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1.
Microb Genom ; 5(2)2019 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30777812

ABSTRACT

Two common classes of nitrogen-fixing legume root nodules are those that have determinate or indeterminate meristems, as in Phaseolus bean and pea, respectively. In indeterminate nodules, rhizobia terminally differentiate into bacteroids with endoreduplicated genomes, whereas bacteroids from determinate nodules are less differentiated and can regrow. We used RNA sequencing to compare bacteroid gene expression in determinate and indeterminate nodules using two Rhizobium leguminosarum strains whose genomes differ due to replacement of the symbiosis (Sym) plasmid pRP2 (strain Rlp4292) with pRL1 (strain RlvA34), thereby switching symbiosis hosts from Phaseolus bean (determinate nodules) to pea (indeterminate nodules). Both bacteroid types have gene expression patterns typical of a stringent response, a stressful environment and catabolism of dicarboxylates, formate, amino acids and quaternary amines. Gene expression patterns were indicative that bean bacteroids were more limited for phosphate, sulphate and iron than pea bacteroids. Bean bacteroids had higher levels of expression of genes whose products are predicted to be associated with metabolite detoxification or export. Pea bacteroids had increased expression of genes associated with DNA replication, membrane synthesis and the TCA (tricarboxylic acid) cycle. Analysis of bacteroid-specific transporter genes was indicative of distinct differences in sugars and other compounds in the two nodule environments. Cell division genes were down-regulated in pea but not bean bacteroids, while DNA synthesis was increased in pea bacteroids. This is consistent with endoreduplication of pea bacteroids and their failure to regrow once nodules senesce.


Subject(s)
Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial , Phaseolus/microbiology , Pisum sativum/microbiology , Rhizobium leguminosarum/genetics , Root Nodules, Plant/microbiology , DNA, Bacterial/genetics , Gene Expression Profiling , Plasmids , Secondary Metabolism/genetics , Symbiosis
2.
Mol Microbiol ; 84(1): 117-29, 2012 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22340847

ABSTRACT

Mutation of ptsP encoding EI(Ntr) of the PTS(Ntr) system in Rhizobium leguminosarum strain Rlv3841 caused a pleiotropic phenotype as observed with many bacteria. The mutant formed dry colonies and grew poorly on organic nitrogen or dicarboxylates. Most strikingly the ptsP mutant had low activity of a broad range of ATP-dependent ABC transporters. This lack of activation, which occurred post-translationally, may explain many of the pleiotropic effects. In contrast proton-coupled transport systems were not inhibited in a ptsP mutant. Regulation by PtsP also involves two copies of ptsN that code for EIIA(Ntr) , resulting in a phosphorylation cascade. As in Escherichia coli, the Rlv3841 PTS(Ntr) system also regulates K(+) homeostasis by transcriptional activation of the high-affinity ATP-dependent K(+) transporter KdpABC. This involves direct interaction of a two-component sensor regulator pair KdpDE with unphosphorylated EIIA(Ntr) . Critically, ptsP mutants, which cannot phosphorylate PtsN1 or PtsN2, had a fully activated KdpABC transporter. This is the opposite pattern from that observed with ABC transporters which apparently require phosphorylation of PtsN. These results suggest that ATP-dependent transport might be regulated via PTS(Ntr) responding to the cellular energy charge. ABC transport may be inactivated at low energy charge, conserving ATP for essential processes including K(+) homeostasis.


Subject(s)
ATP-Binding Cassette Transporters/metabolism , Bacterial Proteins/metabolism , Phosphoenolpyruvate Sugar Phosphotransferase System/metabolism , Potassium/metabolism , Rhizobium leguminosarum/genetics , ATP-Binding Cassette Transporters/genetics , Bacterial Proteins/genetics , Biological Transport , Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial , Homeostasis , Mutation , Phosphoenolpyruvate Sugar Phosphotransferase System/genetics , Phosphorylation , Protein Kinases/metabolism , Rhizobium leguminosarum/growth & development , Rhizobium leguminosarum/metabolism , Transcriptional Activation
3.
Mol Microbiol ; 80(1): 149-67, 2011 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21276099

ABSTRACT

Mutation of gltB (encoding glutamate oxoglutarate amidotransferase or GOGAT) in RU2307 increased the intracellular Gln:Glu ratio and inhibited amino acid transport via Aap and Bra. The mechanism probably involves global post-translational inhibition independent of Ntr. Transport was separately restored by increased gene expression of Aap or heterologous transporters. Likewise, second site suppressor mutations in the RNA chaperone Hfq elevated transport by Aap and Bra by increasing mRNA levels. Microarrays showed Hfq regulates 34 ABC transporter genes, including aap, bra and opp. The genes coding for integral membrane proteins and ABC subunits aapQMP braDEFGC were more strongly elevated in the hfq mutants than solute-binding proteins (aapJ braC). aapQMP and braDEFG are immediately downstream of stem-loops, indicating Hfq attenuates downstream translation and stability of mRNA, explaining differential expression of ABC genes. RU2307 nodulated peas and bacteria grew down infection threads, but bacteroid development was arrested and N(2) was not fixed. This probably results from an inability to synthesize or transport amino acids. However, GOGAT and GOGAT/AldA double mutants carrying suppressor mutations that increased amino acid uptake fixed N(2) on pea plants. Thus de novo ammonium assimilation into amino acids is unnecessary in bacteroids demonstrating sufficient amino acids are supplied by plants.


