side chain, such as those produced by P. aeruginosa, an indication that the double bond could be located further along the chain. In B. ambifaria cultures treated with deuterium, the pseudomolecular ions at m/z 242 and 270 disappear, and two new ions are observed at m/z 246 and 274 at the corresponding retention times of C7 and C9 saturated congeners. Their MS/MS spectra present ions at m/z 159 and 173. A single C9 HAQ congener containing a double bond at the 1'-2' position was detected in B. pseudomallei but at a very low concentration (0.02 mg/liter).
Importantly, and similarly to a pqsA mutation in P. aeruginosa, knocking out hmqA in B. thailandensis and B. ambifaria completely abrogated the production of all five families of HAQ derivatives, in agreement with the proposed role of the hmq operon in the synthesis of these molecules.
Anthranilic acid is the precursor of HMAQs. In order to verify that hmq operon-carrying bacteria derive all HMAQs from anthranilic acid, like P. aeruginosa, we fed B. thailandensis and B. ambifaria cultures with deuterium-labeled anthranilic acid. Upon LC/MS analysis of the cultures, all the ions assigned to HMAQ or HAQ congeners displayed the expected addition of 4 Da to their pseudomolecular ions, confirming the incorporation of anthranilic acid into their structures. Feeding with 15N-anthranilic acid led to an increase of 1 Da in all the pseudomolecular ions mentioned above, indicating that the nitrogen of anthranilic acid is also incorporated into all HMAQ and HAQ congeners. This 1-Da increase was also found in all the MS/MS fragment ions mentioned above.
Interestingly, we noticed that anthranilic acid accumulates in hmqA mutant cultures (at an OD600 of 6.0 [0.16 mg/liter for the wild type versus 8.13 mg/liter for the hmqA mutant of B. thailandensis]), suggesting that a source of excess anthranilate is available in these Burkholderia strains, contributing to the synthesis of HMAQs. In P. aeruginosa, three sources supply anthranilic acid to the cellular pool for HAQ synthesis: the anthranilate synthases TrpEG and PhnAB and the kynBUA-encoded kynurenine pathway, which provides anthranilic acid through the degradation of tryptophan (Fig. 1) (20). Although B. ambifaria and B. thailandensis do not seem to carry PhnAB homologues, anthranilate synthase trpEG genes are present (Bamb_0439 and Bamb_0438 for trpE and trpG, respectively, in B. ambifaria AMMD), and a complete set of kynBUA genes is found as a cluster on the Burkholderia genomes (Bamb_2625 to Bamb_2627 in B. ambifaria AMMD). To verify whether the kynurenine pathway contributes to HMAQ synthesis, we fed B. ambifaria and B. thailandensis cultures with deuterium-labeled tryptophan, and this led to the labeling of all HMAQs in both bacteria. This showed that tryptophan degradation via the kynurenine pathway provides at least part of the anthranilic acid pool used for HMAQ synthesis (data not shown).
We recently reported that halogenated anthranilic acid analogues inhibit the synthesis of HAQs in P. aeruginosa and B. thailandensis, presumably by targeting the function of PqsA and/or HmqA (33). We therefore tested the effect of the anthranilic acid analogue 6-FABA on B. ambifaria cultures. The level of production of HMAQs decreased with increasing concentrations of 6-FABA added to the culture (Fig. 4A). Furthermore, the exogenous addition of anthranilic acid partially complemented this inhibition (Fig. 4B), supporting the hypothesis that HmqA is the target of 6-FABA in B. ambifaria. 6-FABA similarly inhibits B. thailandensis HMAQ production (data not shown).
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FIG. 4. Inhibition of HMAQ production by an analogue of anthranilic acid. (A) Production of HMAQ C7:2' by B. ambifaria decreases with increasing concentrations of 6-FABA. (B) Exogenous anthranilic acid addition partially restores HMAQ C7:2' production by B. ambifaria in the presence of 6-FABA. AA, anthranilic acid.
