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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, September 2006, p. 5998-6003, Vol. 72, No. 9
0099-2240/06/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AEM.00979-06
Copyright © 2006, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Department of Bioscience and Biotechnology, Faculty of Agriculture, Kyushu University, Hakozaki 6-10-1, Higashi-ku, Fukuoka 812-8581, Japan
Received 26 April 2006/ Accepted 23 June 2006
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We previously purified and characterized the reductive PCE dehalogenase PceA and cloned the corresponding pceA gene from Desulfitobacterium hafniense strain Y51 (GenBank accession no. AY706985) (20). Subsequently, the rest of the pce genes, such as pceB, pceC, and pceT, were cloned (GenBank accession no. AY706985) (7, 20). The pceABCT gene cluster was situated between the two nearly identical IS elements termed ISDesp1 and ISDesp2, which belong to the IS256 family. Thus, the set of these genes could form a composite transposon (8). We isolated two different PCE-nondechlorinating variants that emerged during repeated subculturing of strain Y51 and named them SD (small deletion) and LD (large deletion) (8). Sequencing analysis revealed that the SD variant lost the ISDesp1 element (ca. 1.6-kb DNA region upstream of pceA), which includes the 35 promoter sequence of the pceA gene, so that the SD variant failed to transcribe the pceA gene. On the other hand, the LD variant lost ca. 6.5 kb including the pceABCT genes. This deletion took place by homologous recombination between ISDesp1 and ISDesp2 (8). Moreover, we found a significant growth inhibition when strain Y51 was cultured in the presence of 5 mM cis-DCE (7). After an extended lag time, the cells grew normally. This growth inhibition was observed to a lesser extent when the cells were grown with 5 mM PCE, but not with 5 mM TCE (7). In this study, we happened to find that the cis-DCE used in the previous study contained significant amounts of chloroform (CF). These findings led us to investigate how CF affects the growth of strain Y51 and the stability of the pce genes. We now report CF inhibits the growth of strain Y51, but not SD and LD variants, so that these deletion variants become predominant in the presence of CF. These findings should be important to the bioremediation and natural attenuation in the cocontaminated site by chloroethenes and chloromethanes.
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Strain and cultivation.
Desulfitobacterium sp. strain Y51 was identified as Desulfitobacterium hafniense strain Y51 in a previous study (15). The SD and LD variants were isolated and characterized in a previous study (8). The wild-type (wt) strain Y51 and its SD and LD variants were anaerobically grown at 30°C in minimum medium containing yeast extract, pyruvate, and fumarate (MMYPF medium) (45.9 mM K2HPO4, 8.8 mM KH2PO4, 1.7 mM sodium citrate, 0.4 mM MgSO4 · 7H2O, yeast extract [2.0 g/liter], 68.2 mM sodium pyruvate, 5.0 mM sodium fumarate, and 4.0 µM resazurin sodium salt at pH 7.2) with or without chloroethenes or chloromethanes (19). Chloroethenes and chloromethanes dissolved in N,N-dimethylformamide were added to the culture medium after inoculation. The growth of strain Y51 and its variants was measured by their optical density at 660 nm. Growth was measured at least three times independently.
Production of biogenic cis-DCE.
cis-DCE was produced biologically from TCE using a culture of strain Y51. Strain Y51 was grown in 1,000 ml MMYPF medium and harvested at the stationary phase by centrifugation at 4,000 x g for 15 min. The cells were suspended in 160 ml MMYP medium, which is a variant of MMYPF, lacking fumarate, and TCE was added at 6 mM. The complete conversion of TCE to biogenic cis-DCE was confirmed by gas chromatography as previously described (19). Samples of the liquid phase were extracted by a sterile syringe equipped with a 0.45-µm filter and added to fresh MMYPF cultures of strain Y51 to achieve appropriate cis-DCE concentrations.
Stability of the pceA and tnpA genes.
The cells cultivated in MMYPF medium with or without CF were harvested at the stationary phase, and the genomic DNA was isolated according to the established procedures (21). The genomic DNA (500 ng) digested with EcoRI was subjected to the 0.8% agarose gel electrophoresis. Hybridization with digoxigenin (DIG)-labeled (Roche, Penzberg, Germany) pceA and tnpA as DNA probes was done to detect the presence or absence of the pceA and tnpA genes. This experiment was done in duplicate.
Detection of the pceA deletion variants.
