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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, December 2005, p. 8257-8264, Vol. 71, No. 12
0099-2240/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AEM.71.12.8257-8264.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Department of Chemical Engineering and Applied Chemistry, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada,1 School of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, Georgia,2 School of Biology, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, Georgia3
Received 10 June 2005/ Accepted 3 September 2005
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To date, 15 different reductive dehalogenases (RDases) have been at least partially purified from a variety of microbial genera (3, 11, 17, 19, 22-27, 30, 34, 38). These include the first RDase purified from a Dehalococcoides organism, TceA of Dehalococcoides ethenogenes strain 195 (18, 19). More recently, a VC RDase was partially purified from Dehalococcoides sp. strain VS (23). All but one of the RDases have been copurified with a corrinoid cofactor, and all contained iron-sulfur clusters. Physiological studies of whole cells and cell extracts have suggested the expression of different dechlorinating enzymes depending on the type and concentration of the initial dechlorinating substrate (8, 12, 37).
Biochemical purification has proved laborious due to the low growth yields of these organisms as well as the hydrophobic nature and oxygen sensitivity of their membrane-associated proteins. However, molecular investigations of the reductive dehalogenase genes have provided a wealth of sequence information. An analysis of the genome of Dehalococcoides strain 195 revealed 17 intact genes that appeared homologous to genes encoding biochemically purified reductive dehalogenases (31, 39). Based on these sequences, Krajmalnik-Brown et al. (15) designed degenerate primers to amplify Dehalococcoides-specific reductive-dehalogenase-homologous (RDH) genes. This allowed for the amplification of many RDH genes from different strains of Dehalococcoides, including strain BAV1 (7 homologues), strain FL2 (14 homologues), and strain CBDB1 (14 homologues). Although some strain-specific genes were identified, Hölscher et al. (14) identified 10 subclusters of genes with orthologues in two or more different Dehalococcoides strains.
The fact that each strain possesses multiple RDHs has prompted investigations of what controls the expression of these genes. Studies with the cpr gene cluster of Desulfitobacterium dehalogenans have identified two regulatory proteins, cprC and cprK, whose gene products belong to the NirI/NosR and CRP/FNR families, respectively (33). The transcription of cprA and cprB was shown to be dependent on the chlorinated substrate 3-chloro-4-hydroxyphenylacetate. A recent examination of the Dehalococcoides ethenogenes strain 195 genome revealed homologues of cprC and cprK; however, the majority of the transcriptional regulators were two-component signal transduction systems (31). What remains to be investigated is if these regulatory genes respond to specific substrates and thus cause the transcription of different dehalogenase genes based on the presence of specific chlorinated compounds used as electron acceptors.
The aims of these studies were to first identify the Dehalococcoides RDH genes in KB1 and then to understand which of these RDH genes have an active role in reductive dechlorination of TCE, cDCE, VC, and 1,2-dichloroethane (1,2-DCA). To address the latter issue, we identified RDH genes that were transcribed in KB1 during the dechlorination of these four different electron acceptors. Our results indicated that two genes were transcribed in response to all four of the chlorinated electron acceptors and that multiple genes were simultaneously transcribed during the degradation of each of the compounds. This work adds to the RDH sequence data set and further extends it by investigating the differential transcription of these genes under different electron-accepting conditions. This information will be useful in creating molecular tools to aid in the design and monitoring of bioremediation schemes. Accumulating research indicates that the 16S rRNA gene is not sufficient to distinguish the dechlorinating abilities of different strains of Dehalococcoides (5, 9, 28). However, the detection of specific RDH genes may allow for the prediction of a site's degradation potential, and the detection of RDH gene transcripts may allow estimates of in situ dechlorination activity.
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Cultures and growth conditions.
