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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, July 2006, p. 4871-4877, Vol. 72, No. 7
0099-2240/06/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AEM.00375-06
Copyright © 2006, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Department of Bacteriology, University of Wisconsin, Madison, Wisconsin 53706,1 Genetics and Biotechnology Center, University of Wisconsin, Madison, Wisconsin 53706,2 USDA Forest Service, Forest Products Laboratory, Madison, Wisconsin 53726,3 Department of Plant Pathology, University of Minnesota, St. Paul, Minnesota 551084
Received 15 February 2006/ Accepted 12 May 2006
| ABSTRACT |
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| INTRODUCTION |
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Lignin encases cellulose fibers, providing strength and stability to plant cell walls (17). The complex water-insoluble polymer is recalcitrant to decay, and white rot fungi are thought to depolymerize lignin to gain access to cellulose. Indeed, no organism is known to use lignin as a sole carbon and energy source.
Oxidative enzymes involved in ligninolysis by P. chrysosporium include lignin peroxidase (LiP), manganese peroxidase (MnP), and glyoxal oxidase (GLX) (reviewed in reference 7). These extracellular, nonspecific enzymes are produced in submerged cultures during secondary metabolism (27). Size constraints prevent peroxidases from directly penetrating sound wood, and these enzymes are presumed to generate radical species that participate in further reactions to degrade the lignin polymer (27).
The proposed role of GLX in lignin decay is to generate H2O2 for LiP- and MnP-mediated reactions. P. chrysosporium possesses several oxidases that could potentially supply peroxide for these reactions, but only GLX appears to be secreted in ligninolytic cultures in liquid medium (27). In addition to the physiological connection to peroxidases, extracellular peroxide production may be involved in the generation of highly reactive hydroxyl radicals via a Fenton reaction. Fenton chemistry has been implicated in lignocellulose degradation in P. chrysosporium (11, 31), but it is generally thought to be more important in cellulose depolymerization by brown rot fungi (15, 22).
Glyoxal oxidase is a copper-radical oxidase, with broad substrate specificity for the oxidation of simple aldehydes, such as glyoxal and methylglyoxal, to the corresponding carboxylic acids (45). These substrates are found in ligninolytic cultures, suggesting a role as physiological substrates for GLX. GLX also has been implicated in the regulation of peroxidase activity, and it is activated in vitro by lignin peroxidase (24, 25). Based on similarities to the galactose oxidase from Dactylium dendroides (20, 45), the active site of GLX has been identified and includes Tyr377, His378, Tyr135, Tyr70, and His471 (23, 45). For many years, it was thought that P. chrysosporium possessed only a single glx gene with two alleles (26).
Automated gene predictions generated from P. chrysosporium genome assemblies v1.0 (32) and v2.0 (http://www.jgi.doe.gov/whiterot) include six incomplete sequences with partial but significant similarities to glx. Three of these putative copper radical oxidase genes (cro3, cro4, and cro5) are clustered within a larger cluster of lignin peroxidase genes (7, 32).
Our overall goal is to understand the biological role of these glx-like sequences. Specific objectives in this study were to determine (i) the structural relationships among cro genes, (ii) the transcript patterns of these genes in colonized wood, and (iii) the activity and substrate preference of a heterologously expressed cro gene. The expression of cro genes, particularly in decaying wood, together with the oxidation of a substrate produced in ligninolytic cultures is consistent with a role for these genes and the enzymes they encode in lignin degradation.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Culture conditions.
For RNA, 200 ml of defined medium (10) amended with 0.4% Avicel PH-101 (Fluka Chemie, Buchs, Switzerland) was inoculated with 1 x 107 RP78 spores in a 2-liter flask. Incubation was at 37°C and 250 rpm in a shaking incubator. The culture was harvested after 6 days by filtration through Miracloth (Calbiochem, La Jolla, CA). The mycelium was snap frozen in liquid N2 and stored at 90°C. RNA was also derived from 2-day-old carbon-limited cultures as previously described (28, 36). mRNA isolation and first-strand cDNA synthesis were as previously described (42).
