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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, November 2005, p. 4598-4607, Vol. 49, No. 11
0066-4804/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AAC.49.11.4598-4607.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Mikrobiologie/Biotechnologie, Eberhard-Karls-Universität Tübingen, Auf der Morgenstelle 28, 72076 Tübingen, Germany,1 Institut für Chemie, Arbeitsgruppe Biochemie und Molekulare Biologie, Technische Universität Berlin, Franklinstrasse 29, 10587 Berlin-Charlottenburg, Germany,2 Leibniz-Institut für Naturstoff-Forschung und Infektionsbiologie, Hans-Knöll-Institut, Beutenbergstrasse 11, 07745 Jena, Germany3
Received 24 March 2005/ Returned for modification 14 June 2005/ Accepted 17 August 2005
| ABSTRACT |
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| INTRODUCTION |
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Sequence comparison of PhsA with the amino-terminal sequence of the N-Ac-DMPT-activating enzyme (PTT synthetase I) from S. viridochromogenes revealed that PhsA is identical to PTT synthetase I and that it is most probably the initiation module of the PTT assembly system with N-Ac-DMPT representing the formal amino terminus of Ac-DMPTT (11). Analysis of the substrate specificity of PTT synthetase I (PhsA) using several model substrates structurally related to N-Ac-DMPT revealed that PTT synthetase I exclusively activated N-acetylated phosphinoamino acids such as Ac-PT but not deacetylated ones, confirming the presumed role of N-Ac-DMPTT as an intermediate of PTT biosynthesis (11).
Further biochemical analyses of protein extracts of S. viridochromogenes also showed the presence of two alanine-activating enzymes which were able to bind alanine as a thioester and were estimated to have Mrs of 120,000 and 140,000 in their native states. These two peptide synthetases were correlated in their activities with the titers of PTT in different S. viridochromogenes strains and were termed PTT synthetases II and III, respectively, both most probably responsible for recruitment of the two alanine residues of N-Ac-DMPTT (11). However, the two proteins were found to be unstable, and since no sequence data were available, it was not clear how their precise modular structures looked or whether they were distinct protein species or proteolytic fragments of a larger enzyme housing a total of two modules for alanine activation.
Here we show that the PTT biosynthesis gene cluster contains two NRPS genes lying some 20 kb downstream from the phsA gene. These two genes, designated phsB and phsC, were considered candidate genes for PTT synthetases II and III, respectively. In the following we present genetic and biochemical evidence that these genes encode two stand-alone modules which are identical with PTT synthetases II and III, respectively.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Media and culture conditions. For the cultivation of Streptomyces viridochromogenes and Streptomyces lividans, YM medium was used (1). Cultures were grown in baffled Erlenmeyer flasks on a rotary shaker for 3 days at 30°C. Escherichia coli XL1 Blue was grown in LB medium at 37°C (29).
Isolation of chromosomal and plasmid DNA. Isolation of chromosomal and plasmid DNA from Streptomyces strains was carried out according to (14). Plasmids from E. coli were isolated as described (29).
Cloning, restriction mapping, and in vitro manipulation of DNA. Methods for isolation and manipulation of DNA were as described (14, 29). Restriction endonucleases were purchased from various suppliers and used according to their instructions.
DNA sequencing and analysis. Subfragments of DNA fragments containing the peptide synthetase genes were subcloned in sequencing vectors pK19, pUC18 and pBlueskript SK+. The sequence of a 9-kb DNA fragment containing phsB and phsC was determined by standard techniques (30). The DNA sequence was examined for open reading frames by applying the codon usage program of Staden and MacLachlan (1982) (38). The programs BLAST (2) and CLUSTAL W (40) were used for homology search. Multiple alignments were generated by the program GENEDOC (22). The deduced amino acid sequence of OrfM was examined for transmembrane helices by the dense alignment surface method (9).
