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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, March 2006, p. 2050-2063, Vol. 72, No. 3
0099-2240/06/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AEM.72.3.2050-2063.2006
Copyright © 2006, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Oregon State University, Corvallis, Oregon 97331,1 Joint Genome Institute, Walnut Creek, California 94598,2 Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, Livermore, California 94550,3 Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge, Tennessee 37831,4 University of Louisville, Louisville, Kentucky 40292,5 University of Wisconsin, Madison, Wisconsin 537066
Received 14 October 2005/ Accepted 19 December 2005
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Nitrobacter winogradskyi Nb-255 and other nitrite-oxidizing bacteria participate in nitrification by converting nitrite, the end product of ammonia oxidation, into nitrate according to the reaction NO2 + H2O
NO3 + 2H+ + 2e. Nitrite functions as an electron donor for the reduction of NAD via reverse electron flow and the generation of ATP by oxidative phosphorylation (36).
As a facultative chemolithoautotroph, N. winogradskyi gains energy from nitrite oxidation, and fixes carbon dioxide as its source of carbon. Additionally, in the absence of nitrite, various Nitrobacter species can utilize organic compounds as sole carbon and energy sources. However, chemoorganotrophic growth is typically much slower than that occurring when nitrite is supplied as the energy source (16). All tricarboxylic acid cycle enzyme activities have been detected (84) and energy can be gained from the oxidation of pyruvate, acetate, formate,
-ketoglutarate, and glycerol (14, 79). In some strains of Nitrobacter, growth on a combination of nitrite and the aforementioned organic carbon sources (mixotrophy) can outpace either chemolitho- or chemoorganotrophic growth (16, 84).
The nitrite-oxidizing bacteria are currently classified into four genera. Nitrobacter, Nitrospina, and Nitrococcus are proteobacteria and members of the alpha-, delta-, and gammaproteobacteria (89), respectively. The fourth genus, Nitrospira, is a member of the class Nitrospira within the phylum Nitrospirae. Historically, members of the Nitrobacter genus have been used as the primary model organism for studying nitrite oxidation. Based on 16S rRNA gene sequence analysis, strains in the genus Nitrobacter are most similar to the metabolically versatile phototrophic bacterium Rhodopseudomonas palustris and the dinitrogen-fixing legume symbiont Bradyrhizobium japonicum (89).
The nitrite-oxidizing bacteria have been available in pure culture for over a century, but detailed studies at the molecular level are scarce. To date, research on N. winogradskyi has focused primarily on the description of its physiology, which in most instances is limited to the proteins involved in electron transport, nitrite oxidation, carbon fixation, and intermediary carbon metabolism (2, 15, 16, 101). Currently, there is considerable interest in the ecology of nitrification and the composition of ammonia-oxidizing bacteria and nitrite-oxidizing bacterial communities in various ecosystems (19, 39, 46, 51). Whole-genome sequences from nitrite-oxidizing bacteria will provide new insight into their phylogenetic identity, reveal potentially novel physiological capabilities, and serve as a model to study the cellular and molecular processes that control nitrite oxidation. Here we present the analysis of the first complete genome sequence from a nitrite-oxidizing bacterium, N. winogradskyi Nb-255.
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Genome library construction, sequencing, and assembly.
Sequencing of DNA was done by using the whole-genome shotgun method as previously described (23, 34). Briefly, random 3- and 8-kb DNA fragments were isolated and cloned into pUC18 and pMCL200, respectively, for amplification in Escherichia coli. A larger fosmid library was constructed containing approximately 40-kb inserts of sheared genomic DNA cloned into the pCC1Fos cloning vector. Double-ended plasmid sequencing reactions were done at the Department of Energy Joint Genome Institute using ABI 3730xl DNA analyzers and MegaBACE 4500 genetic analyzers as described on the Joint Genome Institute website (http://www.jgi.doe.gov/).
Approximately 47,312 reads of sequence were assembled, producing an average of 7.4-fold coverage across the genome. Processing of sequence traces and base calling and assessment of data quality were performed with PHRED and PHRAP, respectively (32, 33). Assembled sequences were visualized with CONSED (40). The initial assembly consisted of 42 contigs (
20 reads/contig). Gaps in the sequence were primarily closed by primer walking on gap-spanning library clones or PCR products generated from genomic DNA. True physical gaps were closed by combinatorial (multiplex) PCR. Sequence finishing and polishing added 272 reads and assessment of final assembly quality was completed as described previously (23).
Sequence analysis and annotation.
Automated gene modeling was completed by combining results from Critica, Generation, and Glimmer modeling packages, and comparing the translations to GenBank's nonredundant database using the basic local alignment search tool for proteins (BLASTP). The protein set was also searched against the KEGG, InterPro, TIGRFams, PROSITE, and Clusters of Orthologous Groups of protein (COGs) databases to further assess function. Manual corrections to automated functional assignments (<2% of the genome) were completed on an individual gene-by-gene basis as needed. Comparative analyses of bacterial genomes and gene neighborhoods were completed using the Joint Genome Institute Integrated Microbial Genomes web-based interface (http://img.jgi.doe.gov/pub/main.cgi).
Nucleotide sequence accession number.
The sequence and annotation of the complete N. winogradskyi Nb-255 genome are available at GenBank/EMBL/DDBJ under accession number CP000115.
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FIG. 1. Chromosome of Nitrobacter winogradskyi Nb-255 (ATCC 25391). The outer two circles indicate the locations of key energetic and metabolic features. The third and fourth circles depict predicted protein-encoding and structural RNA genes on the plus and minus strands, respectively (green, energy metabolism; red, DNA replication; magenta, transcription; yellow, translation; orange, amino acid metabolism; dark blue, carbohydrate metabolism; pale red, nucleotide metabolism; black, coenzyme metabolism; cyan, lipid metabolism; light blue, cellular processes; brown, general function; gray, hypothetical and conserved hypothetical genes; pale green, structural RNAs). The fifth and sixth circles depict the location of IS elements and phage regions (gray bars) on the plus and minus strands, respectively. The seventh circle indicates GC bias; and the eighth circle indicates GC skew.