For the analysis of extracellular protein from strain RP78, a medium containing Whatman CC41 microgranular cellulose was used (46). Each of three 2-liter flasks containing 1 liter of CC41 medium was inoculated with >107 RP78 spores. Inoculated flasks were maintained at 30°C and 150 rpm on an orbital shaker. On day 3, 1 g of autoclaved MnO2 was added directly to each flask. Cultures were harvested on day 12 by filtration through 100% nylon fabric (any sheer stocking is adequate; Hanes Corp., Winston-Salem, NC), followed by vacuum filtration through a Whatman GF/F 15-cm glass fiber filter (Whatman International Ltd, Maidstone, United Kingdom). Culture filtrates were stored at 20°C.
Wood wafer inoculation.
Wood wafers (1 cm by 1 cm by 2 mm) were cut from freshly harvested sapwood of Populus tremuloides, sterilized, and inoculated by contact with mycelium growing on malt extract agar (15 g malt extract [Difco, Detroit, MI] and 15 g agar liter1) in petri dishes. Wood wafers were harvested after 1 h and then on days 1, 3, 10, 20, 90, and 120. Noninoculated wood wafers placed on malt extract agar in petri dishes served as controls. Three separate replicates of at least 10 wafers each were harvested for each time point. Wafers were snap frozen in liquid N2 and stored at 90°C until used. Lignin and carbohydrate analysis was performed as previously described (9).
Identification of genomic cro sequences and amplification of cDNAs.
The P. chrysosporium genome v1.0 database (http://www.jgi.doe.gov/whiterot) contains six sequences with limited similarities to GLX. Following manual curation of the incomplete v1.0 gene models, PCR primers (Table 1) were designed for the amplification of six full-length cro cDNAs. Proofreading polymerase PFU (Stratagene, La Jolla, CA) or GeneAmp XL (Applied Biosystems, Foster City, CA) was used according to the manufacturers' instructions. Pfu cycling parameters were 2 min for 1 cycle at 95°C, 30 s at 94°C, 30 s at 51°C, and 3 min at 72°C for 30 cycles, followed by a 15-min extension at 72°C. GeneAmp XL cycling parameters were 24 s at 94°C, 3 min for 7 cycles at 65°C, 25 s at 94°C, and 3 min at 67°C for 32 cycles, followed by a 7-min extension at 67°C. The fully sequenced cro2 cDNA was amplified from colonized wood, while cro1, cro3, cro4, and cro5 were amplified from C-starved cultures and cro6 was amplified from Avicel medium. Amplicons were cloned into pCR-Blunt (Invitrogen Corp., Carlsbad, CA) or pGEM-T Easy (Promega Corp., Madison, WI) and sequenced. Multiple alignments were performed using ClustalW with DNAStar MegAlign software (Madison, WI).
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A 500-µl reverse transcription master mix, containing 1x PCR buffer (Promega, Inc., Madison, WI), 5 mM MgCl2, 4 mM dNTPs, 500 units RNasin (Promega), 105 pmol oligo(dT)15, 1,250 units Moloney murine leukemia virus-reverse transcriptase (Invitrogen), and 100 µl mRNA, was made for each mRNA replicate. Fifty-microliter aliquots were divided among 0.5-ml Eppendorf tubes and placed in a thermocycler. Reaction cycling was 23°C for 10 min, 42°C for 45 min, and 95°C for 5 min. All tubes for each replicate were combined and split into several aliquots for storage at 20°C.
Gene-specific cDNA levels were determined by competitive PCR as previously described (13, 40), with competitive template amounts ranging from 1011 to 1018 g plasmid/reaction. Genomic templates for competitive PCR were prepared by PCR amplification using the primers listed in Table 2 and cloned into pCR-Blunt or pGEM-T Easy. Using the primers listed in Table 2, competitive PCRs were performed on three separate first-strand syntheses for each time point. Gel band intensities were quantified and analyzed as described previously (5) by using NIH Image version 1.61.