All KB1 subcultures grown with different chloroaliphatic compounds were derived from a single, TCE-dechlorinating parent culture (6). Subcultures were maintained with different chlorinated electron acceptors in 200- to 2,000-ml volumes in glass bottles (with approximately 10% of the total volume being headspace) and amended with methanol or hydrogen plus acetate as previously described (5). The cultures were maintained in defined mineral medium (7). All KB1 cultures were replenished with 20 to 50% (vol/vol) fresh medium if degradation rates decreased, approximately every 3 to 6 months. A KB1 enrichment culture that was maintained with VC and methanol for 5 years (KB1/VC-MeOH) was the source of inoculum for the transcription experiment described herein. This ethene-producing culture was grown with weekly amendments of 445 µM (liquid concentration) VC from a 100% gas stock and of 2.2 mM methanol. The KB1/VC-MeOH culture contains two identified Dehalococcoides 16S rRNA gene sequences, KB1/VC (AY146779) and KB1/PCE (AY146780), and Dehalococcoides accounts for about 50% of the biomass, with acetogens and methanogens comprising the remainder. A second subculture (KB1/VC-H2) was also used to assay specific RDH genes. This subculture contains only one Dehalococcoides 16S rRNA gene sequence, KB1/VC, and in this culture, Dehalococcoides accounts for >90% of the biomass (5).
Transcription experiment.
The KB1/VC-MeOH subculture (2 liters) was purged with a sterile N2-CO2 (80:20 [vol/vol]) gas stream that was passed over heated copper filings until the methane, ethene, and VC concentrations were below the detection limits. Following a 70-hour incubation, 400-ml portions of the culture were dispensed into five identical 1-liter bottles (Pyrex; VWR, Mississauga, Ontario, Canada) in an anaerobic glove box (Coy Laboratory Products, Grass Lake, MI). The bottles were sealed with plastic screw-cap tops in which a hole had been drilled in order to insert a black butyl rubber septum (Geo-Microbial Technologies, Ochelata, OK) for repeated sampling. Individual chlorinated electron acceptors were added to each bottle by syringe as undiluted compounds in the following amounts: TCE, 150 µmol; cDCE, 300 µmol; VC, 150 µmol; and 1,2-DCA, 200 µmol. These amounts correspond to the following initial aqueous concentrations: TCE, 200 µM; cDCE, 475 µM; VC, 135 µM; and 1,2-DCA, 465 µM. One bottle was not amended with a chlorinated electron acceptor. Headspace samples (300 µl) were then taken (after the compounds had equilibrated) for compositional analysis, and an initial well-mixed liquid sample (50 ml) was taken from the unamended treatment for RNA analysis. Subsequently, methanol was added as the electron donor (495 µmol) to all five bottles to initiate dechlorination. In an effort to detect genes responding to the chlorinated substrate that was added to the culture and not to subsequent dechlorination products, samples for RNA extraction were taken soon after the onset of dechlorination.
Analytical procedures.
Chlorinated ethenes and ethanes, methane, and ethene were analyzed by gas chromatography of headspace samples as described previously (5).
Nucleic acid extraction.
Genomic DNAs were extracted from 15 ml of liquid culture using an UltraClean soil DNA kit (Mo Bio Laboratories Inc., Solana Beach, CA) as previously described (5). In total, DNA was extracted from six different cultures to capture the breadth of KB1 cultures. For RNA extraction, 50-ml samples were withdrawn from the culture bottles inside an anaerobic chamber (Coy Laboratory Products). To avoid creating excessive vacuum, 60 ml of N2-CO2 was injected into each culture bottle with a sterile 60-ml syringe prior to withdrawing 50 ml of culture in the same syringe. The culture sample was then dispensed into an anaerobic centrifuge tube on ice. Cells were collected by centrifugation at 2,000 x g for 40 min at 4°C. After discarding the supernatant, the pellet was resuspended in 300 µl of ice-cold lysis solution (1.4 M NaCl, 22 mM EDTA, 35 mM sodium dodecyl sulfate) and transferred to a 1.5-ml screw-cap microcentrifuge tube. Subsequently, 900 µl of ice-cold acid-phenol-chloroform-isoamyl alcohol (125:24:1, pH 4.5) (Ambion, Austin, TX) and 100 µl of zirconia/silica beads (0.5 mm; BioSpec Products Inc., Bartlesville, OK) were added to the microcentrifuge tube. The tube was then agitated horizontally on a vortex machine (VELP Scientifica, Plainview, NY) for 4 min at maximum speed followed by centrifugation at 14,000 x g for 3 min at 4°C. The aqueous supernatant was removed and transferred to a new 1.5-ml microcentrifuge tube. Ammonium acetate (0.1 volume of a 5 M solution) and isopropanol (1.1 volumes) were added, and the RNA was precipitated overnight at 20°C. The RNA solution was then purified using an RNeasy spin column (QIAGEN, Valencia, Calif.). Contaminating DNAs were removed using two successive treatments of a DNA-free kit (Ambion, Austin, TX).