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4.5-kb element that encodes a number of phage-related products (nwi1485 to nwi1479 and nwi1623 to nwi1628) and interestingly lies within two larger phage-like regions. |
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TABLE 1. Summary of complex repetitive sequences
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subunit (nwi0774 and nwi2068, 94% identity) and ß subunit (nwi0776 and nwi0965, 97% identity). Some of these duplications may have already developed new functions, as reflected by the assimilation of these repeated cassettes into different genes. For example, two nearly identical (>99.8%) copies of a 1,593-bp region contribute differently to two genes. For gene nwi2076, the repetitive element constitutes almost the entire length of the 1,602-bp gene, while in nwi1732, this sequence comprises only the 3' portion of the 2,595-bp gene. Both of these have been annotated as putative TonB-dependent siderophore receptors. Additionally, there are two copies of a putative TonB-dependent biopolymer transport system (nwi2038 to nwi2040 and nwi0705 to nwi0703); however, only the 3' end of the ExbB proton channel component (nwi0703 and nwi2040) shows conservation (98% identity), while the 5' ends are of different sizes and are unique.
Transcription, translation, and cell division.
Genes for the
, ß, ß', and
components of the core bacterial RNA polymerase were identified and are most similar to the same components in B. japonicum. All essential ribosomal proteins are accounted for in the genome. Typical prokaryote translation factors if-1, if-2, and if-3 and elongation factors Tu and G were all contiguous with genes coding for ribosomal proteins. There were 49 genes for amino acyl-tRNA biosynthesis. Genes encoding RNA processing functions include RNase PH (final 3' trimming and modification of tRNA precursors), RNase D (a 3' exonuclease acting on tRNA), and RNase E and RNase G (maturation of the 5' end of 16S RNA).
Genes putatively encoding homologs for the tubulin-like FtsZ (nwi1058), and for cell division proteins that associate with Ftsz, FtsA (nwi1057), FtsQ (nwi1056), FtsW, (nwi1050), FtsI (nwi1045), and FtsK (nwi0083), were identified. Like other alphaproteobacteria, N. winogradskyi lacks homologs of MinCDE, SulA, ZipA, FtsL, and FtsN (104). N. winogradskyi possesses homologs of CtrA (nwi0525) and GcrA (nwi0512), which in Caulobacter crescentus form the core oscillator of the genetic circuit controlling cell cycle progression and asymmetric polar morphogenesis (44). The CtrA-GcrA interaction may also have a role in controlling N. winogradskyi cell division, which occurs by polar swelling, and results in asymmetric cells.
Regulation and signaling.
N. winogradskyi has 322 genes (ca. 10% of the genome) devoted to regulation and signaling (Table 2). Genes for
32-,
70-, and
54-like transcription factors were identified. Fourteen specialized fecI-related
24 homologs are present, most of which are proximal to fecR and siderophore receptor genes. A ferric uptake regulator (nwi0013) was identified in addition to a zinc uptake regulator (nwi0493), and an iron response regulator (nwi0035), the last of which could be mediating iron-dependent control of heme synthesis (71). N. winogradskyi has 28 signal transduction histidine kinases of varied function, two of which are nitrogen related (NtrB) and seven of which are periplasmic sensor signal transduction related.
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TABLE 2. Regulatory and signaling proteins
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Multiple phosphotransferase system signaling genes were identified. The gene cluster at nwi0344 to nwi0348 encodes Hpr, EIIA, HPr kinase, and homologs of the ChvIG/ExoRS two-component sensory system (Fig. 2C). A phosphoenolpyruvate-utilizing EI enzyme (nwi0378) was also annotated along with a second EIIA2 (ptsN, nwi0179) gene immediately upstream of
54 (rpoN). Gene homologs for sugar permeases (e.g., EIIB, EIIC, and EIID) were not identified. The absence of sugar permease genes combined with the presence of an Hpr kinase gene suggest that the phosphotransferase-type signaling molecules in N. winogradskyi are not involved in sugar transport (18). Alternatively, the phosphotransferase proteins may be stimulating RpoN expression (60, 90) and/or involved in the regulation of ChvIG/ExoRS, which has been shown to regulate acid-inducible genes in Agrobacterium tumefaciens (54), and succinoglycan exopolysaccharide production and flagellum biosynthesis in Sinorhizobium meliloti (56, 103).
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FIG. 2. Organization of N. winogradskyi gene clusters. Each arrow represents one gene. The N. winogradskyi locus numbers are indicated within the arrows and putative gene names are above each arrow. In panel D, a gene cluster from N. europaea (ATCC 19718) is shown for comparison.
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In chemolithotrophic growth, nitrite is oxidized to nitrate via a molybdopterin-containing nitrite oxidoreductase (2, 15). Electrons are released from the cytochrome a1c1 component of the nitrite oxidoreductase and subsequently transferred to cytochrome c oxidase (Cox) through cytochrome c550 (101). Cytochrome c-550 and the cox operon have been studied in detail in N. winogradskyi strain agilis (ATCC 14123). DNA hybridization to coxA, coxB, and coxC probes revealed multiple copies of the cytochrome oxidase operon (11). Both soluble and membrane-bound class IA/B cytochrome c-550 proteins were purified and shown to be electron donors for Cox (67, 87, 102). Among the c-type cytochrome genes identified, orthologs for both cytochrome c-550 proteins (c-550s, nwi2582, and c-550m, nwi0712) were located. A paralog of c-550m (nwi0287) was also identified in addition to two class IC cytochromes (COG2863, nwi0159, and nwi0670). Further analysis is needed to assign functions to these or other c-type cytochromes in the electron transport system.