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hmqF (Bamb_5768 and BTH_II1930) encodes a protein of 1,292 amino acids showing homology with several putative AMP-dependent synthetases and ligases and several putative nonribosomal peptide synthetases. Analysis of HmqF protein motifs and conserved domains in the Pfam 22.0 database (http://pfam.janelia.org/) revealed that this putative protein contains several conserved domains: an N-terminal region showing homology to the AMP-binding enzyme family (PF00501), two predicted acyl-CoA dehydrogenase domains (PF02770 and PF00441), and a predicted phosphopantetheine attachment site in the C-terminal region (PF00550).
Interestingly, the same analysis for HmqG (712 amino acids) revealed the presence of a predicted methyltransferase domain (PF08242) that is part of the S-adenosyl-L-methionine (SAM)-dependent methyltransferase family. Therefore, we hypothesized that HmqG might be involved in the methylation at the 3 position of HMAQs. Accordingly, in a B. ambifaria hmqG mutant culture, the two major ions at m/z 256 and 284 (unsaturated HMAQ) disappear and are replaced by two intense ions at m/z 242 and 270 occurring at a retention time corresponding to those of C7 and C9 unsaturated HAQs of family E. This is consistent with the loss of the methyl group of the corresponding HMAQ congeners, supporting the hypothesis that HmqG acts as a methyltransferase, adding a methyl group at the 3 position of HAQs. Accordingly, the inactivation of hmqG results in the complete absence of methylation on the HMAQs normally produced (loss of families A, B, and C), with an accumulation of the unmethylated molecules (families D and E) (Table 2).
Effect of HMAQs on QS-regulated phenotypes and production of AHLs. Very few QS-regulated functions have so far been identified in B. ambifaria. These functions include the production of extracellular proteases, siderophores, and an unknown antifungal compound (60). We investigated whether these QS-regulated phenotypes are affected by HMAQ production. The hmqA mutant shows increased siderophore production and proteolytic and antifungal activities compared to those of the wild type (Fig. 5). Results obtained with C. albicans were further confirmed with the same bioassay using Cryptococcus neoformans and Candida glabrata. In both bioassays, a strain deficient in HMAQ synthesis produced larger amounts of antifungal compounds (data not shown). Also, colonies of the hmqA mutant showed higher levels of protease activity on agar plates containing 1% skim milk powder and 0.2% yeast extract than did the wild type (data not shown).
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FIG. 5. Effect of hmqA and hmqG mutations on QS-regulated factors. (A) Antifungal activity against C. albicans. (B) Proteolytic activity. (C) Siderophore production. Proteolytic and antifungal activities were estimated from the areas of the clear zones surrounding wells containing supernatants of cultures. The values shown are the averages ± standard deviations for triplicate cultures. Siderophore production was estimated from the area of the halo surrounding colonies on CAS agar after 24 h at 37°C. The values shown are corrected for the number of CFU in the colony (108) and are averages ± standard deviations of data for eight colonies.
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FIG. 6. Production in function of growth of C8-HSL by wild-type B. ambifaria and hmqA and hmqG mutants. Error bars represent the standard deviations of data for triplicate cultures.
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Moreover, we showed that the operon found in the Burkholderia strains mentioned above contains two more genes downstream of the gene homologous to pqsE that we thus named hmqF and hmqG. Apart from the homology with pqsABCDE, the genomic context surrounding hmqABCDEFG is quite different in these bacteria compared to P. aeruginosa. No anthranilate synthase reminiscent of phnAB is found nearby, and no homologue of the gene coding for the MvfR transcriptional regulator is present in the vicinity of the hmq operon. Furthermore, no putative LysR box seems to be present within the promoter of the hmqABCDEFG operon.
Chemical analysis of HMAQs. While we actually found only traces of P. aeruginosa-type HAQs (family D), we observed that the principal products in hmqABCDEFG-carrying Burkholderia species are HAQ analogues methylated at the 3 position. After a detailed analysis of the literature, we were able to find that bacterially produced methylated HAQs with an unsaturated aliphatic side chain had been detected previously. 4-Hydroxy-3-methyl-2-heptenylquinoline from an uncharacterized Pseudomonas strain was identified (24) and was later found in various B. cepacia (unidentified genomovar) strains (48) along with HMNQ (27) and a series of congeners from family B (41). As with P. aeruginosa HAQs, HMAQs are produced as mixtures of various congeners with an alkyl chain of variable length with or without an unsaturation and/or an N-oxide function on their quinoline amino group. In order to ascertain the structures of these compounds, we first used high-performance LC to isolate the most abundant HMAQ congener produced by B. thailandensis, as its TIC chromatogram shows predominantly one major congener, compared with B. ambifaria, which produces a greater diversity of compounds. The compound isolated was determined to be HMNQ by NMR. This analytical tool confirmed that the double bond is in the trans configuration. Considering that each congener of family A with a given m/z value appears at only one retention time, and considering the regular intervals between the retention times of the various congeners of this family, we assume that all the other unsaturated HMNQ congeners also share this trans configuration.
