|
Agnieszka
Sekowska & Antoine Danchin ©
An
earlier presentation of the views proposed here has been published in
year 2000 and should be used as a reference for work published previous
to that year.
Sulfur
is an ubiquitous element of the Earth crust where it is mostly present
as sulfate salts. Far from dioxygen it may be present in reduced metal-binding
forms, such a pyrite (fool's gold) in rocks. It is an essential component
of life. Most recent scenarios depicting the Origin
of Life place sulfur at a crucial position. In biological processes
the role of sulfur is limited to a series of highly specific objects,
in particular involved in electron transfers. The presence of gaseous
dioxygen has further enhanced the versatility of the processes where this
atom is involved. This is probably due to the fact that it is a very reactive
atom, and that many chemical reactions involving sulfur consume a large
quantity of energy. It is therefore of prime importance to understand
sulfur metabolism in model organisms and then extend the corresponding
knowledge to other ecological niches. The various inorganic states of
sulfur have been well studied, and the corresponding knowledge is fundamental
for understanding mineralogy and soil biology (for a review see Ehrlich,
1996). In contrast, the organic cycle of sulfur is much less well
known, and metabolism of sulfur, in spite of its central importance (but
perhaps because of its difficult chemistry), has been relatively neglected
by investigators. For this reason, many steps in sulfur metabolism have
been mistakenly ascribed wrong functions that still plague genome annotations.
A. General
sulfur metabolism
Three
well differentiated processes must be separated in the general metabolism
of sulfur: synthesis of the sulfur-containing amino acids (cysteine and
methionine), together with that of the sulfur-containing coenzymes or
prosthetic groups; catabolism and equilibration of the pool of sulfur
containing molecules; and methionine recycling (a topic in itself, be
it only because of the role of methionine as the first residue of all
proteins). Several databases devoted to metabolism allow one to retrieve
extant data relevant to sulfur metabolism such as: the Kyoto Encyclopedia
of Genes and Genomes (KEGG),
the WIT (What is there?) database
of the US Department of Energy at Argonne, BRENDA
and the database of SRI, EcoCyc.
Specialized microbial genome databases, Colibri
and SubtiList provide
direct information about the genes and genomes of the model organisms
Escherichia coli and Bacillus subtilis. Other databases
maintained within the GenoChore
suite allow one to have access to further information on a variety of
bacteria.
Anabolism
-
Sulfur
distribution On
average, the sulfur concentration at the surface of the Earth is
estimated to be of the order of 520 ppm. It varies in rocks between
270 and 2400 ppm. In fresh water, it is 3.7 ppm on average. In sea
water, it reaches 905 ppm. In temperate regions, it varies between
100 and 1500 ppm in soil (Ehrlich, 1996). However, its concentration
in plants is usually low. This element is present essentially in
the form of the amino acids cysteine and methionine, their oxidation
products, as well as molecules of reserve or osmoprotectants, such
as S-methylmethionine (Kocsis
et al., 1998) or various types of sulfonates (Cook
& Denger, 2001; Kertesz
& Wietek, 2001). It is also found in many derivatives of
secondary metabolism (in particular in garlic-related plants, Atmaca,
2004), where these sulfur-containing metabolites play a very
efficient antimicrobial role), and as sulfated carbohydrates or
aminoglycosides (Chai
et al. 2004; Nazarenko
et al., 2003).
-
Oxido-reduction
and assimilation of sulfur In
the presence of oxygen, sulfur metabolism is particularly energy
costly. As sulfate, it must first permeate the cell, usually against
the intracellular electric potential which is usually strongly negative
(-70 mV), then change from a highly oxidized state to a reduced
state. This requires a significant consumption of energy, as well
as the maintenance of a very low oxido-reduction potential, a proces
that seems difficult to achieve with the simultaneous presence of
oxygen molecules (Table 1- translated from A.
Sekowska PhD thesis).
Table 1. Electron
transfers in the absence of photosynthesis
|
Reducing
agent |
Redox
couplea |
E0'
[mV]b
|
DG0'
[kJ*mol-1]c
|
Organisms |
| Carbon
monoxide |
CO2/CO |
-540 |
-261 |
'Carboxidobacteria'
e.g. Pseudomonas |
| Hydrogen |
2
H+/H2 |
-410 |
-237 |
'Knallgas'
bacteria |
| Sulfide |
S0/HS- |
-260 |
-207 |
Thiobacillus,
Beggiatoa, Wolinella succinogenes |
| |
HSO3-/HS- |
-110 |
-536 |
Thiobacillus,
Sulfolobus |
| Sulfur |
HSO3-/S0 |
-45 |
-332 |
Thiobacillus |
| Sulfite |
SO42-/HSO3- |
-520 |
-258 |
Thiobacillus |
| |
APS/HSO3- |
-60 |
-227 |
Thiobacillus |
| Ammonium |
NO2-/NH3 |
+340 |
-276 |
Nitrosomonas |
| Nitrite |
NO3-/NO2- |
+430 |
-75 |
Nitrobacter |
| Fe2+(pH
2) |
Fe3+/Fe2+ |
+770 |
-32 |
Thiobacillus
ferrooxidans, Sulfolobus |
| Oxygen |
O2/H2O |
+816 |
|
Cyanobacteria |
a.
The reaction procedes from the reduced state to the oxidized state,
but convention asks that it is represented in the order: product/substrate.
b.
Redox reactions are reactions where a substrate is reduced (electron
acceptor) and another one is oxidized (electron donor). DE
is the difference potentiel between the end and the start of the
reaction. DE0'
is the redox potentiel difference (that can for example generate
a protonmotrice force) of a biochemical reaction in standard conditions:
298 K (25°C), pH 7.0 and where the concentration of each reagent
is 1 mol/liter except for water (normal concentration 55.55 mol/liter)
and gases (pressure of 101.3 kPa = 1 atm). The reaction occurs
spontaneously only when the value of DE
is negative, i.e. when the potential evolves towards more negative
values. The redox potential is usually represented with the negative
values above, and the spontaneous reactions procede from top to
bottom.
c.
For each component of the system one attributes a quantity of
free energy 'G', composed of an enthalpy 'H' (internal energy
plus pressure multiplied by the volume) and of an entropy 'S'
(measuring the degrees of freedom of the system, in terms of positions
and energy levels available to its different components). In the
cases where the absolute values are not large, the changes in
G (DG)
are decisive for the chemical reaction. The reaction occurs spontaneously
only when the value of DG
is negative. DG0'
is the DG
of the biochemical reaction in standard conditions as defined
above.
Cell
compartmentalization is therefore a prerequisite to sulfur assimilation
and this is reflected in the organization of sulfur metabolism genes
into clusters in the chromosome (Rocha
et al., 2000).
In Escherichia coli, where the pathway has been best
established, the genes involved in these reduction steps
are organized as several operons (Kredich, 1996). Operon cysDNC
codes for subunit 2 of sulfate adenylyltransferase, subunit 1
of ATP sulfurylase (ATP:sulfate adenylyltransferase) and adenylylsulfate
kinase. Genes cysZ and cysK may not be co-transcribed,
although they are neighbours in the chromosome. CysZ is probably
a membrane protein, but its function is unknown. CysK is O-acetylserine
sulfhydrylase, phylogenetically related to tryptophane synthase
(Lévy &
Danchin, 1988, see also minerals
and the origin of life). E. coli ATP sulfurylase forms
a tight, catalytically-coupled complex with the last enzyme in the
cysteine biosynthetic pathway, O-acetylserine sulfhydrylase (Wei
et al., 2002). Operon cysPUWAM codes for a thiosulfate
(and sulfate) periplasmic binding protein, an ABC-type membrane
permease, and a minor O-acetylserine sulfhydrylase, specific
for thiosulfate. Finally cysE codes for serine O-acetyl-transferase.
It may lie in operon with genes yibN, grxC, secB
and gpsA (coding respectively for: a rhodanese-related sulfurtransferase,
a glutaredoxin: glutathione-dependent redoxin, an element of the
protein secretion machinery, and most probably a glycerol-phosphate
dehydrogenase, possibly used in phospholipids biosynthesis). Gene
cysE is the start point of cysteine biosynthesis, probably
derived from an ancestral serine metabolism (Wächtershäuser,
1988; Danchin,
1989).
Sulfate is first transported into the cell, as we shall detail later
on, then it is assimilated in the form of adenosine phosphosulfate
(APS), by an ATP sulfurylase (coded by genes cysDandcysN). This reaction, which yields APS and pyrophosphate
from ATP and sulfate, is thermodynamically strongly shifted towards
ATP synthesis (and, therefore, not towards sulfate incorporation),
because the DG0'
of hydrolysis of the APS phosphate-sulfate bond (-19 kcal/mol) is
considerably higher than that of hydrolysis of the a,b
bond of ATP (-10,7 kcal/mol, Liu, 1998). It is therefore necessary
that an important activity keeps efficiently the pyrophosphate concentration
to a low level (through hydrolysis into inorganic phosphate) to
pull the reaction towards the anabolic direction. This is assumed
by one or several pyrophosphatases, whose essential role is to pull
the pyrophosphate-producing macromolecular biosynthesis reactions
towards the direction of anabolism (figure 1). However, as witnessed
by the rather high intracellular pyrophosphate concentration in
E. coli, it seems that this reaction is far from equilibrium.
It cannot therefore be sufficient to pull the reaction toward synthesis
of APS (Liu, 1998). This is why the synthesis of this latter molecule
is also linked with hydrolysis of the b,g
bond of GTP, which favors the reaction of sulfate incorporation
(105-fold
with respect to the reaction in absence of GTP). The coupling of
the synthesis of APS with GTP hydrolysis displaces the equilibrium
of the reaction towards sulfate assimilation (DG0'
= -6,8 kcal/mol) (Liu, 1998). However, this implies an extremely
high cost of incorporation of sulfur in sulfur-containing molecules.
This drives a strong selection pressure for the recovery of molecules
which contain sulfur in reduced state, a fact that has to be taken
into consideration when analyzing sulfur metabolism.
A further energy-consuming step sometimes shifts further the reactions
towards sulfur assimilation. In E. coli APS is the substrate
of a kinase (CysC), in a reaction that utilises a second ATP molecule
to phosphorylate the 3OH positionofAPS, which
is meatbolized into 3phosphoadenosine phosphosulfate (PAPS).
The raison d'être of this reaction, which from ATP
produces PAPS and ADP, seems to be a supplementary means to pull
the reaction towards the anabolic direction. The sulfate activation
pathway is essential for the assimilation of sulfate and, in many
bacteria, is comprised of three reactions: the synthesis of APS
(adenosine 5' phosphosulfate), the hydrolysis of GTP, and the 3'
phosphorylation of APS to produce PAPS, whose sulfuryl group is
reduced or transferred to other metabolites. The entire sulfate
activation pathway is organized into a single complex in Mycobacterium
tuberculosis (Sun
et al., 2004). The catalytic efficiency of PAPS synthesis is
considerably higher than that of APS synthesis, and PAPS is formed
extremely fast.
ATP4- + SO42-
<–> APS2- + P2O74-
GTP4- + H2O <–>
GDP3- +HPO42- + H+
ATP4- + APS2-
<–> ADP3- + PAPS4- + H+
and a further reaction
P2O74- +
H2O <–> 2 HPO42-
drives the overall pathway towards PAPS synthesis.
In fact, not only
the 3' phosphate of PAPS has no specific function, but it must be
metabolized into a by-product of the reaction, PAP (3'-5'ADP), with
no known function in metabolism (figure 1). In many bacteria (but
we did not find the corresponding enzymes in E. coli
or B. subtilis), the plants and the animals, PAPS is
the necessary precursor for the sulfatation of various molecules
(carbohydrates in particular) by sulfotransferases (Kusche, 1991;
Suiko, 1992; Varin, 1992). In M. tuberculosis PAPS is involved
in sulfatation of a lipid important for protecting the baceria against
the host defenses, and hence releavant to pathogenicity (Mougous
et al. 2004).
In the sulfur assimilation pathway, PAPS is reduced into SO32-,
yielding adenosine 3-5 diphosphate (PAP) as a by-product.
It will therefore be interesting to investigate the fate of PAP
after sulfate reduction. This is all the more important because
this same molecule is produced in another reaction starting from
coenzymeA, the transfer of the 4-phosphopantetheine group on the
acyl carrier protein (ACP) of the complex synthesizing fatty acids
(see Sekowska
et al, 2000 and below). Finally, synthesis of secondary metabolites
such as peptide antibiotics, surfactin of polyketides also require
the transfer of 4-phosphopantetheine from coenzymeA, producing PAP
as a by-product (Reuter, 1999). This implies the existence of a
3-5 diphosphoadenosine phosphatase, yielding 5'-AMP
and inorganic phosphate. Protein CysQ (Swiss-Prot: P22255)
may be the missing phosphatase, although we did not find explicit
experimental data proving this contention. York, 1995, CysQ is similar
to a plant adenosine diphosphate phosphatase Gil-Mascarell, 1999
involved in the reduction of sulfite to H2S (Swiss-Prot:
Q42546).
This enzyme (HAL2=MET22 Glaser, 1993) is probably also present in
yeast, where its inactivation lead to methionine auxotrophy. The
plant enzyme (encoded by the HAL2-like gene RHL Peng, 1995) is sensitive
to the presence of sodium ions and its activity is, for some unknown
reason, associated with the resistance to osmotic stress. Because
of its role, one may wonder whether PAP phosphatase is not present
in the cell in the neighborhood of adenylate kinase, which scavenges
AMP. One should finally ask whether PAP does not play a regulatory
role in a cell process controlling the entry of oxidized sulfur
into the cell, eventually coupling this metabolism to that of lipids.
Let us note in this respect that this molecule is very similar to
cyclic AMP, a well-known regulator of gene expression (Ullmann
& Danchin, 1983).
The enzyme involved in the reduction of sulfate, phosphoadenosine
phosphosulfate reductase (EC 1.8.99.4) (thioredoxin-dependent PAPS
reductase) (PADOPS reductase) is coded by gene cysH.
5'-phosphoadenosine-3'-phosphosulfate
+ thioredoxin reduced
<>
phosphoadenosine
phosphate + thioredoxin oxidized + sulfite
The
sulfite ion is reduced by NADPH-sulfite reductase (EC 1.8.1.2), an
enzyme comprising two subunits, coded by operon cysJIH. Subunit
a
(coded by gene cysJ) involves FAD, whereas subunit b
(coded by gene cysI) involves an iron-sulfur center and a siroheme
prosthetic group (analogous to siroheme-dependent nitrite reductases).
