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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, May 2004, p. 2764-2770, Vol. 70, No. 5
0099-2240/04/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/AEM.70.5.2764-2770.2004
Copyright © 2004, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Songcheng Zhu,
Sheng Yang, Guoping Zhao, and Weihong Jiang*
Laboratory of Molecular Microbiology, Institute of Plant Physiology and Ecology, Shanghai Institutes for Biological Sciences, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Shanghai 200032, People's Republic of China
Received 28 November 2003/ Accepted 5 February 2004
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subunit and a large ß subunit. The PGA enzyme is synthesized as an inactive preprotein that contains a leader peptide directing the protein to is destination and a spacer peptide separating the
and ß subunits. Formation of active PGA includes a series of posttranslational steps via translocation and periplasmic processing and folding that are unusual for prokaryotic proteins (39). The PGA enzyme belongs to the family of N-terminal nucleophile (Ntn) hydrolases, a class of enzymes that all have a fold around the active site and contain a catalytic nucleophile at the N-terminal position, whereas in PGA, the catalytic nucleophile is a serine that is located at the N-terminal position of the large ß subunit (10). Expression of Escherichia coli PGA is usually modulated by several factors, such as growth temperature, phenylacetic acid, oxygen levels, strain variations, and glucose in both wild-type and recombinant E. coli (20, 27). A normal growth temperature is favorable for its expression, and it is subject to induction by phenylacetic acid. Since the rate of an enzymatic reaction generally increases with temperature, the application of an enzyme with greater temperature stability will improve the efficiency of many industrial processes (21). Early studies suggested that the characteristics commonly associated with elevated thermostability in proteins include a relatively small solvent-exposed surface area; an increased packing density, which reduces cavities in the hydrophobic core; optimization of hydrophobic interactions; decreased length of surface loops; and hydrogen bonds between polar residues (49, 50). Approaches comparing the amino acid sequences and crystal structures of homologous mesophilic and thermophilic proteins have been used to determine structural features contributing to the thermostability of many proteins, and such knowledge will be essential for the rational design of highly thermostable protein by protein engineering techniques (35).
During our effort to obtain cephalosporin acylase-producing organisms, a strain capable of producing both a cephalosporin acylase and a PGA was isolated. The strain was later identified as Achromobacter xylosoxidans subsp. xylosoxidans (synonym, Alcaligenes xylosoxidans subsp. xylosoxidans) (data not shown). It is interesting that A. xylosoxidans has been suggested as an important cause of bacteremia in immunocompromised patients, and the strains involved are usually multiply resistant to antimicrobial therapy. Some recent findings suggest that A. xylosoxidans subsp. xylosoxidans is also an emerging pathogen in cystic fibrosis (51). In this paper, we describe the cloning and characterization of a novel PGA (PGA650) from A. xylosoxidans. The gene that encodes it was overexpressed in E. coli, and the PGA enzyme was purified and used for kinetic analyses. The results showed that PGA650 possesses the characteristic of higher thermostability, which provides significant advantages over other well-characterized penicillin acylases in ß-lactam conversions for its potential application in industry. To further understand the molecular mechanism of its enhanced thermostability, the enzyme structure was modeled on the basis of the determined tertiary structures of E. coli and P. rettgeri penicillin G amylases, and the possible structural characteristics associated with its thermostability were investigated.
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and JM109 (laboratory stock) were used for routine cloning procedures and propagation and amplification of all plasmid constructs. Overproduction of the PGA was performed with E. coli BL21(DE3) (Novagen). The E. coli and A. xylosoxidans strains were routinely grown and maintained in Luria-Bertani medium with appropriate antibiotic selection when needed. Bacterial cultures for enzyme expression assays were grown in Luria-Bertani broth left unsupplemented or supplemented with phenylacetic acid. Cultures were incubated at 22 or 28°C for 48 h or at 37°C for 24 h.
Gene cloning and sequencing.
Chromosomal DNA of A. xylosoxidans was isolated and partially digested with Sau3A. Fragments of 3 to 5 kb were purified and ligated into the BamHI-opened, dephosphorylated vector pBluescriptIISK(+) and then transformed into E. coli DH5
(proA leuB thi recA) on plates containing ampicillin. Recombinant clones harboring the gene for PGA were selected by an overlay technique using Serratia marcescens as described by Meevootisom et al. (26). The positive clone (JM109/pPGA) was obtained, and the insertion was sequenced by the dideoxy method.
Protein expression and purification.