Reverse transcription.
Each RNA sample was divided into two, with one half serving as a control to which no reverse transcriptase (RT) was added. Total RNA was quantified using the Ribogreen method according to the manufacturer's recommendations (Molecular Probes, Burlington, Ontario, Canada). First-strand cDNA synthesis was performed using 6 to 12 µg of RNA, 250 ng of random hexamers (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA), and 10 nmol of deoxynucleoside triphosphates (Invitrogen). The final volume was adjusted to 15 µl using RNase-free water. This mixture was then heated to 65°C for 5 min in a PTC-200 DNA engine thermocycler (MJ Research). The sample was cooled in an ice bath before 2 µl of a 0.1 M dithiothreitol solution (Invitrogen) and 4 µl of 5x first-strand buffer (Invitrogen) were added. The sample was then incubated at 25°C for 5 min. Finally, 1 µl of SuperScript II (Invitrogen) was added, and the thermocycler program was continued at 25°C for 10 min, 42°C for 1 h, and then 70°C for 15 min.
PCR amplification of RDH genes from DNA or cDNA.
Degenerate primers B1R and RRF2 (15) were used to amplify RDH genes from genomic DNA (for KB1 RDH gene identification) and cDNA templates (for transcription experiments). PCR mixtures (50 µl) contained 1 to 10 µl of cDNA or 50 ng of genomic DNA, a 0.5 µM concentration of each primer, 2.5 mM MgCl2, a 0.25 mM concentration of each deoxynucleotide (MBI Fermentas, Burlington, Ontario, Canada), 0.13 mg/ml of bovine serum albumin, and 1.25 U of Taq DNA polymerase (New England Biolabs, Beverly, MA) in 1x PCR buffer (New England Biolabs). PCRs were carried out with the following parameters: 130 s at 94°C; 30 cycles of 30 s at 94°C, 45 s at 48°C, and 130 s at 72°C; and a final extension of 6 min at 72°C. Agarose gels (1%) were run to verify amplification and amplicon sizes. To detect contamination of the cDNA with genomic DNA, the PCR products from cDNAs generated without RT were also analyzed in agarose gels.
RDH-specific primers.
Specific PCR primers were designed for each of the RDH genes found in the KB1 subcultures (Table 1). For specific RDH genes, PCRs were carried out as described above, except that the annealing and extension steps were performed for only 30 s, and the annealing temperature was 60°C. The specificity of these primers was assessed by attempting PCR amplification of nontarget DNA from Escherichia coli, a mixed toluene-degrading consortium, and clones containing nontarget RDH genes. In addition, PCRs were performed with genomic DNA from three different KB1 subcultures at three different annealing temperatures. The resulting amplicons were sequenced, the chromatograms were visually inspected, and the sequences were aligned.
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TABLE 1. Specific primer sequences designed for KB1 RDH genes
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Sequence determination.
Sequencing of the plasmid inserts was carried out by the Ontario Cancer Institute's sequencing facility (Princess Margaret Hospital, Toronto, Ontario, Canada), using a Beckman Coulter CEQ 2000 automatic sequencer. Inserts were sequenced using vector primers T7 forward and M13 reverse (Invitrogen).
Sequence assembly and analysis.
A total of 87 inserts, derived from both DNA and cDNA templates, were sequenced with both the T7f and M13r primers. For each unique insert, 3 to 10 times sequence coverage was obtained over the entire length. Internal sequencing primers were designed using Primer3 software (http://www.genome.wi.mit.edu/cgi-bin/primer/primer3_www.cgi). The sequences were assembled into contigs using the EditSeq and SeqMan programs of the DNAStar software package (DNASTAR Inc., Madison, WI). Conceptual translations were made using the translate tool of Expasy (http://us.expasy.org/tools/dna.html). These amino acid sequences were aligned and compared to known sequences using ClustalX (36). Manual editing of the alignment was performed using Genedoc (http://www.psc.edu/biomed/genedoc). Additionally, an identity/similarity matrix was constructed using MatGAT, a program that creates pairwise alignments (2). Phylogenetic trees were constructed using PAUP* (Sinauer Associates, Inc., Sunderland, MA).