This implies a strong link between iron and sulfur metabolims, as
well as with heme or vitamin B12 biosynthesis. The sulfhydryl ion,
HS-, is quite reactive and toxic to the cell if it is concentrated.
The synthesis of siroheme is catalysed by a SAM-dependent uroporphyrinogene
III methylase (EC 2.1.1.107), encoded by gene cysG that forms
an operon with genes nirBDC coding for the nitrite reductase
and possibly with genes yhfLMNOPQR, coding for the metabolism
of fructoselysine. Siroheme is present in two enzymes, sulfite reductase
and nitrite reductase. In addition, it is a precursor of the B12 coenzyme
(that neither E. coli K12 nor B. subtilis
168 can entirely synthesize).
Remarkably,
in M. tuberculosis (and B. subtilis as well) it
has been found that APS can be used as the ultimate step in sulfite
synthesis. However, it is not cleaer that this is the situation in
vivo. This does not seem likely as PAPS would be only used for sulfatation
that produce sulfolipids, putative virulence factors, in M. tuberculosis.
The cysDNC operon codes for the multifunctional enzyme complex
that exhibits the three linked catalytic activities that constitute
the sulfate activation pathway. In B. subtilis, the cysH
gene codes for a PAPS reductase, that has a significant APS reductase
activity (Berndt
et al., 2004), as in M. tuberculosis (Williams
et al., 2002).
Many
kinds of intermediary sulfur oxidation states exist: sulfite, thiosulfate,
etc. Complex oxido-reduction systems permit to reach the ultimate
reduction state, that of hydrogen sulfide, H2S. These systems
are often poorly known. However, one knows that, for example, thiosulfate
can be an excellent sulfur source in E. coli Sirko, 1995).
With respect to organic sulfur forms, things are also poorly known.
The situation in Bacillus subtilis is being unravelled but
not yet completely understood. It is significantly different from
its counterpart in E. coli.
Biosynthesis
of cysteine The reaction catalyzed by CysE (serine transacetylase,
EC 3.1.3.7) condenses an acetyl group from acetyl CoA on the hydroxyl
group of serine, forming O-acetylserine. Sulfur, reduced as H2S,
reacts with O-acetylserine in E. coli to give cysteine.
Genes cysK and cysM code for O-acetylserine (thiol)-lyase-A
and -B, or O-acetylserine sulfhydrylase A and B (EC 4.2.99.8)
Lévy, 1988; Kredich, 1996). Serine transacetylase and O-acetylserine
sulfhydrylase A form an enzyme complex, cysteine synthase. In contrast,
O-acetylserine sulfhydrylase B does not belong to an identified
enzyme complex. Both O-acetylserine sulfhydrylases use sulfide
as a nucleophile, but O-acetylserine sulfhydrylase B possesses
also a characteristic feature, the ability to use thiosulfate in the
place of H2S, leading to the production of S-sulfocysteine.
The conversion of S-sulfocysteine into cysteine has not been
demonstrated in E. coli, and this casts doubt on the physiological
importance of this activity. However, as we shall see later, there exist
numerous sulfonatases that may act on this molecule, yielding cysteine
and a sulfate ion, which would thus enter the normal pathway.
It is
useful to understand the synthesis of O-acetylserine and its
regulation, because the intermediary metabolites are very often regulators
of gene expression, as we shall see below for the role of N-acetylserine
in E. coli. N-acetylserine (that derives from O-acetylserine)
is probably an inducer of the cys regulon. This molecule is
formed by spontaneous cyclisation of O-acetylserine. The conversion
of O-acetylserine into N-acetylserine is produced at
the rate of 1% per minute at pH 7.6, and almost ten times faster at
pH 8.6. The reverse reaction does not happen, which means that O-acetylserine
but not N-acetylserine can serve as a sulfur acceptor. In contrast,
N-acetylserine is approximatively 15-fold more efficient than
O-acetylserine in its inducer action (Kredich, 1992).
Synthesis
of methionine Methionine
synthesis is linked to cysteine synthesis through metabolic pathways
that differ according to the organisms. There often exist several different
pathways in the same organism. In E. coli, the biosynthetic
pathway is the following (figure 2) Greene, 1996).
Biosynthesis
of methionine originates from the homoserine pathway (which branches
to lysine via diaminopimelate, an essential component of mureine
to threonine, and to isoleucine), starting from the synthesis
of an activated derivative, O-succinylhomoserine. This activated
homoserine condenses directly with cysteine, giving cystathionine. A
S-lyase, belonging to a large family of enzymes that allow the
cleavage of molecules of the X-CH2-S-CH2-Y,
or X-CH2-S-S-CH2-Z
type, from either side of the sulfur atom, liberates homocysteine and
serine (which is cleaved into pyruvate and ammonium). Homocysteine is
the precursor of methionine, whose methyl group comes from the one-carbon
metabolism (figure 3). In E. coli, two enzymes which catalyze
this methylation exist. One of them, the product of the metH
gene (EC 2.1.1.13), utilises vitamin B12 as a cofactor, and the methyl
group can be taken from 5-methyltetrahydrofolate or from its polyglutamyl
derivative. The second one, the product of gene metE (EC 2.1.1.14),
which is not coenzyme B12-dependent, catalyses the methylation with
5-methyltetrahydropteroyltri-L-glutamate as the methyl groupe donor
Kung, 1972). In both cases the original carbon derives from serine.
One
can wonder why there exist two different genes for this metabolic step.
In fact, one of them utilises coenzyme B12 (that necessitates at least
26 steps for its synthesis, starting from uroporphyrinogene III
(Michal, 1999) and consumes seven molecules of S-adenosylmethionine.
E. coli does not synthesize coenzyme B12, but possesses
a transport system (btuBCDE and btuR) highly specific
and efficient for this coenzyme (Colibri).
The reaction catalyzed by protein MetH with coenzyme B12 is more than
one hundred-fold faster than that catalyzed by the B12-independent enzyme,
MetE (EC 2.1.1.13) Greene, 1996). It follows that the availability in
methyl groups (we shall see below how important they are), via methionine,
is provided much more easily in the presence than in the absence of
coenzyme B12.
Methionine
synthesis genes, metA (homoserine O-succinyltransferase,
EC 2.3.1.46), metB (cystathionine g-synthase
EC 4.2.99.9), metC (cystathionine b-lyase,
EC 4.4.1.8), metE (5-methyltetrahydropteroyltriglutamate-homocysteine
methyltransferase, EC 2.1.1.14) and metF (5,10 methylenetetrahydrofolate
reductase, EC 1.7.99.5) are more or less spread out in the chromosome.
The operon metB comprizes another gene, metL, that codes
for a bifunctional enzyme AKII-HDHII (aspartokinase II/homoserine hydrogenase
II, EC 2.7.2.4 and EC 1.1.1.3), belonging to the part of the aspartate
derived pathway which branches out to threonine, lysine and methionine
synthesis Saint-Girons, 1988).
There
exists finally a pathway for recycling of methyl groups, recently found,
that utilises S-methylmethionine as a methyl donor. This molecule,
synthesized by plants, is scavenged by the product of gene mmuM
(formerly yagD, with a strong similarity with metH), S-methylmethionine:homocysteine
methyltransferase, which transfers methyl group directy onto homocysteine
to give methionine (Thanbichler, 1999, Table 2).
Transport
of sulfur-containing molecules and sulfur scavenging
Amino-acid
and peptide permeases
There
certainly exist permeases for the sulfur-containing amino-acid: cysteine,
its oxidation product cystine, homocysteine and homocystine, and methionine.
They have however rarely been characterised without ambiguity. One may
think that transport of methionine is carried out by branched-chain
amino-acid permeases (liv in E. coli, azlCD
and braB brnQ in B. subtilis), but one must wonder
about the possible existence of specific permeases
Greene, 1996). Indeed, there exists a permease for S-methylmethionine,
encoded by gene mmuP (formerly yfkD), in an operon with
gene mmuM (Table 2). In the case of B. subtilis methionine
is transported by several permeases but the most efficient one is the
metNPQ (yusCBA) operon that encodes an ABC permease
transporting methionine sulfoxide, D- and L-methionine (Hullo
et al., 2004).
Independently
from their transport, the presence of reduced amino acids (cysteine
and homocysteine) must pose a problem to the cell, since they are very
reactive (reducers), and this must be taken into account when one explores
the way in which they permeate the cell. In order to understand their
possible effects, it is useful to remark that the distribution of cysteine-containing
proteins is not random in general. In the cytoplasm, one often finds
proteins containing a metal, and in particular the diverse types of
iron-sulfur centers (often with clustered cysteine residues), isolated
cysteines (often involved in the catalytic mechanism), and cysteines
burried in the hydrophobic regions of proteins. In contrast, the periplasm
possesses a strongly oxidizing character (in the presence of oxygen),
necessary for the formation of tertiary and quaternary structures of
all kinds of proteins through disulfide bridges. The intrusion of strongly
reducing molecules may therefore have a deleterious role.
Probably,
the problem of cysteine toxicity in its reduced form does not occur
frequently, because it is not present in nature in significant amount,
but is saved perhaps in environments devoid of oxygen. Cystine is likely
to be more common, and it is probable that there exists a system permetting
its transport, and its rapid metabolism (a b-lyase
for example). This seems more necessary because cystine is structurally
similar to diaminopimelic acid (figure 4), an essential component of
many eubacteria cell wall, E. coli in particular. As in
the case of every molecular mimic, it may therefore take the corresponding
place, and interfere with the synthesis of mureine, leading to cell
lysis Richaud, 1993).
There
exist many proteases and peptidases in bacteria Miller, 1996), and the
externl medium (the gut in particular) such as those faced by E. coli
often contain peptides. Several transport systems allow their salvage
(Dpp, Tpp and Opp Oliver, 1996). A specially important case, despite
the fact that it has hardly been studied, is that of peptides from the
amino-terminal ends of proteins. They often carry a N-formyl-methionine
group, specific for translation initiation. It has indeed been discovered
that in the eucaryote hosts that live in the presence of commensal or
pathogenic bacteria, there exist several recognition and transport systems
for these peptides Schiffmann, 1975; Prossnitz, 1999). This indicates
that these molecules are produced and secreted in significant quantity.
It seems likely that bacteria also possess transport systems allowing
their salvage. Nobody knows, at this time, if permeases Dpp, Tpp or
Opp are adapted to this transport, or if there exist other similar permeases.
In the same way, the pathways for the degradation of these peptides
allowing methionine salvage, have not been studied. This would be more
interesting because these molecules can easily be visualized as participating
in a new process allowing "quorum sensing".
- Transport
of oxygenated sulfur sources
Sulfate
and thiosulfate are transported in E. coli by proteins
coded by operon cysPUWAM and by an isolated gene, spb.
These transport systems are composed of a single permease (coded by
genes cysUWA, the products of which are associated with the
membrane) and of two periplasmic binding proteins specific for these
two anions: TSBP (thiosulfate-binding protein), coded by gene cysP,
and SPB (sulfate-binding protein), coded by gene spb
Sirko, 1995). Another protein, CysZ, is also necessary for transporting
sulfate, but its exact function is not known. The two periplasmic
proteins, TSBP and SBP, share their specificity for the same substrates.
This accounts for the fact that the simple mutant is always capable
of transporting either anion (less efficiently, which slows down its
growth as compared to the wild type). The double mutant only is incapable
of transporting both anions.
Many
molecules comprising sulfur in an oxidized state (sulfinates: -C-SO2;
sulfonates: -C-SO3;
sulfates -O-SO3;
thiosulfates
-S-SO3)
are available as sulfur sources Cook, 1999). There must exist several
families of permeases specific for these different molecules. In E. coli
only one has been identified and it transports taurine van der Ploeg,
1996). One expects that other ABC (ATP Binding Cassette) permeases
transport these molecules. It is therefore probable that among the
permeases of unknown function one will discover some that concentrate
the sulfur-containing molecules of this family. As a working hypothesis
it would be interesting to see whether there would be a permease in
the operon comprizing gene ycdM (coding for a protein similar
to a protein annotated in Swiss-Prot as "dibenzothiophene sulfurization
enzyme A").
Once
in the cell, under the action of appropriate enzymes, the molecules
in question liberate their sulfur, in the form of sulfate or sulfite.
These anions then enter the biosynthetic pathway that we have just
described.
- Sulfonate
utilization and scavenging
Organosulfonates
are molecules that contain the SO3-
group. It is possible to class them according to the nature of the
bond they form with the sulfur atom. One thus finds O-sulfonates
(often named sulfates, with an oxygen bond), N-sulfonates and
C-sulfonates. O-sulfonates and N-sulfonates are
degraded by hydrolases of the general classes EC 3.1.6.- or EC 3.10.1.-
(action on the S-N bond), respectively. C-sulfonates, which
are more stable, are not submitted to hydrolysis Cook, 1999). There
exist three mechanisms for degradation of these compounds: (i) activation
of carbon at the CSO3-
bond and liberation of sulfite, a reaction catalyzed by thiamine,
(ii) stabilisation of the CSO3-
bond by addition of an atom of oxygen to the carbon of this bond (directly
by oxygenation), which liberates sulfite, and (iii) an unidentified
mechanism of reduction. Taurine seems to be degraded, in the majority
of cases, by the first mechanism Cook, 1999). In contrast, in E. coli,
taurine Eichhorn, 1997) as well as most linear and aromatic sulfonates
(alkyl-sulfonates and aryl-sulfonates) in most organisms, are degraded
by the action of oxygenases (mono-oxygenases and dioxygenases). The
general scheme for the reactions is as follows (it is sometimes repeated
several times on the successive products of a same reaction):
NADH
+ O2
+ substrate + H+
> NAD+
+ product + HSO3-
In
animals, cysteine oxidized as cysteic acid is decarboxylated into
taurine and excreted. Taurine is transported by an ABC-permease (coded
by genes tauABC in E. coli van der Ploeg, 1996)
and ssuBAC in B. subtilis van der Ploeg, 1998).
It is degraded by an a-ketoglutarate-dependent
dioxygenase (tauD; Eichhorn, 1997) into aminoacetaldehyde and
sulfite. The fate of aminoacetaldehyde is not known, but there must
exist a hydrogenase to dispose of it. Sulfite subsequently enters
the pathway of mineral sulfur assimilation.