Congruent with previous investigations of N. winogradskyi strain agilis (11), two distinct operons encoding paralogs of six cytochrome c oxidase (complex IV) synthesis genes were identified in the genome (see "Complex repetitive sequences" above). Additional cytochrome oxidases were not evident in the genome although gene homologs of two subunits (cyoBC) of a cytochrome o oxidase are adjacent to the cytochrome c oxidase genes at the nwi0761 and nwi0766 loci. Electrons from nitrite oxidation are considered to enter the respiratory chain at the level of cytochrome a1 (2, 15, 100, 101). Cytochrome a1 requires a heme A cofactor that is biosynthesized from heme B via heme O as a stable intermediate (35, 65). This pathway requires the sequential activity of heme O synthase (CoxA/CtaB homologs) (35, 86) and heme A synthase (CtaA homologs) (86), respectively. Each cytochrome c oxidase gene cluster contains a CyoE/CtaB homolog (nwi0225 and nwi0763), although a single Cox15/CtaA (nwi1418) homolog is segregated from these cytochrome operons and is clustered with one of two predicted NarK homologs (nwi1419), which are implicated in transport of nitrate or nitrite.
In the past, the nitrite oxidoreductase enzyme has been abbreviated as NOR, an abbreviation that has also been used for nitric oxide reductase. To eliminate this confusion, we propose a new abbreviation for nitrite oxidoreductase, NXR. Nitrite oxidation by NXR is reversible and NXR can catalyze the reduction of nitrate to nitrite; this transformation is believed to be part of the denitrification pathway carried out by N. winogradskyi (see below) (2, 15, 27). Formate may also be a substrate for NXR, and is oxidized to carbon dioxide (27).
The NXR enzyme complex is a heterodimer consisting of one
subunit (large subunit) and one ß subunit (small subunit), encoded by nxrA and nxrB, respectively (82). The N. winogradskyi genome contains two copies each of nxrA and nxrB. One copy of nxrA is one gene upstream of nxrB (nxrA1 at nwi0774 and nxrB1 at nwi0776; Fig. 2A), while the other copies are segregated at distant points in the genome (nxrA2 at nwi2068 and nxrB2 at nwi0965). There are no other genes closely associated with the segregated copy of nxrA2; the segregated copy of nxrB2 lies downstream of a gene annotated as encoding a hypothetical protein.
The NXR complex is membrane associated and has been localized to the cytoplasmic face of the cell membrane (81, 82). Signal peptides were not detected by SIGNALP (10) analysis of either NxrA or NxrB. However, NxrA and NxrA were predicted by TOPPRED (94) and TMPRED (43) analysis to form two or three transmembrane
-helices, suggesting that the
-subunit anchors the NXR complex to the cytoplasmic membrane.
Previous sequence analysis in N. hamburgensis identified an open reading frame (ORF), norX, located between nxrA1 (norA) and nxrB1 (norB) (50). A putative homolog of norX, nxrX (nwi0775), was identified in N. winogradskyi (Fig. 2A) and is predicted to encode a peptidyl-prolyl cis-trans isomerase (EC 5.2.1.8), which may aid in the folding of NXR. Inspection of the nucleotide sequences of nxrX and norX revealed a single base "deletion" in nxrX. The absence of a thymine between bases 863769 and 863770 caused a shift in the reading frame, altering the putative start codon and 5' end of nxrX/nwi0775. The start codon of nxrX annotated in N. winogradskyi begins 22 bases upstream of the start site reported for norX. The correct start site and functionality of nxrX/norX remain to be validated.
The nxrA1XB1 cluster appears to be organized in an operon with four additional genes that might provide accessory functions to NXR (Fig. 2A). Immediately upstream of nxrA1, nwi0773 is predicted to encode a c-type cytochrome that may be a part of the electron transport system coupled to oxidation and reduction of nitrite (2, 15, 100, 101). Immediately downstream of nxrB1, two genes are predicted to encode homologs of NarJ (nwi0777) and NarI (nwi0778), which are subunits of the dissimilatory nitrate reductase common to heterotrophic denitrifiers (105). NarJ, the nitrate reductase
subunit, inserts the molybdenum cofactor in nitrate reductase A (13, 92), and could play a similar role in NxrA biosynthesis. NarI (nitrate reductase
subunit) is a b-type cytochrome that serves as the electron acceptor from the quinone pool and electron donor to the molybdenum cofactor in the
-subunit.
The last two genes in the nxr cluster are predicted to encode a NarK-like nitrate/nitrite transporter (nwi0779) and a transporter for C4 dicarboxylic acids/malic acid or tellurium (nwi0780). NarK is a member of the major facilitator superfamily of transporters that has been reported to function as a nitrate-proton symporter, a nitrate-nitrite antiporter, and a nitrite uniporter (26, 98). Active uptake of nitrite or efflux of nitrate would both be important to maintaining NXR activity, and the function(s) of NarK in N. winogradskyi remains to be determined. The relationship of the nwi0780 product to NXR activity is unknown.
Dissimilatory nitrate reduction.
N. winogradskyi can grow anaerobically and gain energy by coupling oxidation of organic compounds to nitrate reduction (17, 37). As mentioned above, nitrite oxidation mediated by NXR is reversible, and the nitrate reductase activity that initiates denitrification is presumably provided by this enzyme. NxrA and NxrB are homologs of the NarGH polypeptides that comprise the large and small subunits of dissimilatory nitrate reductase A in heterotrophic denitrifiers (50). Also as mentioned above, homologs of the NarJI subunits of nitrate reductase are also clustered with NxrAB. With the exception of nxrA2 and nxrB2, N. winogradskyi possesses no other narGHJI-like genes. N. winogradskyi lacks a periplasmic nitrate reductase, and in this respect differs from its closest phylogenetic relative, B. japonicum.
