Previous Article | Next Article ![]()
Applied and Environmental Microbiology, July 2002, p. 3321-3327, Vol. 68, No. 7
0099-2240/02/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/AEM.68.7.3321-3327.2002
Copyright © 2002, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Juliane Willuhn,,
Hermann Sahm, and Lothar Eggeling*
Institut für Biotechnologie, Forschungszentrum Jülich GmbH, D-52425 Jülich, Germany
Received 5 February 2002/ Accepted 19 April 2002
|
|
|---|
|
|
|---|
In the present study we investigated these aspects in L-threonine formation with C. glutamicum. L-Threonine synthesis proceeds in three steps, starting from aspartate semialdehyde. The corresponding biosynthesis genes hom and thrB, which form an operon, were cloned (14), as was thrC (16). The hom gene codes for homoserine dehydrogenase, and alleles of this gene, such as HomG378E [hom(Fbr)], that code for a dehydrogenase which is no longer feedback-inhibited by L-threonine have been identified (34). The overexpression of hom and thrB with high-copy-number plasmids is possible (13, 29), whereas hom(Fbr) thrB can only be expressed at low levels (35). This is due to the resulting high internal L-threonine concentration of up to 100 mM, versus less than 1 mM in the wild type. Increased internal L-threonine concentration is associated with increased glycine formation (5, 35). Furthermore, the very high internal concentration of L-threonine indicates that its export is limited. This export is catalyzed by the recently identified ThrE carrier (39), which is present not only in C. glutamicum, but also in bacteria, archaea, and fungi (46).
The purpose of our present work was to determine how L-threonine is degraded to glycine in C. glutamicum. There are indications that a threonine 3-dehydrogenase may be responsible for such reaction in Corynebacteriaceae (3). In Corynebacterium sp. strain B6, an activity of as much as 2.04 µmol min-1 (mg of protein)-1 was detected (2). Furthermore, we wanted to reduce an identified activity in C. glutamicum and to examine whether improved L-threonine accumulation occurs. A further goal was to increase the ThrE-catalyzed export of L-threonine and again to assay for improved L-threonine accumulation.
|
|
|---|
|
View this table: [in a new window] |
TABLE 1. Strains and plasmids used in this study
|
To place glyA under the control of the tac promoter, a 1,418-bp EcoRI-TfiI fragment of glyA was isolated which contained glyA without its own promoter. The fragment was blunted and ligated with BamHI-cleaved pVWEx2, made by V. Wendisch (45), which is a derivative of pKW0 (20), enabling isopropylthiogalactopyranoside (IPTG)-dependent expression. In the resulting construct, pVWEx2glyA, the glyA gene is fused with Ptac. With pVWEx2glyA as a template and the primer pair 5'-CCGGAATTCTCACTGCCCGCTTTCCAGTC-3' and 5'-CGGGATCCCAGCTTTCCGGAGAAGTTCAAC-3', a 2-kb fragment was amplified, containing a 437-bp fragment of the 5' end of glyA together with the fused tac promoter and in addition the lac repressor lacIq, which is also present on pVWEx2glyA. By use of the attached BamHI and EcoRI sites, this fragment was ligated with the mobilizable and nonreplicative vector pK18mob to yield pK18mobglyA' (see Fig. 3).
![]() View larger version (19K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 3. Depletion construct pK18mobglyA' to reduce expression of SHMT. Shown is the construct itself with the inducible tac promoter and the 3' part of glyA. Furthermore, the recombination of pK18mobglyA' with the chromosomal glyA sequences of strain DM326-2 is shown, and at the bottom is shown the resulting genomic organization in the strain enabling IPTG-dependent Ptac-driven expression of glyA.
|
Construction of strains.
Intergeneric gene transfer was used to place glyA in the chromosome of C. glutamicum under the control of the IPTG-inducible tac promoter (37). For this purpose, E. coli S17-1 was transformed with the nonreplicative plasmid pK18mobglyA' to kanamycin resistance. Conjugation and selection for kanamycin resistance were done in the presence of 0.1 mM IPTG. The correct integration into the chromosome via glyA sequences was verified with appropriate primer pairs and controls. The integration mutants DM368-2::pK18mobglyA' and ATCC13032::pK18mobglyA' were made by this procedure. These mutants carry one intact copy of glyA under the control of the inducible tac promoter and one incomplete copy under the natural promoter (see Fig. 3).