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Protoplasts from A. nidulans IJFM A729 were prepared as previously described by Ballance et al. (3), with modifications. Specifically, 100 ml YEG (0.5% yeast extract and 2% glucose) was inoculated with 2 x 108 spores, incubated overnight at 30°C, washed twice with 0.6 M KCl, and resuspended in Novozyme solution (0.24% Novozyme 234, 20 mM MgSO4, 0.1% bovine serum albumin in 0.6 M KCl). Tubes were incubated horizontally at 30°C for 2 h in an orbital shaker (50 rpm). The solution was filtered through sterile Miracloth, and protoplasts were collected by centrifugation (1,600 x g at room temperature for 10 min). The protoplast pellet was washed with 0.6 M KCl and resuspended in 500 µl sorbitol solution (0.8 M sorbitol, 50 mM Tris [pH 7.5], 50 mM CaCl2). To this, 125 µl polyethylene glycol (PEG) solution (40% PEG-4000, 50 mM Tris [pH 7.5], 50 mM CaCl2, 5% dimethyl sulfoxide) was added and mixed gently.
Cotransformation of protoplasts was performed as described previously (33) with 5 to 7 µg expression cassette, together with 3 µg of the pArgAns-1 selectable marker, with modifications. A total of 110 µl of the protoplast suspension was added to microcentrifuge tubes containing DNA. Tubes were incubated on ice for 30 min. Six hundred microliters PEG solution was added and mixed gently, and the suspension was incubated at room temperature for 10 min. Eight hundred microliters 0.6 M KCl was added and mixed, and the tubes were centrifuged (750 x g at room temperature [22°C to 25°C] for 5 min). All but 300 µl of the tube's contents were discarded, and the remaining protoplast suspension was plated directly onto two plates containing minimal medium (26) supplemented with 1 µg ml1 biotin, 1 mg ml1 L-methionine, 5% maltose, and 0.6 M KCl. Plates were incubated at 37°C for 3 to 7 days, and transformants were transferred to fresh minimal medium plates when visible.
To confirm cotransformation, 10 ml YEG in 100 by 15-mm petri dishes was inoculated with a loopful of spores. Following overnight incubation at 37°C, the mycelium was skimmed off the surface and snap frozen and DNA was isolated with the QIAGEN DNA plant mini kit (QIAGEN Sciences, Germantown, MD). The presence of cro2 and arg was confirmed by PCR amplification with primers specific to each gene.
For protein analysis, transformants were grown in 250-ml Erlenmeyer flasks, to which 50 ml minimal medium, amended as described above, was added. These cultures were inoculated with a loopful of spores and incubated for 3 days at 30°C on an orbital shaker (200 rpm). Culture fluid was collected by filtration through Miracloth.
Liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) protein identification.
Mass spectrometry was used to confirm the presence of CRO2 in extracellular culture fluids of P. chrysosporium strain RP78 and an A. nidulans transformant. A total of 790 ml of P. chrysosporium CC41 culture filtrate was concentrated 63-fold by ultrafiltration with a 5,000 molecular weight cutoff polyethersulfone membrane (Millipore Corp., Bedford, MA). The concentrate was separated into fractions on a HiPrep 16/60, Sephacryl S-100, high-resolution gel filtration column (Amersham Biosciences Corp., Piscataway, NJ). Fractions containing cellulose dehydrogenase activity were pooled for further analysis. The Miracloth filtrate from the above-mentioned A. nidulans transformant was concentrated with a Microsep 10,000 polyethersulfone centrifugal device (Pall Life Sciences, Ann Arbor, MI).