Subject(s)
Bacterial Proteins/metabolism , Nitrogen Fixation/physiology , Nitrogen/metabolism , Pisum sativum/microbiology , Rhizobium leguminosarum/metabolism , Rhizobium leguminosarum/physiology , Bacterial Proteins/genetics , Chromatography, Liquid , Mass Spectrometry , Mutation , Nitrogen Fixation/genetics , Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction , Rhizobium leguminosarum/genetics
4.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 106(30): 12477-82, 2009 Jul 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19597156

ABSTRACT

One of the largest contributions to biologically available nitrogen comes from the reduction of N(2) to ammonia by rhizobia in symbiosis with legumes. Plants supply dicarboxylic acids as a carbon source to bacteroids, and in return they receive ammonia. However, metabolic exchange must be more complex, because effective N(2) fixation by Rhizobium leguminosarum bv viciae bacteroids requires either one of two broad-specificity amino acid ABC transporters (Aap and Bra). It was proposed that amino acids cycle between plant and bacteroids, but the model was unconstrained because of the broad solute specificity of Aap and Bra. Here, we constrain the specificity of Bra and ectopically express heterologous transporters to demonstrate that branched-chain amino acid (LIV) transport is essential for effective N(2) fixation. This dependence of bacteroids on the plant for LIV is not due to their known down-regulation of glutamate synthesis, because ectopic expression of glutamate dehydrogenase did not rescue effective N(2) fixation. Instead, the effect is specific to LIV and is accompanied by a major reduction in transcription and activity of LIV biosynthetic enzymes. Bacteroids become symbiotic auxotrophs for LIV and depend on the plant for their supply. Bacteroids with aap bra null mutations are reduced in number, smaller, and have a lower DNA content than wild type. Plants control LIV supply to bacteroids, regulating their development and persistence. This makes it a critical control point for regulation of symbiosis.


Subject(s)
Amino Acids, Branched-Chain/metabolism , Pisum sativum/microbiology , Rhizobium leguminosarum/physiology , Symbiosis , ATP-Binding Cassette Transporters/genetics , ATP-Binding Cassette Transporters/metabolism , Amino Acids, Branched-Chain/biosynthesis , Bacterial Proteins/genetics , Bacterial Proteins/metabolism , Biological Transport , Biosynthetic Pathways , Host-Pathogen Interactions , Microscopy, Electron , Mutation , Nitrogen Fixation/physiology , Pisum sativum/genetics , Pisum sativum/metabolism , Rhizobium leguminosarum/genetics , Rhizobium leguminosarum/ultrastructure , Root Nodules, Plant/genetics , Root Nodules, Plant/metabolism , Root Nodules, Plant/microbiology
5.
J Bacteriol ; 191(12): 4002-14, 2009 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19376875

ABSTRACT

Rhizobium leguminosarum bv. viciae forms nitrogen-fixing nodules on several legumes, including pea (Pisum sativum) and vetch (Vicia cracca), and has been widely used as a model to study nodule biochemistry. To understand the complex biochemical and developmental changes undergone by R. leguminosarum bv. viciae during bacteroid development, microarray experiments were first performed with cultured bacteria grown on a variety of carbon substrates (glucose, pyruvate, succinate, inositol, acetate, and acetoacetate) and then compared to bacteroids. Bacteroid metabolism is essentially that of dicarboxylate-grown cells (i.e., induction of dicarboxylate transport, gluconeogenesis and alanine synthesis, and repression of sugar utilization). The decarboxylating arm of the tricarboxylic acid cycle is highly induced, as is gamma-aminobutyrate metabolism, particularly in bacteroids from early (7-day) nodules. To investigate bacteroid development, gene expression in bacteroids was analyzed at 7, 15, and 21 days postinoculation of peas. This revealed that bacterial rRNA isolated from pea, but not vetch, is extensively processed in mature bacteroids. In early development (7 days), there were large changes in the expression of regulators, exported and cell surface molecules, multidrug exporters, and heat and cold shock proteins. fix genes were induced early but continued to increase in mature bacteroids, while nif genes were induced strongly in older bacteroids. Mutation of 37 genes that were strongly upregulated in mature bacteroids revealed that none were essential for nitrogen fixation. However, screening of 3,072 mini-Tn5 mutants on peas revealed previously uncharacterized genes essential for nitrogen fixation. These encoded a potential magnesium transporter, an AAA domain protein, and proteins involved in cytochrome synthesis.