PGA650-encoding gene pgaW was amplified by PCR with the JM109/pPGA plasmid as the template with two oligonucleotides, pa650L (5'-CATATGTAGCGGCTCCGTATCATGGT-3') and pa650R (5'-AAGCTTCCTCGGAGTCGACGGTATC-3'). The resulting 2.9-kb PCR fragment was cloned into the EcoRV site of pBluescriptIIKS(+) to generate pKSpga. pKSpga was doubly digested with HindIII and NdeI, and the released insert was cloned into pET28b(+) (Novagen) to generate pPGAw. pPGAw was introduced into E. coli strain BL21(DE3) (Novagen) to allow expression of pgaW under the control of the T7 lac promoter. The cells were harvested by centrifugation at 4,000 rpm for 20 min in a Beckman J2-HS instrument and resuspended in 30 ml of osmotic-shock buffer (33 mM Tris-HCl [pH 7.3], 1.5 mM EDTA, 40% sucrose) after induction with 0.5 mM isopropyl-ß-D-thiogalactopyranoside (IPTG) for 3 to 4 h at 28°C. A cold osmotic-shock procedure was performed in accordance with reference 15. The final volume of periplasmic extracts was 10 ml. The periplasmic extract fraction precipitated with ammonium sulfate at 30 to 60% saturation was loaded directly onto a hydrophobic interaction phenyl Sepharose CL-4B column (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech). Fractions containing PGA activity were pooled, concentrated by ultrafiltration (cutoff of 30 kDa), and dialyzed in 20 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.5). The resulting sample was applied to an ion-exchange Mono Q HR5/5 column (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech). The active fractions were pooled and desalted. After they were boiled for 5 min in loading dye, two protein bands of 27.0 and 62.4 kDa were revealed by sodium dodecyl sulfate-12% polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE). All purification steps were carried out at room temperature in a fast protein liquid chromatography system (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech).
Sequence analysis.
The purified protein was analyzed by SDS-PAGE. After electrophoresis, the protein bands were transferred to a polyvinylidene difluoride membrane (Bio-Rad) by electroblotting. Bands corresponding to the
and ß subunits were cut out. The amino acid sequence of the N terminus was determined by automated Edman degradation with an ABI 492 Procise cLC Sequenator.
DNA and protein sequences were analyzed by using the Wisconsin Genetics Computer Group sequence analysis package (version 8.1). Amino acid similarity and identity percentages were determined by ClustalW multiple-sequence alignment (43). The World Wide Web Prediction Server SignalP V1.1 (http://www.cbs.dtu.dk/services/SignalP/) (32) was used to predict the presence and locations of signal peptide cleavage sites in amino acid sequences. Evolutionary relationships were analyzed by using the PROTDIST, FITCH, DRAWGRAM, and DRAWTREE routines of the PHYLIP 3.6a program, which is available at the Pasteur Institute server (http://bioweb.pasteur.fr/seqanal/phylogeny/phylip-uk.html) (11, 12).
Enzyme assay and characterization.
The specific activity of PGA650 and kinetic parameters for hydrolysis were determined as described by Yang et al. (52). The model substrate, 6-nitro-3-phenylacetamidobenzoic acid (NIPAB) and its natural substrate penicillin G were used for the assay. One unit of enzyme activity was defined as the amount of enzyme that hydrolyzed 1 µmol of NIPAB per min at 37°C and pH 8.0. The protein concentration was determined by the Bradford method.
The optimal temperature for the activity was determined in a range of 30 to 70°C by measuring NIPAB hydrolysis. The effect of pH on the activity of the enzyme was determined with NIPAB as the substrate at 37°C in 50 mM phosphate buffer (pH 6 to 8) or 50 mM Na2HPO4-NaOH (pH 9).
The PGA of E. coli D816(pDB3) was used as a control for the thermostability assay (7). Twenty-microliter aliquots of the purified enzyme that had been diluted in 50 mM sodium phosphate buffer (pH 8.0) were incubated for 0, 5, 10, 20, 25, 30, 35, 40, 45, 50, or 55 min at 60 or 55°C, respectively. After cooling of the samples, the activity was determined by using a fixed, saturating NIPAB concentration (0.9 mg/ml) at 37°C.
Structural analysis by comparative-modeling techniques.