In Nitrobacter vulgaris, nitrite reductase activity (reduction of nitrite to nitric oxide) was measured in a membrane-bound N,N-diethyldithiocarbamate-sensitive protein that copurified with NXR (1). The two major groups of enzymes that function in this capacity are the trimeric copper-containing oxidases (CuNIR) and the dimeric cd1-type cytochromes (24, 73, 105). N. winogradskyi is not predicted to produce the latter of these, as it lacks genes for biosynthesis of the heme D1 cofactor. However, N. winogradskyi possesses four predicted multicopper oxidases encoded by nwi1901, nwi2648, nwi2651, and nwi2661.
Two of the putative multicopper oxidase genes (nirK, nwi2648; and ncgA, nwi2651) are clustered in an apparent operon with genes for biogenesis of c-type cytochromes (nwi2652, ncgB; nwi2650, ncgC; and nwi2649). Orthologs of these genes and the operon structure are conserved in the ammonia-oxidizing bacteria Nitrosomonas europaea and N. eutropha (23) (Fig. 2D). In N. europaea, the results of mutational analyses indicate that the nwi2648 ortholog (NirK) and other genes in the cluster function in detoxification of and tolerance to nitrite and possibly nitric oxide (6, 8). These genes could have a similar role in N. winogradskyi (see "Environmental defense and stress" below). Of the two remaining multicopper oxidases, only nwi2661 lacks the motif for a type III copper site, the absence of which is characteristic of the copper-containing nitrite reductases (31). Which, if any, of these putative multicopper oxidase genes function in a dissimilatory nitrate reduction pathway remains to be determined.
While nitrous oxide is reported to be the terminal product of respiratory nitrate reduction by Nitrobacter spp. (37), the predominant form has not been independently confirmed. Nitrous oxide has been detected in nonspecified amounts (36, 37), yet the N. winogradskyi genome lacks predicted homologs of a nitric oxide reductase. If nitrous oxide is the primary end product of respiratory denitrification, the pathway by which it would be formed is uncertain. Presumably, nitrous oxide is produced from the reduction of nitric oxide, and two nitric oxide reductase (NOR) classes are recognized, cytochrome c dependent (cNOR) and quinol dependent (29, 42, 73). There were no BLAST hits in the N. winogradskyi genome for quinol-dependent homologs.
Two putative proteins had weak similarities (23 to 26% identity) with the NorC (nwi2313) and NorB (nwi2314) subunits of the cNOR complex. The cNOR catalytic subunit is NorB and the predicted product of nwi2314 is much larger than that of typical NorB homologs, 839 amino acids versus ca. 460 amino acids, respectively. The products of nwi2313 and nwi2314 are predicted to possess the COX1 and COX2 domains that are characteristic of the heme-copper cytochrome oxidase family of which cNOR is a member. However, cNOR is distinguished from other heme-copper cytochrome oxidases in that the NorB dinuclear center contains nonheme iron instead of copper, and four conserved glutamic acid residues in NorB have been implicated in coordinating the nonheme iron ligand (73). Because the product of nwi0562 aligns poorly with NorB homologs, it is difficult to ascertain if this distinguishing feature exists in the putative polypeptide.
Autotrophy.
Carbon dioxide fixation in N. winogradskyi is mediated by a type I ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase-oxygenase (RuBisCO) via the Calvin-Benson-Bassham (CBB) cycle (15, 16). Genes for all of the enzymes of a functional CBB cycle are present. The typical sedoheptulose 1,7-bisphosphatase (EC 3.1.3.37) and the glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (EC 1.2.1.13) genes are absent and are functionally replaced in N. winogradskyi by homologs of fructose 1,6-bisphosphatase (EC 3.1.3.11, nwi2694) and NADH-dependent glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (EC 1.2.1.12, nwi2735), respectively (23, 59, 76).
Two copies of cbbL and cbbS, encoding the large and small subunits, respectively, of type I RuBisCO were identified (Fig. 2B; nwi2928-2929 and nwi1987-1986). Genes encoding the structural components of carboxysomes are immediately downstream of cbbS (nwi1986). The two RuBisCO copies do not appear to be paralogs given that the sequence of the nwi2928-2929 locus is most similar to those of the RuBisCO genes of its close relatives in the alphaproteobacteria, B. japonicum and R. palustris, while the RuBisCO genes (nwi1987-1986) are most similar to those in the gammaproteobacteria Thiobacillus and the ammonia-oxidizing betaproteobacteria genera Nitrosospira and Nitrosomonas. Likewise, the organization of the nwi1975 to nwi1987 RuBisCO/carboxysome gene cluster is nearly identical to that in the gammaproteobacteria Acidithiobacillus ferrooxidans (22) and Thiobacillus denitrificans.
Both copies of cbbL are preceded by divergently transcribed cbbR LysR-type regulators (Fig. 2B) and putative signal transduction proteins containing PII-like domains (nwi1989 and nwi2931). While the presence of an adjacent cbbL regulator is common, the location of PII-like proteins near RuBisCO appears to be rare. Outside of the Nitrobacter lineage, only one other PII homolog (tbd2652 from T. denitrificans sp. strain ATCC 25259) of nwi1989 or nwi2931 is adjacent to genes encoding RuBisCO or carboxysome peptides. Although the function of these PII-like proteins is not known, their presence next to both RuBisCO gene clusters potentially indicates coordinated regulatory control of nitrogen assimilation in response to availability of carbon.
Carbon monoxide dehydrogenase homologs.
Genes putatively encoding an aerobic-type carbon monoxide dehydrogenase (CODH) were identified. The predicted CODH complex is comprised of large, medium, and small subunits encoded by coxL/cutL-like (nwi1079), coxM/cutM-like (nwi2204), and coxS/cutS-like (nwi2205) genes, respectively. The last two genes are adjacent on the reverse strand, while the coxL/cutL-like gene (nwi1079) is located some distance away on the forward strand. This distribution differs from that of most other cox/cut-like genes, where genes encoding all three subunits are typically clustered (38, 49, 74).