Subject(s)
Pisum sativum/microbiology , Rhizobium leguminosarum/genetics , Symbiosis , Transcription, Genetic , Vicia/microbiology , Bacterial Proteins/genetics , Bacterial Proteins/metabolism , Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial , Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental , Pisum sativum/physiology , Rhizobium leguminosarum/growth & development , Rhizobium leguminosarum/physiology , Root Nodules, Plant/microbiology , Root Nodules, Plant/physiology , Species Specificity , Vicia/physiology
6.
J Bacteriol ; 191(5): 1547-55, 2009 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19103927

ABSTRACT

Spontaneous mutants of Rhizobium leguminosarum bv. viciae 3841 were isolated that grow faster than the wild type on gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) as the sole carbon and nitrogen source. These strains (RU1736 and RU1816) have frameshift mutations (gtsR101 and gtsR102, respectively) in a GntR-type regulator (GtsR) that result in a high rate of constitutive GABA transport. Tn5 mutagenesis and quantitative reverse transcription-PCR showed that GstR regulates expression of a large operon (pRL100242 to pRL100252) on the Sym plasmid that is required for GABA uptake. An ABC transport system, GtsABCD (for GABA transport system) (pRL100248-51), of the spermidine/putrescine family is part of this operon. GtsA is a periplasmic binding protein, GtsB and GtsC are integral membrane proteins, and GtsD is an ATP-binding subunit. Expression of gtsABCD from a lacZ promoter confirmed that it alone is responsible for high rates of GABA transport, enabling rapid growth of strain 3841 on GABA. Gts transports open-chain compounds with four or five carbon atoms with carboxyl and amino groups at, or close to, opposite termini. However, aromatic compounds with similar spacing between carboxyl and amino groups are excellent inhibitors of GABA uptake so they may also be transported. In addition to the ABC transporter, the operon contains two putative mono-oxygenases, a putative hydrolase, a putative aldehyde dehydrogenase, and a succinate semialdehyde dehydrogenase. This suggests the operon may be involved in the transport and breakdown of a more complex precursor to GABA. Gts is not expressed in pea bacteroids, and gtsB mutants are unaltered in their symbiotic phenotype, suggesting that Bra is the only GABA transport system available for amino acid cycling.


Subject(s)
ATP-Binding Cassette Transporters/genetics , Bacterial Proteins/genetics , Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial , Operon , Rhizobium leguminosarum/metabolism , gamma-Aminobutyric Acid/metabolism , ATP-Binding Cassette Transporters/metabolism , Bacterial Proteins/metabolism , Biological Transport , Pisum sativum/microbiology , Rhizobium leguminosarum/enzymology , Rhizobium leguminosarum/genetics , Rhizobium leguminosarum/growth & development , Symbiosis
7.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 103(47): 17933-8, 2006 Nov 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17101990

ABSTRACT

The number of solute-binding protein-dependent transporters in rhizobia is dramatically increased compared with the majority of other bacteria so far sequenced. This increase may be due to the high affinity of solute-binding proteins for solutes, permitting the acquisition of a broad range of growth-limiting nutrients from soil and the rhizosphere. The transcriptional induction of these transporters was studied by creating a suite of plasmid and integrated fusions to nearly all ATP-binding cassette (ABC) and tripartite ATP-independent periplasmic (TRAP) transporters of Sinorhizobium meliloti. In total, specific inducers were identified for 76 transport systems, amounting to approximately 47% of the ABC uptake systems and 53% of the TRAP transporters in S. meliloti. Of these transport systems, 64 are previously uncharacterized in Rhizobia and 24 were induced by solutes not known to be transported by ABC- or TRAP-uptake systems in any organism. This study provides a global expression map of one of the largest transporter families (transportome) and an invaluable tool to both understand their solute specificity and the relationships between members of large paralogous families.


