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Journal of Bacteriology, December 2008, p. 8215-8219, Vol. 190, No. 24
0021-9193/08/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JB.01009-08
Copyright © 2008, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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Simon A. J. Messing,2,
L. Mario Amzel,2
Sandra B. Gabelli,2 and
Silvia A. Piñeiro1*
Department of Medical and Research Technology, School of Medicine, University of Maryland, Baltimore,1 Department of Biophysics and Biophysical Chemistry, School of Medicine, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland2
Received 22 July 2008/ Accepted 9 October 2008
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FIG. 1. Bdellovibrio bacteriovorus life cycle depicted in eight stages. In the extracellular predatory phase (stage 1, free-living attack Bdellovibrio [Bd]), the predators search for (stage 2, prey location) and attach to (stage 3, attachment) prey cells. They enter the prey cell wall initiating the intraperiplasmic or replicative phase (stage 4, invasion) (24-26, 28). In the periplasm, they feed upon the cytoplasmic contents of the prey (stage 5, establishment or early bdelloplast) (10) and form what is called the bdelloplast. They elongate (stage 6, elongation or bdelloplast) and segmentate into approximately 6 to 10 smaller components (stage 7, division or late bdelloplast) (1, 15, 16), finally releasing the progeny by lysis of the prey (stage 8, release) (14, 20). Interestingly, some strains of Bdellovibrio can generate host-independent mutants that grow axenically (18). The inserts show fluorescence staining of bdelloplasts that distinguishes live cells from dead cells; BacLight-stained live bacteria with intact membranes are green (Bdellovibrio), and dead cells with disrupted membranes are red (prey, E. coli) in the indicated examples.
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In silico sequence analysis of the B. bacteriovorus HD100 genome showed the presence of six open reading frames containing the Nudix consensus sequence. One of them, Bd0714, has the highest sequence identity with Escherichia coli MutT (3). Here, we report the characterization of Bd0714 by genetic analysis and complementation assays, as well as with the in vitro kinetic analysis of its product, indicating that it can function as the mutator enzyme in B. bacteriovorus HD100.
Nudix sequence identification. Amino acid sequence searches for a functional homologue of MutT in Bdellovibrio bacteriovorus HD100 (gi:42494925) identified five putative Nudix hydrolases with canonical Nudix signature sequence (NP_967680, NP_969942, NP_969058, NP_967241, and NP_969548) and one with a modified signature sequence (NP_967621) (Fig. 2). One of these sequences, NP_967680 (Bd0714), shares 43 identical residues of the total 153 (28.1% identity) with E. coli MutT.
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FIG. 2. Nudix sequences of the Bdellovibrio bacteriovorus genome. Bd0714 (NP_967680), Bd3179 (NP_969942), Bd2220 (NP_969058), Bd0236 (NP_967241), Bd2755 (NP_969548), and one modified signature sequence in Bd0654 (NP_967621). The black background indicates identity in a proline residue and in the Nudix signature sequence. Bd0654, the open reading frame with the modified signature sequence, has a lysine residue instead of the typical first glutamate in GX5EX7REUXEEXGU. The boxes show homologous residues. The alignment was done with ClustalW and the figure with ESPript (8).
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-β pyrophosphate bond of dGTP.
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FIG. 3. (A) Relative activity of the Bd0714 for possible nucleotide substrates; dGTPase activity was normalized to 100%. Black bars correspond to the colorimetric assay with added enzyme, gray bars correspond to all components of the assay except for inorganic pyrophosphatase (IPP) or calf intestinal phosphatase enzyme (CIP), and white bars correspond to the reaction carried out without the Bd0714 enzyme. (B) Relative activity of Bd0714 versus Bd0714-E70Q for deoxynucleoside triphosphates, with dGTP normalized to 100% activity.
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FIG. 4. Kinetic data for Bd0714 and Bd0714-E70Q. (A) Initial velocities as a function of dGTP concentration. The continuous curves correspond to nonlinear least-square fits of the data to the Michaelis-Menten equation. (B) Plot of the kcat values of pH in the range of 7.5 to 9 for Bd0714 and Bd0714-E70Q.