Southern hybridization. Southern hybridization experiments were carried out using the nonradioactive digoxigenin DNA labeling and detection kit from Roche Diagnostics (Mannheim, Germany). Hybridizations using oligonucleotides (oligonucleotide 1, 2, 5 and 6) were performed at 57°C and a stringent washing step with 1x SSC (1x SSC is 0.15 M NaCl plus 0.015 M sodium citrate)/0.1% sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS). The oligonucleotides were marked using the digoxigenin oligonucleotide tailing kit from Roche Diagnostics (Mannheim, Germany). Oligonucleotides used for identification of the peptide synthetase genes were derived from conserved core motifs: oligonucleotide 1 (core motif 1, A-domain), oligonucleotide 2 (core motif 2, A-domain), oligonucleotide 4 (core motif 4, A-domain), and oligonucleotide 5 (core motif 5, T-domain) (24) (Table 2). Hybridizations using the phsB gene (including orfM) located on a 6.2-kb KpnI/BstI107 DNA fragment as a probe were performed at 68°C and a stringent washing step with 0.1x SSC/0.1% SDS.
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Complementation of the mutants PHSB and PHSBC and heterologous expression of phsB/phsC in Streptomyces lividans. The separate peptide synthetase genes phsB, phsB (including orfM), phsC, and all genes together were subcloned as KpnI/NcoI, KpnI/BstI107, NruI/EcoRI, and KpnI/EcoRI fragments in the expression vector pEM4, resulting in plasmids pMS99, pDS207, pDS208, and pDS209, respectively. The corresponding peptide synthetase genes are transcribed by the constitutive ermE promoter (PermE) (31). After transformation of mutant PHSB with pMS99 and of mutant PHSBC with pDS207, pDS208, and pDS209, the restoration of PTT production was examined as described (1). For heterologous expression of phsB/phsC, S. lividans TK23 was transformed using pDS209.
Promoter probe experiments. In order to identify a putative promoter in front of phsB, a 0.7-kb DNA fragment upstream of phsB was isolated by PCR. The following reaction mixture was used: 0.7 µg pDS5 as template, 1.0 µM of primers Orf1P1 and Orf1P2 (Table 2), 10 µl 10x reaction buffer (with 2 mM MgCl2), 20 µl Q-solution, 0.2 mM deoxynucleoside triphosphates, and 1.0 µl Pwo DNA polymerase (Roche Diagnostics), The PCR total volume was 100 µl. After denaturation (2 min, 94°C), 25 cycles of amplification (1 min at 94°C, 1.5 min at 58°C, and 1 min at 72°C) were performed in a thermal controller PTC-100 from MJ Research, Inc. (Waltham, MA). PCR products were electrophoretically separated in a 1% agarose gel, isolated by gel elution (Qiaquick, QIAGEN, Hilden, Germany) and directly used for cloning. To identify a putative promoter between orfM and phsC, a 477-bp ApaI/SmaI DNA fragment containing the corresponding intergenic region was used. The putative promoter carrying DNA fragments were cloned upstream of the promoterless neomycin/kanamycin resistance genes of the promoter probe vectors pDS190 or pDS190, respectively. Promoter activity was tested by conferring kanamycin resistance to plasmids carrying S. lividans and S. viridochronogenes cells, respectively.
Enzyme purifications. PhsA, PhsB, and PhsC activities from disruption mutants or wild-type S. viridochromogenes (as a control) were isolated (11). In the case of each strain, 10 g of mycelium (wet weight) served for preparation of a crude extract and was fractionated on Q-Sepharose (fast flow, Amersham Bioscience) by elution with a salt gradient (0 to 0.25 M NaCl). Individual peaks eluted in the order PTT synthetase I (Ac-PT thioester-forming activity PhsA), PTT synthetase II (alanine thioester-forming activity PhsC), and PTT synthetase III (alanine thioester-forming activity PhsB). Each individual peak was pooled and subjected to ammonium sulfate precipitation (60% saturation). The resulting precipitates were subsequently subjected to gel filtration on Superdex 200 (Amersham, Bioscience). Optionally, PhsB and -C each were purified by one additional round of anion exchange chromatography on MonoQ (HR5/5).