Isolation of SHMT.
Serine hydroxymethyltransferase (SHMT) was isolated from E. coli M15/pREP4 containing pQE30glyA. LB cultures containing 50 µg of carbenicillin and 25 µg of kanamycin per ml were grown for 2 h to give an optical density at 600 nm (OD600) of 0.6. Then 1 mM IPTG was added for the induction of His6-glyA expression, and incubation was continued for a further 3 h up to an OD600 of 2.5. Cells were harvested and lysed by sonication. The resulting extract was centrifuged, and the enzyme was isolated via Ni2+-nitrilotriacetic acid affinity chromatography.
Enzyme assays.
The threonine 3-dehydrogenase activity (EC 1.1.1.103) coupled to amino-ketobutyrate lyase (Fig. 1A) was assayed in a system containing (per 0.7 ml) 300 µl of Tris-acetate-EDTA-potassium phosphate buffer (200 mM Tris-acetate-EDTA, 25 mM potassium phosphate, pH 8.6), 100 µl of KCl (400 mM), 70 µl of NAD+ (100 mM), 70 µl of coenzyme A (CoA, 50 mM), 17.5 µl of L-threonine (200 mM), 42.5 µl of water, and 100 µl of crude extract. The reaction was started by the addition of substrate. Aliquots were removed after 0, 30, 60, and 90 min of incubation at 30°C, treated with 15% (wt/vol) trichloroacetic acid, and, after neutralization, used for glycine analysis by high-pressure liquid chromatography (HPLC).
![]() View larger version (17K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 1. Pathways for L-threonine degradation. (A) Pathway initiated by threonine-3-dehydrogenase (TDH) activity, with subsequent CoA-dependent conversion of 2-amino-3-ketobutyrate by amino-ketobutyrate lyase (AKB-CoA lyase) or spontaneous decarboxylation of 2-amino-3-ketobutyrate. (B) L-Threonine cleavage by transaldolase (TA) or SHMT activity and the main activity of SHMT generating 5,10-methylene tetrahydrofolate (THF).
|
The threonine aldolase activity generating glycine plus acetaldehyde (EC 4.1.2.5) (Fig. 1B) was assayed in the following system: 400 µl of equilibrated crude extract was passed over a PD10 column (Amersham Pharmacia) with Tris-acetate-EDTA-potassium phosphate buffer (200 mM Tris-acetate-EDTA, 25 mM potassium phosphate, pH 8.6), 100 µl of pyridoxal 5'-phosphate (2 mM), 100 µl of L-threonine (200 mM), 100 µl of L-isoleucine (10 mM), and 300 µl of water. Reaction mixtures were incubated for up to 120 min. The protein was precipitated with trichloroacetic acid and, after neutralization, used for glycine quantification via HPLC.
The same assay was also used to assay for formation of acetaldehyde. After termination of the reaction with trichloroacetic acid, 800 µl of supernatant was mixed with 200 µl of N-methylbenzothiazolon hydrazone (1%, wt/vol) and the pH was adjusted to 3 to 4 with 45 µl of neutralization buffer (31.8 g of K2CO3 in 100 ml of 20 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.0). Assay mixes were boiled for 3 min, and after cooling, 2.5 ml of 0.2% (wt/vol) FeCl3 was added. After 5 min at room temperature they were mixed with 6.5 ml of acetone, and absorptions were read at 670 nm.
The SHMT (EC 2.1.2.1) was assayed with 300 µl of HEPES-NaOH (200 mM, pH 7.0), 200 µl of crude extract (equilibrated via passage through PD-10 columns with the same buffer), 100 µl of pyridoxal-5'-phosphate (2 mM), 50 µl of 5,10-methylene tetrahydrofolate (18 mM in 0.1% [wt/vol] dithiothreitol), 200 µl of substrate (100 mM, either L-threonine or L-serine), and 150 µl of water. Reaction mixes were incubated for up to 15 min, and 500-µl samples were mixed with 125 µl of 25% (wt/vol) trichloroacetic acid, placed on ice, and centrifuged in the cold. Then 480 µl of the resulting supernatant was neutralized with buffer (31.8 g of K2CO3 in 100 ml of 20 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.0), and glycine was quantified via HPLC.