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Complementation of the mutator phenotype. To obtain direct evidence that the Bd0714 enzyme is a functional homologue of MutT, the Bd0714 gene was expressed in an E. coli strain in which the mutT gene was inactivated (SB3 mutT mutant) (see Table S1 in the supplemental material) (3). The SB3 mutT mutant was transformed with pTrc99a, pTrc99mutT, or pTrc99Bd0714 (see Table S1 in the supplemental material) and challenged with media supplemented with either streptomycin or nalidixic acid, and the mutation frequencies per 109 cells were evaluated. The SB3 mutant harboring pTrc99Bd0714 had a much lower mutation frequency than did the SB3 mutant harboring pTrc99A in both media (Table 1). This rate is even lower than that observed in the SB3 mutant transformed with pTrc99mutT, which had a threefold-higher mutational frequency. This analysis showed that Bd0714 can efficiently complement MutT function in E. coli SB3. The comparable kinetic and biochemical profiles, along with the complementation analysis, indicate that Bd0714 can function as a mutator enzyme in B. bacteriovorus.
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TABLE 1. Mutation frequencies of the E.coli SB3 mutT mutants transformed with different plasmids
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Both the B. bacteriovorus wild-type and
Bd0714 deletion strains were grown in liquid coculture along with E. coli SB3 prey and plated with E. coli SB3Nal prey in media supplemented with nalidixic acid to determine the difference in the number of spontaneous mutants obtained between the wild-type and Bd0714 mutant strains. No mutants were found for either strain. Similar phenotypic analysis of the mutant strain could not be performed using streptomycin since the wild-type B. bacteriovorus is already streptomycin resistant (21). The B. bacteriovorus wild-type and
Bd0714 strains were synchronically cultured and monitored by microscopy to determine the effect of the deletion on their life cycle; no substantial difference was found.
Transcription of the Bd0714 gene during the B. bacteriovorus life cycle.
To better understand the role of Bd0714 during the B. bacteriovorus life cycle, transcription of the Bd0714 gene at various stages in the life cycle was monitored by reverse transcription-PCR (RT-PCR). RNA was extracted from B. bacteriovorus at stages 1, 5, 6, and 7 of the life cycle (Fig. 1). RNA was also obtained from cultures of the attack phase (stage 1) of the B. bacteriovorus HD100
Bd0714 mutant and from the host-independent B. bacteriovorus HI100. Transcription of the Bd0714 gene was observed during the free-swimming attack phase, but barely perceptible in stage 5 (establishment or early bdelloplast) (Fig. 5). However, increasing transcription was seen throughout the bdelloplast stages, reaching a maximum in stage 7 (late bdelloplast or prior to release). Similar levels of transcription were found in the host-independent strain and wild-type B. bacteriovorus in stage 6 (elongation). As further confirmation of the deletion, RT-PCR product was not observed in the extracellular attack phase for the HD100
Bd0714 deletion mutant, even though product was observed for the wild-type strain in the same stage in the life cycle.
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FIG. 5. RT-PCR analysis of the Bd0714 gene in B. bacteriovorus HD100, the Bd0714 mutant, and host-independent B. bacteriovorus. Total RNA was extracted from E. coli ML35 prey (lane 1), host-independent B. bacteriovorus (lane 2), the attack-phase Bd0714 mutant (lane 3), and wild-type B. bacteriovorus HD100 (lane 4, free-living attack phase; lane 5, early bdelloplast; lane 6, bdelloplast; and lane 7, late bdelloplast) throughout the life cycle and used in RT-PCRs with primers specific for the Bd0714 gene. The rpsL gene was used as a load control for B. bacteriovorus RNA. The absence of an RT-PCR product in lane 1 indicates that the product seen for both the Bd0714 and rpsL genes corresponds to B. bacteriovorus RNA rather than to any possible contaminating E. coli RNA. MW, molecular weight marker.
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Special thanks to Maurice J. Bessman for introducing us to the Nudix enzymes and for the donation of the E. coli SB3 strains. We thank Marcelo H. Amador for the rendition of Fig. 1.
Published ahead of print on 17 October 2008. ![]()
Supplemental material for this article may be found at http://jb.asm.org/. ![]()
These authors contributed equally to this paper. ![]()
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