In
addition to this well characterized operon, there exist several operons
in E. coli with features that are reminiscent of the systems
for sulfur oxide scavenging. This is the case of likely monooxygenases
(coded by the gene ycbN in an operon with ycbO and ycbM),
or of dioxygenases (YeaW and YeaX). Protein YcbN is a protein (monooxygenase)
identifed in the study of the proteome as induced in sulfur starvation,
which substantiates this hypothesis (Quadroni, 1996 and Swiss-Prot
P80645). However, its substrate is not known. In the case of dioxygenases
one may wonder whether a dioxygenase identified as having 3-phenylpropionate
as a substrate (YfhUVWXY) Burlingame, 1983; Burlingame, 1986) may
also act on sulfur-containing molecules. There exist other such enzymes
as YeaW and YeaX, for which no substrate has been described. It seems
interesting to perform a detailed analysis of what might be the natural
substrates of reactions of this type in a biotope similar to that
of E. coli. This would allow to explore much more efficiently
the nature of many genes of unknown function in its genome. On the
other hand, cysteine may have been oxidized to a lower state, as sulfinate,
and it seems that some gene products related to the nifS gene
may act as sulfinases Mihara, 1997).
Finally,
it would be important to investigate the fate of O- or N-sulfonated
carbohydrates, such as those present in many polysaccharides such
as heparine, chondroïtine sulfate, and in plants, carragenanes
or agar-agar. We have verified that E. coli cannot grow
on agar-agar in the absence of sulfur source, but this does not tell
us whether it can grow in presence of the corresponding monomers.
Aryl-sulfonatases, most often studied for their action on xenobiotics,
may well have a spectrum of action much wider than their action on
aromatic substrates.
- Methionine
recycling and equilibrated pools of sulfur
In
the metabolic pathways that have just been described, cystathionine
plays a central role since, by its very construction, it allows to
go indiscriminately from cysteine to homocysteine and vice versa,
as long as there exist b-lyase
and g-lyase,
together with b-synthase
and g-synthase
activities (figure 5). Therefore the organisms carrying these activities
should grow equally well with cysteine or homocysteine as sulfur sources.
Growth on methionine requires a methyl group transfer reaction. But
as S-adenosylmethionine is involved in a large number of activities
that produces homocysteine, this should be easily achieved. Furthermore,
the reaction catalyzed by MmuM, shows that the transfer of a methyl
group from a sulfonium group is not difficult to achieve Thanbichler,
1999). Finally, the reaction homologous to that leading from serine
to cysteine must easily result from the evolution of the corresponding
proteins and allow the use of homoserine as a substrate in the place
of serine (O-acylhomoserine sulfhydrylase, or even homoserine
phosphate sulfhydrylase; Michal, 1999). One can therefore easily appreciate
the versatility in the utilisation of sulfur sources in different
organisms, take the case of Pseudomonas putida for example
Vermeij, 1999). All depends on the selection pressure of the biotope
in which they strive to survive.
In
these conditions, it is remarkable that E. coli, that
can grow on cysteine, cannot grow on methionine Kredich, 1996). This
inability is certainly due to the fact that the anaerobic medium in
which E. coli generally lives is a sulfur-rich medium.
The problem that is posed to the bacteria is therefore how to eliminate
the sulfur excess rather than its elaborate utilization. In such a
case, there is no bypass from methionine (or homocysteine) to cysteine.
E. coli metabolizes cystathionine only by the action of
a b-lyase
(MetC), the g-lyase
being apparently absent from its genome. Interestingly, this lack
of continuity in sulfur metabolism allows E. coli to use
selenomethionine in the place of methionine, as was shown by Georges
Cohen (Cohen, 1957; Cowie, 1957). We have indeed verified that E. coli
was not able to grow with methionine as a sulfur source. It follows
that E. coli is an organism of choice for testing by heterologous
complementation the existence of sulfur equilibrating pathways in
other microorganisms.
Methionine
is the object of several cycles, particulary important when sulfur
is limiting (in plants for example). The first of these cycles concerns
the process of translation of messenger RNAs into proteins. Indeed,
all the proteins of the cell start with a methionine residue, which
implies an importance of this amino acid. This methionine is however
modified by a formyl group, and all neosynthesized proteins start
with a N-formyl-methionine.
In
eubacteria translation begins in an original way. A particular transfer
RNA, tRNAFmet
is first charged by methionine as its homologous tRNAMmet,
by the action of methionine tRNA synthetase, encoded by gene metG
in E. coli. (metS in B. subtilis).
The remarkable feature comes now. This Met-tRNAFmet
is formylated by a transformylase (identified both in E. coli
and B. subtilis, fmt), that utilises 10-formyltetrahydrofolate
as donor of the formyl group (cf. Danchin, 1973). It is this FMet-tRNAFmet
that, in the presence of translation initiation factor IF2 (encoded
by gene infB) and GTP, will correctly position this charged
tRNA at the translation initiation site of a messenger RNA (at codons
AUG, UUG or GUG). In the presence of a transfer RNA corresponding
to the subsequent codon, charged with its cognate amino acid and loaded
on factor EF-Tu in the presence of GTP and then factor EF-G bound
to GTP, the first peptidic link is formed. Let us note here a second
oddity: the formation of this first peptidic link, except if it links
FMet to an aromatic amino-acid, necessitates another factor, named
EFP (enoded by gene efp) Aoki, 1997). The precise role of protein
EFP, which is an essential protein, remains to be determined. Interestingly,
we must remark that factor EFP is homologous to the eucaryotic factor
eIF5-A (a family of highly conserved essential proteins), that carries
a residue derived from spermidine, hypusine. The need for its presence
suggests that it operates at a "fragile" step of translation,
and that at this stage this process can be spontaneously interrupted.
Also, the role of factor EFP in the liberation of short peptidyl-tRNA
must be taken into account when one wishes to count the pool of methionine
available in the cell. The synthesis of the protein then goes on normally.
One
observes therefore that, as a function of the efficiency of this step
(and more generally of every first steps of translation), one will
obtain either a complete protein, carrying FMet at its extremity,
or a transfer RNA carrying a peptide that will be hydrolyzed by peptidyl-tRNA
hydrolase (EC 3.1.1.29), an essential protein encoded by gene pth
Heurgue-Hamard, 1998). The need for the step of dissociation of peptidyl-tRNA
from the ribosome is apparently necessary to ensure the accuracy of
translation Heurgue-Hamard, 1998).
A
general assessment of translation indicates that 10% at least of initiated
translations are abortive Heurgue-Hamard, 1998). This shows that the
effect of formation of the first peptidic link on the utilisation
of sulfur is far from negligible. As a consequence, there must exist
a recycling process permitting methionine salvage from peptidyl FMet-aan.
An alternative to recycling is excretion of formylated peptides, but
this leads to sulfur leakage, in the form of methionine. We have already
indicated that these peptides are recognized by receptors in eucaryotes
Prossnitz, 1999), showing that this mechanism is most probably significant.
It may also be involved in "quorum sqensing".
A
second series of reactions associated to translation plays a general
role. The neosynthesized protein must be deformylated by a deformylase
(specified by gene def, in operon with fmt, in E. coli
and B. subtilis). The sequence of these two steps
formylation and deformylation must have an important role,
since it is conserved throughout evolution in all Bacteria (and even
in mitochondria and chloroplasts). But, oddly enough, it does not
appear to be absolutely necessary since E. coli can grow
without formylation, in particular when ribosomal protein S12 is altered
to become streptomycin resistant (Danchin,
1973; Harvey, 1973; Petersen
et al., 1978; Mazel et al., 1994). Subsequently, methionine is
cleaved by an original amino-peptidase, encoded by gene map
with a zinc cofactor, but also, in many organisms, the cobalt ion,
Co2+.
Cobalt
is a relatively rare ion. Its concentration in soil varies from 10
to 15 mg/g (mg of cobalt by g of soil) Kucera, 1998). Living organisms
have therefore developped very efficient transport systems for this
indispensable ion. Note that amino-peptidase plays a particularly
important role in all organisms because it is an essential activity
for the cell. It has been found that the antibiotic fumagilline (synthesized
by the fungus Aspergillus fumigatus) is a strong inhibitor
of this enzyme in eucaryotes Liu, 1998). In B. subtilis two
genes, map (mapA) and yflG (mapB)
code for a methionine aminopeptidase. While MapB (YflG) analogs are
found in Gram positive cocci, they do not possess an direct counterpart
of the Bacillus MapA.
The
successive action of these two enzymes (deformylase and methionine
aminopeptidase) recycles methionine. This liberates the amino-terminal
extremity of the protein, which may thus be submitted to the degradative
action of diverse aminopeptidases, allowing fine regulation of the
concentration of the corresponding protein in the cell (see Varshavsky's
"N-end rule" Bachmair, 1986). It is essential to remark
that the cleavage of the N-terminal methionine can only happen after
deformylation Solbiati, 1999). The activity of deformylase is controlled
by an essential ferrous ion, which makes it particularly sensitive
to the presence of oxygen Rajagopalan, 1998). Taken together, these
observations show that these steps probably play a crucial role in
the regulation of gene expression, in particular in the presence of
oxygen.
- Catabolism
and reparation of sulfur-containing amino acid
The
E. coli biotope is not likely to be limited in sulfur.
Many observations substantiate this contention: cysteines are present
in large quantity in its proteins and its metabolism does not seem
to care for sulfur availability. This is illustrated by the following
example. Spermidine biosynthesis produces a sulfur-containing molecule
methylthioadenosine (MTA) (figure 6 and see below). In a close
relative of E. coli, Klebsiella pneumoniae, this
molecule is transformed into methylthioribose-1-phosphate and recycled
(see below). In E. coli however, it is excreted Schroeder,
1973), which implies an enormous loss of sulfur, because for each
molecule of spermidine a molecule of methylthioribose (MTR) is produced
and excreted (and we shall see that other reactions involving AdoMet
produce also MTA)!
What
do we know more generally about sulfur sources for E. coli?
In its mammalian hosts, apart from quite varied sources (depending
on the diet), they derive probably from two pathways of cysteine degradation:
cysteine-sulfinate (sulfinoalanine)-dependent, and cysteine-sulfinate
independent, because methionine is recycled (and its sulfur lost as
MTR). The cysteine-sulfinate-dependent pathway arises by oxidation
of cysteine by the cysteine dioxygenase (CDO, EC 1.13.11.20), which
produces cysteine-sulfinate (sulfinoalanine). The latter can be catabolized
in two different ways. Either it is transaminated by an aspartate
aminotransferase (AAT, EC 2.6.1.1) with production of pyruvate and
sulfate, or it is decarboxylated by cysteine sulfinate decarboxylase
(sulfinoalanine decarboxylase, CSAD, EC 4.1.1.29) into hypotaurine.
Hypotaurine is probably oxidized non-enzymatically into taurine Bella,
1996). Neither animals, nor plants (where it is rarer) can metabolize
taurine. The excess of taurine produced by animals is excreted either
directly in urine, or in bile in the form of taurocholate. This molecule
is therefore abundant in E. coli's diet. Taurine is an
important metabolite, involved in aging, in homeostasis or in the
defense against free radicals or alterations in the concentration
of calcium.
Cysteine,
in the presence of oxygen, can be oxidized spontaneously into cysteic
acid (frequent oxidation in aging proteins). Cysteic acid is decarboxylated
directly into taurine by sulfinoalanine decarboxylase (CSAD, also
named sulfoalanine decarboxylase, an enzyme specific of two similar
substrates, cysteine-sulfinate and cysteate (see Swiss-Prot: EC 4.1.1.29
and KEGG: MAP00430)). Alternatively it is transformed in the presence
of H2S
into cysteine and sulfite by a cysteine lyase (EC 4.4.1.10). However,
most of these reactions are unknown (and, in fact, a cysteine sulfinate
sulfinase has just been described Mihara, 1997 #280), and these reactions
are just presented as hypotheses reflecting our ignorance
(cysteine
lyase:
L-cysteine + sulfite <=> L-cysteate + H2S can use
a second molecule of cysteine (producing lanthionine) or other alkyl
thiols as replacing agents). As an illustration of this metabolism
in bacteria (it does not appear to exist in E. coli),
one finds in B. subtilis a gene (yubC) that looks
like a cysteine dioxygenase, enzyme known to regulate the intracellular
level of cysteine, of methionine and of glutathione in mammals (SubtiList)
Eppler, 1998 #253. This, together with the fact that B. subtilis
possesses a very small number of cysteines in its proteins, may indicate
a physiological role particular to this amino acid.
- Repair
of oxidized sulfur amino-acids
Disulfide
bridges are very important structural elements of many proteins.
They are extremely rare in cytoplasmic proteins because of the
reducing nature of the intracellular medium. In contrast, the
periplasm possesse a strongly oxidizing character (in the presence
of oxygen). An environment with this character is necessary to
the formation of tertiary and quaternary structures of all kinds
of proteins, via the formation of disulfide bridges. These covalent
bonds are essential to the stability and activity of many extracellular
proteins. This has been demonstrated in pathogenic bacteria in
the case of some toxins, secreted cellulases and pectate lyases
Missiakas, 1995 #213. The corresponding oxidation mechanism (2
Cys > Cys-S-S-Cys + 2 H+
+ 2 e-), can be spontaneous in the presence of oxygen, but in
E. coli the proteins of the family Dsb (DiSulfide
Bond formation) that catalyse the formation of appropriate disulfide
bridges, have an essential function. This family comprises proteins
DsbA, DsbB, DsbC and DsbD Missiakas, 1995 #213 and proteins DsbE
and DsbF that have been recently discovered Metheringham, 1996
#227. Among these proteins, DsbA and DsbC that are located in
the periplasm have a strong oxidizing activity on cysteines. The
membrane protein DsbB is essential for the recycling of the active
site (active thiol) of DsbA, but the mechanism of this reaction
is not yet known. Protein DsbD counteracts the action of the two
oxidizing forms (A and C) by reduction of disulfide bridges in
an equilibrium between the thiols and the disulfide bonds in the
periplasm. The role of Dsb proteins in the shaping of proteins
is fundamental, and one can therefore wonder about the nature
of their function: are they enzymes, or molecular chaperones?
The case of protein DnaJ illustrates well the question. Identified
as a chaperone, it possesses an enzymatic activity capable of
reducing, oxidizing, or isomerizing disulfide bridges Wang, 1998
#307.