Subject(s)
ATP-Binding Cassette Transporters/metabolism , Bacterial Proteins/metabolism , Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial , Sinorhizobium meliloti/metabolism , ATP-Binding Cassette Transporters/genetics , Acids/metabolism , Amines/metabolism , Amino Acids/metabolism , Bacterial Proteins/genetics , Biological Transport/physiology , Carbohydrates , Gene Expression Profiling , Genes, Reporter , Molecular Sequence Data , Operon , Plasmids/genetics , Plasmids/metabolism , Promoter Regions, Genetic , Purines/metabolism , Pyrimidines/metabolism , Sinorhizobium meliloti/genetics
8.
J Bacteriol ; 188(18): 6661-8, 2006 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16952958

ABSTRACT

In the absence of added thiamine, Rhizobium leguminosarum bv. viciae strain 3841 does not grow in liquid medium and forms only "pin" colonies on agar plates, which contrasts with the good growth of Sinorhizobium meliloti 1021, Mesorhizobium loti 303099, and Rhizobium etli CFN42. These last three organisms have thiCOGE genes, which are essential for de novo thiamine synthesis. While R. leguminosarum bv. viciae 3841 lacks thiCOGE, it does have thiMED. Mutation of thiM prevented formation of pin colonies on agar plates lacking added thiamine, suggesting thiamine intermediates are normally present. The putative functions of ThiM, ThiE, and ThiD are 4-methyl-5-(beta-hydroxyethyl) thiazole (THZ) kinase, thiamine phosphate pyrophosphorylase, and 4-amino-5-hydroxymethyl-2-methyl pyrimidine (HMP) kinase, respectively. This suggests that a salvage pathway operates in R. leguminosarum, and addition of HMP and THZ enabled growth at the same rate as that enabled by thiamine in strain 3841 but elicited no growth in the thiM mutant (RU2459). There is a putative thi box sequence immediately upstream of the thiM, and a gfp-mut3.1 fusion to it revealed the presence of a promoter that is strongly repressed by thiamine. Using fluorescent microscopy and quantitative reverse transcription-PCR, it was shown that thiM is expressed in the rhizosphere of vetch and pea plants, indicating limitation for thiamine. Pea plants infected by RU2459 were not impaired in nodulation or nitrogen fixation. However, colonization of the pea rhizosphere by the thiM mutant was impaired relative to that of the wild type. Overall, the results show that a thiamine salvage pathway operates to enable growth of Rhizobium leguminosarum in the rhizosphere, allowing its survival when thiamine is limiting.


Subject(s)
Rhizobium leguminosarum/genetics , Rhizobium leguminosarum/metabolism , Thiamine/biosynthesis , Alkyl and Aryl Transferases/physiology , Artificial Gene Fusion , Binding Sites , Colony Count, Microbial , Gene Deletion , Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial , Genes, Bacterial , Green Fluorescent Proteins/biosynthesis , Green Fluorescent Proteins/genetics , Microscopy, Fluorescence , Nitrogen Fixation , Pisum sativum/microbiology , Phosphotransferases (Alcohol Group Acceptor)/metabolism , Phosphotransferases (Phosphate Group Acceptor)/metabolism , Plant Roots/microbiology , Promoter Regions, Genetic , Pyrimidines/metabolism , RNA, Bacterial/analysis , RNA, Messenger/analysis , Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction , Rhizobium leguminosarum/growth & development , Thiazoles/metabolism , Vicia/microbiology
9.
J Bacteriol ; 188(14): 5304-7, 2006 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16816205

ABSTRACT

ATP-binding cassette transporters from several rhizobia and Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium, but not secondarily coupled systems, were inhibited by high concentrations (100 to 500 mM) of various osmolytes, an effect reversed by the removal of the osmolyte. ABC systems were also inactivated in isolated pea bacteroids, probably due to the obligatory use of high-osmolarity isolation media. Measurement of nutrient cycling in isolated pea bacteroids is impeded by this effect.


Subject(s)
ATP-Binding Cassette Transporters/metabolism , Aminoisobutyric Acids/metabolism , Gram-Positive Bacteria/metabolism , Salmonella typhimurium/metabolism , Biological Transport , Kinetics
10.
Microbiology (Reading) ; 151(Pt 10): 3249-3256, 2005 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16207908

ABSTRACT

A series of promoter probe vectors for use in Gram-negative bacteria has been made in two broad-host-range vectors, pOT (pBBR replicon) and pJP2 (incP replicon). Reporter fusions can be made to gfpUV, gfpmut3.1, unstable gfpmut3.1 variants (LAA, LVA, AAV and ASV), gfp+, dsRed2, dsRedT.3, dsRedT.4, mRFP1, gusA or lacZ. The two vector families, pOT and pJP2, are compatible with one another and share the same polylinker for facile interchange of promoter regions. Vectors based on pJP2 have the advantage of being ultra-stable in the environment due to the presence of the parABCDE genes. As a confirmation of their usefulness, the dicarboxylic acid transport system promoter (dctA(p)) was cloned into a pOT (pRU1097)- and a pJP2 (pRU1156)-based vector and shown to be expressed by Rhizobium leguminosarum in infection threads of vetch. This indicates the presence of dicarboxylates at the earliest stages of nodule formation.