Twenty-five microliters of the concentrated extracellular protein solutions was mixed with 20 µl Laemmli buffer (Bio-Rad Laboratories, Inc, Hercules, CA) and loaded onto a 12.5% Criterion Tris-HCl ready gel (Bio-Rad) for sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE). Electrophoresis was performed in a Bio-Rad Criterion cell, 200 V for 50 min at 23°C. Gels were stained with Coomassie blue R-250 (Bio-Rad) to estimate the protein abundance and molecular mass distribution. Gel regions defined by predicted molecular weights were excised with a scalpel, cut into
1-mm pieces, and placed in individual siliconized 1.5-ml microcentrifuge tubes (Fisher Scientific, Chestertown, MD) for subsequent enzymatic digestion.
"In-gel" digestion and mass spectrometric analysis were performed as previously described (41, 42) (www.biotech.wisc.edu/ServicesResearch/MassSpec/ingel.htm) with minor modifications. Specifically, 40 µl of each extracted peptide was automatically loaded onto a reverse-phase high-pressure liquid chromatography trap column and solvents were delivered at 20 µl min1 to load the sample. Elution into the nanoelectrospray source was for 80 min.
A Spectrum Mill MS proteomics workbench (Agilent) and an in-house-licensed Mascot search engine (Matrix Science, London, United Kingdom) were used to identify peptides from a data set of 10,048 v2.1 gene sequences currently available (http://genome.jgi-psf.org/Phchr1/Phchr1.download.html [41]). Peptide sequences with Spectrum Mill and Mascot scores of >13 and >40, respectively, were considered significant matches. Throughout, protein similarity scores are based on the Smith-Waterman algorithm (35) with the BLOSUM62 matrix.
Oxidase activity assay.
Miracloth filtrates from six 50-ml, 3-day old cultures of Aspergillus transformant were combined. Phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride was added to a final concentration of 0.1 mM, and filtrates were concentrated approximately 70-fold in an Amicon ultrafiltration unit (Millipore) using a 10,000-Dalton cutoff polyethersulfone membrane (Millipore). A total of 1.5 ml of concentrate was then buffer exchanged with 5 mM Na+ 2,2-dimethylsuccinate (pH 6.0) and 0.1 mM phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride by using two HiTrap 5-ml desalting columns (Amersham) in tandem. One-milliliter fractions were collected, and 100 µl of each fraction was tested for oxidase activity in 200-µl reactions as previously described (16). Methylglyoxal and glycolaldehyde dimers (Sigma-Aldrich, St. Louis, MO) were tested as potential substrates at 10 mM, and control reactions were performed with no substrate. Concentrated filtrates from control transformant (pArgANS-1) were likewise screened but showed no activity. SDS-PAGE of cro2 and control transformants confirmed that similar protein levels were assayed.
P. chrysosporium RP78 grown on medium containing Whatman CC41 was also tested for oxidase activity. In this case, the culture filtrate of 12-day cultures was concentrated approximately 75-fold by ultrafiltration prior to buffer exchange.
| RESULTS |
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Cro2.
The v2.0 sequence corresponding to cro2, gene model 132241, has a complete N terminus in contrast to the corresponding v1.0 model pc.46.103.1 (32). However, gene model 132241 incorrectly identifies a second intron, resulting in a seven-amino-acid deletion. Ustilago maydis glo1 (gi71013128, score 522) is the most closely related sequence in the current NCBI database. The membrane-bound Glo1 protein is involved in filamentous growth and pathogenicity of U. maydis (29). A variant cDNA clone extending the coding region by 102 amino acids also was amplified by reverse transcription-PCR (RT-PCR) from P. chrysosporium CC41 cultures and from colonized wood (GenBank DQ400693). BLASTP and BLASTX analyses of this sequence identified no significant similarity to any known sequences.
cro3, cro4, and cro5.
Initial analysis of the v1.0 draft genome identified a cluster of three glx-like sequences surrounded by well-characterized lignin peroxidase genes (32, 36). Careful manual inspection and cDNA sequencing revealed complex N-terminal regions which were not predicted in v1.0. Specifically, cro3, cro4, and cro5 contain two to four tandem copies of a WSC (cell wall integrity and stress component) domain (Fig. 1B). The function of the WSC domain is unclear; two copies are found in a ß-1,3 exoglucanase of the mycoparasite Tricoderma harzianum, and this protein has been implicated in the degradation of the host cell wall (6). In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, a family of WSC-containing proteins is required for heat shock response and maintenance of cell wall integrity (30). Classified as putative carbohydrate binding domains (www.ebi.ac.uk/interpro/), the WSC regions contain up to eight conserved cysteine residues that may be involved in the formation of disulfide bridges. The P. chrysosporium CRO WSC domains contain five to six of these conserved cysteines. The function of the WSC in P. chrysosporium remains unclear.