Bader
et al. reconstituted the oxidative folding system using
purified DsbA and DsbB. They identified the sources of oxidative
power for protein folding and showed how disulfide bond formation
is linked to cellular metabolism: disulfide bond formation is
directly coupled to the electron transport chain. DsbB uses quinones
as electron acceptors, allowing various choices for electron transport
to support disulfide bond formation. Electrons flow via cytochrome
bo oxidase to oxygen under aerobic conditions or via cytochrome
bd oxidase under partially anaerobic conditions. Under anaerobic
conditions, menaquinone shuttles electrons to alternate final
electron acceptors such as nitrate or fumarate Bader, 1999).
Intracellular
proteins are in majority present in the thiol form, with a low
representation of cysteines (1.6%), whereas extracellular proteins
contain disulfide bridges and are rich in cysteines (4.1%) Fahey,
1977). This absence of disulfide bridges inside the cell, as we
have seen, is linked to the strongly reducing character of the
cytoplasm (production of NAD(P)H by the catabolic processes of
respiration and glycolysis). In E. coli, many factors
participate in the maintenance of the balance between thiols and
disulfide bridges in the cytoplasm (disulfide bridges can be formed
by the action of free radicals, active oxygen or cosmic rays,
which lead to inactivation of the proteins sensitive to their
action). In the cytoplasm the main system maintaining the correct
ratio between thiols and disulfide bridges is constituted by a
tripeptide containing cysteine, glutathione (see also below).
Glutathione is present in E. coli at a high concentration
(about 5 mM), and it is maintained almost entirely in the reduced
form (redox potential of -230 mV). the ratio between reduced and
oxidized glutathione is between 50:1 and 200:1 Prinz, 1997).
E. coli
possesses at least four thiol-disulfide oxidoreductases that
permit reduction of the disulfide bridges of cytoplasmic proteins:
a thioredoxin (encoded by gene trxA) and three glutaredoxins
(1, 2 and 3, encoded by genes grxABC). Thioredoxin is a
reducing protein more efficient (redox potential of -270 mV) than
glutaredoxins (redox potential of -233 mV to -198 mV). After reducing
the disulfide bridges, the thiol-disulfide oxidoreductases are
oxidized. A system based on the transfer of protons from NADPH
to these proteins allow their reduction, a sine qua non
step to keep them functional. Thioredoxins are reduced directly
by a thioredoxin reductase (FAD enzyme, EC 1.6.4.5, encoded by
gene trxB), whereras glutaredoxins are reduced by glutathione,
that in its turn is reduced by glutathione reductase (FAD enzyme,
EC 1.6.4.2, encoded by gene gor). In E. coli,
these two systems: thioredoxin reductase and thioredoxin, and
glutaredoxin reductase, glutathione and glutaredoxin, participate
in the reduction of disulfide bridges of essential cytoplasmic
enzymes that need this step of reduction to accomplish
their catalytic function (for example ribonucleotide reductase,
PAPS reductase or peptidyl methionine reductase).
One
mechanism to regulate the activity of redox proteins in the cell
is through reversible formation of disulfide bridges. This is
often achieved with the help of glutathione, glutaredoxin, or
thioredoxin. Thus, the activity of key redox regulatory proteins
is responsive to the intracellular thiol-disulfide redox status.
For example, OxyR, the prototypic redox-regulated transcription
factor in E. coli, is activated through the formation
of a disulfide bond using cysteine sulfenic acid as an intermediate,
and is deactivated by enzymatic reduction of this disulfide bond
with glutaredoxin 1 Zheng, 1998 #363; Aslund, 1999 #362. Likewise,
the catalytic mechanism by which peroxiredoxins scavenge hydrogen
peroxide or alkyl hydroperoxide also involves reduction and re-formation
of disulfide bonds with a cysteine sulfenic acid as intermediate
(reviewed in Jin, 1999 #367). Known peroxiredoxins in E. coli
include AhpC and scavengase p20/Tpx Chae, 1994 #366; Wan,
1997 #364; Zhou, 1997).
The
oxidation of methionine is a case of damage that can happen to
proteins through action of endogenous or environmental oxidizing
agents. Although in some cases oxidation does not have a large
effect on the activity of proteins, in the majority of cases it
abolishes their catalytic function. The cell has two ways to take
into account proteins containing oxidized methionine residues
(Met(O)). Oxidized proteins are either degraded, or an enzyme
can reduce the modified residues. This latter function is performed
by peptidyl-methionine sulfoxide reductase MsrA (encoded by gene
msrA) that reduces oxidized residues in the protein, restoring
its function Moskovitz, 1995). This enzyme, apart from its capacity
to repair oxidized residues in proteins, can also reduce methionine
sulfoxide in its free amino-acid form. It permits therefore utilisation
of methionine sulfoxide as a source of sulfur in bacteria.
An
interesting observation established recently a relationship between
the capacity of repair of oxidized methionines and virulence in
enterobacteria pathogenic for plants, Erwinia chrysanthemi
Hassouni, 1999). Alteration of virulence (inability to cause systemic
invasion) is associated with enhancement of sensitivity to oxidative
stress and with the decrease of motility on a solid substrate.
It involves the msrA gene, coding for peptidyl methionine
sulfoxide reductase. Indeed, the mutants of this gene can no longer
repair their proteins altered by the defensive action of plants
(a process that utilises active oxygen and free radicals). Moreover,
motility is an essential factor of virulence, in particular motility
on solid surface is affected in mutant msrA. Curiously,
the msrA mutants remain motile in liquid medium. This shows
that the affected mechanisms do not involve flagellae. It is possible
that the target process is not the process of movement creation
but, for example, chemotaxis or adhesion. Combining these data,
one can imagine that MsrA has the double function of a general
repair system and a regulator of the production of extracellular
appendages. The production of these appendages may be under the
control of a regulator extremely sensitive to oxidative stress,
normally repaired by MsrA. In any event, peptidyl methionine sulfoxide
reductase is a particulary important protein since it seems to
be present in all extant organisms: it belongs to the class of
genes that Eugene Koonin named "the minimal gene set"
Mushegian, 1996).
S-adenosylmethionine
and its metabolism
Methionine
is also an essential element in a large number of methylation
processes it is a universal methylating agent (and it was
even proposed that it could act in the absence of enzymes, but
this has not been found to be the case Posnick, 1999 #373
via S-adenosylmethionine (SAM or AdoMet). Some of these
methylations are essential to cell functioning, and SAM synthetase
is therefore an essential enzyme. The exact role of these methylations
is often poorly known, but it is a type of chemical modification
so frequent that it probably indicates a metabolic need linked
to the availability in one-carbon residues ("one-carbon pool").
Sulfur in its sulfonium form is an ideal atom as an intermediate,
being both a receptor and donor of alkyl groups. As a case in
point, it appears now that another molecule comprising this group,
S-methylmethionine, also plays an important (but poorly
known) role both in the storage and in the exchange of methyl
groups Thanbichler, 1999).
Biosynthesis
of S-adenosylmethionine
AdoMet
is synthesized from methionine and ATP by SAM synthase (EC 2.5.1.6),
the product of gene metK. AdoMet is an essential molecule.
This is due to the frequent (and poorly understood) involvement
of AdoMet in the regulation of gene expression (cf. Thomas, 1991;
Chen, 1999) and this accounts well for the ambiguous results of
the genetics of metK. SAM synthase being essential, the
metK gene can never be totally inactive. If one obtains,
among ethionine resistant mutants, mutants that make little AdoMet,
they are nevertheless not entirely deprived of it Saint-Girons,
1988). One should not forget this fact, that has long made scientists
think that there existed two AdoMet synthetases in E. coli
(which is true in S. cerevisiae, but not in E. coli)
Thomas, 1987; Greene, 1996).
AdoMet
synthetase condenses methionine with ATP by hydrolyzing the latter
into phosphate and pyrophosphate. In turn, pyrophosphate is cleaved
by pyrophosphatase, pulling the reaction toward the biosynthesis
direction:
ATP
+ methionine > AdoMet + Pi
+ PPi
This
is therefore a very energy costly reaction since it consumes three
energy-rich bonds, while creating only one, that of the sulfonium
group. The sulfur atom of methionine is, in the molecule of AdoMet,
positively charged. It is coordinated to three groups that it
can theoretically donate in a more or less equivalent way: a methyl-
group, an aminobutyryl- (or, more aptly, 3-amino-3-carboxylpropyl-)
group and an adenosyl- group. It is generally the methyl- group
which is donated, but the other reactions are possible (a variant
is seen in the synthesis of spermidine, with transfer of the aminopropyl-
group from dAdoMet). For example, some transfer RNA molecules
(tRNAPhe)
can be modified with the 3-amino-3-carboxylpropyl- group Nishimura,
1974). A last type of transfer (transfer of the ribosyl- group)
is the basis of another complicated modified base of tRNA, queuosine
Slany, 1993).
Because
of its reactivity this sulfonium group can be spontaneously hydrolyzed,
and it is the masking from water molecules that makes it reactive
towards other acceptor substrates. In the presence of water it
spontaneously yields methionine and adenosine, methylthioribose
and homoserine, or methanol and adenosylhomocysteine. It must
therefore exist a strict control of the pool of AdoMet in the
cell.
The
main product of the transmethylation reaction is S-adenosylhomocysteine.
In E. coli, this molecule seems to be recycled in
the following way. A nucleosidase (EC 3.2.2.9), encoded by gene
pfs (see below) hydrolyses this molecule into adenine and
S-ribosylhomocysteine, that hydrolyses spontaneously into
homocysteine and ribose Della Ragione, 1985). Homocysteine is
converted into methionine, and ribose and adenine must be recycled
(but we did not find a general assessment of these reactions).
In plants and animals, there exists an adenosylhomocysteinase
(EC 3.3.1.1) that produces adenosine and homocysteine directly.
This seems more economical and produces adenosine, an important
mediator of some cascades of regulation Cohen, 1998 #10. It seems
clear that it would be useful to characterize more explicitly
the outcome of these pathways in bacteria.
The
reactions of the AdoMet sulfonium group
Methylations
Methylation
reactions are very numerous. The best known, because they are
better understood, are those which correspond to methylation of
DNA, in particular to protect DNA against restriction enzymes
(in general the genes are in an operon coding for a DNA methylase,
followed by the restriction enzyme: a case in point is the hsdRM
operon in E. coli K12). They can also be involved
in covalent modifications leading to processes of epigenetic heredity
(as sexual imprint in vertebrates, or controlling the form of
flowers Cubas, 1999).
Methylation
of nucleic acids
Most
often, methylated sites are located at position N6 of adenine,
or C5 of cytosine, but all kinds of reactions are possible: for
example, positions 2' or 3' of ribose can also be methylated,
as well as the amino group of adenine.
In
E. coli, two major sites of methylation of DNA are
observed: on the one hand the adenine present at site GATC, is
methylated by Dam methylase, and on the other hand the second
cytosine sites recognized by enzyme EcoRII CC(A/T)GG, by
methylase Dcm Urieli-Shoval, 1983). GATC methylation sites are
involved in at least three fondamental processes: (i) the replication
proof-reading system ("long patch mismatch repair"),
where protein MutH cleaves the unmethylated strand of sequence
GATC, and hydrolyses the daughter strand when it interacts with
a mismatch base pair recognized by the MutS MutL complex, followed
by the reparation of this strand by DNA polymerase I Laengle-Rouault,
1986); (ii) the fixation of protein DnaA, to permit correct initiation
of replication of DNA at the Ori region Campbell, 1990 #242; (iii)
the control, possibly epigenetic in part, of the transcription
of genes involved in pili formation Blyn, 1990). Finally, an analysis
of the genome sequence suggested a particular role of GATC sequences,
perhaps hemimethylated, in the control of the transition of growth
from anaerobiosis to growth in the presence of oxygen Hénaut,
1996). A recent work on the formation of E. coli biofilms
controlled by the regulator OxyR that binds to regions containing
several GATC substantiates experimentally this hypothesis Hasman,
1999). The case of DNA regions methylated by protein Dcm corresponds
mostly to the correction of very local errors ("very short
mismatch repair") Lieb, 1986 #245.
RNA
molecules are also often methylated: it is the case of many positions
in transfer RNA Bjork, 1996), in particular of the thymine residue
in the TYCG
loop (gene trmA). Some positions in ribosomal RNA may be
methylated permanently Bjork, 1996 #254, or in the presence of
genes confering resistance to some antibiotics (such as erythromycine
Thakker-Varia, 1985 #255). The role of these methylations is poorly
known, and inactivatiing the corresponding genes does not give
a simple phenotype (apart from a variation in the accurracy of
translation, Bjork, 1999).
In
the case of ribosomal RNA eubacteria differ from eucaryotes and
archaebacteria in that it is much less methylated, and probably
methylated by methylases specific for each methylated region.
In contrast, in the latter cases, it seems that a small set of
methylases recognize structures made of ribosomal RNA associated
to guide RNAs, that can methylate several regions of the rRNA.
Protein
methylation
Many
proteins may also be methylated: ribosomal proteins Chen, 1977
#258; Mardones, 1980 #259; chemotaxis control proteins (methylation
of a glutamate residue in the chemotaxis receptors by methyltransferase
CheR and demethylation by methylesterase CheB Simms, 1987 #257);
N-methylation of the amino-terminal residue of some proteins
Stock, 1987 #260; or methylation of isoaspartate residues in aging
proteins. In this latter case, methylation on the aspartate group
creates an unstable methyl bond, that is corrected following spontaneous
hydrolysis Visick, 1998).
The
sites of these methylations are varied: it is often the e-terminal
group of lysines, but one also finds histidine Chen, 1988 #262,
aspartate, glutamate, arginine Rawal, 1995), glycine Ogawa, 1998
residues, or the N-terminal extremity of proteins. In this latter
case, the modifications concern methionine, phenylalanine, alanine
or proline residues, which leads to the formation of monomethylmethionine,
monomethylphenylalanine, monomethylalanine, trimethylalanine and
dimethylproline Stock, 1987 #260. Little is known concerning methylation
of proteins in bacteria, and it is probable that the study of
the proteome will lead to suprising discoveries in this domain.