Subject(s)
Bacterial Proteins/metabolism , DNA Probes/genetics , Genetic Vectors , Gram-Negative Bacteria/metabolism , Luminescent Proteins/metabolism , Promoter Regions, Genetic/genetics , Bacterial Proteins/genetics , Dicarboxylic Acid Transporters/genetics , Dicarboxylic Acid Transporters/metabolism , Flow Cytometry , Gene Expression , Genes, Reporter , Gram-Negative Bacteria/genetics , Green Fluorescent Proteins/genetics , Green Fluorescent Proteins/metabolism , Luminescent Proteins/genetics , Plasmids , Recombinant Fusion Proteins/genetics , Recombinant Fusion Proteins/metabolism , Rhizobium leguminosarum/enzymology , Rhizobium leguminosarum/genetics , Rhizobium leguminosarum/pathogenicity , Vicia/microbiology
11.
Mol Plant Microbe Interact ; 18(1): 67-74, 2005 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15672820

ABSTRACT

Rhizobium leguminosarum synthesizes polyhydroxybutyrate and glycogen as its main carbon storage compounds. To examine the role of these compounds in bacteroid development and in symbiotic efficiency, single and double mutants of R. leguminosarum bv. viciae were made which lack polyhydroxybutyrate synthase (phaC), glycogen synthase (glgA), or both. For comparison, a single phaC mutant also was isolated in a bean-nodulating strain of R. leguminosarum bv. phaseoli. In one large glasshouse trial, the growth of pea plants inoculated with the R. leguminosarum bv. viciae phaC mutant were significantly reduced compared with wild-type-inoculated plants. However, in subsequent glasshouse and growth-room studies, the growth of pea plants inoculated with the mutant were similar to wildtype-inoculated plants. Bean plants were unaffected by the loss of polyhydroxybutyrate biosynthesis in bacteroids. Pea plants nodulated by a glycogen synthase mutant, or the glgA/phaC double mutant, grew as well as the wild type in growth-room experiments. Light and electron micrographs revealed that pea nodules infected with the glgA mutant accumulated large amounts of starch in the II/III interzone. This suggests that glycogen may be the dominant carbon storage compound in pea bacteroids. Polyhydroxybutyrate was present in bacteria in the infection thread of pea plants but was broken down during bacteroid formation. In nodules infected with a phaC mutant of R. leguminosarum bv. viciae, there was a drop in the amount of starch in the II/III interzone, where bacteroids form. Therefore, we propose a carbon burst hypothesis for bacteroid formation, where polyhydroxybutyrate accumulated by bacteria is degraded to fuel bacteroid differentiation.


Subject(s)
Carbon/metabolism , Glycogen/metabolism , Hydroxybutyrates/metabolism , Phaseolus/microbiology , Pisum sativum/microbiology , Polyesters/metabolism , Rhizobium/metabolism , Glycogen Synthase/genetics , Glycogen Synthase/metabolism , Mutation , Plant Roots/microbiology , Plant Roots/ultrastructure , Rhizobium/genetics , Symbiosis
12.
Nature ; 422(6933): 722-6, 2003 Apr 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12700763

ABSTRACT

The biological reduction of atmospheric N2 to ammonium (nitrogen fixation) provides about 65% of the biosphere's available nitrogen. Most of this ammonium is contributed by legume-rhizobia symbioses, which are initiated by the infection of legume hosts by bacteria (rhizobia), resulting in formation of root nodules. Within the nodules, rhizobia are found as bacteroids, which perform the nitrogen fixation: to do this, they obtain sources of carbon and energy from the plant, in the form of dicarboxylic acids. It has been thought that, in return, bacteroids simply provide the plant with ammonium. But here we show that a more complex amino-acid cycle is essential for symbiotic nitrogen fixation by Rhizobium in pea nodules. The plant provides amino acids to the bacteroids, enabling them to shut down their ammonium assimilation. In return, bacteroids act like plant organelles to cycle amino acids back to the plant for asparagine synthesis. The mutual dependence of this exchange prevents the symbiosis being dominated by the plant, and provides a selective pressure for the evolution of mutualism.


Subject(s)
Amino Acids/metabolism , Nitrogen Fixation , Pisum sativum/metabolism , Pisum sativum/microbiology , Rhizobium/metabolism , Symbiosis , Amino Acids/biosynthesis , Asparagine/biosynthesis , Biological Transport , Molecular Sequence Data , Mutation , Pisum sativum/genetics , Rhizobium/genetics
13.
J Bacteriol ; 184(19): 5436-48, 2002 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12218032