The fragmentation patterns of the pseudomolecular ions of the unsaturated HMAQs and the unsaturated HAQs (32) are quite similar, although the double bond is between the 2' and 3' carbons in the former and between the 1' and 2' carbons in the latter. The two most abundant ions of the MS/MS spectra of unsaturated HMAQ family A are at m/z 173 and 186, which correspond to the m/z 159 and 172 ions observed for unsaturated HAQs (32), with the 14-Da difference being due to the additional methyl group at the 3 position of the quinoline ring (Fig. 7). The m/z 173 fragment ion of HMNQ, or the corresponding m/z 159 fragment ion of HHQ, is a radical cation and not a cation produced by a rearrangement that would have led to the loss of the nitrogen. This is demonstrated by the fact that when 15N-anthranilic acid was fed to the bacteria, the m/z 173 ion was increased by 1 Da, thus proving that it still contains one nitrogen atom. The other daughter ion at m/z 212 in the MS/MS spectra of unsaturated HMAQs could also be structurally analogous to the m/z 198 ion observed in unsaturated HAQs. The relatively intense ion at m/z 184, however, does not have an analogous m/z 170 ion in the unsaturated HAQ MS/MS spectra and could arise from the cyclization of the 2' carbon of the side chain with the methyl at the 3 position, followed by a loss of the residual alkyl chain with the formation of a double bond. It is also possible that the same fragmentation pathways involving the 3' carbon of the side chain and leading to an unsaturated six-membered ring could produce that m/z 198 ion. Another possibility is that the m/z 198 and 212 ions in the MS/MS spectra of unsaturated HMAQ ions have their side chains cyclized with the quinoline nitrogen, as proposed for the HAQ MS/MS spectra.
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FIG. 7. Daughter ions observed in the MS/MS spectra of saturated and unsaturated HMAQs and HAQ.
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As in P. aeruginosa, B. thailandensis and B. pseudomallei produce another family of HMAQs with their pseudomolecular ions at 16 Da above those of the unsaturated HMAQs (family C). These molecules correspond to HMAQ N-oxides, as they disappeared when supernatants were treated with zinc in acetic acid, conditions known to reduce N-oxides. Their MS/MS spectra produced ions at m/z 172, 173, 184, 186, and 198 (Fig. 8). The m/z 173 ion is probably a radical cation related to the prominent m/z 159 ion observed in the corresponding HMAQ N-oxide through the initial loss of a hydroxyl radical (40). The m/z 172 and 298 daughter ions probably arise from the concerted loss of water, followed by chain cleavage at the positively charged carbon or at the conjugated 3' position. We confirmed the position of the double bond on the 2' carbon by the increase in the intensity of the unsaturated HMAQ congeners upon the reduction of the N-oxide group by zinc. The presence of these N-oxide derivatives in B. thailandensis and B. pseudomallei is consistent with the presence of a gene, which we call hmqL, that is highly homologous to the P. aeruginosa pqsL gene, which we found is required for the synthesis of HAQ N-oxides in the latter species (32). Consistently, such a pqsL homologue is absent in B. ambifaria, which does not produce the family C HMAQ N-oxides. An Arthrobacter strain from soil was previously reported to produce HMNQ N-oxide, which inhibits various gram-positive bacteria, including multiple-drug-resistant strains of Staphylococcus aureus and Staphylococcus epidermidis (30). This compound was also effective against Helicobacter pylori (52) and was found to be a potent inhibitor of mitochondrial complexes I and III (46), consistent with the well-known activities of HAQ N-oxide derivatives (26, 34, 36).
