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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, June 2003, p. 3658-3662, Vol. 69, No. 6
0099-2240/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/AEM.69.6.3658-3662.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Phylogeny and Characterization of Three nifH-Homologous Genes from Paenibacillus azotofixans
Quok-Cheong Choo, Mohd-Razip Samian, and Nazalan Najimudin*
School of Biological Sciences, Universiti Sains Malaysia, 11800 Pulau Pinang, Malaysia
Received 19 November 2002/
Accepted 21 March 2003

ABSTRACT
In this paper, we report the cloning and characterization of
three
Paenibacillus azotofixans DNA regions containing genes
involved in nitrogen fixation. Sequencing analysis revealed
the presence of
nifB1H1D1K1 gene organization in the 4,607-bp
SacI DNA fragment. This is the first report of linkage of a
nifB open reading frame upstream of the structural
nif genes.
The second (
nifB2H2) and third (
nifH3)
nif homologues are confined
within the 6,350-bp
HindIII and 2,840-bp
EcoRI DNA fragments,
respectively. Phylogenetic analysis demonstrated that NifH1
and NifH2 form a monophyletic group among cyanobacterial NifH
proteins. NifH3, on the other hand, clusters among NifH proteins
of the highly divergent methanogenic archaea.

INTRODUCTION
Nitrogen fixation-related genes have been highly conserved throughout
evolution even though they are widely distributed among eubacteria
and archaea (
4,
7,
11,
13,
15). In terms of their physical and
biochemical properties, the mechanisms of the nitrogen fixation
process are very similar among these organisms. The conventional
dinitrogenase is composed of an
2ß
2 tetramer; the

and ß subunits are encoded by the
nifD and
nifK genes,
respectively. Also included in the nitrogenase complex is nitrogenase
reductase, which is encoded by the
nifH gene. In most diazotrophs,
the
nifHDK genes are contiguous. Sequence and mutational analyses
of nitrogen fixation-related genes of various diazotrophs indicate
that the arrangement of
nif and associated genes differs considerably
among these organisms. Examples of organisms with a noncontiguous
arrangement of structural
nif genes are
Frankia sp. strain FaC1,
Bradyrhizobium japonicum, and
Rhizobium sp. strain Irc78 (
2,
14).
Paenibacillus azotofixans ATCC 35681 is a gram-positive, facultatively anaerobic diazotroph that falls into a broad cluster of nitrogen fixers in rRNA group 3; this cluster also includes P. macerans and P. polymyxa (3). Diazotrophic strains of P. azotofixans were shown to possess the ability to fix atmospheric dinitrogen with high efficiency (8, 25, 29). In contrast to the majority of diazotrophs, their ability to fix nitrogen is not affected by the presence of nitrate (29).

PCR amplification of the nifH gene fragment.
The objective of identifying DNA fragments containing
nif homologues
was achieved by using the 380-bp
nifH gene as a homologous probe.
Alignment of NifH polypeptide sequences from representative
diazotrophs was performed using ClustalX software (
9). Based
on these sequence alignments,
nifH-degenerate oligonucleotides
(5'-TAY GGN AAR GGN GGN ATN GGN AA-3' and 5'-GCR AAN CCN CCR
CAN ACN ACR TC-3') were designed as primers.
Chromosomal DNA (40 ng/ml) was PCR amplified in a 50-µl reaction volume containing 1x PCR buffer (Promega), a 1 mM concentration of each primer, a 0.2 mM concentration of each deoxynucleoside triphosphate, 1.5 mM MgCl2, and 2.0 U of Weiss Taq DNA polymerase (Promega). The following PCR parameters were used: 94°C for 5 min; 30 thermal cycles of 94°C for 30s, 45°C for 30s, and 72°C for 30s; and a final extension step at 72°C for 10 min.

Screening of genomic library and Southern blot analysis.
A genomic library of individual lambda clones from primary recombinants
was screened according to standard procedures (
28), using the
PCR-amplified
nifH probe. Following secondary and tertiary screenings,
positively hybridized plaques were isolated and their DNA was
extracted. The purified DNA was subjected to restriction enzyme
digestions (
EcoRI,
HindIII, and
SacI). Southern analysis using
the
nifH probe revealed the presence of three distinctly different
DNA digestion profiles (data not shown), suggesting the existence
of three different
nif gene-containing DNA regions, which were
subsequently gel purified and ligated. Hybridization analysis
using the digoxigenin-labeled
nifH PCR probe was also performed
with genomic DNA digested with the
EcoRI and
HindIII restriction
enzymes (data not shown). The results obtained suggested the
presence of more than one copy of the
nifH gene in
P. azotofixans,
in agreement with previous studies by Oliveira et al. (
21) and
Rosado et al. (
26).