Methylation
of metabolites
AdoMet
is involved in the synthesis of a large number of metabolites,
and in particular of essential coenzymes such as ubiquinone, menaquinone,
siroheme and vitamin B12. One also finds detoxification systems
(methyl-selenocysteine), antibiotics and all kinds of molecules
involved in the cell's achitecture (terpene derivatives, sterols,
lignin) or metabolites involved in the regulation of osmotic pressure
(betaïne, choline). In plants, one finds derivatives of methionine,
such as S-methylmethionine (SMM) James, 1995 #265 or S-methylcysteine
Chow, 1972 #266. The role of SMM is not clear but it is used by
plants as an osmoprotectant. It has recently been implicated in
the metabolism of selenium. Its methyl group can be transfered
to homocysteine to give two molecules of methionine (role of storage
for methyl groups). In plants, SMM can also be cleaved into dimethylmercaptan
and homoserine or, finally, decarboxylated in the presence of
pyridoxal-phosphate and metal ions. This decarboxylation product
(dimethylsulfonium propylamino) is an element active in the anticancer
molecule, bleomycine A2
Cohen, 1998 #10. Some of these metabolites exist in diverse strains
of E. coli, and it is likely that among the unknown
genes of pathogenicity islands one finds genes involved in some
of these methylations.
The
aminobutyryl group and its avatars
The
second group which may be donated by AdoMet is the aminobutyryl
group. It has been found recently that the aminobutyryl group
is utilized by the cells in several reactions.
Quorum
sensing
Bacteria
are often considered as isolated individuals, incapable of the
organized behaviors observed in multicellular organisms. However,
W. Hastings, who studied marine bacteria forming luminescent
colonies, discovered twenty years ago that their capacity to emit
light was entirely determined by their relative number Wilson,
1998 #271. These bacteria had to be concentrated enough to produce
light. Everything went as if they could measure their number to
induce expression of the genes necessary for light production.
This supposed, as in general assemblies, that a "quorum"
was reached, hence the name of "quorum sensing" given
to this phenomenon. "Quorum sensing" is a mechanism
of communication between bacteria that leads them to display an
organized collective behavior.
The
following questions were asked: what are the molecules secreted
by the bacteria, that permitted them to trigger this phenomenon,
how these molecules were synthesized, and what did they control?
Among
the many molecules that carry this information (autoinducers)
one may distinguish at least two classes. Gram negative bacteria
produce N-acyl homoserine lactones (N-acyl HSL),
small molecules composed of homoserine cyclised in lactone and
an aliphatic chain. Other bacteria, such as Staphylococcus
aureus or B. subtilis, produce peptidic autoinducers.
In the case of Gram bacteria, the paradigm of which is Vibrio
fisheri or V. harveyi, a protein belonging to
the family LuxI catalyses the formation of N-acyl HSL from
a molecule of S-adenosylmethionine and acyl-ACP (acyl-Acyl
Carrier Protein) Val, 1998 #268; Parsek, 1999 #267. AdoMet is
used in this reaction as a donor of the aminobutyryl group (it
participates in the creation of the lactone cycle), which produces
a molecule of methylthioadenosine (MTA). The aliphatic chain (in
general short chained) comes from the biosynthesis of fatty acids,
and it is transported by ACP. The fact to carry an aliphatic chain
of a certain length (but not too long) permits free diffusion
of the molecule through the cell membrane, even in the absence
of permease. This leads to a rapid equilibration of its concentration
between the external medium and the inside of the cell.
When
this concentration reaches a threshold value the regulator effects
of "quorum sensing" begin to control a large number
of processes, such as: luminescence (V. fisheri, or
V. harveyi), conjugative transfer of plasmids (Agrobacterium
tumefaciens), collective movement of bacteria (swarming) (Serratia
licfaciens), synthesis of some reserve molecules (e.g. poly-3-hydroxybutyrate,
V. harveyi), or finally virulence Val, 1998).
The
synthesis of ethylene
The
gas ethylene (CH2=CH2)
is the first multifonctional gaseous hormone that has been discovered
(in 1934, in plants), well before nitrogen monoxide, curiously
now much more famous Cohen, 1998 #10. Ethylene participates, among
other processes, in fruit ripening, plant aging and/or in the
formation of roots or flowers. The biosynthesis of ethylene derives
from methionine, or more precisely of AdoMet. Ethylene is also
synthesized in bacteria such as E. coli, Pseudomonas
syringae or the fungus Cryptococcus albidus. The existence
of microbes producing ethylene indicates a possible interference
with the plant metabolism during infection of microbial origin.
In
microorganisms, there are at least two known pathways for ethylene
biosynthesis. A first one starts with methionine (as in plants)
and the second one uses a-ketoglutarate
as a precursor. In Penicillium digitatum, there exists
yet another precursor, 2-keto-4-methylthiobutyrate (KMBA), produced
by the transamination of methionine (or, as we shall see, the
product of recycling of methylthioribose in K. pneumoniae).
KMBA can be directly converted into ethylene. The main pathway
using AdoMet as a precursor, is composed of two enzymes. The first
one, ACC synthase (pyridoxal 5-phosphate enzyme, EC 4.4.1.14),
converts AdoMet into 1-aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylic acid (ACC)
yielding methylthioadenosine. Subsequently, ACC oxidase converts
ACC into ethylene (figure 7) Cohen, 1998).
Cyanobacteria
also produce ethylene, but its role is not well understood. For
example, in Fremyella displosiphon, a photoreceptor
protein which belongs to the family of two-component regulators
is homologous to a gene governing the reponse to ethylene in Arabidopsis
thaliana Kehoe, 1996 #176. The authors speculate that this
protein may be involved in the control of cellular processes regulated
by light. It is possible that the receptors of ethylene and the
phytochromes (red/infrared receptors) evolved from a common ancestor
that was sensitive to the regulation by two stimuli: light and
ethylene. We cannot exclude their possible role as mediators of
differentiation in higher cyanobacteria, especially because there
exists in these organisms an ethylene receptor binding protein
homologous to that of Arabidopsis thaliana that seems to
be functional (ethylene response sensor protein (ETR1) Rodriguez,
1999).
Synthesis
of biotin
A
step of biotin synthesis (bioA) uses AdoMet not as a source
of methyl group, but as a source of amino group, yielding as a
by-product of the reaction S-adenosyl-4-methylthio-2-oxobutanoate.
This molecule, that is similar to a precursor of ethylene synthesis,
must therefore be recycled. This step is not known.
Modification
of tRNA
Transfer
RNAs are known to have a large number of modifications in their
bases, some of which as frozen traces of ancestral functions (Danchin,
1989). The most recent works have identified 79 modifications
in enterobacteria Bjork, 1999 #246. One of these modifications
results from transfer of the 3-amino-3-carboxypropyl group of
S-adenosylmethionine Nishimura, 1974). This modification
concerns phenylalanine tRNA and is on the uridine of the supplementary
loop m7G-X-C,
where X represents 3-(3-amino-3-carboxypropyl)-uridine. As a product
of the reaction, apart from the modified nucleoside, one obtains
methylthioadenosine.
The
synthesis of spermidine
The
last point that we shall consider here is the transfer of the
aminopropyl group of S-adenosylmethionine in the synthesis
of polyamines. This reaction is of significant biological importance,
despite the fact that, from a purely quantitative point of view,
transmethylations are more significant. However, in the case of
methylations, sulfur is immediaty recycled as homocysteine, which
is not the case in polyamine biosynthesis. In this case, AdoMet
is first decarboxyled by S-adenosylmethionine decarboxylase
(EC 4.1.1.50) Cohen, 1998 #10. Subsequently, its aminopropyl group
is transfered by spermidine synthase (aminopropyltransferase,
EC 2.5.1.16) on putrescine to give a molecule of spermidine and
a molecule of methylthioadenosine (see figure 6). This reaction,
that traps sulfur in a little studied molecule, is a universal
reaction, present in all living organisms, with the exception
of a few halophilic microorganisms that do not possess spermidine.
In eucaryotes and some procaryotes, this aminopropyl group can
be subsequently transfered onto spermidine to give spermine. This
reaction is catalysed by an enzyme very similar to spermidine
synthases (spermine synthase, EC 2.5.1.22), with production of
a molecule of methylthioadenosine, the fate of which will be considered
below. Because of its availability, one may wonder about the possible
existence of aminopropyl group transfers to other molecules: in
principle one may expect that all the substrates of methylation,
and in particular numerous proteins could be modified by this
group. This may explain that analysis of bacterial proteome displays
modified polypeptides in proportions much larger than expected.
Transfer
of the ribosyl group
Queuosine
(Q) [7-(((4,5-ciS-dihydroxy-2-cyclopenten-1-yl)amino)methyl)-7-deaza-guanosine],
is a nucleoside that takes the place of guanosine at position
34 of some transfer RNAs (those of asparagine, aspartate, histidine
and tyrosine) in Bacteria and in Eukarya, with the exception of
archaebacteria and yeast. Bacteria synthesize the base queuine
de novo, whereas eucaryotes must insert this base
directly into the tRNA from a precursor obtained from food. For
a few years only, one knows that this nucleoside is a derivative
of S-adenosylmethionine Slany, 1993 #238. It is an extremely
interesting case because AdoMet acts here as a donor of the ribosyl
group. This is, as yet, the only known example of this reaction.
Only two steps of the biosynthesis pathway of queuosine are well
characterized. This pathway starts with GTP, that is converted
by a unknown mechanism, requiring iron, into 7-(aminomethyl)7-deaza-guanine
(preQ1).
PreQ1
is then inserted at position 1 of the anticodon of some tRNAs
in exchange of guanine by a tRNA-guanine transglycosylase (EC
2.4.2.29, encoded by gene tgt). The preQ1
present in these tRNAs is converted into epoxyqueuosine (oQ) by
attachement of the epoxycyclopentanediol group. This reaction
is catalysed by S-adenosylmethionine:tRNA ribosyltransferase-isomerase
(EC 5.-.-.-, encoded by gene queA). The cyclopentane group
is the isomerized derivative of ribose coming from AdoMet. Nobody
knows the outcome of adenine during this reaction. In fact, because
we do not have AdoMet labeled on ribose, it is difficult to determine
whether it is the ribosyl group alone or the adenosyl group that
is used. The last step of reduction of epoxyqueuosine into queuosine
is catalysed by an unidentified enzyme using vitamin B12 as a
cofactor (when present). Finally, for reasons that are not quite
understood, queuosine or its derivatives is excreted at high levels
in the medium. This may be used for quorum sensing and/or for
interaction with the hosts.
It
seems interesting to stress that all the types of activated groups
in AdoMet are used to provide modifications of transfer RNA. The
methyl group is most often transfered, for example to form ribothymidine.
The 3-amino-3-carboxypropyl group is used to give 3-(3-amino-3-carboxypropyl)-uridine
and the ribosyl (or possibly adenosyl) group are involved in the
formation of queuosine.
AdoMet
also acts as a transient donor of the oxyadenosyl radical in the
synthesis of L-b-lysine
from L-lysine (reaction catalysed by a lysine 2,3-aminomutase)
in anaerobic conditions in Closthree-dium subterminale
Lieder, 1998 #270. In the same conditions, AdoMet plays a role
in E. coli in the synthesis of deoxyribonucleotides,
reaction catalysed by a ribonucleotide reductase (EC 1.17.4.2,
coded by genes nrdD and nrdG) Ollagnier, 1997 #274.
One sees therefore that the metabolism of this molecule is quite
complicated.
Recycling
of methylthioadenosine: the methionine salvage pathway
AdoMet
can also be decarboxyled as dAdoMet, the precursor of spermidine.
During this reaction methylthioadenosine (MTA) is produced (figure 8).
Many bacteria [13, 33], yeast [25], plants [22], rat [39] and
human [12] utilize the methionine salvage pathway recycling MTA
to methioine. Organic sulfur being often limiting, this molecule
must be recycled in most cases. Several studies in bacteria related
to E. coli, K. pneumoniae, suggest the
metabolic pathway indicated in figure
9 .
The pathway has now been completely unravelled in B. subtilis,
and in several other bacteria, including Pseudomonas aeruginosa.
It remains however not completely understood in several organisms,
such as Thermoanaerobacter tencongensis.
In
a first step in E. coli, MTA is hydrolysed by a nucleosidase
(EC 3.2.2.16, coded by gene pfs, now mtnN), yielding
methylthioribose (MTR) and adenine Cornell, 1996 #273; Cornell,
1998 #272. In B. subtilis the corresponding gene yrrU,
is present in a complex operon yrrTmtnNyrhABC,
that appears to metabolise sulfur containing molecules Sekowska,
1999). In contrast, in animals and their parasites, MTA is phosphorolysed,
giving methylthioribose-1-phosphate and adenine. In the case where
sulfur is not limiting it happens that MTR is the final product
excreted into the medium. This seems to be the case in E. coli
(Schroeder, 1973). In order to harmonize nomencalture pfs
and yrrU should perhaps be renamed mtnN, for methylthioadenosine
nucleosidase (reserving mtnP for the phosphorylase
present in several Bacteria, Archaea and Eukarya).
However,
MTR is usually recycled (figure
9). In the presence of oxygen, the pathway deciphered
in K. pneumoniae begins with phosphorylation of MTR
by a MTR kinase, that uses ATP as phosphate donor and produces
MTR-1-phosphate (Wray, 1995). MTR-1-P is transformed into methylthioribulose-1-phosphate
(MTRu-1-P) by an aldose-ketose isomerase. MTRu-1-P is subsequently
dehydrated (and converted into a ketone) by a not yet identified
dehydratase, to give 2,3-diketo-5-methylthiopentyl-1-phosphate
(DK-MTP-1-P). This latter molecule is first converted into phosphoene-diol
(DHK-MTPene) via the intermediate, 2-hydroxy-3-keto-5-methylthiopentenyl-1-phosphate
(HK-MTPenyl-1-P), to give 1,2-dihydroxy-3-keto-5-methylthiopentene
(aci-reductone). These two steps are catalysed by a bi-functional
enzyme, enolase-phosphatase E-1. In K. pneumoniae,
1,2-dihydroxy-3-keto-5-methylthiopentene can be processed in two
different ways, by hte action of a dioxygenase E-2 (aci-reductone
oxidase) either into formate, 3-methylthiopropionate and CO (Wray,
1993), or, depending on the nature of the transition ion bound
to the enzyme (either nickel or iron), into formate and a-keto-4-methylthiobutyrate
(KMTB), the direct ketoacid precursor of methionine. Only the
second pathway permits the direct way back to methionine thanks
to the transamination of KMTB by an original tyrosine aminotransferase
(TyrAT), that utilises as an amino group donor glutamate or aromatic
amino-acids Heilbronn, 1999) (figure
9). It must be stressed that the carbon atoms 2,
3, 4 and 5 of ribose are found again in the methionine backbone,
and that the methyl group carried by sulfur is not exchanged:
this recycling process therefore does not require a source of
one-carbon residues, but, in contrast, it produces one (in the
form of formaldehyde or formate). This fact is quite remarkable
(figure
9). Indeed, this production of one-carbon residues
in the form of a chain reaction is typically explosive. One expects
therefore that methionine metabolism will be particularly stringently
regulated to control these explosive reactions. In this
context, the storage in the form of S-methylmethionine
may be a way to modify rapidy the availabilty of methyl groups.