Nucleotide sequence accession numbers.
The sequences of the RDH genes and their associated B gene fragments have been deposited in GenBank under the following accession numbers: DQ177506 to DQ177519 (KB1 rdhA1 to rdhA14) and DQ115513 and DQ115514 (FL2 rdhA12 and rdhA13).
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FIG. 1. Comparison of translated sequences of RDH genes detected in cultures KB1 and VS and strains FL2, CBDB1, and 195. Highly similar sequences ( 93 to 100% amino acid identity) in different strains are grouped in the same row. The percent identity compared to the sequence in KB1 is shown in parentheses. The phylogenetic relationship among the proteins is indicated by the most parsimonious cladogram to the left of the table. The KB1 sequences that were detected in cDNA are listed in Table 3. Highly similar homologues found in three or more cultures are shaded. No extensive RDH gene survey has been conducted with culture VS, and vcrA is the only reported sequence.
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TABLE 2. Identity/similarity matrix of RDH gene translations in KB1
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FIG. 2. PCR amplification of DNA from different KB1 subcultures using primers specific to frequently encountered RDH genes and the Dehalococcoides 16S rRNA gene. Four different specific primer sets (rdhA14, rdhA6, rdhA5, and 1f/259r [5]) were tested on six different DNA templates. Template 1, genomic DNA from KB1/VC-H2 (only contains Dehalococcoides sequence KB1/VC); template 2, genomic DNA from a KB1/TCE-MeOH culture (contains both KB1/VC and KB1/PCE sequences); template 3, genomic DNA from KB1/VC-MeOH (contains both KB1/VC and KB1/PCE sequences); template 4, positive control (plasmid DNA containing the corresponding RDH gene or 16S rRNA gene); template 5, negative control (plasmid DNA containing a nontarget RDH gene); and template 6, negative control (no template). L, 100-bp ladder. The white arrow points to the result showing that KB1 rdhA6 (bvcA-like gene) was not detected in KB1/VC-H2.
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FIG. 3. Dechlorination profiles of four treatments amended with chlorinated substrates. The arrows indicate when RNAs were extracted. The TCE-amended culture was sampled 7 h after electron donor addition; at this point, 30 µmol of TCE had been dechlorinated to cDCE, and only traces of VC were present. The cDCE-amended culture was sampled after 24 h, during the transformation of cDCE to VC before ethene production began. The VC-amended culture was also sampled after 24 h. The 1,2-DCA-amended culture was sampled after 300 h (12.5 days) owing to a long lag time of 7 days before appreciable degradation took place.
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FIG. 4. PCR amplification of cDNAs with degenerate primers targeting RDH genes (primers RRF2 and BR1). For cDNA samples from each treatment group (TCE, cDCE, VC, and 1,2-DCA), two PCRs were performed: "+" indicates that RT was used for cDNA synthesis, and "" indicates that no RT was used. L, 1,000-bp ladder (New England Biolabs); N, PCR product from RNA extracted from the unamended culture.
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TABLE 3. Comparison of the different RDH genes identified in RNA samples
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A comparison of the dechlorination conditions under which particular RDH genes were transcribed in KB1 and the substrate range of Dehalococcoides strains that possess highly similar homologues to those genes suggests that, in contrast to expectations, these highly similar genes do not necessarily encode RDases that share substrate specificity. For example, KB1 rdhA5 was transcribed under all four electron-accepting conditions. This gene has highly similar homologues in three other Dehalococcoides strains, namely, FL2 (rdhA6), CBDB1 (rdhA2), and 195 (DET1545). No chlorinated substrate has been reported to be common among these three organisms and KB1, suggesting a broad substrate range, an unidentified common substrate, different regulatory mechanisms in different strains, or a nonspecific regulatory mechanism for this putative dehalogenase. KB1 rdhA6, which is highly similar to BAV1 bvcA, was transcribed during the degradation of all four compounds (TCE, cDCE, VC, and 1,2-DCA); however, TCE is not a growth substrate for Dehalococcoides strain BAV1 (10). It could be that transcription of KB1 rdhA6 was induced by the presence of small amounts of cDCE that were formed from TCE dechlorination. KB1 rdhA14, which is highly similar to VS vcrA, was transcribed during TCE degradation, in contrast to the tested substrate range of partially purified protein fractions containing VcrA. These partially purified fractions dechlorinated all three DCE isomers at rates similar to the VC dechlorination rate; however, TCE was dechlorinated at 5% of this rate (23). Although vcrA of strain VS is closely related to KB1 rdh14, there are still significant sequence differences between these genes. There are 18 nucleotide differences in the first 72 base pairs, corresponding to six amino acid substitutions at the N terminus of the protein, which could explain differences in the substrate specificity of the enzyme. The identification of a transcript's function is complicated in sequential reactions, where dechlorination of parent and intermediate products often occurs simultaneously. However, even during VC and 1,2-DCA dechlorination reactions, each of which only involves a single dechlorination step, multiple genes were transcribed. Sequencing of Dehalococcoides genomes will provide additional insight into regulatory networks and allow more detailed experimentation to explore RDase gene transcription.