All enzyme activities are given in nanomoles per minute per milligram of protein, with protein determined with the biuret reaction.
Amino acid quantification.
Amino acids were quantified by automated precolumn derivatization with ortho-phthaldialdehyde (21), followed by reversed-phase chromatography with fluorometric detection as previously described (39).
Nucleotide sequence accession number.
The sequence data have been submitted to GenBank under accession number AF327063.
|
|
|---|
A second possible glycine-yielding reaction is the pyridoxal-5'-phosphate-dependent aldole cleavage of L-threonine. This can be catalyzed by an aldolase (22) or as a side reaction of SHMT (38) (Fig. 1B). In extracts of the same strains used previously, glycine formation with a specific activity of 2.2 nmol min-1 (mg of protein)-1 was detected. Also, the expected increase in formation of the second end product, acetaldehyde, could be detected. Therefore, a specific threonine aldolase or an aldolase activity due to SHMT is present in C. glutamicum. However, it is not possible to differentiate between these two threonine-degrading possibilities without genetic or biochemical work. Attempts to complement the aldolase mutant E. coli GS245 with gene banks used successfully for complementation of other E. coli mutations (19) failed, although E. coli GS245 was successfully used to isolate lta from a Pseudomonas strain (23). We therefore focused on glyA, the gene encoding SHMT.
Cloning of glyA and purification of SHMT.
The degenerate primers 5'-GAYATGGCNCACTTCGCNGG-3' and 5'-ACNARGTGNACRTCNGTNCC-3', designed to match conserved regions within known glyA genes, were used to clone a 372-bp PCR product. Based on this fragment, glyA of C. glutamicum was eventually cloned as a 1.7-kb fragment to give pUC18glyA. Sequence analysis identified glyA (1,305 nucleotides), which is preceded by two inverted repeats together with two possible promoter regions. This might indicate highly regulated transcriptional control of the gene, as is the case in E. coli (24). The deduced polypeptide has an Mr of 46,539 and exhibits the highest identities over its whole length with homologues from Mycobacterium tuberculosis (73%), Bacillus subtilis (53%), and E. coli (48%).
To further characterize the gene product, glyA was amplified together with attached BamHI and SalI sites to enable cloning in pQE30. This resulted in a fusion of glyA with (His)6-Gly-Thr codons attached to its 5' end. Plasmid pQE30glyA was used to transform E. coli M15, and a culture of the recombinant strain was induced to enable isolation of the His-tagged SHMT. Figure 2 demonstrates the successful isolation of the polypeptide. Its molecular weight is fully consistent with that deduced from the glyA sequence. The protein (fraction E3) was used to assay L-serine- and L-threonine-dependent glycine formation. With L-serine as the substrate (and 5,10-methylene tetrahydrofolate [THF]), the specific activity was 31.0 µmol min-1 (mg of protein)-1, and with L-threonine it was 1.3 µmol min-1 (mg of protein)-1. This shows that glyA encodes functionally active SHMT and that this enzyme also converts L-threonine at a rate of about 1/25th that of L-serine.
![]() View larger version (101K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 2. Purification of SHMT. A sodium dodecyl sulfate gel is shown, containing an extract of E. coli without induced glyA expression (lane 1), with induced expression (lane 2), or the flowthrough (lanes 3 and 4). Lane St, size standards, with sizes indicated on the right (in kilodaltons). Lanes E1 to E4, eluted SHMT protein.
|
For this purpose, promoterless glyA obtained as a 1,418-bp TfiI-BamHI fragment was cloned into pVWEx2, supplying the tac promoter as well as its repressor lacIq (Fig. 3). From this vector, together with the appropriate primers, lacIq, Ptac, and a 5'-glyA part of 437 bp was amplified and subsequently cloned into the nonreplicative vector pK18mob (37). By using conjugative transfer, C. glutamicum DM368-2 was transformed to kanamycin resistance in the presence of IPTG. One resulting transformant was designated DM368-2::pK18mobglyA' and verified by PCR to have the full chromosomal copy of glyA under the control of Ptac (Fig. 3).
Growth and SHMT activity of the GlyA depletion strain.