At
this stage, experimental work was needed to identify all the biochemical
steps of the pathway. A remarkable work by Yokota and his colleagues
established the following, in B. subtilis (). The mtnW
(ykrW) gene coding for a RuBisCO-like Protein (RLP) is
the first gene in the mtnWXBD operon, located close to
the mtnKA operon (Sekowska and Danchin, 2002). These
operons have S-box riboswitches that regulate the expression of
the genes involved in sulfur metabolism in B. subtilis
and other A+T-rich Gram positives. MtnD is highly homologous to
the 1,2-dihydroxy-3-keto-5-methylthiopentene dioxygenase and MtnK
was identified as the methylthioribose kinase (Sekowsha et al.,
2001). This suggested that both operons were functioning in the
methionine salvage pathway (figure
9). Therefore Yokota et al. first predicted and proved
that B. subtilis MtnA, rather than coding for a translation
initiation factor, coded for the first step of MTA recycling;
RLP would catalyze a reaction step somewhere in this pathway.
Each step of this pathway has been predicted in Klebsiella
sp. by analysis of metabolic intermediates but two enzymes, MTR-1-P
isomerase and MTRu-1-P dehydratase, were unknown. Moreover, each
reaction step in this pathway was uncharacterized in B. subtilis,
except for that catalyzed by MTA nucleosidase, MTR kinase and
KMTB aminotransferase encoded by mtnN, mtnK
and mtnE, respectively. This fact suggested to them that
RLP functions as a DK-MTP-1-P enolase in the methionine salvage
pathway in Bacillus species. One must remark here the special
role played by dioxygenase E-2 (that gives an interesting idea
of the general possible function of dioxygenases). Indeed, this
enzyme directly consumes dioxygen, O2,
and may therefore be utilised to prevent the toxic effects of
oxygen (more numerous than we can summarize here, see for example
Gardner, 1998). In such a case, the production of MTA (MTR) may
be considered as a means (perhaps existing very early in evolution,
before the evolving of respiration) to protect the cell against
the toxic effects of oxygen. This may indirectly account for the
antioxidizing properties of polyamines coupled with their synthesis
Lovaas, 1991; Pavlovic, 1992).
Special
metabolism of sulfur
We
just broadly outlined the general metabolism of sulfur, but it
still exists a series of more or less unknown metabolic pathways
where sulfur is involved in some way. Sulfur is an element present
in molecules as glutathione. It is also a constituent of iron-sulfur
centers or of essential coenzymes such as thiamine, biotin, molybdopterin,
pantothenate and lipoic acid. It also belongs to the many modifications
of the nucleotides that constitute transfer RNA, via reactions
that we just begin to understand.
Glutathione
We
begin with this cofactor because it is directy associated to cysteine
metabolism. Its transfer onto spermidine probably leads to storage
of the latter in stationary growth phase (Cohen, 1998). In E. coli,
gene gsp is involved in this transfer. The corresponding
protein, GSP, is a bifunctional protein that catalyses the formation
of glutathionyl-spermidine (glutathionyl-spermidine synthase,
EC 6.3.1.8), but also its hydrolysis (glutathionyl-spermidine
amidohydrolase, EC 3.5.1.78). The two catalytic activities lie
in two distinct parts of the protein, the amidase function is
located in the amino-terminal part, whereas the synthetase function
is located in the carboxy-terminal part (Swiss-Prot: P43675).
There exists also another protein, glutathione S-transferase
or GST (EC 2.5.1.18, encoded by gene gst), that tranfers
glutathione to several kinds of molecules.
Glutathione
is an isotripeptide, very frequently found in cells. It is derived
from the condensation of cysteine on the g-terminal
COOH of glutamate. A glycine residue is subsequently added by
formation of an usual peptidic bond. Glutathione is used to recycle
the sulfide groups that can be spontaneously oxidized, following
electron transfer due to catalysis or free radicals, or other
oxidation phenomena. In the course of this process, two molecules
of glutathione form a disulfide bridge that is thus reduced by
glutathione oxidoreductase. In E. coli, the genes
involved are the following:
• gene
gor codes for glutathione oxidoreductase; it is in operon
with an unknown gene yhiR.
• gene
gshA codes for g-glutamyl-cysteine
synthetase; it lies in a likely operon yqaBAgshAygaG (YqaB
and YqaA may be phosphatases, similar to the phosphatase of the
HPr protein of B. subtilis).
• gene
gshB codes for glutathione synthetase; it lies in a likely
operon gshByqgEyqgF (YqgE and YqgF display some analogy
with phosphotransferases). These unexpected associations suggest
an interesting track to explore: is the biosynthesis of glutathione
controled by protein phosphorylation?
The
iron-sulfur centers
Sulfur
is also an element of iron-sulfur centers (minute analogues of
iron pyrite) that are involved in a large number of oxido-reductions,
and constitute the core of ferredoxins. In the history of the
origin of life, hypotheses become more and more convincing that
the electron transfers between Fe2+
iron and Fe3+
iron and the numerous possible oxidation states of sulfur play
a role of prime importance (Granick, 1957; Wächtershäuser,
1988; Danchin, 1990). It is therefore interesting to wonder how
the iron-sulfur centers are formed in the cell.
One
knows very little about the formation of elemental sulfur, apart
from conditions where it acts in the electron transfers allowing
anaerobic respiration Ehrlich, 1996 #33. It is very unlikely that
it is sulfur in this oxidation state that is incorporated in the
diverse types of centers (Fe-S)n.
A possible start point seems to be cystine, possibly by directly
coupling a cysteine to a cysteine present in the protein that
carries the iron-sulfur center, using a hydrogenase. A b-lyase,
analogous to cystathionine b-lyase
may then provide the thiocysteine that serves as donor of sulfur
atom. But it is the study of protein NifS in Azotobacter vinelandii
that brings most information on a possible mechanism. This protein
is a cysteine sulfurylase that, from thiocysteine, liberates sulfur,
yielding cysteine Zheng, 1998 #282. Several enzymes homologous
to the product of gene nifS of A. vinelandi
existent in E. coli. One of those seems to code for
a cysteine sulfinate sulfinase Mihara, 1997 #280. The existence
of these reactions may provide tracks to assign a function to
some genes labeled "y".
Thiamine
Thiamine
is an essential cofactor comprising a sulfur heterocycle. Its
biosynthesis needs two separated pathways. The first synthesizes
the thiazole group (5-methyl-4-(-hydroxyethyl)thiazole), and the
second a pyrimidine (4-amino-5-hydroxymethylpyrimidine pyrophosphate)
(figure 10). These two molecules are combined to yield thiamine
pyrophosphate. The pyrimidine moiety is derived from 5-aminoimidazole
ribotide. Thiazole is derived from tyrosine, cysteine, and 1-oxy-D-xylulose-5-phosphate.
The enzymatic mechanisms involved in the formation of thiazole
and pyrimidine remain poorly understood. In particular a synthesis
pathway for pyrimidines, related to that of purines, but that
does not stem from normal ammonium transfer on PrPP, seems to
exist. This pathway involves several genes of unknown function
such as apbA, apbE or ybgF (the homologous
gene in B. subtilis is yabC). Their inactivation
makes the mutants particularly sensitive to serine.
An
operon of five genes (thiCEFGH) involved in the biosynthesis
of thiamine has been cloned and characterized (Table 2 and figure
10).
Gene
thiC complements mutants auxotrophic for 4-amino-5-hydroxymethylpyrimidine,
genes thiFGH complement mutants auxotrophic for thiazole,
and gene thiE codes for thiamine phosphate synthase. Another
gene (thiI), necessary for the biosynthesis of thiazole
in Salmonella typhimurium has recently been identified
Webb, 1997 #337. A gene homologous to thiI of S. typhimurium
is located at 9.5 min in the chromosome of E. coli
and complements a mutation nuvC. NuvC is necessary for
the synthesis of the thiouridine present in tRNA and of the thiazole
moiety of thiamine. This suggests that ThiI plays a role in the
chemistry of sulfur transfer in the biosynthesis of thiazole.
A
new observation recently completed this pathway. When the product
of gene thiG, purified from a strain that expressed it,
has been analysed by mass spectrometry, it appeared that it was
in fact made of two proteins. A subunit, now named ThiS, had a
mass of 7310.74 Da. The second subunit, for which one keeps
the name ThiG, had a mass of 26896.5 Da. In fact, although
the mass anomaly of ThiG had been noted before, thiS had
escaped attention during the identification of CDSs in the E. coli
genome. This was caused in part by the short length of the corresponding
CDS, and by the presence of sequence errors (quoted in Taylor,
1998). To this difficulties we may add that ThiS is poorly coloured
with Coomassie blue and migrates with the front in the polyacrylamide
gels. ThiS contains the -Gly-Gly sequence found at the carboxy-terminal
end of ubiquitinylated human red cells. This similarity in sequence
was more remarkable because ThiF is similar to an enzyme that
activates ubiquitine. The similarity includes the presence of
an ATP binding site. This suggested that ThiF may well catalyse
adenylation of ThiS, and that the adenylate derivative ThiS-CO-AMP
may react with cysteine (or a sulfur donor derived from cysteine)
to yield the thiocarboxylate derivative ThiS-COSH (figure
11 B). Furthermore, the double role of ThiI in the biosynthesis
of thiazole and 4-thiouridine indicated that ThiI may play a role
in the reaction of sulfur transfer. This is what has been proposed
by Taylor and his colleagues (figure 11 Taylor, 1998).
The
enzymatic mechanisms of sulfur transfer in the biosynthesis of
thiamine, molybdopterin, biotin, and lipoic acid remain however
poorly known.
Lipoic
acid
Thiamine
is involved in the anabolic processes of decarboxylation (linked
to dehydrogenation), where two cofactors operate successively,
thiamine pyrophosphate and lipoic acid. Lipoate is synthesized
by insertion of sulfur coming from cysteine into the hydrocarbon
chain of octanoic acid (an intermediary in the biosynthesis of
fatty acids) at position C-6 and C-8. This reaction is probably
performed by a mechanism involving a radical Michal, 1999 #166.
The sources of sulfur used for the formation of biotin and lipoic
acid are unknown, and the mechanism of insertion of sulfur into
the protein has not yet been established. At the end of biosynthesis,
a molecule of lipoate activated by ATP is linked to the e-amino
group of a lysine of the corresponding enzyme to yield the functional
cofactor. Lipoic acid is a cofactor linked covalently to many
dehydrogenases, such as pyruvate dehydrogenase (EC 3.3.1.) or
a-ketoglutarate
dehydrogenase (EC 3.8.1.). Most living organisms synthesize lipoic
acid, that must be produced in situ to be functional, and
it seems difficult to recover from the environment. However, in
some bacteria, lipoate is a growth factor Michal, 1999 #166.
Three
genes of the biosynthesis pathway of lipoate have been identified:
lipA (lipoate synthase, Swiss-Prot P25846), and lplA
and lipB (lipoyl-protein ligases A and B, EC 6.-.-.-, Swiss-Prot
P32099 and P30976, respectively). But it is clear that for understanding
the whole pathway a lot of data are still missing. One possibly
has in E. coli an operon comprising dacA (D-alanine
carboxypeptidase), ybeD (similar to yitC of B. subtilis,
similar to an oxo-acyl CoA carrier protein synthase) and lipB
(LipB links lipoate to the e-amino
group of a lysine in a receptor protein, a reaction performed
from a complex and not from free lipoate), an operon comprising
ybeF (YbeF is an activator of the LysR family, whose effector
is unknown) and lipA whose product may be involved in insertion
of sulfur during lipoate biosynthesis. There exist two proteins
similar to LipA in B. subtilis, YutB (54% identity)
and YqeV (23% identity). YqeV is remarkable because it is very
conserved in all bacteria, but without known function, with a
likely role in the synthesis of lipoic acid (Table 2).
The
modifications of transfer RNA
Among
the 79 types of transfer RNA modifications that have been identified,
at least 50 of which being present in E. coli, three or
four involve sulfur-containing molecules Bjork, 1996 #254.
In
E. coli and related bacteria, the nucleotide in position
8 in transfer RNA is a modified uridine, 4-thiouridine. This nucleotide
seems to have as its principal role a protective function against
violent irradiations by near ultraviolet light Mueller, 1998).
Indeed, this nucleotide absorbs radiation at this wavelength and
therefore protects the cell. In the presence of sufficient irradiation
at 365 nm, this nucleotide reacts with a neighbor cytosine producing
a covalent bond. The tRNA molecule thus modified can no longer
be charged by the corresponding amino acid, in most cases. This
triggers the stringent response, whose signal is the ppGpp molecule,
coupling translation to transcription. The macromolecular syntheses
stop and bacteria are shifted to a state that permit them to better
resist this situation. One does not yet know how the atom of sulfur
is incorporated into the nucleotide. Although mutants controlling
this process have been isolated more than 25 years ago (nuvA
and nuvC Lipsett, 1978), the thiI gene involved
in this reaction has only been characterised recently Mueller,
1998). Furthermore, this gene is involved in the synthesis of
thiamine.
There
exist several modifications at position 34 (first position of
anticodon) in E. coli. In the case of tRNAs specific
for glutamate, lysine and glutamine, the modified nucleoside is
5-methylaminomethyl-2-thiouridine (mnm5s2U34).
The reaction of uridine 34 modification comprises several steps,
some of which are poorly known. The first step of thiolation at
position two of uridine (s2U34)
is catalysed by the product of gene mnmA (also known in
the litterature as trmU or asuE). The product of
gene mnmE (trmE) catalyses the first step of the
modification at position five, but one does not know the steps
that lead to the modification into 5-carbonylmethylaminomethyl-2-thiouridine
(cmnm5s2U34).
The two modifications at position two and five are synthesized
independently of each other. The product of gene mnmC (trmC),
that catalyses the following step of the modification at position
five, possesses two enzymatic activities that catalyse successively
the reactions to liberate the acetate group of cmnm5s2U34
(which leads to nm5s2U34,
5-methylamino-2-thiouridine), and to methylate the nm5s2U34
in mnm5s2U34
(AdoMet-dependent reaction) Hagervall, 1998).