Enzyme assays. Routine monitoring of PhsA was by the N-Ac-PT dependent ATP-pyrophosphate exchange reaction (11) Monitoring of PhsB or -C was by the thioester formation assay with [14C]alanine, respectively. Quantitation of enzymes was by titration with [3H]N-acetyl-phosphinothricin (PhsA) or [14C]alanine (PhsB or PhsC) and determination of enzyme bound radioactivity by standard protocols. The thioester formation assays consisted of enzyme (PhsA, PhsB or PhsC), 106 cpm [3H]AcPT (or 5 x 105 cpm [14C]alanine, respectively), 5 mM ATP, 20 mM MgCl2 in a total volume of 180 to 250 µl (buffer B (11). Incubation was for 30 min at 30°C. Assays to demonstrate in vitro formation of free or enzyme-bound AcPT-alanine or AcPT-alanyl-alanine contained 9 to 13 pmol PhsA, 3.5 to 5 pmol PhsB, or 2.5 to 3.2 pmol PhsC (or both), 1 µCi [14C]alanine, 0.25 mM AcPT, 5 mM ATP, and 20 mM MgCl2 in total volumes of 250 to 350 µl (buffer B). Incubations were at 30°C for 30 min.
Analytical procedures. For detection of protein-bound radioactive reaction intermediates, enzyme incubations were subjected to trichloroacetic acid precipitation with 5% trichloroacetic acid. After washing with trichloroacetic acid and ethanol, precipitates were dissolved in 100 µl 0.1 M NaOH. After neutralization with 0.1 M HCl, undissolved protein was removed by centrifugation and supernatants applied to Pasteur pipettes containing freshly regenerated Dowex-50 H+ form (in H2O). Washing with water eluted AcPT and potential AcPT peptides from the columns. Neutral amino acid such as alanine was eluted with 2 M NH3. Further purification of the acidic fraction was on Dowex-1 formate columns (washed with water) and subsequent elution with 1 M ammonium formate, pH 4.5. After freeze drying, acidic and neutral fractions were taken up in minute volumes of water and applied to silica gel 60 thin-layer chromatography sheets and chromatographed using 2-propanol-acetic acid-water (7:2:3, by volume) as the solvent system. Protein determinations and SDS gel electrophoresis were as described (6, 17).
For short-term incorporation studies with whole cells of S. viridochromogenes, 5-ml portions were removed from S. viridochromogenes cultures actively synthesizing PTT (3 days of age) and centrifuged for 5 min at 5,000 x g and room temperature. After washing twice in the same volume of tap water, cells were resuspended in 5 ml of tap water and transferred to a 100-ml Erlenmeyer flask. After addition of 1 µCi of [14C]alanine, the suspension was shaken at 250 rpm in an environmental shaker (New Brunswick, model G 25) for 2 hours at 28°C. After this, mycelium was filtered off and the filtrate was concentrated to a final volume of ca. 250 µl. Aliquots were chromatographed on silica gel sheets along with authentic PTT using 2-propanol-acetic acid-water (7:2:3, by volume) as solvent system. Radioactive PTT was localized on TLC plates by radioscanning as described (11). Labeling of proteins with subsequent separation by SDS-gel electrophoresis and autoradiography was as described (11). Protein microsequencing from protein blots was done on an Applied Biosystems (Foster City, CA) Procise sequencer according to the manufacturer's protocols.
Selectivity conferring code of peptide synthetases. The selectivity conferring code of peptides synthetases are deposited at the NRPS A-domain database (http://www.tigr.org/jravel/nrps/).
Nucleotide sequence accession number. The nucleotide sequence data reported have been assigned he accession no. X65195 (as part of the complete PTT biosynthetic gene cluster) in the EMBL data library. In Fig. 2, the biosynthetic gene cluster shown covers a region from bp 1626 to bp 35396 of the deposited sequence data.
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| RESULTS |
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Sequencing this region along with other regions of the PTT biosynthetic gene cluster (34) revealed four complete open reading frames (ORFs), called orf1, phsB, orfM, and phsC (Fig. 2). orf1 is 210 bp long and encodes a protein of 69 amino acids. The second ORF, phsB, with a size of 3,570 bp, is located immediately downstream of orf1. The gene encodes a protein of 1,189 amino acids (129 kDa). The next ORF (orfM) is 1,662 bp long and the deduced protein consists of 553 amino acids. Whereas the end of phsB and the start of orfM overlap by 8 bp, the following ORF, phsC, is located 72 bp downstream of orfM. It has a size of 3,261 bp and encodes a protein of 1,086 amino acids (119 kDa). The G+C content of the genes (72.6 mol%) is characteristic of Streptomyces DNA (4). In contrast to the phsA gene (1, 36), no rare TTA codon, believed to be involved in regulation of secondary metabolism (18), was found.