Immediately downstream of nwi2204 is a cluster of five ORFs that could be involved in the biosynthesis of the molybdopterin cofactor required by CoxL/CutL. The motifs of these gene products identified by Pfam analysis include an AAA+ family ATPase (nwi2203), a VWA (von Willebrand factor type A domain)-containing CoxE-like protein (nwi2202), a protein of the XdhC and CoxF family (nwi2201 and nwi2200), and a probable molybdopterin-binding protein (nwi2199). Immediately upstream of coxS/cutS-like nwi2205, the predicted product of nwi2206 appears to be a CoxG-like protein; the function of CoxG is unknown, but CoxG-like genes are conserved in carbon monoxide-oxidizing bacteria (38, 74).
Heterotrophy.
Metabolic pathways which support known modes of heterotrophic growth in N. winogradskyi were constructed from putative gene annotations. Enzymatic activities measured from auto-, mixo-, and heterotrophically grown cells of N. winogradskyi strain agilis demonstrated a complete tricarboxylic acid cycle (83). Growth of N. winogradskyi on hexose sugars such as glucose and fructose has not been reported. Consistent with these findings, a gene encoding a putative phosphofructokinase was not identified in the genome, which would sever classical glycolysis. The Enter-Doudoroff pathway also could not be reconstructed. This was due to the absence of a 2-keto-3-deoxy-6-phosphogluconic acid aldolase gene, even though an adequate homolog for a phosphogluconate dehydratase (nwi0213) was identified.
Genes encoding enzymes necessary for pyruvate, acetate, and glycerol metabolism were identified. For pyruvate metabolism, genes were identified for encoding pyruvate dehydrogenase (nwi1817-1818), phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (nwi2278), and malic enzyme (nwi1587), confirming previous investigations with N. winogradskyi strain agilis (84). Pyruvate phosphate dikinase (nwi2709) and phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase genes (nwi0350) were also identified, allowing N. winogradskyi greater metabolic flexibility around pyruvate.
Similarly, heterotrophic growth by N. winogradskyi on acetate was demonstrated (14, 28, 79). Genes for catabolic enzymes that would funnel acetate into the tricarboxylic acid cycle via conversion to acetyl-coenzyme A through either acetyl-phosphate or acetyl-adenylate intermediates were located. The presence of genes for key glyoxylate cycle enzymes, isocitrate lyase and malate synthase, permits the regeneration of oxaloacetate and prevents a C4 deficiency that would occur during growth on acetate or other C2 or C3 compounds. Finally, with regard to glycerol, homologs of glycerol kinase (nwi0281), glycerol-3-phosphate dehydrogenase genes (nwi0469 and nwi2990), and triosephosphate isomerase (nwi1835) were found, which would allow the conversion of glycerol to the glycolysis intermediate glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate.
Although growth of Nitrobacter on glycerol has been demonstrated (37), an inner membrane glycerol porin was not identified. An aquaporin, aqpZ (nwi1000) (in the same major intrinsic protein family and COG functional group as glycerol porin channels), was located, but analysis of conserved residues in aqpZ indicate this gene encodes an aquaporin (85), which is generally selective for water.
Vitamins and coenzymes.
Genes encoding complete pathways for the de novo synthesis of heme, NAD, pyrroloquinoline quinone, biotin, pantothenate, folate, acyl carrier protein, and coenzyme A were identified. Classical pathways could not be confirmed for cobalamin (B12), thiamine, or pyridoxal (B6). Surprisingly, a complete classical pathway for the biosynthesis of menaquinone or ubiquinone could not be reconstructed from annotated genes, as homologs encoding a chorismate lyase (ubiC) or 3-octaprenyl-4-hydroxybenzoate decarboxylase (ubiD or ubiX) were lacking from the N. winogradskyi genome. Prior investigators have indicated that N. winogradskyi strain agilis possessed ubiquinone (2), which, if correct, would suggest that biosynthesis of this molecule may occur via a nonclassical pathway.
Lipid and lipopolysaccharide biosynthesis.
Several studies have shown that the fatty acid composition of phospholipids in N. winogradskyi is almost exclusively vaccenic acid (18:1,11c) (4, 55). Two FabA-encoding genes (nwi0034 and nwi1578) were identified that carry out the desaturation of fatty acids and the subsequent conversion of trans to cis double-bond configurations. Genes were identified that are involved in assembly of a complete lipopolysaccharide, including lipid A, core oligosaccharide, and an O-antigen structure. In addition, two paralogous genes (nwi2396 and nwi0647) were identified that code for synthesis of N-acetylneuraminic acid, and/or formation of the capsular homopolysaccharide sialic acid.
Another interesting feature of polysaccharide biosynthesis was the identification of genes associated with the regulation (ndvD, nwi1788) (25), synthesis (ndvC, nwi1787), glycosyl transfer (ndvB, nwi1789), and transport (ndvA, nwi2681) of membrane-associated cyclic ß-glucans that accumulate in the periplasmic space. This class of compounds has received some attention in Rhizobium and Bradyrhizobium spp., where they are synthesized under low osmotic strength and are thought to play an unspecified role in nodulation.
Amino acid biosynthesis.
Genes for the biosynthesis of all 20 amino acids were identified. The N. winogradskyi genome lacks both an asparagine synthetase and an asparaginyl-tRNA synthetase. Thus, the sole pathway to synthesize asparagine and charge a tRNA appears to be through transamidation of an aspartyl-tRNA (63) via a class II aspartyl-tRNA synthetase (nwi1588, EC 6.1.1.12) and a glutamine-dependent Asp-tRNAAsn amidotransferase encoded by gatCAB (nwi2003, nwi2001, and nwi1997).
Storage compounds.