The three-dimensional structures of the PGAs of P. rettgeri (PDB [Protein Data Bank] code 1CP9) and E. coli (PDB codes 1AJN and 1E3A) were extracted from the Brookhaven PDB (9, 18, 25). The structures were superimposed, and a sequence alignment was derived from the structural equivalences by the Insight II program (ACCERLRY 1997, San Diego, Calif.). The A. xylosoxidans PGA sequence and the above three sequences extracted from the PDB (1CP9, 1AJN, and 1E3A) were then aligned by using the ClustalW program (43) and manually manipulated to optimize the matching of several structural characteristics. Side chain substitutions were automatically done by the Insight II program. A distance-dependent dielectric constant, no Morse potential, no cross-terms, and charges "on" were used for the 100 steepest-descent and 500 conjugate gradient energy minimization steps. All geometry optimization operations were performed with the consistent valence force field in the Discover program from Molecular Simulation Inc. The HOMOLOGY package in Insight II (ACCERLRY 1997) was used for manipulation of structures and alignments. PROCHECK (24, 28) was used to monitor the stereochemical quality of the final models, and PROSAII (38) was used to measure overall protein quality in terms of packing and solvent exposure. Secondary structures were determined by using the program DSSP (19), and the salt bridges were calculated through the WHAT IF Web Interface (http://www.cmbi.kun.nl/gv/servers/WIWWWI/) (33). A salt bridge is defined as a negative atom (side chain oxygens in Asp or Glu) and a positive atom (side chain nitrogens in Arg, Lys, or His) with an interatomic distance of less than 7.0 Å. All of the programs were run under IRIX 6.3 on O2 silicon Graphics stations.
Nucleotide sequence accession numbers.
The nucleotide and the protein sequences of PGA650 reported here have been submitted to the GenBank database under accession no. AF490005.1 and AAP20806, respectively.
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Amino acid and N-terminal sequence analyses of PGA650.
The deduced protein sequence encoded by pgaW showed the typical PGA polypeptide organization (signal sequence-
subunit-spacer peptide-ß subunit). The first stretch of 21 amino acids has the property of a signal peptide, substantiating the periplasmic location of the enzyme. The
subunit contains 247 amino acid residues, whereas the ß subunit contains 557 amino acids starting from the N-terminal serine.
The amino acid sequence of PGA650 was compared to the sequences of other characterized PGAs by standard search algorithms (BLASTP). The results showed that PGA650 has 51% amino acid identity with the PGA (P06875) of E. coli, 52% identity with the PGA (A56681) of P. rettgeri, 52% identity with the PGA (P07941) of Kluyvera cryocrescens, 41% identity with the PGA (AAL58441) of A. faecalis, 28% identity with the PGA (AAD45609) of B. megaterium, and 28% identity with the PGA (P31956) of A. viscosus.
A phylogenetic tree of several known PGAs and PGA650 was constructed with the PHYLIP 3.6a program (Fig. 1). It showed that PGA650 from A. xylosoxidans is phylogenetically close to the well-characterized PGAs from Providencia rettgeri (A56681), A. faecalis (AAL58441), K. cryocrescens (P07941), E. coli (P06875), B. megaterium (AAD45609), and A. viscosus (P31956). Included in the phylogenetic tree, PGAs from Ralstonia metallidurans (ZP_00027232), Pseudomonas aeruginosa PA01 (NP_250584), (NP_248996), Pseudomonas putida KT2440 (NP_747265), Pseudomonas fluorescens PfO-1 (ZP_00085714), and A. xylosoxidans (AAP20806) interested us because these strains are all gram-negative nonfermenting bacilli and are opportunistic human pathogens that are major causes of chronic lung infection in patients with cystic fibrosis (14). They also share the characteristics of intrinsic and acquired resistance to multiple antimicrobial agents (34). Multidrug-resistant pathogens are probably a potential source of ß-lactam acylase.
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FIG. 1. Phylogenetic tree of determined and putative prokaryotic PGAs based on the enzymes' amino acid sequences. The tree was constructed with the ClustalW and PHYLIP 3.6a programs by the neighbor-joining method as described in Materials and Methods. The scale bar represents 10 amino acids residues substitutions per 100 amino acids residues.
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subunit of A. faecalis PGA (46). The N-terminal sequence of the ß subunit was determined to be SNMWIVGRDHAKDARS, which contains the conserved N-terminal serine-asparagine sequence found in the ß subunits of the all known PGAs.
Overexpression and purification of PGA650.
The optimal growth temperature for PGA650 expression is 28°C. This study found that higher cultivation temperatures, such as 37°C, led to lower specific activity of PGA650, while lower cultivation temperatures, such as 22 or 25°C, resulted in poor biomass for further protein isolation. Under the optimal condition, a typical 4,000 U of PGA650 activity can be achieved from a 1-liter E. coli culture.
The overexpressed PGA650 enzyme was purified from E. coli BL21(DE3)/pPGAw with a degree of purity of about 99%. The purified enzyme showed two bands on SDS-PAGE, corresponding to the
and ß subunit with molecular masses of approximately 27.0 and 62.4 kDa, respectively (Fig. 2). The size of the ß subunit was similar to that of other known PGAs, while the size of the
subunit was larger than that of other known PGAs.