Sequence analysis of nifH1, nifH2, nifH3, and other nif genes.
The 4,607-bp
SacI fragment contained a 320-amino-acid partial
nifB1 coding region, the complete
nifH1 and
nifD1 open reading
frames (ORFs), and the first 387 amino acids of
nifK1 (Fig.
1a). These alleles were designated
nifB1,
nifH1,
nifD1, and
nifK1, respectively. This is the first report of linkage of
a
nifB ORF upstream of the conventional structural
nif genes.
Analysis of the region immediately upstream of the
nifH1D1K1 ORFs revealed the presence of potential ribosome binding sites
(RBSs; GAAGG, GAGG, and GAGG, respectively) (
30) located between
8 and 11 bp from the ATG initiation codon of each ORF. The suggested
nifH1 RBS overlaps with the 3' end of the
nifB1 coding region.
Examination of the 143-bp
nifH1-
nifD1 intergenic region revealed
the presence of an 11-bp inverted-repeat structure that might
have a regulatory function during
nifD1K1 transcription. Similar
inverted repeats have been described for other diazotrophs (
4,
11,
16). Comparison of its amino acid sequences with sequences
in the database revealed that this
nifD1 ORF has the highest
degree of homology with members of the gram-positive, high-G+C-content
genus
Frankia (69% identity with
Frankia alni strain ArI3 and
68% identity with
Frankia sp. strain EUIK1). A 4-nucleotide
overlap occurs between the 3' end of
nifD1 and the 5' end of
nifK1, an indication of a possible translational coupling phenomenon
(
22). The sequence of
nifK1 was partial from the putative ATG,
coding for 387 amino acids, with a putative RBS located 10 bp
upstream (within the 3' end of
nifD1).
A second
nifB-nifH cluster (designated
nifB2H2) was found in
a 6,350-bp
HindIII fragment (Fig.
1b). As with NifH1, the protein
coding region of NifH2 is 879 nucleotides in length and encodes
a predicted 292-amino-acid polypeptide. Interestingly, as in
nifH1, the putative RBS (
30) for
nifH2 is located within the
5' end of its corresponding
nifB2 gene. The
nifB2 ORF terminates
with a single stop codon, TAA, which is followed by the initiation
codon for
nifH2 6 bp downstream. Unlike
nifB1H1, this
nif cluster
does not have the
nifDK genes within the 3.5-kb region downstream
of the
nifH2 termination codon. Instead, two potential ORFs
that appear to lack any known
nif-related function are found.
The closest homologies were with various transporter substrate-binding
proteins.
The third nifH homologue (nifH3) was found within the 2,840-bp EcoRI fragment (Fig. 1c). No adjacent nifB or nifDK coding regions were found within close proximity. A putative ORF (truncated) that displayed homology to transporter ATP-binding proteins was found approximately 80 bp upstream of the nifH3 start codon.

Amino acid alignment of NifH proteins.
Figure
2 shows an alignment of the deduced amino acid sequences
of the
P. azotofixans NifH proteins. They are more divergent
in their C termini. Stretches of 10 or more conserved amino
acids were observed for residues 10 to 21, 97 to 109, and 129
to 141. When the amino acid residues of NifH1 and NifH2 were
compared, seven were found to differ; this constitutes 97% identity.
Comparing either NifH1 or NifH2 with NifH3 yielded a comparatively
low 43% identity. A high (97%) identity was also observed when
the partial reading frames of
nifB genes were translated to
their respective amino acids. At the nucleotide level, alignment
of the two
nifBH gene clusters also revealed a high degree of
identity (94%), with no significant changes until 57 bases downstream
of the presumptive termination codon of the
nifH ORF (data not
shown). These data led us to postulate that
nifBH gene clusters
of
P. azotofixans had undergone a gene duplication process,
resulting in the
nifB1H1 and
nifB2H2 gene organizations.