Strain Y51 was inoculated into MMYPF medium with or without chloromethanes and anaerobically cultivated until the cells reached the stationary phase. The cells were then spread onto the MMYPF agar medium. The agar (Sigma Aldrich Japan, Tokyo, Japan) was added to the MMYPF medium at 1.5%. Two hundred colonies were subjected to colony hybridization using the DIG-labeled pceA gene as a probe to count the pceA deletion variants. The frequency of loss of the pceA gene (as a percentage) was calculated as the ratio of the number of pceA-deleted colonies to the total number of colonies. This experiment was done three times independently.
PCE dehalogenase activity.
The crude cell extracts were prepared from Y51 cells grown to stationary phase as previously described (19). PCE dehalogenase activity was measured in the following mixture (1.0 ml in a 5-ml serum vial): cell extracts (200 µg protein/ml), 2.5 mM sodium pyruvate, 0.2 mM NADH, 0.2 mM NADPH, 10 mM flavin adenine dinucleotide, 0.4 mM FeSO4, 3 mM methyl viologen, 25 mM imidazole, 5 mM dithiothreitol, and 10% glycerol at pH 7.5. The cell extract (200 µg protein/ml) of Clostridium saccharoperbutylacetonicum ATCC 13564 containing hydrogenase was added to reduce the methyl viologen. The vials were sealed with butyl rubber stoppers and crimped. PCE was added to get a final concentration of 600 µM. The reaction mixtures were incubated at 30°C with gentle shaking. The chloroethenes generated by the PCE dechlorination reaction were quantified by gas chromatography (19).
Immunoblotting of PCE dehalogenase.
The cell extracts of strain Y51 (5 µg) were subjected to sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The PCE reductive dehalogenase (PceA) was detected by immunoblotting using the anti-PceA antiserum as described previously (20).
RT-PCR of the pce transcripts.
Cells of wt Y51 and SD variant cultivated in MMYPF medium were harvested at the mid-logarithmic phase. Total RNA from these cells was isolated by TRIzol reagent (GIBCO-BRL) according to the manufacturer's protocol. The resultant RNA was treated with DNase I for 1 h at 37°C and used as a template RNA for the reverse transcriptase PCR (RT-PCR) using the SuperScript III One Step RT-PCR synthesis system with Platinum Taq (Invitrogen) according to the manufacturer's protocol. For amplification of the intergenic regions between pceA and pceB, pceB and pceC, pceC and pceT, and pceA and pceC (see Fig. 4A), four sets of forward and reverse primers were chosen as follows: primer 1 (5'-TGGCATCTTGATTCCAACCG-3') and primer 2 (5'-AATCGCAGGAATAAGTGCCG-3'), primer 3 (5'-CGGCACTTATTCCTGCGATT-3') and primer 4 (5'-GCTCCTTGATTGCAAGACCT-3'), primer 5 (5'-GGTGACTATGGGACATTGGA-3') and primer 6 (5'-TAACCGGTACTGTTGCATCC-3'), and primer 1 and primer 4, respectively.
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FIG. 4. (A) Gene organization around the pce gene cluster of wt strain Y51 and SD and LD variants. Primers for RT-PCR used in this study are depicted as arrowheads. The EcoRI sites are shown by vertical arrows. The mRNA transcripts detected by RT-PCR are shown as solid bars. (B) RT-PCR analyses for total RNA from wt strain Y51. RT-PCR was done targeting intergenic regions between pceA and pceB (primers 1 and 2), pceB and pceC (primers 3 and 4), pceC and pceT (primers 5 and 6), and pceA and pceC (primers 1 and 4), respectively. Lane 1, genomic DNA as the template; lane 2, RNA as the template, no RT; lane 3, RNA as the template, with RT. The sizes of RT products are indicated to the left of the blots. (C) Northern blot analyses using pceA and pceT as the probes for wt strain Y51 (W) and SD variant (S). Total RNAs from wt Y51 and SD variant were electrophoresed with RNA size markers (leftmost blot).
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Inhibitory effect of CF on the growth of strain Y51.
We investigated the effect of CF on the growth of strain Y51 (Fig. 1). Strain Y51 was inoculated into MMYPF medium, and CF was added at various concentrations. No significant growth delay was observed at 0.01 µM. However, a growth lag of ca. 10 h was observed at 0.1 µM CF. The growth lag was extended for ca. 24 h at 1, 10, 100 and 1,000 µM, and the cells grew normally after a prolonged lag phase in these cases.
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FIG. 1. Effect of CF on the growth of wt strain Y51. Strain Y51 was cultivated in MMYPF medium alone ( ) or supplemented with 0.01 µM CF ( ), 0.1 µM CF ( ), 1 µM CF ( ), 10 µM CF (), 100 µM CF ( ), or 1,000 µM CF ( ). OD600, optical density at 660 nm.
