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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, August 2005, p. 4771-4776, Vol. 71, No. 8
0099-2240/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AEM.71.8.4771-4776.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
National Laboratory of Protein Engineering and Plant Genetic Engineering, College of Life Sciences, Peking University,1 Biotechnology Research Institute, Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences, Beijing 100081, People's Republic of China,2 Department of Science and Health, Institute of Technology Carlow, Kilkenny Road, Carlow, Ireland3
Received 1 September 2004/ Accepted 24 February 2005
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Two classes of AroA have been reported (1). Class I includes AroA enzymes from Escherichia coli, Aeromonas salmonicida, Petunia petunia, and Arabidopsis thaliana. Class I enzymes are naturally sensitive to glyphosate. Their mutants with tolerance to glyphosate can be generated by different methods (4, 10, 20). For example, highly glyphosate tolerant AroA has been produced by a G96A substitution in the aroA gene of Escherichia coli (20). However, glyphosate tolerance in class I enzymes is often paralleled by a decrease in the affinity of AroA synthase for PEP (1, 26). Class II AroA enzymes, which share less than 30% amino acid identity with class I AroA enzymes, have been identified from Agrobacterium tumefaciens CP4, Bacillus subtilis, and Pseudomonas sp. strain PG2982. In contrast to class I enzymes, class II enzymes usually have not only high affinity for PEP but also natural tolerance to glyphosate (1).
In this study, we have retrieved a novel AroA-encoding gene (aroA) from a Pseudomonas putida strain isolated from a soil heavily contaminated by glyphosate in China. Sequence analysis shows that this novel enzyme has less than 30% amino acid identity to both class I and class II AroA enzymes. This enzyme has similar Km[S3P] and Km[PEP] values, but a much higher Ki[glyphosate] value, compared with Escherichia coli AroA.
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Isolation of microorganisms.
Isolation of the glyphosate-tolerant strains was undertaken using an inoculum of heavily contaminated soil from a glyphosate-producing factory in Hebei province, China. Soil samples were suspended in 0.9% (wt/vol) NaCl solution, diluted, and spread onto M63 plates containing 60 mM glyphosate. Dozens of colonies were isolated after 2 days of incubation at 28°C and were further screened on M63 plates in the presence of higher concentrations (120 mM and 200 mM) of glyphosate. One strain, 4G-1, grew well in the presence of 200 mM glyphosate and was chosen for further studies.
Isolation of the gene involved in glyphosate tolerance.
Chromosomal DNA was isolated from strain 4G-1 and was subsequently partially digested with Sau3AI to produce 30- to 40-kb fragments. These DNA fragments were dephosphorylated and ligated with the SuperCos 1 cosmid vector (Stratagene). The resulting ligation mixture was packaged with GIGAPACK III packaging extract (Stratagene), and thus a genomic library was constructed as described by the manufacturer. Escherichia coli XL1-Blue MR colonies carrying the cosmid library were spread onto M63 agar plates containing 120 mM glyphosate and were incubated at 37°C overnight. One glyphosate-resistant colony was obtained, which contained a cosmid with an insert of approximately 35 kb and was designated pBD1. The pBD1 cosmid DNA was prepared, partially digested with Sau3AI, and ligated into the pUC18 vector (18). The ligation mixtures were transformed to the Escherichia coli aroA mutant strain AB2829 (22) and screened on M63 agar plates supplemented with 120 mM glyphosate. One colony harboring a plasmid (designed pBD2) with a
2.0-kb insert fragment was selected. The insertion fragment contained in pBD2 was subsequently sequenced.
Expression of His-tagged AroA from Pseudomonas putida 4G-1 and N-terminal amino acid sequencing.