The
modification at position 34 participates probably in the discrimination
between codons of the same family that, varying at their third
position, code for different amino acids (for example lysine is
coded by two triplets AAA and AAG, which can lead to the confusion
with asparagine codons AAU and AAC). However, experience shows
that this role is perhaps not direct, because the mutants partially
modified at position 34 of tRNA seem to be more accurate in translation
(there is less confusion between lysine and asparagine) than the
wild type, with a tRNA containing normally modified uridine. The
authors propose that this modification has a role in the interactions
with the ribosome or with the translation elongation or termination
factors, rather than in the direct codon discrimination Hagervall,
1998). In this case, the thiol group present in these modified
bases stabilises the structure of transfer RNA, which is centrally
important to the reconnaissance of tRNA correspondings by their
synthetases and to their charge with their amino acids Kruger,
1998).
At
position 32 of some tRNAs of eubacteria, one finds another modification,
2-thiocytidine, but little is known about the genes involved in
its synthesis and about the biological signification of this modification
Bjork, 1996).
Another
modification (2-methylthio-N6-isopentenyl
adenosine (ms2i6A),
adds a S-methyl group at position 2 of adenine at position
37 of transfer RNAs specific for codons beginning with U, with
the exception of tRNASer
I and V). It may result from the transfer of the methyl group
of AdoMet, whereas sulfur atom would come from cysteine. Two genes,
miaB and miaC, are necessary for this reaction.
Gene miaA catalyses the first step of conversion of adenosine
into 6-isopentenyl-adenosine Esberg, 1995). The position of these
genes in the chromosome of E. coli was not clearly
established until recently. The miaB gene has been shown
to be identical to gene yleA. MiaB contains a cysteine
cluster reminiscent of iron-binding sites. It is therefore assumed
that it participates in the thiolation step of tRNA Esberg, 1999).
In S. typhimurium, a fourth gene, miaE, oxidizes
2-methylthio-N6-(isopentenyl)-adenosine
into 2-methylthio-N6-(4-hydroxyisopentenyl)-adenosine
(ms2io6A)
Persson, 1998).
Some
modifications of tRNA are important for cellular metabolism (in
S. typhimurium), or virulence (in Shigella) Bjork,
1999 #246. Among others, these modifications concern position
37, such as the modification of adenosine just described (ms2i6A),
or the modification of guanosine catalysed by tRNA(m1G37)methyltransferase,
encoded by gene trmD (1-methyl-guanosine (m1G37)),
or another modification of guanosine at position 34 in queuosine.
The
molybdenum coenzyme (molybdopterin)
With
the exception of nitrogenase, in all molybdoenzymes, the atom
of molybdenum belongs to an organometallic structure named the
molybdenum cofactor (MoCo). In this structure, molybdenum is linked
to its organic ligand by a dithiolene group located in the 6-alkyl
chain of molybdopterin (MPT). In E. coli, MoCo is
present in the slightly different form of molybdopterin guanine
dinucleotide (the conversion of MoCo in dinucleotide is placed
just before incorporation of the cofactor in the protein). The
biosynthesis of MPT starts with GTP as a precursor (figure 12).
There are several steps, that comprise the opening of the GTP
cycle, lead to the direct precursor of MPT, precursor Z Wuebbens,
1995). This latter molecule is a 6-alkylpterine with a phosphate
group at the extremity of the aliphatic chain. This phosphate
group leads to the formation of a six atom heterocycle by using
two carbons of the chain (C-2' and C-4') (figure 12). Precursor
Z contains none of the sulfur atoms present in MPT. The conversion
of precursor Z into molybdopterin necessitates ring opening of
the heterocycle and transfer of sulfur to create the dithiolene
group needed for the chelation of molybdenum.
The
transfer of sulfur in the biosynthesis of thiamine and molybdopterin
follows the same course. A system of three enzymes (MoeB, MoaD,
and MoaE) permitting the transfer of sulfur to precursor Z of
molybdopterin has been reconstituted in E. coli Pitterle,
1993; Pitterle, 1993) and in Aspergillus nidulans (figure
12) Appleyard, 1998).
The
first enzyme, MoeB (also known as ChlN), molybdopterin synthase
sulfurylase, is responsible for the activation of MoaD by adenylation,
as well as the transfer of sulfur to activated MoaD Appleyard,
1998). MoaD (small subunit) with MoaE (large subunit) form molybdopterin
synthase (known in the litterature as "converting factor").
This enzyme possesses two catalytic activities: opening of the
cycle created by the phosphate group and sulfur transfer on precursor
Z. Protein MoeB is very similar to ThiF; MoaD and ThiS comprise
the same Gly-Gly dipeptide at their carboxyl-terminal end. One
can therefore think that sulfur is transfered in the same way
by adenylation followed by formation of thiocarboxylate, as in
the case of the biosynthesis of thiamine Taylor, 1998 (see figure
11).
In
E. coli the genes involved in the biosynthesis of
MPT are situated in two operons: moeA (function unknown)
moeB, and moaABCDE. moaABC have an unknown
function (Table 2).
Biotin
Apart
from the metabolism of energy, transamination and decarboxylation
are the two most central steps of intermediary metabolism. In
general, transamination is involved in anabolism, while decarboxylation
is most often a first step of catabolism (cf. Danchin, 1990 #49).
A particular coenzyme, biotin, plays a central role in many decarboxylation
reactions (but also carboxylations and transcarboxylations). Although
generally essential, this coenzyme is rare in nature. For this
reason, living organisms have developped many systems to capture
and transport biotin. These systems are so powerful that they
have been used as probes in many processes used in molecular biology.
The biotin/(strept)avidine couple is often more efficient and
more specific than the antigen/antibody couples. One can use biotin
and streptavidine to the coupling of a reaction (molecular hybridization
for example) with an enzymatic amplification system Prescott,
1999).
Biotin
is synthesized by bacteria, yeast and plants essentially in the
same way. However, this biosynthesis is not completely understood,
and in particular one does not yet know how sulfur is incorporated
into biotin. It begins probably by the condensation of three molecules
of malonyl-CoA into pimeloyl-CoA with liberation of two molecules
of carbon dioxide. Subsequently, the condensation of pimeloyl-CoA
with alanine (pyridoxal-phosphate-dependent) leads to the formation
of a molecule of 8-amino-7-oxopelargonate (KAPA) with the liberation
of CO2
and CoA-SH. KAPA is then converted into 7,8-diaminepelargonate
(DAPA) by a transamination reaction. This reaction involves S-adenosylmethionine
as an amino group donor. An ATP-dependent carboxylation leads
to the closing of the imidazolidone cycle and to the formation
of dethiobiotin. The last step, that places sulfur in the molecule
(is still an unidentified mechanism, because it can neither be
sulfur S0,
nor an iron-sulfur center, but probably of sulfur coming from
a protein with an iron-sulfur center, perhaps biotin synthase
Bui, 1998 #339, yields biotin by the closure of the thiophane
cycle Michal, 1999). Because biotin (vitamin H) is an important
food supply, its production is of industrial interest.
In
E. coli, we know that the synthesis of biotin is controled
by genes linked to locus galETK (lambda phage deletions
often lead to auxotrophy for biotin), but all the steps are not
yet known. Two operons containing genes involved in the synthesis
of biotin are lying next to each other in a divergent way. One
has therefore possibly an operon of three genes: bioA (acid
diaminepelargonic synthetase), ybhB (unknown gene that
is similar to yxkA of B. subtilis (31% identity),
itself similar to ... bioA) and ybhC (weakly similar
to YdgB of B. subtilis (29% identity), without known
function). The divergent operon comprises four genes: bioB
(coding for biotin synthase), bioF (coding for 7-keto-8-aminopelargonic
acid synthase), bioC (function unknown, the mutant of this
gene is blocked in the formation of pimeloyl-CoA) and bioD
(coding for dethiobiotin synthase). Gene bioH is located
elsewhere in the chromosome, and its function is not known but
the corresponding mutant is blocked in the formation of pimeloyl-CoA.
Pantothenic
acid and coenzyme A
The
presence of membranes in the form of a lipid bilayer is a universal
feature of life. Lipids, and especially aliphatic long chain fatty
acids, are ubiquitous constituents of membranes. To know their
biosynthesis is therefore crucial to understand the metabolism
of living organisms. This biosynthesis is based on the synthesis
and degradation of a thioester bond, which have an ancient origin
and probably started before the origin of life. The mobile arm
in these reactions catalysed by ACP (Acyl Carrier Protein), is
4-phosphopantetheine. In some reactions this arm is linked to
a nucleotide, and forms coenzymeA (CoA, or "acyl carrier
group"). The biosynthetic mechanism of CoA synthesis is not
entirely known, although the main enzymatic steps have been identified
(figure 13).
Thee
precursor of panthothenate biosynthesis is 2-oxoisovalerate, the
valine transamination product. 2-oxoisovalerate is methylated
by 5,10-methylene-THF, giving 2-hydropantoate, which is subsequently
reduced into pantoate. An ATP-dependent condensation of the latter
with b-alanine
(derived from aspartate a-decarboxylation,
or from pyrimidine degradation) yields (R)-pantothenate.
This latter product, which is strongly excreted by E. coli,
is source of this vitamin for mammals Michal, 1999).
Coenzyme
A is synthesized by all organisms from (R)-pantothenate
that is first phosphorylated in (R)-4'-P-N-pantothenate.
Its condensation with cysteine in presence of CTP produces pyrophosphate,
CMP and (R)-4'-P-N-pantothenoyl-cysteine. Following decarboxylation,
one obtains 4'-P-pantetheine. Phosphopantetheine adenylyltransferase
(PPAT), produces dephosphoCoA Izard, 1999), that is subsequently
phosphorylated by an unknown dephospho-CoA kinase to give the
final product, CoA.
The
4-phosphopantetheine group of CoA is transfered on a serine residue
of ACP (apo-ACP), the core protein of the fatty acids biosynthesis
enzymes and also of peptide antibiotics. The same mechanism operates
for the formation of an active protein EntF, necessary for the
syntehsis of siderophores Gehring, 1998). At this step, there
is liberation of 3'5'adenosine diphosphate (PAP), the same molecule
that is liberated during assimilation of sulfate, and that is
hydrolysed in 5'AMP by the product of gene cysQ. It is
therefore important to notice that PAP creates a possible link
between sulfur assimilation, lipid biosynthesis, iron transport
and antibiotic biosynthesis.
In
E. coli, the few genes involved in the biosynthesis
of pantothenate and of CoA are distributed in several operons
dispersed in the chromosome (Table 2). They are indicated in figure
13. We have operon panBC where panB codes for ketopantoate
hydroxymethyltransferase, EC 2.1.2.11 and panC coding for
pantothenate synthetase "panthoate activating enzyme",
EC 6.3.2.1. Gene panD codes for aspartate 1-decarboxylase,
EC 4.1.1.11 and coaA codes for pantothenate kinase, EC
2.7.1.33. The operon kdtAB, where kdtB has been
wrongly annotated in Swiss-Prot, codes for phosphopantetheine
adenyltransferase Izard, 1999). Finally, operon rnc era recO
pdxJ acpS contains acpS that codes for holo-ACP synthase
(EC 2.7.8.7).
Some
elements of regulation
Such
a complex metabolism requires an important coordination. Indeed,
there exist, in E. coli, at least four general regulators
(without counting specific regulators) that coordinate sulfur
utilisation both in the anabolic and in the catabolic direction.
Three of these regulators, CysB, MetR and Cbl, are LysR-type activators
Greene, 1996; Kredich, 1996; van der Ploeg, 1997). The regulators
of this family (more than one hundred are known) are similar to
each other in a region of about 280 residues, comprising in its
amino-terminal end a DNA binding site, the"helix-turn-helix"
motif Schell, 1993). To these regulators we can add protein MetJ,
that has a totally different structure, with almost no equivalent
among the proteins known to bind DNA Greene, 1996).
CysB
is a tetramer composed of identical subunits (Mr = 36 kDa), that
controls expression of genes involved in the biosynthesis of cysteine
in Gram negative bacteria. This system comprises many genes associated
to sulfate transport, to its reduction into sulfide and to the
formation of cysteine from serine and acetyl-CoA Kredich, 1996).
CysB is a transcriptional regulator that acts as an activator
of transcription. It is also the repressor of its own synthesis
(it is generally the case of LysR type regulators). The activity
of CysB is modulated by a cofactor, N-acetylserine. As
we have seen, O-acetylserine (the direct precursor of the
synthesis of cysteine) is not stable. By internal cyclisation
and transfer of the acetyl group, O-acetylserine leads
to a more stable molecule, N-acetylserine. It is this molecule
that plays the role of probe for the available level of O-acetylserine
in the cell, and regulates the cysteine biosynthesis pathway.
As
in the case of many promotors functioning in the presence of an
activator, the promotors of genes under the control of CysB possess
a "-35" region that differs from the consensus sequence
of sigma factor 70 (TTGACA). The activation promotors of this
type necessitate the fixation of the activator upstream from region
"-35", which facilitates the formation of transcription
initiation complexe Kredich, 1992). It is difficult to predict
the interaction sites of LysR type regulators. Their experimental
identification Schell, 1993 leads several authors to describe
a consensus binding sequence for CysB to DNA Hryniewicz, 1995).
But because of its length and its small number of conserved residues
TTANTNcNNtTNNNNNTNN and NNATNNNNAaNCNNTNNNT a consensus of this
type is probably without much significance. One must also remark
that, curiously, the authors have never made a statistical study
of the corresponding sequence. As we can see, the usual search
for consensus sequences (generally disputable Hénaut, 1996)
seems therefore particulary ill suited to proteins of this type
and to their operators.
The
underlying molecular mechanisms were not really understood until
recently. One often remarked that the binding sites of these activator
proteins apparently occur in strongly curved regions of DNA. Indeed,
one finds CysB in the control of other responses where the supercoiling
and the curvature of DNA have been noticed, such as the adaptation
to acid Rowbury, 1997). The analysis in electron microscopy of
the structure of sigma 70 promotors, during transcription initiation,
leads to a remarkable observation. It seems established that DNA
circles completely the molecule of RNA polymerase, forming a superhelix
with a very small diameter (10 nm), which involves a strong DNA
curvature at the promotor, placing the -70 region and the +24
region of promotor in close vicinity Rivetti, 1999). One therefore
understands that the stabilisation of curved structures could
help transcription initiation. One must also stress that there
exists a phenomenon of winding of the double helix, that can play
an important role. This is illustrated by the promotors controlled
in B. subtilis by factor Mta (Multidrug transporter
activation), a member of the family of transcriptional regulators
MerR, which have regions -10 and -35 spaced by 19 base pairs instead
of 17 (Baranova
et al., 1999). One does not know yet, in the case of CysB,
the relative contributions of the bending and torsion of the promotors
that it regulates.