A recent analysis of the Dehalococcoides strain 195 genome described a close association between most of the RDH genes and genes coding for transcription regulators (31). Furthermore, many of these regulatory genes are homologous to those belonging to two-component signal transduction systems, whose associated histidine kinase sensors appear to reside in the cytoplasm rather than the typical membrane location (29, 31, 35). Because of the presence of PAS/PAC motifs implicated in sensing cytosolic changes in redox potential, oxygen, and light, it has been suggested that the histidine kinase sensors respond to intracellular stimuli to modulate the energy level of the cell (31, 35). In addition, an analysis of the genome of strain 195 also revealed that one RDase gene, tceA, is not situated near a transcriptional regulator. This is interesting because the corresponding RDase, TceA, was partially purified from a mixed TCE-dechlorinating culture containing strain 195. It may be that within one Dehalococcoides organism, individual RDase genes are regulated by distinct transcriptional control mechanisms, and that these controls respond to multiple stimuli.
An alternative explanation for the different substrate ranges of the Dehalococcoides strains that transcribe highly similar RDH genes is that although similar apoenzymes may be produced from these genes, perhaps different corrinoid cofactors modulate substrate specificity. All but one of the purified RDases are dependent on the corrinoid cofactors that are associated with the enzyme. The genome sequence of Dehalococcoides strain 195 suggests that these organisms cannot synthesize the corrinoid ring structure and must salvage them from the environment (31), which in the case of pure cultures must be the medium, but in the case of a mixed culture or the environment, might also be other organisms. Therefore, different cofactors may be associated with the RDases when strains are grown in mixed or pure cultures. Strain CBDB1 was able to degrade pentachlorobenzene and hexachlorobenzene when grown in a mixed culture, but not when grown in isolation (1). This was attributed to the state in which the compound was administered (i.e., in crystal form, as opposed to a hexadecane phase); however, this different substrate range could be due to the availability of different cofactors associated with the RDase(s). Dehalococcoides strain 195 exhibited different rates and extents of dechlorination depending on what amendments were made to the medium. For example, when mixed-culture supernatant was added to the pure culture, TCE was degraded to ethene, but when yeast extract or E. coli extract was added, no degradation beyond cDCE occurred (21). The possibility that the corrinoid cofactors affect the substrate range and specificity of the holoenzyme would explain observations made with mixed and pure cultures, and this hypothesis should be explored further.
Understanding the transcriptional controls of reductive dechlorination is relevant for bioremediation applications. Mixed consortia like KB1 have been used successfully in bioaugmentation field studies (20). The sequence information described in this paper will be useful in designing probes or primers to detect the presence of these genes or transcripts in situ. Dehalogenase genes offer more resolution than 16S rRNA gene-based probes, which cannot distinguish between Dehalococcoides strains with differing dechlorinating activities. The detection of a specific complement of RDH genes may provide more reliable strain identification. Furthermore, the detection of transcription of certain RDH genes may provide quantitative information about the metabolic processes occurring in situ. However, more research is required to determine if the identification of certain transcripts at a site correlates with a particular compound being degraded or if site geochemical parameters such as available corrinoid cofactors modulate substrate degradation. These approaches will lead to the development of refined molecular tools to predict and monitor in situ dechlorination processes.
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