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FIG. 2. (A) PCE dechlorination of cell extracts from wt strain Y51 after growth in MMYPF medium alone ( ) or supplemented with 0.1 µM CF ( ) or 1 µM CF ( ). (B) Immunoblot analysis using the anti-PceA antiserum of cell extracts from wt strain Y51. Lanes 1 to 3 depict strain Y51 grown in MMYPF medium, MMYPF with 0.1 µM CF, and MMYPF with 1 µM CF, respectively.
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FIG. 3. (A) Southern blot analysis of the genomic DNA from strain Y51 grown with or without CF using pceA as a probe. Genomic DNA was digested by EcoRI. Strains and culture conditions for the lanes are as follows: lane 1, wt Y51, MMYPF medium; lane 2, SD variant, MMYPF; lane 3, LD variant, MMYPF; lane 4, wt Y51, MMYPF with CF at 0.1 µM; lane 5, wt Y51, MMYPF with CF at 1 µM. (B) Southern blot analysis of the genomic DNA from strain Y51 grown with or without CF using tnpA as a probe. Genomic DNA was digested by EcoRI. Strains and culture conditions were the same as in panel A. (C) Effect of CF on the frequency of loss of the pceA gene in wt strain Y51. Two hundred colonies were subjected to colony hybridization using pceA as a probe. Culture conditions for the bars are as follows: 1, MMYPF medium; 2, MMYPF with CF at 0.1 µM; 3, MMYPF with CF at 1 µM.
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Effects of CF on the growth of SD and LD variants.
We were interested in investigating the reason why the cells grew normally after an extended lag phase when wt strain Y51 was inoculated with CF. For this purpose, we investigated the growth of SD and LD variants in the presence or absence of CF. The SD and LD variants grew normally in the MMYPF medium using fumarate as an electron acceptor (data not shown). Surprisingly, no significant growth inhibition of these nondechlorinating variants was observed in the presence of CF at concentrations of 0.01, 0.1, 1, 10, 100, and 1,000 µM (data not shown). Thus, such SD and LD variants seem to be selectively enriched in the presence of CF.
Effects of CD and CT on the growth of the strain and deletion of the pceA gene.
We next investigated whether the negative effects caused by CF are also true for other chloromethanes, such as carbon dichloride (CD) and carbon tetrachloride (CT). First, we confirmed that strain Y51 could not dechlorinate CT and CD as well as it could dechlorinate CF (data not shown). The addition of CD at 1,000 µM did not affect the growth of wt Y51 and SD and LD variants (data not shown). However, the addition of CT caused a significant growth inhibition of wt Y51 even at 0.1 µM. The prolonged lag period of the growth of wt Y51 was observed with the increased concentrations of CT up to 100 µM as follows: 0.1 µM, ca. 6 h; 1 µM, ca. 21 h; 10 µM, ca. 24 h; and 100 µM, ca. 90 h. On the other hand, the growth of the SD and LD variants was not affected by CT up to 1 µM; however, at 10 µM and 100 µM, an extension of the lag phase was observed as follows: 10 µM, ca. 6 h; and 100 µM, ca. 79 h. At 1,000 µM CT, the growth of wt Y51 and SD and LD variants was completely inhibited. Thus, CT exhibited growth inhibition not only for wt Y51 but also for the SD and LD variants, but to a much lesser extent for the latter two.
Subsequently, we investigated the effects of CT and CD on the stability of the pceA gene. Colony hybridization using pceA as a probe demonstrated that CT promoted enrichment of the LD variant, as did CF. The growth of strain Y51 with 1 µM CT resulted in the generation of 94% ± 6% pceA deletion variants. However, CD did not generate such deletion variants even at 1,000 µM.
Transcriptional analyses of the pce gene cluster.