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FIG. 8. Putative structures of daughter ions observed in the MS/MS spectra of HMAQ N-oxides.
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The main difference between our results and those recently described by Diggle et al. (16) regarding the HAQ derivatives produced by B. pseudomallei and B. thailandensis is that those authors did not report the production of HMAQs. Furthermore, we did not detect any saturated HHQ congener and no saturated C9 N-oxide, and we detected only very small concentrations of the unsaturated HAQ congener that they reported for B. thailandensis. In addition, despite the sensitivity of our method, we did not find HHQ in B. cenocepacia cultures either. It is difficult to compare these last results with those of Diggle et al., as they did not quantify the compounds that they reported. We cannot exclude the possibility that B. thailandensis might produce trace amounts of saturated HAQs (family D) and HAQ N-oxide congeners; their findings could be explained by the fact that while we directly injected culture supernatant samples in our LC/MS assay without preconcentration, Diggle et al. solvent extracted and concentrated their samples 1,000 times prior to analysis (16). The fact that they did not report HMAQs is more surprising, however, since we show here that these methylated derivatives are the prominent ones. We believe that this could be because they focused only on published, known HAQ analogues described previously for P. aeruginosa (32). Moreover, since they studied their Burkholderia strains using a bioreporter designed to detect primarily PQS and HHQ, it is conceivable that it failed to detect HMAQs (21). It is very unlikely that differences in the strains investigated or culture conditions could explain these differences, as these factors have no effect in P. aeruginosa or on our tested strains. Nevertheless, it is clear that in B. ambifaria, B. thailandensis, and B. pseudomallei and under our conditions, HMAQs are more abundant, sometimes by more than 3 orders of magnitude, than unmethylated HAQs. This raises the question of the biological significance of trace amounts of HAQs in these species compared to amounts of HMAQs. In view of the very small amounts of unsaturated HAQ congeners produced by these strains in comparison with those of HMAQs, we named these operons hmqABCDEFG.
Biosynthesis of HMAQs. Because anthranilic acid is the precursor of all HAQs (14), we tested if it is also the common precursor of HMAQs. Adding labeled anthranilic acid to a culture results in the labeling of all the HMAQs. We then found that the inactivation of hmqA in B. thailandensis and in B. ambifaria leads to the abrogation of HMAQ production, as observed for the loss of HAQs from the B. pseudomallei homologue (16) and the pqsA mutant of P. aeruginosa (14). Furthermore, 6-FABA, an analogue of anthranilic acid known to competitively inhibit PqsA (33), also inhibits HMAQ biosynthesis. The fact that this inhibition, as in P. aeruginosa, can also be reversed by an exogenous supply of anthranilic acid indicates that the genetic homology between hmqA and pqsA also translates into a common biological activity. This is in line with the reported complementation of a P. aeruginosa pqsA mutant with a B. pseudomallei homologue (16). The homologies between PqsA and various aryl-CoA ligases indicate that HmqA is likely responsible for the activation of anthranilic acid into a CoA ester (Fig. 1). Such activation of the anthranilic acyl group would be required for the closing of the second ring of the quinoline core.
In contrast with P. aeruginosa, there is no gene responsible for the synthesis of anthranilic acid near the hmqABCDEFG operon. Nevertheless, plenty of anthranilic acid seems to be available, as this precursor accumulates in hmqA mutant cultures, as we have previously seen in a pqsA mutant of P. aeruginosa (14). While TrpEG analogues responsible for the biosynthesis of anthranilic acid in the formation of tryptophan are present, part of the anthranilic acid used for HMAQ biosynthesis also comes for tryptophan degradation, presumably through the kynurenine pathway, as shown by our labeled tryptophan experiment.
Within each HMAQ family, the relative amounts of congeners containing an odd number of carbons on their side chains are larger than those with one extra carbon, often by 2 orders of magnitude. This is analogous to the observations made with HAQs and is likely due to the successive addition of acetate groups to form an even-numbered 3-keto fatty acid intermediate, which reacts with anthranilic acid, as first hypothesized by Wells (58) and later confirmed by others (3, 47). Because of the location of the reactive keto group of the 3-keto fatty acid, this produces predominantly an odd-numbered alkyl chain in HAQs and HMAQs. The chain lengths of HMAQs also seem to vary from one Burkholderia species to another, as HMAQs in B. thailandensis and B. pseudomallei are predominantly C9 congeners, while in B. ambifaria, they are predominantly C7 congeners.