Based on structure and organization, cro3 through cro5 form a distinct subfamily among the copper radical oxidases. In addition to the common feature of repeated WSC domains, their intron positions are highly conserved (Fig. 1B). Moreover, if the WSC domains are excluded from alignments, cro3, cro4, and cro5 are 79 to 90% identical in pairwise comparisons. Beyond these structural considerations, the current assembly places cro3-5 within a 45-kb region on scaffold 19. This gene clustering raises the question of whether these genes are coordinately regulated. If so, it is not apparent from our analysis of transcript patterns in colonized wood (see below) or in defined ligninolytic cultures (data not shown).
cro6.
Of the six new cro genes, cro6 is most closely related to glx (Fig. 1A). BLASTP of NCBI shows C. neoformans conceptual translations (e.g., gi57227801, score 330) as the next most closely related sequences. The N-terminal region (
200 amino acids) of the mature peptide is absent from all other copper radical oxidases and distantly related to functionally disparate sequences such as Propionibacterium acnes ß-galactosidase fused to ß-N-acetylhexosaminidase (gi50843277, score 63.5) and Solibacter usitatus family 2 glucosyl transferase (gi67932023, score 59.7). TBLASTN of the CRO6 protein against the unpublished Coprinus cinereus genome (www.broad.mit.edu/annotation/fungi/coprinus_cinereus/) clearly showed a homologous translation on scaffold 5, contig 1.103 (coordinates 529357 to 531543). Thus, this two-domain copper radical oxidase structure is conserved, at least in these two filamentous basidiomycetes.
Analysis of colonized wood.
Earlier investigations had quantified cellulase and peroxidase transcripts from P. chrysosporium grown on wood chips under standard biopulping conditions (21, 39). Those studies had shown that transcript patterns in defined media bore little resemblance to more "natural" substrates. However, biopulping wood chips are nonuniform with respect to size and anatomical source. To reduce this sample variation, chips in "bioreactors" were replaced with thin wood wafers placed directly on actively growing mycelia. Ultimately, colonized wafers permitted an integrated view of transcript patterns, microscopic assessments of decay, and chemical composition over time.
Competitive PCR results showed differential regulation among the cro genes over a 120-day time course (Fig. 2). No transcript was detected at the 1-h sampling (data not shown). However, by 24 h (day 1), gpd transcripts could be detected, and by day 3, transcript levels were measurable for all but cro4 and cro6. Microscopic analysis of wafers during the time course showed that the fungus had colonized wood surfaces and had begun cell penetration by day 20, and by day 120, cell walls were completely degraded leaving large voids (data not shown). Chemical analyses of wood wafers removed 20 and 120 days after inoculation showed 16 and 60% lignin loss, respectively (data not shown).
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Heterologous expression.
Based on previous success expressing GLX in Aspergillus (26), the cro2 cDNA was placed under the control of the Aspergillus niger glucoamylase promoter, secretion signal, and terminator and cotransformed with pArgANS-1 into the A. nidulans argB auxotrophic mutant strain IJFM A729. Controls were transformed with pArg ANS-1 (8). Cotransformants were verified by PCR amplification of arg and cro2 sequences from isolated DNA.
Transformants were grown in 50-ml cultures and concentrated. SDS-PAGE revealed a band in the cro2 transformant, and mass spectroscopy analysis confirmed the identity. Specifically, five CRO2-specific sequences with Spectrum Mill scores of >13, including the CC41-derived peptide, were detected. These sequences were distributed over the protein's full length and accounted for 12% coverage. The observed protein was >100 kDa, significantly larger than the predicted 69 kDa for the mature protein. This discrepancy is probably due to glycosylation, a common process during protein secretion in Aspergillus (1).