A DNA fragment containing the entire coding region of AroA was obtained by PCR using pBD2 as a template with the following two primers based on pBD2: primer 1 (5'-GCTCTAGAAGTGTTGGAACAATATG-3') and primer 2 (5'-GTTACTCGAGTGAGAAATTAAATTGATGGTTT-3') (the introduced restriction enzyme sites are underlined). Primer 2 contains a mutation where the stop codon TGA was replaced with CTC. The fragment was digested with XbaI and XhoI, cloned into the corresponding restriction sites of pET-28a (Novagen, Inc.), and confirmed by DNA sequencing. The plasmid was transformed to Escherichia coli BL21(DE3) (Novagen, Inc.) to express the His-tagged AroA. The protein was purified using a HisTrap HP kit (Amersham Biosciences) according to the manufacturer's instructions. The protein was further purified by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and blotted onto a polyvinylidene difluoride membrane for N-terminal protein sequencing using an Applied Biosystems Procise sequencer.
Construction of recombinant plasmids.
Primers 3 (5'-CGGGATCCTAAGTAAGTGAAAGTAACAATACAGC-3') and 4 (5'-CGGGATCCCTTCTTCGGACAATGACAGAC-3'), specific for aroA, were designed based on the sequence of pBD2; primers 5 (5'-CGGGATCCGTTAATGCCGAAATTTTGCTTAATC-3') and 6 (5'-CGGGATCCAGGTCCGAAAAAAAACGCCGAC-3'), specific for the aroA gene of Escherichia coli, were designed based on the sequence available in GenBank. BamHI sites were introduced into the forward and reverse primers (one into each primer) in order to ligate fragments with the pACYC184 vector (3). When pBD2 and Escherichia coli ET8000 genomic DNA (15) were used as templates, the aroA gene fragments from Pseudomonas putida 4G-1 and Escherichia coli were PCR amplified, BamHI digested. and ligated into the pACYC184 vector. Plasmids with the aroA gene and Tetr promoter in the same direction were chosen in order to ensure that the aroA genes would be driven by the Tetr promoter of pACYC184 (designated pACYC-aroAP. putida and pACYC-aroAE. coli, respectively). In addition, a glyphosate-tolerant mutant (G96A) (20) of aroAE. coli (designated pACYC-aroAE. coli-G96A) was constructed using the method of PCR overlap extension (12).
Cell growth in the presence of glyphosate.
The Escherichia coli aroA mutant strain AB2829 harboring either pACYC-aroAP. putida, pACYC-aroAE. coli, or pACYC-aroAE. coli-G96A was grown with shaking at 37°C in liquid M63 minimal medium supplemented with glyphosate at various concentrations ranging from 0 to 100 mM. Cell densities were measured by attenuance at 600 nm (D600).
Preparation of crude AroA.
The Escherichia coli aroA mutant strain AB2829 containing either pACYC-aroAP. putida, pACYC-aroAE. coli, or pACYC-aroAE. coli-G96A was grown in 300 ml LB broth. When the D600 reached 2.5, the cells were collected by centrifugation and resuspended in 30 ml 50 mM Tris-HCl buffer (pH 7.0)-0.2 mM dithiothreitol. The cell suspension was lysed using a French press. The crude homogenate was clarified by centrifugation at 8,000 rpm and 4°C for 10 min. Ammonium sulfate was added to the supernatants to 35% saturation, and the resulting precipitate was removed by centrifugation. The supernatant was brought to 70% saturation with ammonium sulfate and the precipitate collected by centrifugation. The precipitate was dissolved in 50 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.0)-0.1 mM dithiothreitol. The samples were dialyzed overnight in 50 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.0)-0.1 mM dithiothreitol.
Enzyme assay.
AroA activity was measured by the production of inorganic phosphate using the malachite green dye assay method (14). The standard reaction was carried out at 28°C in a final volume of 50 µl containing 50 mM HEPES (pH 7.0), 1 mM S3P, 1 mM PEP, and the crude enzyme. After incubation for 1 to 5 min, 800 µl of malachite green-ammonium molybdate colorimetric solution was added, and 1 min later, 0.1 ml of a 34% sodium citrate solution was added to stop the reaction. After a 30-min incubation at room temperature, absorbances of samples were measured at 660 nm. In this case, the same reaction solution without S3P was used as the zero control.