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FIG. 2. SDS-PAGE analysis of PGA650 purified from recombinant E. coli BL21(DE3)/pPGAw. The molecular weight standard in lane M was stained with 0.025% Coomassie brilliant blue R-250 after electrophoresis. The molecular masses of marker proteins are indicated in kilodaltons. The enzyme (lane E) was purified from E. coli BL21(DE3)/pPGAw as described in Materials and Methods. The bands corresponding to the and ß subunits of PGA650 are indicated on the right.
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FIG. 3. Effects of temperature and pH on the activity of recombinant purified PGA650. (A) Temperature-activity profile of PGA650. The activity of the enzyme was assayed at each temperature in 50 mM phosphate buffer (pH 8) by measuring NIPAB hydrolysis. (B) pH-activity profile of PGA650. The effect of pH on the activity of the enzyme was determined at 37°C in 50 mM phosphate buffer (pH 6 to 8) and 50 mM Na2HPO4-NaOH (pH 9) for the NIPAB substrate.
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TABLE 1. Enzymatic parameters of purified A. xylosoxidans PGA
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FIG. 4. Thermal inactivation of purified recombinant PGAs from A. xylosoxidans and E. coli. A 20-µl sample of the purified enzyme diluted in 50 mM sodium phosphate buffer (pH 8.0) was incubated in Eppendorf tubes at 60 or 55°C. At the indicated times, samples (20 µl) were withdrawn, cooled, and then tested for enzyme activity at 37°C by using a fixed, saturating NIPAB concentration (0.9 mg/ml). The calculated t1/2s at 60 and 55°C for the recombinant PGA650 enzyme were about 8 and 55 min, respectively. The symbols and represent the thermal stability of the A. xylosoxidans enzyme at 55 and 60°C, respectively; the symbols and x represent the thermal stability of PGA from E. coli at 55 and 60°C, respectively.
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TABLE 2. Putative important factors responsible for the high thermostability of A. xylosoxidans PGA
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There is also a markedly high content of Ala residues in helices in A. xylosoxidans PGA650 compared with the PGAs from other sources. These extra Ala residues may contribute to the thermostability of these enzymes, not only by significantly increasing the hydrophobicity of the subunit interaction but also by stabilizing the individual helices since alanine can serve the helix-forming function (2).
The high content of arginine residues in A. xylosoxidans PGA and the higher Arg/Lys ratio may also account for its high thermostability to some degree (Table 2). Early studies indicated that there is a correlation between protein stability and the number of arginines on the protein surface (44). Thermophilic proteins have, on average, a higher arginine content and a greater amount of reducing lysines on the protein surface (1, 48). The site-directed mutagenesis study has proved that LysArg mutations increases the thermotolerance of enzymes (6, 29, 44) because of stronger hydrogen bonding of the large guanidinium group of arginine with nearby polar groups (44). Because of its large side chains, arginine may be important in both local and long-range interactions (3, 22). In addition, arginine residues may also provide advantages for thermostable proteins in the following ways: involvement in ion pair networks, better shielding of the hydrophobic hydrocarbon chain from H2O, more rigidity, and remaining charged at higher pHs.
Another feature that may be related to the thermostability of PGA650 is its notably greater amount of proline residues (Table 2). Proline has a unique geometry, restricting the conformational flexibility of the folded polypeptide chain (13, 23); proline also fits well into the first turn of an
-helix and consequently increases internal hydrophobicity, thus stabilizing the
-helix (41). In addition, it was stated that proline residues, in general, reduce the entropy of unfolding and are therefore important in stabilizing the molecular structure. It has been suggested that introduction of prolines at selected sites in target proteins increases their molecular stability (17, 30, 31, 53).
In this paper, we have reported the cloning and characterization of a novel thermostable PGA from A. xylosoxidans and explored the possible molecular mechanism responsible for its thermostability. The results suggested that the increased buried ion pair networks, decreased N and Q content, and high arginine and proline content could contribute to the thermostability of A. xylosoxidans PGA650. The PGA650 protein is the most thermostable penicillin acylase reported so far. Its thermostability makes the A. xylosoxidans PGA650 enzyme a more attractive biocatalyst both in hydrolysis and in synthetic conversions. A detailed study is under way to determine the structural features that confer this high thermostability.
This work was supported by the National High Technology Development Program (2001AA235081) and the National Basic Research Program (2003CB716000) of China.
Gang Cai and Songcheng Zhu contributed equally to this paper, and both should be considered the first author. ![]()
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-glucosidase. Protein Eng. 15:29-33.
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