Identification of putative promoters.
To examine whether orf1, phsB, orfM, and phsC form a single transcriptional unit, promoter probe experiments were performed. A 767-bp DNA fragment directly upstream of phsB (Fig. 2A) was cloned in front of the promoterless neomycin/kanamycin resistance gene of the promoter probe vector pDS191, resulting in plasmid pDS211. This plasmid was transferred into S. lividans and S. viridochromogenes and conferred a kanamycin resistance level of up to 800 µg/ml in these strains, indicating the localization of a putative promoter on the cloned DNA fragment, and 430 bp in front of orf1 that is translationally coupled with phsB, a sequence (5' TCTTGACAT 3') was identified showing similarity to the consensus sequence of E. coli and Streptomyces
70-dependent promoters (5). In contrast, no promoter region was identified by analysis of the intergenic region between orfM and phsC on a 475-bp ApaI/SmaI DNA fragment cloned in PDS210 (Fig. 2A). Kanamycin resistance only reached a low level of 5 to 10 µg/ml, a value that was also observed in the negative controls (promoter probe vectors without inserts). Regarding these results and the fact that a promoter was already found upstream of the phosphinomethylmalate isomerase gene (pmi), which is 112 bp downstream of phsC (13) (Fig. 2A), the peptide synthetase genes phsB and phsC as well as orf 1 and orfM all appear to be cotranscribed from a single promoter upstream of orf1.
Sequence analysis of the deduced proteins from orf1, phsB, orfM, and phsC. Comparisons of the deduced amino acid sequences of orf1, orfM, phsB, and phsC with protein sequences in databases revealed that Orf1 (calculated mass, 7.9 kDa) was similar to proteins of similar sizes but unknown function encoded by genes in various NRPS gene clusters such as of mycobactin in Mycobacterium tuberculosis (46% identity) or of enterobactin in E. coli (32% identity to orf1) (25, 28). The deduced gene product of orfM showed weak similarities to putative membrane proteins of unknown function from E. coli and Bacillus subtilis (not shown). To identify putative transmembrane helices, a search was performed using the dense alignments surface (DAS) method (9). By this method, at least 13 transmembrane helices were identified (data not shown) which is consistent with the assumption that OrfM is a membrane protein.
Analysis of the deduced amino acid sequences from phsB and phsC showed that each protein represents a complete elongation module containing well conserved condensation (C-), A-, and T-domains in the order C-A-T. Surprisingly, PhsB was found to possess an extra amino-terminal domain of about 100 amino acids preceding the C-domain. This domain has high similarity to T-domains, indicating a T-C-A-T domain arrangement for PhsC. The alignment of the four T-domains of the PTT assembly system (PhsA, PhsB, and PhsC) showed high conservation of these domains except that the amino-terminal PhsB T-domain deviated from the others in the signature sequence of the 4'-phosphopantheteine attachment site (19) by a change of the double G in L(T,I)GG(D,H)S(L,I) to GA (Fig. 3). Whether this amino acid substitution has significance for the catalytic function of this particular T-domain is not known.
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To inactivate the phsB gene, an internal 1.7-kb Eco47-3 fragment (Fig. 2) was replaced by the apramycin/PermE (aprP) resistance cassette (1.6-kb StuI/EcoRV fragment of pEH13) in a gene replacement experiment using plasmid pMS100 (Table 1). To ensure the continuation of orfM and phsC transcription, the ermE promoter (as part of the cassette) had been introduced in the direction of phsB transcription. The successful use of the cassette was shown previously by inactivation of another biosynthetic gene (pmi) gene in the PTT biosynthetic gene cluster (13). The correctness of the gene replacement was checked by Southern hybridization analysis and confirmed by the finding that the resulting phsB null mutant (B3-14) (Table 1) was unable to produce PTT.