Nucleotide sequence accession number.
The sequence of the
2.0-kb insert of pBD2 is available from EMBL under accession number AJ812018.
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Cloning of the gene involved in glyphosate tolerance.
To isolate the gene involved in glyphosate tolerance from Pseudomonas putida 4G-1, a genomic library was constructed from this strain and further screened (see Materials and Methods). Of approximately 3,000 ampicillin-resistant Escherichia coli XL1-Blue MR colonies, 1 colony was observed to have the ability to grow on an M63 agar plate supplemented with 120 mM glyphosate. The cosmid DNA isolated from this colony was subcloned into the pUC18 vector, and one of the resulting plasmid subclones (pBD2) could support the growth of the Escherichia coli aroA mutant strain AB2829 on M63 agar plates supplemented with 120 mM glyphosate. This result suggests that pBD2 may encode an aroA gene that may also be involved in glyphosate tolerance.
Sequence and functional analysis of the aroA gene of Pseudomonas putida 4G-1.
The
2.0-kb insert of pBD2 was sequenced and analyzed. One open reading frame (ORF), designated ORF431, was deduced; it contains a single peptide of 431 amino acids that starts with a possible GUG start codon. It shares 28% identity with AroA of Escherichia coli. Therefore, ORF431 encodes an AroA protein, and it was designated aroA.
In order to eliminate the possibility that the flanking regions of ORF431 in pBD2 may also be required for glyphosate tolerance, a PCR experiment was carried out to amplify only the sequence encoding ORF431 from pBD2. The resulting DNA fragment was subsequently cloned into pACYC184, resulting in plasmid pACYC184-aroAP. putida. When this plasmid was transformed into the Escherichia coli aroA mutant strain AB2829, it was able to complement its aroA mutation for growth on M63 minimal medium supplemented with 120 mM glyphosate.
To determine whether ORF431 was translated, AroAH6 P. putida, containing an 8-amino-acid C-terminal extension terminating with His6, was expressed and purified. The molecular size of the predicted product of ORF431 (47 kDa) agreed well with that of the purified AroAH6 P. putida (47 kDa by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis) (data not shown). The N-terminal amino acid sequence of AroAH6 P. putida was further determined as M-K-V-T-I-Q-P-G-D-L by automated Edman degradation. The result confirmed that the initiator codon of AroAP. putida is GUG, which is used as a start codon in less than 10% of bacterial genes (13).
Multiple sequence alignment showed that AroAP. putida has only <30% identity to both class I and class II AroA enzymes (Fig. 1). However, the residues involved in PEP and S3P binding are all highly conserved in AroAP. putida and class I AroA enzymes, whereas these residues are not so conserved in class II AroA enzymes. The domains that are important for glyphosate tolerance and maintenance of productive PEP binding in class II AroA enzymes were not found in AroAP. putida (1) (Fig. 1A). This indicates that AroAP. putida is more closely related to class I AroA enzymes, though phylogenetic analysis revealed that AroAP. putida belongs neither to class I nor to class II (Fig. 1B).
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FIG. 1. Sequence alignment and phylogenetic analysis of AroAP. putida with class I and class II AroA proteins. (A) Multiple sequence alignment performed using T-Coffee (19) with minor manual adjustments. Asterisks, identical residues; periods, conserved residues; colons, strongly conserved residues. Triangles and circles, residues important for S3P binding and PEP binding, respectively, in AroAE. coli (23, 25). Domains important for glyphosate tolerance and maintenance of productive PEP binding in class II AroA are shaded (1). (B) Phylogenetic tree of AroA constructed using DNASTAR based on the results of alignment with T-Coffee. The tree suggests that AroAP. putida (P. putida; AJ812018) has less than 30% identity to class I and class II AroA proteins. Class I AroA proteins shown are from E. coli (P07638), Aeromonas salmonicida (Q03321), Arabidopsis thaliana (P05466), Nicotiana tabacum (P23981), Petunia hybrida (P11043), Zea mays (CAA44974), and Bordetella pertussis (P12421). Class II AroA proteins shown are from Pseudomonas sp. strain PG2982 (P56952), Agrobacterium tumefaciens CP4 (Q9R4E4), Bacillus subtilis (P20691), Staphylococcus aureus (Q05615), Dichelobacter nodosus (Q46550), and Streptococcus pneumoniae (Q9S400).