A difference between Burkholderia and P. aeruginosa is that HMAQs are predominantly unsaturated, while Pseudomonas HAQs are predominantly saturated, and in Burkholderia HMAQs and HAQs, the double bond is at the 2' position, while in unsaturated Pseudomonas HAQs, it is at the 1' position. This probably arises from a difference in the biosynthesis of the 3-keto fatty acid precursor. In P. aeruginosa, it is still unclear if the pqsBCD genes, which all have analogies with 3-keto fatty acid acyl carrier proteins, are responsible for the total synthesis of the 3-keto fatty acid intermediate or if they simply divert some intermediates of general fatty acid biosynthesis into the pathway leading to HAQs. In the Burkholderia strains that we studied, the pqsBCD homologues hmqBCD presumably play the same role in the biosynthesis of the 3-keto fatty acid intermediates (Fig. 1). It remains to be determined if they are responsible for the unsaturation generally encountered in HMAQs or if this occurs because of the difference in the pool of produced fatty acid intermediates between Burkholderia and P. aeruginosa. It is also possible that the hmqBCD genes are responsible for the coupling of the anthraniloyl-CoA and the 3-keto fatty acid and in the closing of the second ring of the quinoline core. An intriguing possibility is that HmqF, which is predicted to contain two acyl-CoA dehydrogenase domains and an attachment site for 3-phosphopantetheine, a functional group present in all ACP proteins, might be responsible for the 2' unsaturation of HMAQs.
The most striking difference between HAQs and HMAQs is obviously the presence of the methyl group at the 3 position. As an hmqG mutant stops producing HMAQs and produces HAQ-like molecules instead, HmqG is likely responsible for the addition of the methyl group. Sequence analogies of the hmqG product with many SAM-dependent methyltransferases indicate that SAM is likely to be the source of the methyl group. We initially thought that this methyl group could simply be the product of the reduction of the acid group of the original 3-keto fatty acid intermediate, as this acid group must be removed to produce HHQ in P. aeruginosa. However, such an HAQ with a carboxyl function at the 3 position was never detected in P. aeruginosa supernatants. The fact that HmqG has homologies with a methyltransferase rather than a decarboxylase could be seen as a confirmation that this acid group is spontaneously lost upon the closing of the second aromatic ring or that another unknown enzyme is responsible for the loss of this acid group in these bacteria. The finding that hmqG is coexpressed with the rest of the operon substantiates that HMAQs are indeed the final products of this pathway.
The kinetics of HMAQ production show that these molecules start to accumulate in cultures near the end of the logarithmic growth phase. This is very similar to the HAQ production profile for P. aeruginosa (13, 31). In this organism, the pqsABCDE operon is controlled by MvfR, whose coinducing ligands are HAQs (61). Thus, it is conceivable that the production of HMAQs is controlled by a regulator induced by HMAQs. Accordingly, we observed that the total level of production of HAQs and HMAQs by the hmqG mutant is much lower than that observed in the wild-type strain (26.82 mg/liter total HAQs and HMAQs for the wild type versus 7.63 mg/liter for the hmqG mutant) (Table 3), suggesting a regulation of the hmqABCDEFG operon by HMAQs.
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TABLE 3. Concentrations of the major HMAQs and HAQs produced by wild-type B. ambifaria AMMD and its hmqG mutant
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Finally, HAQ derivatives may be more widespread than previously thought, raising the intriguing possibility of intergenus communication (18). Still, the methyl group makes the Burkholderia HAQ derivatives distinct from those of P. aeruginosa. Since these new HMAQs appear to be involved in the Burkholderia QS circuitry, and given the essential role of QS in the expression of pathogenic traits in Burkholderia (19, 56), these molecules and the enzymes involved in their biosynthesis could represent attractive targets for the development of novel therapeutics against hmqABCDEFG-carrying pathogenic Burkholderia species.
Published ahead of print on 6 June 2008. ![]()
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