ABSTRACT

Amino acid transport by Rhizobium leguminosarum is dominated by two ABC transporters, the general amino acid permease (Aap) and the branched-chain amino acid permease (Bra). However, mutation of these transporters does not prevent this organism from utilizing alanine for growth. An R. leguminosarum permease (MctP) has been identified which is required for optimal growth on alanine as a sole carbon and nitrogen source. Characterization of MctP confirmed that it transports alanine (K(m) = 0.56 mM) and other monocarboxylates such as lactate and pyruvate (K(m) = 4.4 and 3.8 micro M, respectively). Uptake inhibition studies indicate that propionate, butyrate, alpha-hydroxybutyrate, and acetate are also transported by MctP, with the apparent affinity for solutes demonstrating a preference for C3-monocarboxylates. MctP has significant sequence similarity to members of the sodium/solute symporter family. However, sequence comparisons suggest that it is the first characterized permease of a new subfamily of transporters. While transport via MctP was inhibited by CCCP, it was not apparently affected by the concentration of sodium. In contrast, glutamate uptake in R. leguminosarum by the Escherichia coli GltS system did require sodium, which suggests that MctP may be proton coupled. Uncharacterized members of this new subfamily have been identified in a broad taxonomic range of species, including proteobacteria of the beta-subdivision, gram-positive bacteria, and archaea. A two-component sensor-regulator (MctSR), encoded by genes adjacent to mctP, is required for activation of mctP expression.


Subject(s)
Alanine/metabolism , Amino Acid Transport Systems/metabolism , Monocarboxylic Acid Transporters/metabolism , Rhizobium leguminosarum/metabolism , Amino Acid Transport Systems/classification , Amino Acid Transport Systems/genetics , Bacterial Proteins/genetics , Bacterial Proteins/metabolism , Carboxylic Acids/metabolism , Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial , Genetic Complementation Test , Kinetics , Molecular Sequence Data , Monocarboxylic Acid Transporters/classification , Monocarboxylic Acid Transporters/genetics , Mutation , Pisum sativum/microbiology , Phylogeny , Rhizobium leguminosarum/genetics , Rhizobium leguminosarum/growth & development , Sodium/pharmacology , Symbiosis
14.
J Bacteriol ; 184(15): 4071-80, 2002 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12107123

ABSTRACT

Amino acid uptake by Rhizobium leguminosarum is dominated by two ABC transporters, the general amino acid permease (Aap) and the branched-chain amino acid permease (Bra(Rl)). Characterization of the solute specificity of Bra(Rl) shows it to be the second general amino acid permease of R. leguminosarum. Although Bra(Rl) has high sequence identity to members of the family of hydrophobic amino acid transporters (HAAT), it transports a broad range of solutes, including acidic and basic polar amino acids (L-glutamate, L-arginine, and L-histidine), in addition to neutral amino acids (L-alanine and L-leucine). While amino and carboxyl groups are required for transport, solutes do not have to be alpha-amino acids. Consistent with this, Bra(Rl) is the first ABC transporter to be shown to transport gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA). All previously identified bacterial GABA transporters are secondary carriers of the amino acid-polyamine-organocation (APC) superfamily. Also, transport by Bra(Rl) does not appear to be stereospecific as D amino acids cause significant inhibition of uptake of L-glutamate and L-leucine. Unlike all other solutes tested, L-alanine uptake is not dependent on solute binding protein BraC(Rl). Therefore, a second, unidentified solute binding protein may interact with the BraDEFG(Rl) membrane complex during L-alanine uptake. Overall, the data indicate that Bra(Rl) is a general amino acid permease of the HAAT family. Furthermore, Bra(Rl) has the broadest solute specificity of any characterized bacterial amino acid transporter.


Subject(s)
Amino Acid Transport Systems/metabolism , Rhizobium leguminosarum/metabolism , Amino Acid Transport Systems/genetics , Amino Acids, Branched-Chain/metabolism , Biological Transport , Kinetics , Molecular Sequence Data , Mutation , Phylogeny , Rhizobium leguminosarum/genetics , Substrate Specificity , gamma-Aminobutyric Acid/metabolism
15.
Mol Plant Microbe Interact ; 15(1): 69-74, 2002 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11858173

ABSTRACT

An operon with homology to the dppABCDF genes required to transport dipeptides in bacteria was identified in the N2-fixing symbiont, Rhizobium leguminosarum. As in other bacteria, dpp mutants were severely affected in the import of delta-aminolevulinic acid (ALA), a heme precursor. ALA uptake was antagonized by adding dipeptides, indicating that these two classes of molecule share the same transporter. Mutations in dppABCDF did not affect symbiotic N2 fixation on peas, suggesting that the ALA needed for heme synthesis is not supplied by the plant or that another uptake system functions in the bacteroids. The dppABCDF operon of R. leguminosarum resembles that in other bacteria, with a gap between dppA and dppB containing inverted repeats that may stabilize mRNA and may explain why transcription of dppA alone was higher than that of dppBCDF. The dppABCDF promoter was mapped and is most likely recognized by sigma70.