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-ß-barrel domains, which are connected by a two-stranded hinge (Fig. 2). AroAP. putida has 28% amino identity to Escherichia coli AroA and 27% amino identity to Streptococcus pneumoniae AroA (Fig. 1); however, the structure of AroAP. putida is much more similar to that of Escherichia coli AroA than to that of Streptococcus pneumoniae AroA (Fig. 2). The results also suggested that AroAP. putida is more closely related to class I AroA enzymes.
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FIG. 2. Backbone traces of AroA proteins from P. putida 4G-1, E. coli, and S. pneumoniae. (A) Backbone C atom trace of AroAP. putida. The structure was modeled by SWISS-MODEL based on the structures of AroAE. coli and AroAS. pneumoniae (9, 21, 23) and was drawn with Swiss-PdbViewer (24, 28). (B) Backbone C atom traces of AroAP. putida (green) and AroAE. coli (pink) (9, 23). (C) Backbone C atom traces of AroAP. putida (green) and AroAS. pneumoniae (purple) (21).
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FIG. 3. Growth of the E. coli aroA mutant strain AB2829 harboring either pACYC-aroAE. coli (EcAroA), pACYC-aroAE. coli-G96A (EcAroA-G96A), or pACYC-aroAP. putida (PpAroaA) in liquid M63 minimal medium supplemented with glyphosate at the concentrations indicated.
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View this table: [in a new window] |
TABLE 1. Kinetic properties of AroAE. coli, AroAE. coli-G96A, and AroAP. putidaa
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Sequence analysis and structure modeling had shown that AroAP. putida does not belong to class II AroA enzymes, which have natural glyphosate tolerance. Though AroAP. putida is related to class I AroA proteins, it did not have the motifs that confer glyphosate tolerance in class I AroA (Fig. 1A) (4, 20). Inhibition of AroA by glyphosate has been shown to proceed through the formation of a stable but noncovalent AroA-S3P-glyphosate ternary complex (23). It has been reported that the glyphosate binding site is identical to the binding site for PEP (6, 23). However, the Gly96-to-Ala mutation of Escherichia coli AroA confers glyphosate insensitivity without changing the PEP binding site (20). This is due to an additional methyl group in position 96 of AroAE. coli that has an indirect effect on glyphosate binding (5). Compared with AroAE. coli, AroAP. putida has an identical PEP binding site and even an identical S3P binding site (Fig. 1). AroAP. putida probably has some residues that exert an indirect effect on glyphosate binding, leading to glyphosate tolerance. Since AroAP. putida is more closely related to class I AroA enzymes, studies on the mechanism of glyphosate tolerance of AroAP. putida may help us to obtain a new type of class I AroA proteins that not only show high tolerance to glyphosate but also have high affinity for PEP.
The special structure of AroAP. putida is expected to facilitate the study of the mechanism and function of AroA. Mutagenesis of AroAP. putida to study the different characteristics of this novel AroA is under way. The high glyphosate tolerance of AroAP. putida may also be invaluable for the generation of transgenic crops resistant to glyphosate.
This research was supported by grants from the Ministry of Science and Technology of China (The National Transgenic Research and Industrialization Special Foundation of China, grants J00-A-010 and JY03-A-05), the National Natural Science Foundation of China (grant 39925017), the Higher Education Authority of Ireland PRTLI programme, and EU contracts QLK3-CT2000-00164 and QLK3-CT-2001-00101.
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