In
the same way as we do not know their operators, it is difficult
to identify the effector molecules for LysR type regulators. One
has identified in vitro an inducer of CysB, but sulfide
and thiosulfate inverse the effect of N-acetylserine on
its binding with the promotors of regulon cys. They inhibit
transcription initiation by exerting an anti-inducer role on CysB.
The absence of physico-chemical kinship between these diverse
molecules pose the question of identification of molecules that
bind to CysB.
The
CysB protein has been crystallised, and its three-dimensional
structure is known. The crystal has been obtained from a solution
saturated in ammonium sulfate, then passed through several steps
of sieving and purification in solutions containing no sulfate.
However, in the crystal, a sulfate ion rests at the core of the
protein. The authors of this work did not expect to find this
ion there, although one could naturally expect its presence as
regulator of this metabolic pathway Tyrrell, 1997). The sulfate
ion is likely to be placed at the binding site for N-acetylserine,
that seems be the true inducer of the pathway Lynch, 1994). One
can therefore wonder whether sulfate does not play an antagonist
role to N-acetylserine, for example to repress the pathway
for sulfate transport. Another possibility is that the binding
site of sulfate is the natural place of thiosulfate, that although
structurally similar to sulfate, is an anti-inducer of regulon
cys Tyrrell, 1997). Finally, this observation of the presence
of sulfate in the inducer binding cavity is very interesting because
of the very strong similarity of the three-dimensional structure
of proteins of the LysR family (CysB in particular) with periplasmic
proteins binding sulfate Tyrrell, 1997). It remains however to
be proven that this is really a biologically significant phenomenon.
This is the more so if one remarks that CysB comprises a sequence
(YVRLGLGVGVIASMAVD) which is remarkably similar to that of the
consensus sequence of several AdoMet binding proteins [AMLIVF]
[AMLIVF] [DE] [AMLIVF] G X G X G X [AMLIVF] X X X [AMLIVF] [AMLIVF]
[DENQRKHST] (Wu, 1992, Sekowska
et al. 2000), suggesting that AdoMet could also modulate its
activity. In B. subtilis the corresponding regulation
is indeed performed by AdoMet, but on S-box riboswitches (ref).
The
regulator Cbl is an activator of operon tauABCD and other
genes belonging to the SSI class "sulfate starvation-induced"
in cooperation with CysB van der Ploeg, 1997). One knows little
on the operators recognized or on the effectors involved.
As
for the pathway of cysteine biosynthesis, the pathway of methionine
biosynthesis possesses also its regulators. MetR is an activator
of expression of genes glyA, metE and metH
and probably also of gene metF Cowan, 1993). The activation
by MetR necessitates the presence of homocysteine as coactivator
in the case of glyA and metE or as co-repressor
(in the case of metH) Plamann, 1989), the mechanisms of
activation by this activator are not understood.
It
remains finally an original regulator, MetJ, that controls the
synthesis of methionine in reponse to AdoMet (for a review see
Greene, 1996). MetJ belongs to the small class of transcriptional
regulators that bind DNA by a motif "ribbon-helix-helix"
(RHH) and not with "helix-turn-helix" as most regulators
do in bacteria. This family contains, in addition to MetJ, the
two repressors Arc and Mnt of bacteriophage P22 of S. typhimurium
He, 1992). The regulators of the HU family of B. stearothermophilus
also belong to this class Vis, 1994). Protein MetJ is a dimer
composed of two identical subunits (Mr = 12 kDa), that regulate
expression of all genes involved in the biosynthesis of methionine
(with the exception of metH) and of gene metK coding
for SAM-synthase Greene, 1996). It also regulates its own expression
Saint-Girons, 1984). MetJ binds upstream sequences of genes that
have two to five repeats of the eight nucleotides 'AGACGTCT',
the "methionine box". Each methionine box acts as a
recognition site for a molecule of repressor. However, one needs
at least two boxes to bind a molecule of repressor. The
number of repeats (and their similarity with the consensus) determined
the number of repressor molecules that will bind, and therefore
the level of repression. MetJ is an aporepressor, that for its
activity needs a co-repressor, AdoMet, whose affinity for the
aporepressor is weak (Kd
= 200 mM). The dissociation constant of the repressor-operator
complex is of 1 nM in the presence of AdoMet and 10-fold less
in its absence Saint-Girons, 1986).
As
we can see, the regulation of sulfur utilisation and the corresponding
enzyme activities involve various and complicated mechanisms that
are not always well understood. This regulation is linked to the
methylation potential of the cell (it is the role of AdoMet) and
possibly also to its oxido-reduction potential. The very nature
of sulfur leads us to investigate the processes that permit the
cell to manage its many oxidation states.
The
situation in many organisms, and in particular in E. coli,
is complicated because the metabolism of sulfur is associated
to that of another atom, with a particularly enigmatic role, selenium.
Selenium
and sulfur
Selenium
is an element both indispensible and very toxic to living organisms.
Its "normal" intracellular concentration is only ten-fold
lower than the concentration for which selenium becomes toxic.
This implies that the cell must manage the transport and the mechanisms
of detoxification of this element. Selenium, that is very similar
to sulfur, is the element immediately below sulfur in the same
series of Mendeleieff table. It can therefore very easily take
its place inside biological molecules. Selenium's atomic radius
is however larger than that of sulfur, which means that the bonds
involving selenium atoms are much longer and weaker. Replacement
of sulfur by selenium therefore changes the form of molecules
or the distances between the atoms. Moreover, the chemical properties
of selenocysteine and cysteine are very different. As a consequence,
at physiological pH, the selenol- group (SeH) of selenocysteine
is principally ionized, whereas the sulfhydryl group(SH)
of cysteine is principally protonated.
It
follows that incorporation of selenocysteine in proteins has a
very strong effect on their tertiary structure, and alters the
catalytic activity of residues comprising an atom of selenium.
The chemical differences between selenomethionine and methionine
are not that important, but the sensitivity to oxygen of the former
is however higher. The toxic effects of selenium are therefore
due to the substitution of sulfur, leading mainly to the formation
of selenocysteine.
Selenium
is also more easily oxidized than sulfur. As sulfur, elementary
selenium is not soluble. Its oxidized forms (selenate and selenite)
are very soluble and constitute the source of selenium for the
cell. Selenium oxides play in biological systems the role of a
strong oxidizing centre. Selenite is an extremely toxic compound
because it reacts with the sulfhydryl groups of glutathione (GSH)
or of cysteine, producing molecules of the type RSSeSR
or RSSR and Se0.
The reaction of selenite with thiols produces also H2O2
and O2-,
participating to its toxicity and giving it a mutagenic role Kramer,
1988).
Because
of the significant chemical similarity between sulfur and selenium,
many organisms do not know how to discriminate between these two
elements. Selenium enters in the pathway of sulfur assimilation,
and it is non-specifically integrated in various molecules, that
normally contain sulfur. The proportion of sulfur replacement
by selenium depends on the intracellular concentration of these
two elements, but also on the affinity of enzymes involved in
these sulfur assimilation pathways, vis-a-vis substrates containing
sulfur or selenium.
However,
there exist systems permitting biological discrimination between
sulfur and selenium. A first example is specific insertion of
selenocysteine in some proteins, in the presence of codon UGA
in the corresponding messenger RNA. Thus, selenocysteine plays
the role of twenty first amino acid of the genetic code. The synthesis
of selenocysteine is separated from sulfur metabolism. It begins
with a transfer RNA carrying an activated serine. In this case,
selenium stems from monoselenophosphate, a molecule synthesized
by selenophosphate synthase (product of gene selD) from
selenide (HSe-) and ATP Lacourciere, 1998). Monoselenophosphate
is also the selenium donor for the conversion of 2-thiouridine
into 2-selenouridine in some tRNAs. The selenoproteins have an
important role in the anaerobic metabolism of E. coli
(for example the formate hydrogenase Axley, 1990).
A
second example of biological discrimination between sulfur and
selenium exists in plants. It is useful to understand what happens
in bacteria. It is manifested by greater tolerance to selenium,
which is thus accumulated in a large number of organic molecules
(Se-methylselenocysteine, g-glutamyl-Se-methylselenocysteine
or selenocystathionine). Most plants resistant to selenium belong
to the genus Astragalus (Fabaceae). They are characterised
by: (i) a strong accumulation of selenium in the form of Se-methylselenocysteine,
(ii) enhancement of selenium tolerance, and (iii) a strong reduction
of selenium incorporation into proteins Neuhierl, 1999). Until
very recently, the mechanisms of resistance of plants to selenium,
were not clearly established. One supposed that this resistance
was linked to the presence of enzymes that, in recruiting storage
metabolites containing sulfur, they transformed them into selenium
derivatives that could no longer be incorporated into proteins.
Indeed, a methyltransferase specific for selenocysteine (selenocysteine
methyltransferase) that uses S-methylmethionine as donor
of methyl group has been purified in Astragalus bisulcatus
(species tolerant to selenium) Neuhierl, 1999). In A. bisulcatus,
selenium is metabolized by the sulfur assimilation pathway, which
leads to the formation of selenocysteine, as primary compound.
Selenocysteine is subsequently methylated very efficiently by
selenocysteine methyltransferase, which prevents incorporation
of selenocysteine in these proteins or others molecules containing
sulfur. It is probable that this compound is subsequently discarded
and/or stored in vacuoles, but this remains to be seen.
In
E. coli, there exists a homologue of selenocysteine
methyltransferase, homocysteine methyltransferase encoded by gene
mmuA. This enzyme presents only a slight preference for
selenohomocysteine as compared to homocysteine, whereas the enzyme
from A. bisulcatus is specific for selenohomocysteine
or selenocysteine. It is very likely that the two enzymes are
related, and that the enzyme involved in detoxification has evolved
from an ancestral protein which did not discriminate between sulfur
and selenium.
The
specificity for S-methylmethionine (and probably also for
the S(+) isomer of S-adenosylmethionine) is unusual for
methyltransferases. However, the two methyltransferases described
above use S-methylmethionine as donor of methyl group,
this product being abundant in plants. Furthermore, both enzymes
can use the non-physiological stereoisomer of AdoMet (a spontaneous
product of the racemisation of groups coordinated to a sulfur
atom). In addition to the role of these enzymes in the detoxification
and catabolism of S-methylmethionine, they may thus have
a function in the scavenging of these molecules Neuhierl, 1999).
Concluding
remarks
Sulfur
is an essential component of cells. It has been associated to
life from its very early steps, and it still plays a role of major
importance in life. In E. coli, among the ca 4,500
genes in the genome, more than one hundred genes are directly
involved in some step of sulfur metabolism. Analysis of Table
2 suggests that many more genes are probably related to sulfur
in a way or another. Curiously enough, not much work has been
devoted not only to the identification of many metabolic steps
involving sulfur, but also to the regulation of sulfur availability,
disposal or to the metabolic steps controlled by sulfur containing
molecules. We hope that the present work will be an incentive
for further exploration of this enigmatic domain of gene functions,
especially in the context of genetics of genomes.
Acknowledgements
We
wish to thank Dr Dong-Yan Jin for careful reading and constructive
comments on the manuscript, Drs Philippe Bertin, Nicolas Glansdorff,
Philippe Glaser, Isabelle Martin-Verstraete and Marc Salomé
for their constructive comments in preliminary stages of this
review, and Dr Chun-Kwun Wun for his constant encouragement. Pr
Art Aronson pointed to us that sulfur metabolism in Gram positive
bacteria has to be investigated in depth, since it appears that
bacteria such as Bacillus subtilis lack the ubiquitous
peptide glutathione.
Figure
captions
Figure 1.
Sulfate assimilation pathway and cysteine biosynthesis in Escherichia
coli.
Figure
2. Methionine biosynthesis in Escherichia coli.
Figure
3. One-carbon residues cycle. On a souligne in the figure the
cycle leading to thymine synthesis, in which tetrahydrofolate
is not simply recycled as a coenzyme, but used as a substrate
(thick arrows).
Figure
4. Comparison of cystine and diaminopimelate structure.
Figure 5.
Methionine recycling. In the figure are represented known pathways,
presumed pathways, and unknown but likely pathways. There certainly
exist other pathways that we were not able to imagine. 1 :
O-acetylserine sulfhydrylase, 2 : cystathionine g-synthase,
3 : cystathionine b-lyase,
4 : methionine synthase, 5 : O-acylhomoserine
sulfhydrylase, 6 : SAM synthase, 7 : SAM methyltransferase,
8 : adenosylhomocysteine nucleosidase, 9 : cystathionine
g-lyase,
11 : S-methylmethionine:homocysteine methyltransferase, 12 :
enzyme yielding MTA (e.g. spermidine synthase), 13 : pathway
for MTA recycling (see figure 9), 14 : methionine aminotransferase,
15 : KMBA decarboxylase, 16 : 3-methylpropionate lyase,
17 : methanethiol dioxygenase, 18 : methionine g-lyase
(this enzyme donne, in addition to methanethiol, ammonium and
2-ketobutyrate), 19 : sulfate assimilation pathway (see figure
1).
Figure
6. Polyamines biosynthesis in Escherichia coli.
Figure
7. Biosynthesis pathway for ethylene in plants.
Figure
8. Structure of the S-adenosylmethionine derivatives.
Figure
9.Methylthioribose recycling in Klebsiella pneumoniae.
Figure
10 Taylor, 1998 #207: Pathway generally admitted for the synthesis
of thiamine in E. coli.
Figure
11 Taylor, 1998 #207: Activation of ubiquitin ThiS and mechanism
of formation of ThiS-COSH. A. Reactions catalysed by enzyme
activation of ubiquitin. One shows only the COOH-terminal end
of the protein and the thiol group of cysteine in the active site
of the enzyme activating ubiquitin. B. Sulfur transfer in the
biosynthesis of thiazole.
Figure
12 Appleyard, 1998 #288: Structure of molecules and metabolic
pathway for the synthesis of the molybdenum cofactor in Aspergillus
nidulans.
At
the beginning of the metabolic pathway, a derivative of guanosine
is converted into precursor Z. Sulfur is subsequently added to
precursor Z to form the thiolene active group.
Figure
13. Coenzyme A and Acyl Carrier Protein biosynthesis pathway.
Go
to Top
|