Analysis of protein extracts of strain B3-14 revealed that PhsA was present in the same yield as in wild-type S. viridochromogenes and 707/3, but no alanine-activating activity attributable to PTT synthetase III (as judged from the elution behavior from Sepharose Q anion exchange columns) was detectable. Interestingly, the residual alanine-activating activity attributable to PTT synthetase II was only present at a level of 10 to 15% of the level found in the wild type or strain 707/3. The low activity of PTT synthetase II in strain B3-14 may be the result of poor expression of phsC under the control of the ErmE promoter placed in front of orfM/phsC in that construct. On the other hand, it cannot be excluded that expression in part is still triggered by the natural promoter located in front of phsB. However, if it is the ermE promoter, which drives the low expression of phsC in this construct, this should be because it is present in single copy. In high-copy conditions, heterologous expression in S. lividans of both phsB and phsC cloned into plasmid pEM4 is much stronger (see below).
Genetic complementation of B3-14 was achieved by using plasmid pMS99, which carries the native phsB gene under the control of the ermE promoter. Restoration of PTT production in the transformant was detected by the production of a small inhibition zone in the agar plug diffusion assay for PTT which was absent in strain B3-14. From these data, it is concluded that PhsB is identical to PTT synthetase III. Moreover, they indicate that in strain B3-14 both orfM and phsC are functionally expressed and PhsC cannot take on the function of PhsB.
Construction of a triple PTT mutant (phsB, orfM, and phsC) was achieved by replacing a 4.1-kb Eco47-3/BstI107 fragment of the phsB/orfM/phsC region (
phsBC, Fig. 2A) with the aprP resistance cassette. Southern hybridizations using genomic DNA from the resulting strain, PHSBC, revealed a double crossover event between the chromosomal copy of phsB/phsC and the mutated fragment in the disruption construct pDS199 (Fig. 2B and C). Accordingly, PHSBC had lost the ability to produce PTT. Transformation of PHSBC with either phsB including orfM (pDS207) or phsC (pDS208) did not restore PTT synthesis, indicating that PhsB could not take on the function of PhsC or vice versa. Transformation of PHSBC with pDS209 containing phsB, orfM, and phsC under the control of the ermE promoter (31), by contrast, resulted in restoration of PTT synthesis indicating the requirement of both PhsB and PhsC for PTT production.
Expression of phsB and phsC in Streptomyces lividans TK23. Heterologous expression of phsB and phsC in S. lividans strain TK23 was performed by using plasmids pDS209 and pDS207. pDS209 contains an insert encompassing both genes phsB and phsC (together with orfM) cloned behind the ermE promoter of plasmid pEM4. Testing protein extracts of S. lividans TK23(pDS209) for enzyme activities catalyzing enzyme-alanine thioester formation revealed alanine-activation which was not seen in the control extracts derived from strain S. lividans TK23 containing plasmid pEM4 (data not shown).
Purification according to the published protocol for the phosphinothricin peptide synthetases from S. viridochromogenes by ion exchange chromatography on Sepharose Q, gel filtration on Superdex 200, and anion exchange chromatography (Mono Q HR5/5) afforded a clear separation of the alanine thioester-forming activities from S. lividans TK23 transformed with pDS209 in two separate peaks identical to those isolated by the purification of the two original enzymes from wild-type S. viridochromogenes (11) (not shown). Covalent labeling of enzyme in the two peak fractions with radioactive alanine, gel electrophoretic separation by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE), and autoradiography permitted visualization of the two proteins (Fig. 4).
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In S. lividans, levels of expressed PhsB and PhsC from pDS209 (with the ermE promoter) were two to threefold higher than in S. viridochromogenes (based on yield from wet weight of mycelium). Similarly, high expression of PhsB was also observed from pDS207. These high expression levels were apparently due to the high copy number of the plasmids. In contrast, a lower level of PhsB and PhsC production was found in mutant 707/3 and B3-14, where both the corresponding genes and their promoters (native promoter in 707/3, PermE in B3-14) are only present in single copy within the genome. Interestingly, PhsB purified from S. lividans, like the enzyme purified from S. viridochromogenes, also showed slow degradation, as demonstrated by the gradual disappearance of the 140-kDa gel band from the preparations. PhsC, in contrast, was stable.