Many cytoplasmic inclusions have been reported in Nitrobacter cells, including poly-ß-hydroxybutyrate (PHB), polyphosphates, and glycogen (14, 96). N. winogradskyi Nb-255 contains the genes necessary to synthesize and metabolize PHB and polyphosphate, but not glycogen. Homologs of genes encoding the necessary enzymes for PHB synthesis, phbA, phbB, and phbC (nwi3060, nwi3061, and nwi1650, respectively) and PHB breakdown, PHB depolymerase (nwi0130), are present. Polyphosphate chains are produced via an ATP-dependent polyphosphate kinase (nwi1594) and cleaved with an adjacent exopolyphosphatase (nwi1593). A complete glycogen synthesis pathway could not be reconstructed from the annotated genes. Neither glycogen synthase (EC 2.7.7.27) nor ADP glucose pyrophosphorylase (EC 2.4.1.21) could be identified; however, a gene encoding a glycogen breakdown enzyme, glycogen phosphorylase (EC 2.4.1.1, nwi2414), is present.
Mineral nitrogen assimilation into amino acids.
Incorporation of ammonium, hydroxylamine, nitrate, and nitrite into cell nitrogen has been demonstrated in some Nitrobacter strains (53). Homologs for a hydroxylamine reductase and an assimilatory nitrate reductase (which function to assimilate hydroxylamine and nitrate, respectively) were not identified in the genome. Nitrite assimilation is likely to be mediated by an NAD(P)H-dependent nitrite reductase encoded by nirB (nwi0719) and nirD (nwi0720), which is most similar to nirBD in Mesorhizobium loti. The NirBD complex is a cytoplasmic, siroheme-containing enzyme that utilizes NAD(P)H or ferredoxin as the electron donor (77). NirBD-mediated, nitrite-dependent ammonium formation could serve any of three different functions: nitrogen assimilation, nitrite detoxification, or NAD(P) regeneration (66, 77). Denitrifying cultures of N. winogradskyi have been reported to accumulate ammonium (37).
Because N. winogradskyi possesses genes for glutamine synthetase (GS, nwi1904), glutamate synthase (GOGAT, nwi2953-2954), and an assimilatory glutamate dehydrogenase (nwi2286), it has the potential to switch between GS-GOGAT and glutamate dehydrogenase depending upon the nitrogen source. For example, N. winogradskyi growing in pure culture on nitrite as a sole nitrogen source would likely utilize the GS-GOGAT system for nitrogen assimilation. However, in many environments, N. winogradskyi and other nitrite-oxidizing bacteria will be exposed to higher levels of ammonium than of nitrite, which may trigger a shift to utilization of the glutamate dehydrogenase system.
Several other genes associated with regulation of nitrogen metabolism (including GS expression) were identified in the N. winogradskyi genome, including ntrB/C and ntrX/Y. Genes putatively encoding GlnB, GlnK (PII), and GlnD (uridyltransferase) were identified, including one copy of glnB adjacent to glnA. Finally, glnE (nwi1199), encoding the GS adenylating enzyme, was identified. Further study is required to determine how N. winogradskyi regulates nitrogen assimilation in response to the inorganic nitrogen status of its environment.
N winogradskyi possesses all of the enzymes of the urea cycle and theoretically should be able to produce urea. However, there was no evidence of a urease gene or a complete urea carboxylase. Thus, if N. winogradskyi salvages nitrogen from turnover of proteins, urea might be excreted and, if so, may be available for uptake by nearby ureolytic ammonia-oxidizing bacteria.
Transport and secretion.
Approximately 10% of the N. winogradskyi genome encodes genes for transport and secretion. Most transport systems are of the ATP binding cassette (ABC) type I, major facilitator superfamily, and resistance-nodulation-cell division families (Table 3). Single ABC type II, tripartite ATP-dependent periplasmic, and cation:proton antiporter 1-type transporters were also identified in addition to three small multidrug resistance type and at least three antiport/symport systems for sodium, protons and potassium. The genome lacks genes for active transporters of sugars, although an OprB-like outer membrane porin (nwi0329) and a putative major facilitator superfamily family 1 transporter (nwi3027) were annotated, the combination of which could enable carbohydrate uptake (68, 99). There were no other genes encoding import systems for monosaccharides, further supporting this organism's inability to utilize these molecules for growth.
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TABLE 3. Summary of transporters
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Approximately 70 genes in the N. winogradskyi genome are dedicated to iron acquisition. Considering that NXR contains multiple Fe-S centers, and that 10 to 30% of the total protein in N. winogradskyi cells is NXR (15, 88), acquisition of iron is crucial for survival. FeoAB-encoding genes (nwi2975-2976) were identified, enabling transport of ferrous iron under acidic or anaerobic conditions (3). N. winogradskyi possesses 26 putative iron siderophore receptor genes to acquire ferric iron during aerobic growth at neutral pH. These outer membrane receptors are supported by four TonB-ExbD-ExbB gene sets and two ABC transport systems, which would facilitate transport of siderophores into the cytoplasm (3, 20, 64). Similarly to R. palustris, a cluster of three genes for synthesis of a "rhizobactin-like" hydroxymate siderophore are present. Two additional genes, predicted by general function, are members of a COG that have been associated with an arylsulfate sulfotransferase involved in catechol siderophore biosynthesis. The genome of N. winogradskyi also encodes an HmuTUV-like ABC transport system for hemin uptake.
Genes encoding multiple transporters were also identified for uptake of sulfur, inorganic nitrogen and phosphorus. Two NarK homologs (nwi0779 and nwi1419) were identified which could function to transport nitrite or nitrate. Three ABC type I transporters for sulfonate and/or nitrate, and one for sulfate/thiosulfate are also present. Additionally, an alkanesulfonate monooxygenase homolog (ssuD, nwi0682) was identified, which potentially functions to desulfonate short-chain alkanes as a source of sulfur. The ssuD gene is adjoined by complementary ABC transport components (ssuA, ssuB, and ssuC).
With respect to phosphorus, N. winogradskyi seems to have at least one high-affinity and one low-affinity transport system. Genes encoding the low-affinity PitA (nwi2031) system were identified. These genes share the same organization as the Pit system characterized in S. meliloti (5, 93), which is thought to be constitutively expressed when phosphate is in excess. Genes encoding the well-characterized ABC-type high-affinity system PstSCAB/PhoU (nwi0505 to nwi0512) were also annotated. The pst genes, which are generally expressed under phosphate starvation (72, 95), are also flanked by the phosphate two-component global regulator system phoBR. A gene encoding an Opr-type phosphate porin (nwi2169) was identified, which may form a trimeric porin under phosphate-limited conditions (41, 69).