As shown in Fig. 4, growth of the constructed strain DM368-2::pK18mobglyA' was reduced without IPTG addition, whereas the addition of 10 µM IPTG restored growth comparable to that of the control. This is in accord with a reduced and limiting SHMT activity without IPTG being present. The remaining growth is probably due to SHMT activity in the cells used as the inoculum. This was made from washed cells grown in complex medium plus 100 µM IPTG. When we used cells as grown in Fig. 4 without IPTG addition and then used them as an inoculum for a new culture, growth was completely abolished in the absence of IPTG (not shown). This indicates that SHMT is essential for C. glutamicum and glyA is the sole relevant gene encoding this enzyme activity.
![]() View larger version (15K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 4. Growth of strain DM326-2::pK18mobglyA' on minimal medium without IPTG ( ) or with 10 µM (x) or 100 µM ( ) IPTG and the control strain DM326-2 pZ1 without IPTG ().
|
|
View this table: [in a new window] |
TABLE 2. IPTG-dependent SHMT activitya
|
![]() View larger version (36K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 5. L-Threonine (solid bars) and glycine accumulation (open bars) with IPTG concentrations as indicated at 24, 48, and 72 h. (A) Product accumulation with DM326-2::pK18mobglyA'. (B) Productaccumulation with DM326-2::pK18mobglyA'/pEC-T18mob2thrE,overexpressing the exporter gene. Mean values and standard deviations for three independent cultures are presented.
|
The effect of thrE expression on amino acid accumulation was also studied in strain DR-17 (35). This strain has three copies of the biosynthesis genes hom(Fbr) thrB integrated in its chromosome and is kanamycin resistant, preventing the use of pK18mobglyA'. Strain DR-17 was transformed with pECT18mob2thrE to tetracycline resistance, and cells were grown in minimal medium to follow product accumulation (Fig. 6). Without thrE, 48.6 mM L-threonine had accumulated after 72 h, whereas in its presence a 67.6 mM concentration was formed. In addition to glycine, strain DR-17 also accumulated L-isoleucine and L-lysine (35). Upon thrE overexpression, the concentration of all three accompanying amino acids was reduced (Fig. 6). The strongest relative reduction was found for L-isoleucine (11.6 to 6.0 mM), but not L-lysine (12.1 to 10.7 mM). This suggests a direct intracellular competition of threonine dehydratase (ilvA) and carrier (thrE), together with SHMT (glyA), for their common substrate L-threonine.
![]() View larger version (18K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 6. Amino acid accumulation at 24, 48, and 72 h as a function of thrE expression with strain DR-17. Solid bars, strain DR-17/pEC-T18mob2thrE; open bars, control DR-17/pEC-T18mob2. Each value represents the average of two independent experiments.
|
|
|
|---|
In general, the L-threonine-degrading enzymes are often difficult to differentiate. Among other reasons, this is due in part to overlapping enzyme activities or identical products (31). An L-threonine 3-dehydrogenase activity (EC 1.1.1.103) (tdh in E. coli) is considered responsible for the degradation of L-threonine in Corynebacterium sp. strain B6 (2). However, this enzyme activity is not detectable in C. glutamicum ATCC 13032. Furthermore, the degradation of L-threonine by L-threonine aldolase is possible, generating glycine plus acetaldehyde (EC 4.1.2.5). E. coli, for example, and also Pseudomonas spp. (23) have the corresponding lta gene. In E. coli, threonine aldolase can partially replace SHMT activity (22). In principle, there is also L-allo-threonine aldolase activity (EC 4.1.2.6), which has lower activity with L-threonine as the substrate. However, this enzyme is not very widespread.
We conclude that C. glutamicum does not have an aldolase because our genetic attempt to isolate this gene by complementation was unsuccessful. Analysis of the genome did not result in a corresponding gene either (not shown). A third argument is that the SHMT in C. glutamicum is essential, which would not be expected in a situation analogous to that of E. coli. We have no indications of a catabolic threonine dehydratase (EC 4.2.1.16) comparable to tdh in E. coli. All experimental findings were obtained not only with the wild type of C. glutamicum but also with strain DR-17, which originated from it. This also rules out specific degrading enzymes being expressed in C. glutamicum only at a high intracellular L-threonine concentration.