Measurements of the loading reaction of freshly prepared PhsB with alanine indicated that its specific activity is less than that of PhsC (ca. 30 to 40%) whereas the activities in the alanine-dependent ATP-pyrophosphate exchange were comparable. The migration behavior of both recombinantly produced proteins in gel filtrations on a calibrated Superdex 200 column indicated that they were monomers like the wild-type enzymes from S. viridochromogenes (11).
Testing thioester formation ability with several amino acid substrates revealed, in contrast to the predicted substrate specificity of PhsB and PhsC for serine and proline, respectively (Table 3), alanine was the preferred substrate for both enzymes (Table 4). PhsB activated serine as thioester to an extent of about 50% of that of alanine. PhsC activated serine also, but only at 30% of the amount of alanine thioester. Remarkably, proline was not activated by either enzyme to any extent. Both heterologously expressed PhsB and PhsC were indistinguishable in their substrate specificities and relative specific activities from their wild-type counterparts isolated from S. viridochromogenes (11).
The A-domains of NRPS often have broad substrate specificities enabling them to activate structurally similar amino acid substrates (19). From this, the observed discrepancy between the predicted and the experimentally determined amino acid specificities of PhsB can still be considered acceptable because serine has structural similarity to alanine in that both are unbranched and have no charge in their side groups. However, in the case of PhsC the discrepancy between the predicted and observed substrate specificities cannot be explained in terms of structural similarity between the predicted substrate, proline, and the actual substrate, alanine. This behavior of PhsC (and also that of PhsB) represents an important exception from the established substrate specificity prediction rules of NRPS A-domains (8, 41) and may indicate differences between the structural determinants of the amino acid binding pockets of PhsC and PhsB and the majority of A-domains in the NRPS systems.
To address the question of alanylation of the model substrate AcPT, recombinantly produced PhsB and PhsC individually and in combination were incubated with wild-type PhsA from S. viridochromogenes in the presence of AcPT, [14C]alanine, and ATP. Although PhsA activates AcPT, a nonnatural substrate of PhsA, as adenylate and binds it as thioester as measured by the covalent binding of [3H]Ac-PT to PhsA in the presence of ATP (11), no acidic alanine-containing peptide intermediates bound to proteins were detected in ion exchange chromatography analyses of hydrolysates of protein-substrate complexes. In all cases [14C]alanine was the only covalently bound radioactive material recovered.
To exclude the possibility that failure of PhsB or PhsC to catalyze N-AcPT peptide formation could be attributed to improper folding or insufficient modification with 4'-phosphopantetheine cofactor in the proteins from S. lividans, the same experiments were repeated with these enzymes from wild-type S. viridochromogenes (PhsA plus PhsB plus PhsC), strain 707/3 (PhsA plus PhsB), and strain B3-14 (PhsA plus PhsC). In all cases, formation of any acidic reaction products between AcPT and alanine, either as covalently bound intermediates or free products, could not be detected. Similarly, no formation of acidic peptides were observed in nonfractionated extracts or homogenates of S. viridochromogenes or mutant 707/3 or B3-14. Short-term labeling experiments with whole cells using [14C]alanine as the radiolabel to detect labeled intermediates in these strains revealed the formation of detectable amounts of radioactive PTT in wild-type S. viridochromogenes but no detectable acidic peptides formed in the mutants.
| DISCUSSION |
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The data shown here reveal further that these two enzymes are not derived from a larger bimodular NRPS by proteolytic cleavage but instead are stand-alone modules involved in N-Ac-DMPTT assembly. The involvement of the two modules in PTT synthesis was demonstrated by gene disruption and complementation in S. viridochromogenes. Although from the sequences of their A-domains the enzymes can be predicted to prefer amino acid substrates other than alanine, expression of phsB and phsC in S. lividans and testing of the gene products in vitro revealed that the substrate specificity of both proteins is alanine, in agreement with the results obtained with the corresponding enzymes from S. viridochromogenes. Nevertheless, both enzymes showed activity for the structurally related amino acids serine and aminobutyric acid but not, as predicted from the alignment of residues of the active site pocket residues, for proline (8, 36).