Genes encoding a complete Sec system for transport of proteins to the membrane or periplasm were identified. A Tat system (nwi1777 to nwi1779) for export of folded proteins across the inner membrane was also annotated. Based on analysis by TatP (9) and PrediSi (http://www.predisi.de), approximately 580 proteins are potentially secreted by N. winogradskyi, 240 of these by the Tat pathway. As in many other gram-negative organisms, genes encoding components of a type II protein secretion/type IV pilus assembly are conserved in this organism. The operonic organization of the pilus components is nearly identical to that of the pili operon previously described in C. crescentus, a stalk-forming alphaproteobacterium (78). A suite of Trb-like type IV secretion/conjugal transfer genes were identified as well.
Environmental stress and defense.
N. winogradskyi, like nearly all other aerobic organisms, is expected to contain enzymes that convert active oxygen compounds such as superoxide and hydroperoxides into innocuous products (47, 52, 75). The genome of N. winogradskyi contains genes that encode a heme-containing catalase-peroxidase (HPI, katG, nwi0030), an iron-containing (Fe-SOD, sodB, nwi0913), and a copper-zinc-containing (Cu/Zn-SOD, sodC, nwi2796) superoxide dismutase. In addition, the genome contains several genes that code for a diverse complement of thioredoxin-dependent peroxide reductases, including alkyl hydroperoxide reductase (ahpC, nwi1738 and nwi0891), thioredoxin reductase (ahpF, COG0492 and nwi2453), other peroxiredoxins (COG0678 and nwi2686), glutathione peroxidase (COG0386 and nwi2639), glutathione reductase (COG1249 and nwi1223) as well as antioxidant proteins with peroxidase activity (EC,1.11.1.7; nwi0432 and nwi0492).
Despite the fact that N. winogradskyi lacks genes encoding monofunctional heme-containing (HPII, katA) and non-heme-containing (Mn-catalase) catalases as well as peroxide-scavenging cytochrome c peroxidase, its oxidative stress tolerance inventory is more complex than previously reported for N. europaea (23). In contrast, N. winogradskyi seems less well prepared than N. europaea to cope with reactive nitrogen stress. Whereas the genome of N. winogradskyi contains genes encoding yet uncharacterized multicopper oxidases, which have been implicated in NO reduction (45), it lacks a gene for cytochrome P460, which has a hydroxylamine detoxification role (12).
Also as noted above, the nirK ortholog occurs in an apparent operon in N. winogradskyi, the structure of which is conserved in N. europaea and N. eutropha. In all three of these organisms, the nirK cluster is preceded by a gene predicted to encode an Rrf2 family regulatory protein. In N. europaea, the Rrf2 homolog (NsrR) acts as a transcriptional repressor of the downstream operon, and NsrR repression is lifted by exposure to nitrite (7), and a nitrite-sensing role could also be imagined for the NsrR-like homolog (nwi2653) in N. winogradskyi. However, in N. europaea and N. eutropha, this regulatory gene is oriented divergently to the nirK operon (7, 91), while in N. winogradskyi it is oriented in the same direction as the operon. It's unknown how this difference in orientation may affect the regulatory activity of the Rrf2-like homolog in N. winogradskyi.
A variety of temperature-, osmotic strength-, and chemical stress-related genes were identified. Five gene paralogs encoding the major cold shock regulatory protein (CspA), more than one gene for the cold-induced ß subunit of DNA gyrase, and a sizable complement of genes that encode a variety of heat shock proteins, including the chaperonins (GroES, GroEL, DnaJ, and DnaK), was observed. N. winogradskyi also seems to be equipped for protection from organic solvents (OstA, nwi1679), arsenic (ArsBC, nwi3124 to nwi3125) and cyanate (CynS, nwi1302; and CynX, nwi1437) toxicity, and osmotic stresses (glycine betaine system) and can regulate its pH via a pH-adaptive potassium efflux system (PhaA-F, nwi2654 to nwi2658).
Effective stress response also involves regulated degradative capacity and N. winogradskyi contains several genes encoding ATP-dependent proteases, including Lon and Clp. Genes for DNA repair systems such as RecA, RecB, RecG, and RecF were also located. DNA-specific exonuclease RecJ and exonuclease ABC complex ORFs are present at different locations in the genome (e.g., uvrC, uvrB, uvrA, and uvrD). Genes encoding MutS and MutL, key components for initiation of methyl-directed DNA mismatch repair, were accounted for, although a MutH-encoding gene was not identified.
Motility.
Nitrobacter winogradskyi is motile and can form biofilms, and hence its genome should contain structural and regulatory genes necessary for flagellar synthesis and function in response to environmental cues and challenges. The complement of operons needed for chemotaxis and flagellum biosynthesis is complete compared with information available for other bacteria (21, 30). However, the organization of these genes and the operon locations in the genome are remarkably different. Of the five known classes of methyl-accepting chemotaxis proteins (21, 58, 80), the N. winogradskyi genome encodes three of them: Tsr (nwi2996), which directly senses serine, alanine, glycine, and aminoisobutyrate; Tar (nwi0530), which senses aspartate and glutamate directly and is responsive to cobalt and nickel; and a protein in the CheD/PilJ/McpH protein family (nwi0072). Genes for a ribose/glucose/galactose sensor (Trg-like), a binding protein-dependent dipeptide sensor (Tap), and the redox sensor (Aer) were not found. N. winogradskyi appears to have a methyl-accepting chemotaxis protein complement similar to that found in N. europaea, and its chemotactic activity is likely regulated through the Che protein phosphorelay (CheWAY and CheBR) (23). It needs to be experimentally verified whether the N. winogradskyi methyl-accepting chemotaxis proteins respond to the same signals as found in gammaproteobacteria such as E. coli and Pseudomonas aeruginosa.