The Aspergillus-produced CRO2 product had a substrate preference substantially different from that of GLX, and a screening protocol based on oxidase activity with methylglyoxal, the prototypical substrate for GLX, did not detect CRO2 transformants that were positive by SDS-PAGE. A preliminary screening for possible substrates identified the glycolaldehyde dimer as a substrate based on peroxide formation in a coupled reaction with horseradish peroxidase. Under conditions where oxidase activity was easily detected with glycolaldehyde dimer, e.g., 1.6 absorbance units h1 under optimized conditions, no activity was observed with methylglyoxal. On the basis of this information, activity was tested in crude, buffer-exchanged enzyme from P. chrysosporium RP78 grown on medium containing Whatman CC41, a condition where CRO2 peptide was identified in 12-day cultures. The same preference for glycolaldehyde dimer was observed, while methylglyoxal oxidase activity was absent, indicating that CRO2 activity exceeds GLX activity in these cultures. Approximately fourfold-higher CRO2 activity per unit volume culture filtrate was found with the Aspergillus CRO2 transformant than with the RP78 filtrate, indicating that the Aspergillus expression system should be useful in further characterization of the oxidase.
| DISCUSSION |
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In support of this possibility, here we demonstrate the existence of six sequences structurally related to GLX. All six contain conserved active site residues and predicted secretion signals, but they are diverse with regard to other structural features (Fig. 1). The clustered genes cro3, cro4, and cro5 show remarkable conservation of exon/intron positions and form a subfamily of sequences that contain N-terminal WSC domains of unknown function. cro6 is most closely related to the GLX-encoding gene glx, but it also features a 200-amino-acid N-terminal region of unknown function.
The expression of cro genes is consistent with a role(s) in lignocellulose degradation. cDNAs of all six genes were identified in extensively decayed wood wafers. Transcript patterns determined by competitive RT-PCR showed differential regulation among the cro genes over the 120-day time course (Fig. 2). The absence of cro4 and cro6 transcripts at 3 days of colonization suggests that these genes are not essential for hyphal penetration and early decay. Concentrated filtrates of P. chrysosporium grown in defined submerged medium were analyzed by LC-MS/MS and shown to contain a CRO2-specific peptide. The apparent absence of other CRO proteins in extracellular fluids may reflect low protein concentrations, compartmentalization, or, particularly in the case of WSC-containing genes, cell wall binding.
In addition to the cro genes, complex gene families are well known in P. chrysosporium, particularly among sequences encoding secreted proteins. Examples include LiPs (36), certain glycosyl hydrolases (32), and peptidases (34, 41). The role of such genetic multiplicity remains poorly understood. Structurally, the 10 LiP genes are highly conserved and all are believed to encode high-oxidation potential, nonspecific enzymes. However, slight differences in isozyme activities (14) and differential transcriptional regulation (18, 36) suggest that the LiP genes are not merely redundant. Perhaps subtle differences in specificities enhance the efficiency of cell wall degradation under a broad range of environmental conditions. Targeted disruption or suppression would help clarify the role of individual genes, but suitable transformation systems are not yet available for P. chrysosporium.
Beyond structural diversity and differential regulation of the cro genes, substrate preferences argue in favor of distinct biological roles, at least for glx and cro2. Our results show that heterologously produced CRO2 oxidizes glycolaldehyde dimer, but not methylglyoxal, the prototypical substrate for GLX. Therefore, the two oxidases are distinguished by catalytic differences. Clarification of their physiological roles, as well as those of the other CRO enzymes, will require comprehensive characterizations, including extensive substrate specificity screenings.
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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We thank Angel Martinez for the gift of Aspergillus nidulans IJFM A729, Mark Davis for chemical analysis, and Benjamin Held for laboratory assistance.
| FOOTNOTES |
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