As yet it is not possible to assign which of the two alanylylation steps are catalyzed by PhsB and PhsC. The fact that neither of the two enzymes can replace each other suggests a defined positioning for each protein in the PTT assembly line. From their architectures, phsB and phsC differ from each other mainly by the presence of the amino-terminal T-domain in phsB, and this may be a clue to PhsB's positioning in the PTT synthetase assembly line either after phsA or after phsC. For example, proper module-module interactions are mediated by the E-domain of gramicidin S synthetase 1 (GrsA), which is not only involved in the epimerization of substrate but is important for interaction of GrsA with the next module in the assembly line of gramicidin S synthesis (36). In the case of tyrocidine synthetases, short protein-protein communication-mediating domains were shown to mediate interaction between the tyrocidine synthetases TycA, TycB, and TycC (12). However, in the PTT synthetases described here, such short sequences responsible for protein-protein interactions could not be identified.
Possible reasons for failure to demonstrate cell-free peptide bond formation may lie in the fact that PhsB is extremely susceptible to degradation, leading to loss of putative amino-terminal recognition motifs, rendering the protein unable to interact with its protein partners in vitro. Moreover, the loss of amino acid residues in the amino terminus of PhsC indicated the determined shortened amino-terminal sequence (see above) may be a constraint for the accomplishment of productive protein-protein interactions of this protein. The membrane protein OrfM, the gene for which lies between phsB and phsC and is cotranscribed with the two NRPS genes, may also be crucial for the formation of a productive complex. A role of OrfM in protein association, such as directing both PhsB and PhsC to the cellular membrane in the form of a membrane-associated multienzyme complex, could be envisaged.
Interestingly, a role of OrfM in PTT synthesis was demonstrated by disruption of orfM, which led to a block in PTT production in S. viridochromogenes (34). As a matter of fact, the biochemical data shown here clearly point to the fact that the functional interactions of the PPT synthases are governed by the structural intactness of the cellular organization because neither purified enzymes nor crude extracts of dialyzed cell homogenates displayed synthetic activity in terms of formation of free or enzyme-bound reaction products. Further experiments are therefore necessary to clarify the biochemical role of OrfM in PTT biosynthesis.
In conclusion, the data here show that the PTT assembly system featuring three stand-alone modules is unique among NRPS systems and represents the most drastic contrast to the well-known tripeptide synthetase aminoadipyl-cysteinyl-D-valine synthetase (20) in which all three modules are covalently joined with the domain order A-T-C-A-T-C-A-T-E-Te. To our knowledge, all NRPS systems synthesizing peptides with more than two amino acids contain at least one bimodular NRPS or one with bimodular characteristics (26). The lack of an integral thioesterase domain is an additional peculiarity of this system, leading to speculations on the role of two genes, the1 and the2, of the PTT gene cluster, each encoding stand-alone thioesterase domains of type II. Such thioesterase domains of type II were also observed in other NRPS systems and were shown to be involved in the regeneration of mischarged NRPS enzymes (35). The lack of an integral Te-domain in the PTT system may point to a mechanism of product release different from that observed in the majority of NRPSs (19). More detailed analyses at both the genetic and enzymatic levels are therefore required to resolve the mechanism of peptide formation and product release in this unique NRPS system.
Interestingly, PT is also found as a part of other prodrug peptide forms such as the peptide antibiotic trialaphos (phosphinothricylalanylalanylalanine) from Streptomyces hygroscopicus KSB1285 (15) and phosalacine (phosphinothricylalanylleucine) from Kitasatospora phosalacinea (23). A comparison of the module arrangements in the PTT biosynthesis gene cluster of S. viridochromogenes to the corresponding regions in the as yet uncharacterized biosynthetic gene clusters of these antibiotics could also be helpful to understand the evolution of the various enzyme systems which are destined to channel the unique metabolite PT into its various prodrug forms.
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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Part of the work was financed by a grant of the Fond der Chemischen Industrie (163607). This research has been supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (Wo 485/2-1, Ke 452/11-3, and SPP1152).
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