Surprisingly, the N. winogradskyi genome lacks the genes encoding the flagellar master operon flhDC, which is required for the transcriptional initiation of flagellation and chemotaxis both through direct activation and derepression of operons and indirectly through control of the FliA protein, an alternative sigma factor (
28). A fliA homolog, anti-sigma flgM/fliT (58), and a cheZ phosphatase were also not observed. Hence, it appears that flagellation and motility may be differently regulated in N. winogradskyi.
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FIG. 3. N. winogradskyi cell diagram. Cellular processes depicted are based on putative gene annotations. Roman numerals refer to electron transport components of enzyme complex I (NADH-ubiquinone reductase), complex II (succinate dehydrogenase), complex III (ubiquinol-cytochrome c reductase), and complex IV (cytochrome c oxidase).
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Given the challenges faced by N. winogradskyi and other nitrite-oxidizing bacteria growing on an energy-limited substrate, it will be fascinating to explore how this organism partitions the flux of reductant and ATP into the synthesis of various polymers (polyphosphate, PHB, beta-glucans, exopolysaccharides) that are nonessential under some conditions and essential under others. Nitrobacter accumulates PHB when grown heterotrophically with nitrate under low-oxygen conditions (37). PHB storage has been studied widely in bacteria, including members of the genus Rhizobium, where it can accumulate to high levels under free-living and symbiotic conditions (48).
Interestingly, dicarboxylate carbon sources such as malate and succinate result in the accumulation of PHB under some conditions and not others. Recently, Poole and Allaway (70) speculated that the availability of ammonium might be critical in promoting carbon assimilation into protein and preventing the accumulation of carbon in PHB. As mentioned above, N. winogradskyi possesses genes that code for many enzymes associated with the metabolism of acetate and pyruvate, which might influence the flow of carbon into the tricarboxylic acid cycle, lipids, and PHB. It will be interesting to examine how ammonium versus nitrite availability influences the flow of intracellular partitioning of carbon by N. winogradskyi.
Another interesting feature of the Nb-255 genome was the identification of multiple putative transporters capable of importing amino acids, peptides, and cyanate. These annotations suggest that access to organic nitrogen sources may be important, particularly during heterotrophic growth. Under lithotrophic growth conditions, nitrite serves as the sole source of nitrogen for biosynthesis and energy, as the genome encodes an assimilatory nitrite reductase (NirBD) and NarK-like transporters. The repression of NXR during heterotrophic growth (83) requires N. winogradskyi to utilize alternative sources of nitrogen for biosynthesis. Indeed, heterotrophic growth of N. winogradskyi generally occurs in cultures containing complex organic nitrogen sources such as yeast extract, peptone, and Casamino Acids (14, 28, 79, 84). Although N. winogradskyi can assimilate ammonium and nitrate (53), it may rely on organic nitrogen sources for biosynthesis in environments low in nitrate or nitrite, and may also have adapted to low ammonium, which is readily transformed to nitrite by ammonia-oxidizing bacteria. Clearly, a closer examination of the uptake and metabolism of exogenously supplied amino acids and inorganic nitrogen sources is warranted.
N. winogradskyi is the third member of the Bradyrhizobiaceae for which the genome has been fully sequenced. The N. winogradskyi genome (3.4 Mb) is smaller than that of the other two members, R. palustris (5.4 Mb) and B. japonicum (9.1 Mb), yet over two-thirds of the predicted proteins in the N. winogradskyi genome have the highest degree of sequence identity to homologs in B. japonicum and R. palustris. R. palustris is arguably the most metabolically versatile bacterium known, while N. winogradskyi may be moving towards an obligate dependence on nitrite oxidation. Many deletions of metabolic capabilities possessed by an ancestor common to N. winogradskyi, B. japonicum, and R. palustris are evident throughout the N. winogradskyi genome. For example, genes encoding remnants of nitrogen fixation, thiosulfate/sulfite oxidation, and nodule development pathways (which are functional in B. japonicum and R. palustris) were identified in N. winogradskyi. Whole-genome comparisons between these family members will undoubtedly aid in understanding niche selection, gene duplication events, genome reduction strategies, and horizontal transfer of DNA from other lineages.
The genome sequence of N. winogradskyi facilitates genomic comparisons with related species and may also advance our understanding of the interactions of nitrite-oxidizing bacteria with other microbes with which they closely associate in the environment, particularly ammonia-oxidizing bacteria. Nitrite rarely accumulates in soils, wastewater, or activated sludge, indicating that nitrite and ammonia oxidization are coupled in nature, and the nitrite-oxidizing bacteria are frequently observed to be physically clustered with ammonia-oxidizing bacteria. Outside of those of the Bradyrhizobiaceae, the proteins annotated in N. winogradskyi were most frequently similar to orthologs (reciprocal best BLASTP hits) in N. europaea, suggesting exchange of genetic material. The functions of many of these genes are currently unknown, but their co-occurrence in distinct evolutionary lineages of nitrifying bacteria may indicate their global importance for nitrification. It also remains to be seen how these genes and other processes (e.g., the ncgA/B/C/nirK gene cluster, N flux, exopolysaccharide synthesis, and quorum sensing) function in a nitrifying community. Information gained from this and other nitrifier genomes will help clarify the potential interactions and coordination of nitrite and ammonia oxidation.
We thank E. O. Burton and M. C. Pelliterri for the preparation of N. winogradskyi genomic DNA (funded by grant 2001-35107-11046 from the USDA Cooperative State Research, Education, and Extension Services). Special thanks to G. M. King, F. R. Tabita, and D. R. Söll for helpful comments and assistance.
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6)-D-glucans in Bradyrhizobium japonicum. Can. J. Microbiol. 48:1008-1016.[CrossRef][Medline]This article has been cited by other articles:
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