Subject(s)
Aminolevulinic Acid/metabolism , Carrier Proteins , Escherichia coli Proteins , Operon , Periplasmic Binding Proteins , Rhizobium leguminosarum/genetics , Antigens, Bacterial/genetics , Bacterial Proteins/genetics , Base Sequence , Biological Transport , Dipeptides/pharmacology , Genes, Bacterial , Genotype , Heme/metabolism , Molecular Sequence Data , Mutagenesis , Phylogeny , RNA, Messenger/genetics , Restriction Mapping , Rhizobium leguminosarum/drug effects , Rhizobium leguminosarum/metabolism , Sequence Alignment , Sequence Homology, Nucleic Acid , Transcription, Genetic
16.
Microbiology (Reading) ; 147(Pt 9): 2553-2560, 2001 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11535795

ABSTRACT

A cysE gene encoding a serine acetyltransferase (SAT) potentially involved in the biosynthesis of cysteine was identified approximately 4 kb upstream of the previously described aapJQMP gene cluster that encodes an amino acid permease in Rhizobium leguminosarum strain 3841. The gene exhibits >40% identity to the family of SATs containing N-terminal extensions that have been described for other bacteria and plants. The ORF has three possible translation initiation sites which potentially encode polypeptides of 311, 277 and/or 259 amino acid residues, respectively. All three ORFs complemented the cysE mutation in an Escherichia coli cysteine auxotroph, strain JM39. Insertion of Tn5-lacZ into cysE in the genome of R. leguminosarum (strain RU632) lowered SAT activity in crude extracts by >95%. However, RU632 was not a cysteine auxotroph, which suggests that R. leguminosarum possesses some redundancy in cysteine biosynthesis. Additional copies of cysE could not be detected in the genome when the R. leguminosarum cysE gene was used as a hybridization probe. Therefore it is possible that R. leguminosarum possesses an alternative pathway for cysteine biosynthesis which avoids O-acetylserine. Strain RU632 was unaffected in its ability to nodulate Pisum sativum, and the nodules were effective for N(2) fixation (measured by C(2)H(2) reduction). Transcriptional activity of cysE was determined by measuring the beta-galactosidase arising from cysE::Tn5-lacZ fusions. Maximal levels of expression were observed during early exponential growth and were not influenced by the level of sulphur (supplied as sulphate). However, transcription was repressed by approximately twofold in ammonium-grown, as opposed to glutamate-grown, cultures. Repression by ammonium was not seen in a strain defective for ntrC.


Subject(s)
Acetyltransferases/genetics , Cysteine/biosynthesis , Genes, Bacterial , Rhizobium leguminosarum/genetics , Rhizobium leguminosarum/metabolism , Amino Acid Sequence , Base Sequence , Cloning, Molecular , DNA, Bacterial/genetics , Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial , Gene Expression Regulation, Enzymologic , Glutamic Acid/metabolism , Molecular Sequence Data , Mutation , Nitrogen Fixation/genetics , Phylogeny , Rhizobium leguminosarum/enzymology , Sequence Homology, Amino Acid , Serine O-Acetyltransferase
17.
Mol Plant Microbe Interact ; 14(8): 1016-25, 2001 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11497462

ABSTRACT

Three discrete loci required for growth on myo-inositol in Rhizobium leguminosarum bv. viciae have been characterized. Two of these are catabolic loci that code for malonate semialdehyde dehydrogenase (iolA) and malonate semialdehyde dehydrogenase (iolD). IolD is part of a possible operon, iolDEB, although the functions of IolE and IolB are unknown. The third locus, int, codes for an ABC transport system that is highly specific for myo-inositol. LacZ analysis showed that mutation of iolD, which codes for one of the last steps in the catabolic pathway, prevents increased transcription of the entire pathway. It is likely that the pathway is induced by an end product of catabolism rather than myo-inositol itself. Mutants in any of the loci nodulated peas (Pisum sativum) and vetch (Vicia sativa) at the same rate as the wild type. Acetylene reduction rates and plant dry weights also were the same in the mutants and wild type, indicating no defects in nitrogen fixation. When wild-type 3841 was coinoculated onto vetch plants with either catabolic mutant iolD (RU360) or iolA (RU361), however, >95% of the nodules were solely infected with the wild type. The competitive advantage of the wild type was unaffected, even when the mutants were at 100-fold excess. The myo-inositol transport mutant (RU1487), which grows slowly on myo-inositol, was only slightly less competitive than the wild type. The nodulation advantage of the wild type was not the result of superior growth in the rhizosphere. Instead, it appears that the wild type may displace the mutants early on in the infection and nodulation process, suggesting an important role for myo-inositol catabolism.