For the reasons discussed, we ascribe the L-threonine degradation in C. glutamicum to SHMT (EC 2.1.2.1). As shown with the isolated enzyme, the enzyme from C. glutamicum catalyzes the aldole cleavage of L-threonine with 4% of the activity of the cleavage of L-serine. It is thus similar to the rabbit enzyme, which also cleaves L-threonine with 6% of the activity of the cleavage of L-serine (39). However, this L-threonine cleavage is not a general property of SHMTs, since the rat enzyme is without detectable cleavage activity (27). This may be why there is such an intensive discussion of the in vivo participation of the enzyme in L-threonine degradation (31). Our experiments with L-threonine-producing strains on the product spectrum as a function of glyA expression, however, show that the enzyme can also cleave L-threonine in vivo.
An interesting question is, of course, how L-threonine cleavage by this essential enzyme can be further avoided in the case of L-threonine production by C. glutamicum. An attractive possibility would be the specific reduction of the enzyme's side activity. The three-dimensional structure of the protein is known (36). An essential structural element of the active site of the E. coli enzyme is 222-VVTTTTHKT-230, pyridoxal 5'-phosphate being bound to the
-amino group of the lysine residue in position 229 as an internal aldimine (36). The motif with the string of T residues is strongly conserved and is present in an almost identical form in B. subtilis, Haemophilus influenzae, and Homo sapiens. As found in the present work, it is perceptibly modified in C. glutamicum, which has 230-VVSSTVHKT-239. Nevertheless, within the original string of T residues, the residue corresponding to T226 in the E. coli enzyme is retained, probably because this residue, as in the E. coli enzyme, is directly involved in the catalytic cycle.
As shown by systematic replacement of threonine residues with alanine, the E. coli enzyme tolerates substitutions of all the T residues except T226 (1). Most interestingly, the T230A substitution strongly reduces the activity with L-threonine as the substrate to less than 5% of the original activity with L-threonine, whereas more than 50% of that with L-serine is retained. This is an indication of the potential for altering the specificity of the enzyme by engineering residues within this catalytic site. In this connection, the question of how this problem of L-threonine cleavage might have been solved in the L-threonine producer of E. coli used industrially is naturally also of interest. This strain originated from undirected mutagenesis (12) and could therefore, for example, be mutated in the region of the SHMT discussed. Promoter mutations are, of course, also possible, and such mutations have also already been used successfully in C. glutamicum to improve L-lysine formation (6, 33).
In any case, reduced SHMT activity can reduce the undesirable in vivo aldole cleavage of L-threonine, so that less glycine is formed and more L-threonine is available for export. Even thrE overexpression alone boosts L-threonine accumulation. In this case, less glycine is also formed, i.e., glycine formation can be reduced via increased L-threonine export, probably due to reduced availability of this substrate for SHMT. The joint reduction of the internal aldole cleavage of L-threonine and the simultaneously increased export raises L-threonine accumulation from 7.5 to 11.2 mM. In strain DR-17, the L-threonine level was increased from 48.6 to 67.6 mM by thrE overexpression. The great increase obtained with this strain could mean that in DR-17, in which very high internal L-threonine concentrations of about 100 mM are present (35), the exporter is saturated with its substrate L-threonine. Alternatively, it is also conceivable that the permeability of the cell wall (9, 30) in strain DR-17 is different from that in the wild type, since, in addition to active export, another route contributing about 40% to total L-threonine efflux is diffusion (32, 39).
Present address: Department of Biochemistry, University of Cambridge, Cambridge CB2 1GA, United Kingdom. ![]()
Present address: Aventis Pharma Deutschland GmbH, 65926 Frankfurt, Germany. ![]()
|
|
|---|
icová, P., Z. Abrhámová, J. Ne
vera, M. Pátek, H. Sahm, and B. Eikmanns. 1998. Integrative and autonomously replicating vectors for analysis of promoters in Corynebacterium glutamicum. Biotechnol. Techniques 12:743-746.[CrossRef]
, M., H. Sahm, and L. Eggeling. 1996. A new type of transporter with a new type of cellular function: L-lysine export from Corynebacterium glutamicum. Mol. Microbiol. 22:815-826.[CrossRef][Medline]
This article has been cited by other articles:
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Copyright © 2009 by the American Society for Microbiology. For an alternate route to Journals.ASM.org, visit: http://intl-journals.asm.org | More Info»