Phylogenetic analysis.
The
nifH phylogenetic tree had been well established (
20,
26,
32,
35,
36) and is largely consistent with the 16S rRNA gene
phylogeny (
34). Our data (Fig.
3) are in agreement with the
division of the NifH topology into four major clusters, as described
by Chien and Zinder (
5,
6). When the complete
nifH coding sequences
were used, the clustering of
P. azotofixans NifH1 and NifH2
yielded several interesting observations. Earlier
nifH-based
phylogenetic analyses of
P. azotofixans involved partial sequences
of
nifH fragments derived by PCR amplification (
1,
26,
36).
Discrepancies between our study and those of other investigators
(
1,
26,
36) in the placement of
P. azotofixans NifH proteins
were probably due to their use of short-length
nifH fragments,
which reduced the resolving power of the analyses. When phylogeny
was based on partial
nifH gene sequences, determined by Zehr
et al. (
36),
P. azotofixans NifH did not cluster with NifH proteins
of any group of bacteria. Further observations and the branching
order of the NifH phylogeny seemed to suggest that
P. azotofixans NifH lies within the cyanobacterial clade (
1,
36).
Use of the complete DNA sequences of the three
nifH genes in
a reanalysis of NifH phylogeny demonstrated clustering of
P. azotofixans NifH1 and NifH2 within the
Cyanobacteriaceae grouping
(Fig.
3). The NifH protein from a filamentous, nonheterocystous
marine cyanobacterium,
Trichodesmium sp. strain IMS101, showed
the highest degrees of identity with
P. azotofixans NifH1 (80%)
and NifH2 (79%), respectively. Interestingly, neither NifH1
nor NifH2 clustered with the NifH proteins of other gram-positive
diazotrophs, such as
Frankia spp. (a high-G+C firmicute) and
Clostridium pasteurianum (a low-G+C firmicute).
The third putative nifH gene product of P. azotofixans (NifH3) clustered with NifH proteins of members of the Archaea domain, Methanothermococcus thermolithotrophicus and Methanothermobacter thermoautotrophicus. Again, this putative NifH did not cluster with those of the other phyletically related gram-positive microorganisms, such as Frankia spp. or C. pasteurianum. This is the first report of a gram-positive diazotroph having a NifH protein that clusters with Nif proteins of confirmed methanogenic diazotrophs. Based on the NifH phylogenetic analysis (Fig. 3), P. azotofixans NifH3 also did not fall within the anf nitrogenase clade. Rosado et al. (26) reported a nifH phylogenetic tree in which the proteins of three Paenibacillus strains, P. azotofixans P3E20 and RBN4 and P. durum DSMZ1735, formed a cluster with the alternative (anf) nitrogenases. It is not known at this point whether the putative anf nitrogenase reported by Rosado et al. (26) exists in this P. azotofixans type strain as well. It has not yet been determined whether this nifH3 gene product is a functional nitrogenase. It has been postulated that genes from this cluster are related to genes involved in bacteriochlorophyll synthesis and probably have a function unrelated to nitrogen fixation (5, 12).
The question of horizontal transfer of the nifH gene has been debated among evolutionists for the last 3 decades (10, 17, 18). The strongest evidence yet for horizontal nifH gene transfer came from the pioneering phylogeny studies of nifH genes (17, 18). Verification of a horizontal-transfer event is difficult, especially with the limited genetic data from Paenibacillus strains. Nevertheless, our data on NifH phylogeny revealed some unanticipated features that brought us to postulate that the gene transfer phenomenon exists. The most striking evidence for the occurrence of a gene transfer event was the unusual placement of NifH3 among the highly divergent members of the Archaea. Smith et al. (31) described a phylogenetic congruency test based on the assumption that a NifH tree corresponds to conventional NifH phylogenies (20, 26, 32, 35, 36); if there was any odd placement, a horizontal-gene-transfer event may have occurred. Furthermore, the low level of identity (43%) between P. azotofixans NifH3 and the other two NifH proteins likely indicates that there are two different groupings of orthologous gene products. The vast differences in the sequences among NifH3 proteins compared to NifH1 and NifH2 seemed to suggest that a duplication event was unlikely; otherwise, like the five C. pasteurianum NifH proteins (33), all three P. azotofixans NifH proteins would be grouped in the same cluster.
It is not presently known whether all three nif homologue clusters are located in the genome or on plasmids (if any even exist), as in some diazotrophic systems (19, 24). It will also be of interest to determine whether the phylogenies of complete nifH genes of other Paenibacillus strains conform to the conventional nifH phylogenetic topology.

Nucleotide sequence accession numbers.
The sequencing data obtained in this study have been deposited
in the EMBL database under the following accession numbers:
AJ299453,
AJ299454, and
AJ515294.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This work was supported by research grants from the Malaysian
Ministry of Science, Technology and Environment (MOSTE); a Universiti
Sains Malaysia short-term grant; and the Malaysian Toray Science
Foundation (MTSF).

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: School of Biological Sciences, Universiti Sains Malaysia, 11800 Pulau Pinang, Malaysia. Phone: 60-4-8603181. Fax: 60-4-6565125. E-mail:
nazalan{at}usm.my.


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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, June 2003, p. 3658-3662, Vol. 69, No. 6
0099-2240/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/AEM.69.6.3658-3662.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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