Subject(s)
Fabaceae/microbiology , Inositol/analogs & derivatives , Inositol/metabolism , Plant Roots/microbiology , Rhizobium leguminosarum/metabolism , ATP-Binding Cassette Transporters/genetics , Acetolactate Synthase/genetics , Acetylene/metabolism , Bacterial Proteins/genetics , Biological Transport , Carboxy-Lyases/genetics , Genes, Bacterial , Genes, Reporter , Inositol/biosynthesis , Lac Operon , Molecular Sequence Data , Mutation , Operon , Rhizobium leguminosarum/genetics , Symbiosis
18.
Mol Microbiol ; 40(6): 1449-59, 2001 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11442842

ABSTRACT

The ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporter superfamily is one of the most widespread of all gene families and currently has in excess of 1100 members in organisms ranging from the Archaea to manQ1. The movement of the diverse solutes of ABC transporters has been accepted as being strictly unidirectional, with recent models indicating that they are irreversible. However, contrary to this paradigm, we show that three solute-binding protein-dependent (SBP) ABC transporters of amino acids, i.e. the general amino acid permease (Aap) and the branched-chain amino acid permease (Bra) of Rhizobium leguminosarum and the histidine permease (His) of Salmonella typhimurium, are bidirectional, being responsible for efflux in addition to the uptake of solutes. The net solute movement measured for an ABC transporter depends on the rates of uptake and efflux, which are independent; a plateau is reached when both are saturated. SBP ABC transporters promote active uptake because, although the Vmax values for uptake and efflux are not significantly different, there is a 103-104 higher affinity for uptake of solute compared with efflux. Therefore, the SBP ABC transporters are able to support a substantial concentration gradient and provide a net uptake of solutes into bacterial cells.


Subject(s)
ATP-Binding Cassette Transporters/metabolism , Amino Acid Transport Systems, Basic , Amino Acids/metabolism , Bacterial Proteins , Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins , ATP-Binding Cassette Transporters/genetics , Amino Acid Transport Systems , Aminoisobutyric Acids/metabolism , Biological Transport , Fungal Proteins , Kinetics , Membrane Transport Proteins/genetics , Membrane Transport Proteins/metabolism , Molecular Sequence Data , Periplasm/metabolism , Rhizobium leguminosarum/genetics , Rhizobium leguminosarum/metabolism , Salmonella typhimurium/genetics , Salmonella typhimurium/metabolism
19.
Environ Microbiol ; 3(6): 397-406, 2001 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11472504

ABSTRACT

The techniques of differential fluorescence induction (DFI) and optical trapping (OT) have been combined to allow the identification of environmentally induced genes in single bacterial cells. Designated DFI-OT, this technique allows the in situ isolation of genes driving the expression of green fluorescent protein (Gfp) using temporal and spatial criteria. A series of plasmid-based promoter probe vectors (pOT) was developed for the construction of random genomic libraries that are linked to gfpUV or egfp. Bacteria that do not express Gfp on laboratory medium (i.e. non-fluorescent) were inoculated into the environment, and induced genes were detected with a combined fluorescence/optical trapping microscope. Using this selection strategy, rhizosphere-induced genes with homology to thiamine pyrophosphorylase (thiE) and cyclic glucan synthase (ndvB) were isolated. Other genes were expressed late in the stationary phase or as a consequence of surface-dependent growth, including fixND and metX, and a putative ABC transporter of putrescine. This strategy provides a unique ability to combine spatial, temporal and physical information to identify environmental regulation of bacterial gene expression.


Subject(s)
Bacterial Proteins/genetics , Gene Expression Profiling/methods , Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial , Rhizobium leguminosarum/genetics , Rhizobium leguminosarum/physiology , Bacterial Proteins/metabolism , Base Sequence , DNA Probes , Genetic Vectors , Green Fluorescent Proteins , Luminescent Proteins/genetics , Luminescent Proteins/metabolism , Microscopy, Fluorescence/methods , Molecular Sequence Data , Pisum sativum/microbiology , Plant Roots/microbiology , Rhizobium leguminosarum/cytology , Soil Microbiology
20.
Res Microbiol ; 152(3-4): 259-70, 2001.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11421273

ABSTRACT

There are two subfamilies of ABC uptake systems for amino acids in bacteria, the polar amino acid transport family and the hydrophobic amino acid transport family. We consider the general properties of these families and we examine the specific transporters. Focusing on some of the best-studied ATP binding cassette transporters we also examine the mechanism of amino acid uptake, paying particular attention to the question of bidirectionality of solute movement.


Subject(s)
ATP-Binding Cassette Transporters/metabolism , Amino Acids/metabolism , Bacteria/metabolism , ATP-Binding Cassette Transporters/chemistry , ATP-Binding Cassette Transporters/classification , Adenosine Triphosphate/metabolism , Amino Acid Transport Systems/metabolism , Animals , Biological Transport , Histidine/metabolism , Ion Transport , Phylogeny , Salmonella typhimurium/metabolism
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