We were interested in investigating the reason why growth inhibition was different for the wt strain Y51 and the SD and LD variants. Since the difference in the genotype between wt Y51 and the deletion variants is the regions around the pceABCT gene cluster, it is likely that the difference in the sensitivities to CF and CT between wt Y51 and its deletion variants is due to the difference in the expression of pceABCT genes. Therefore, RT-PCR and Northern blot analyses were done to investigate the transcription of the pce gene cluster (Fig. 4). RNA isolated from the cells grown with pyruvate (as an electron donor) and fumarate (as an electron acceptor) revealed that PceA is significantly produced in the absence of chloroethenes. RT-PCR toward the total RNA from wt Y51 with respective primer pairs designed to amplify the intergenic regions between pceA and pceB (using primers 1 and 2), pceB and pceC (primers 3 and 4), pceC and pceT (primers 5 and 6), and pceA and pceC (primers 1 and 4) yielded products with the expected sizes (Fig. 4B). Northern blot analyses revealed that ca. 3.5-kb mRNA was detected, indicating that the pceA, pceB, and pceC genes were transcribed in a polycistronic manner in wt Y51 (Fig. 4C). Also, ca. 1.1-kb mRNA revealed that pceT was transcribed in a monocistronic manner (Fig. 4C). On the other hand, in the SD variant, pceA, pceB, and pceC mRNA were not detected, but the pceT mRNA was transcribed as in wt Y51. These results indicated that pceA, pceB, and pceC were cotranscribed and that pceT was transcribed alone. However, the RT-PCR result (using primers 5 and 6) indicated that the pceT gene is also transcribed along with pceABC to some extent. Thus, the growth inhibition of wt strain Y51 by CF or CT seems to be caused by the interaction of PceA, PceB, or PceC with CF or CT.
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CT also caused a growth delay in wt strain Y51. Unlike CF and CT, no negative effects were observed with CD. Therefore, the effects of chloromethanes on the growth inhibition of wt strain Y51 seem to be strictly dependent on the chlorine substitution on the methane structure. CT seems to have an additional toxic effect different from CF because the growth of SD and LD variants were also inhibited by CT at higher concentrations. Although wt Y51 did not dechlorinate these chloromethanes, Desulfitobacterium hafniense TCE1 did, forming a small amount of CD (9). Because strain TCE1 dechlorinates PCE to cis-DCE by PCE dehalogenase, which exhibits a 99.8% similarity to that of strain Y51, strain TCE1 may have other enzymes responsible for the reductive dechlorination of chlorinated methanes.
In the previous study, it was found that the LD variant was generated 6.5 times more frequently than the SD variant when wt strain Y51 was subcultured in MMYPF medium (8). This is comparable to the high emergence of LD variant when wt strain Y51 was cultured in the presence of CF and CT. These SD and LD variants were desensitized to CF even at 1,000 µM. The pceA, pceB, and pceC genes failed to be expressed in the SD variant because of the deletion of the promoter, and the same genes were completely deleted in the LD variant. In this context, the difference in the growth inhibition by CF between wt Y51 and the SD and LD variants seems to be caused by the presence or absence of three proteins encoded by pceA, pceB, and pceC. Among these proteins, PceA is a reductive dehalogenase, PceB is believed to be a membrane anchor protein associated with PceA, and PceC is an unknown protein similar to NosR that is involved in nitrous oxide (N2O) respiration (3, 23). Our hypothesis is that one of these three proteins may interact with CF or CT to inhibit the growth of the wt strain. Since SD and LD variants do not produce these proteins, CF does not inhibit the growth of SD and LD variants. Our efforts are currently focusing on which protein, if any, interacts with CF and what the mechanism is.
Maymo-Gatell et al. found that the commercially synthesized cis-DCE contained approximately 0.4% (mol/mol) CF, which was inhibitory for chloroethene utilization by Dehalococcoides ethenogenes strain 195 (12). They biologically produced cis-DCE from PCE using a Desulfitobacterium culture. Such a biogenic cis-DCE was readily utilized by strain 195 (12). Chloromethanes were reported to be inhibitory to a PCE dehalogenase of Sulfurospirillum multivorans (14). A 50% inhibition of the PCE dehalogenase reaction was observed at the following concentrations: 50 µM for CD, 25 µM for CF, and 100 µM for CT. In the chloroethene-dechlorinating consortium, it was also reported that CF inhibited the dechlorination reaction, accumulating vinyl chloride (6). The complete inhibition of dechlorination of vinyl chloride by CF was observed at 2.5 µM. Furthermore, CF is reported to be a potent inhibitor of methanogenesis (1, 2). However, the biochemical and genetic bases of these inhibitory effects by chloroethenes remain to be elucidated. In this study, we suggested for the first time that the growth inhibition by CF and CT could take place with interaction between a certain protein(s) (PceA, PceB, or PceC) and CF or CT in the halorespiring D. hafniense strain Y51.
The results obtained in this study should be important from the viewpoints of toxicology and bioremediation including natural attenuation. It should be also important to investigate how CF affects various halorespiring anaerobes in the environment because CF and CT are widely used and known as environmental contaminants all over the world. We are currently investigating how such anaerobes dechlorinate when chloromethanes and chloroethenes coexist in the environment.
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