Previous Article | Next Article ![]()
Infection and Immunity, September 2005, p. 6165-6168, Vol. 73, No. 9
0019-9567/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/IAI.73.9.6165-6168.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Departments of Microbiology and Molecular Genetics and Medicine, University of California Irvine, Irvine, California 92697-4025
Received 13 January 2005/ Returned for modification 6 March 2005/ Accepted 7 April 2005
|
|
|---|
|
|
|---|
As suggested by Schwan et al. (18), genomic differences between RF and LB species in their metabolic capabilities may account for some distinguishing features of the diseases caused by these groups of pathogens. For instance, RF organisms achieve very high densities in the blood, while LB species spirochetes are present in blood but undetectable by light microscopy (2, 17). Thus, our curiosity was piqued when we unexpectedly discovered by PCR assay
3-kb insertions in the intergenic spacer (IGS) between the 16S and 23S rRNA genes during a study of IGS loci in RF species (4). The entire IGS of the "Connecticut" isolate of B. miyamotoi and B. hermsii HS1 was subsequently amplified using the following forward (F), reverse (R), forward-nested (Fn), and reverse-nested (Rn) primers: F, 5'-GCTACTCCCTTTTCGCTCGCCAC (positions 5668 to 5690 of U03396); R, 5'-CTTCATGAAGTTGGAATCGCTAGT (2158 to 2181); Fn, 5'-TCCCTTTTCGCTCGCCACTACT (5664 to 5685); and Rn, 5'-GAAGTTGGAATCGCTAGTAATC (2164 to 2185). The DNA was amplified using the Expand Long Template PCR System (Roche) with annealing at 60°C, as described previously (3). The PCR product from B. miyamotoi was cloned into the vector pCR2.1 TOPO (Invitrogen). The radiolabeled product from B. hermsii was used to probe a genomic library of B. hermsii in pUC18 as described previously (16), and hybridizing clones were isolated. Both sets of plasmid inserts were sequenced over both strands using custom primers on a Beckman CEQ 8000 sequencer. Homologous genes of other organisms were identified by blastx, blastn, and tblastx searches of GenBank databases (www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/BLAST).
What distinguished the two RF species from the two LB species was the presence in B. hermsii and B. miyamotoi of orthologs of the genes hpt (hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase), purA (adenylosuccinate synthetase), and purB (adenylosuccinate lyase) (Fig. 1). There is a
70-type promoter sequence 44 nucleotides (nt) upstream of the hpt start codon; the presumptive start of the purB gene overlaps the 3' end of the purA gene by 15 nt. This putative hpt-purA-purB operon is on the strand opposite that carrying 16S RNA, alanine tRNA, isoleucine tRNA, a methylpurine-DNA glycosylase homolog (mag), a cof hydrolase homolog, and 23S RNA. Partial sequencing of the IGS of the RF species B. crocidurae revealed the presence in that species of at least the purB gene (accession number AY884004).
![]() View larger version (10K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 1. Physical maps of intergenic spacer regions between 23S (rrl) and 16S (rrs) rRNA genes of Borrelia hermsii, B. miyamotoi, B. burgdorferi, and B. garinii. Arrows indicate the direction of transcription, and gray or black indicates the strand. The other loci shown are cof (a hydrolase homolog), hpt (hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase), purA (adenylosuccinate synthetase), purB (adenylosuccinate lyase), mag (methylpurine-DNA glycosylase), ileT (isoleucine tRNA), alaT (alanine tRNA), and rrs (a 16S rRNA pseudogene). The IGS sequences for B. burgdorferi B31 and B. garinii PBi are taken from accession numbers NC_001318 and NC_006156, respectively. The rrs pseudogene between alaT and ileT in B. garinii PBi was not previously noted in the annotation of this genome (9).
|
The functional activity of the purA homolog of B. hermsii was evaluated by complementation assay in a PurA mutant of Escherichia coli. The purA gene was amplified using the forward primer 5'-GGAATTCCATATGAATGTCAATTTACGCAGTTA-3', the reverse primer 5'-CGGGATCCATTGCTTTACTGGCATATCTTGA-3', and PCR conditions as described previously (16). After digestion with NdeI and BamHI, the products were ligated into a modified pBluescript II KS plasmid (16), and this construct was transformed into strain H1238 (purA54 thr fhuA argF relA spoT argI) from the E. coli Genetic Stock Center, Yale University. The plasmid vector without an insert was transformed into the purA mutant as a negative control. Single colonies on Luria-Bertani medium plates were then cultivated in duplicate at 37°C in 6 ml of defined Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium (Gibco) with adenine HCl (Sigma) at a final concentration of 0, 0.1, 1.0, or 10 µg/ml. The criterion for growth was absorbance of
0.2 optical density units by spectrophotometry at 595 nm and an indicator color change by 72 h; absence of growth was confirmed by phase microscopy. We found that the E. coli transformant with the B. hermsii purA homolog grew in the absence of adenine supplementation, but the vector-only control detectably grew only in the presence of 1.0 or 10 µg/ml of adenine.
Adenylate synthetase and adenylosuccinate lyase are purine salvage enzymes that catalyze steps in the formation of AMP from IMP (12). While both B. burgdorferi and B. hermsii have orthologs for GMP synthetase (guaA) and IMP dehydrogenase (guaB) (14), which carry out analogous functions for the formation of GMP from IMP, B. burgdorferi had no discernible ortholog for purA and purB, or for purF, purC, and purG, which catalyze reactions for the formation of IMP from hypoxanthine (6). The facultatively pathogenic spirochete Leptospira interrogans has purA and purB orthologs. The oral spirochete Treponema denticola (AAS12016) has an ortholog of purB but not purA (19).
To further investigate the evolutionary origins of the purine salvage genes in RF Borrelia species, we carried out phylogenetic analysis of these sequences, as well as sequences from representative archaebacteria, eukaryotes, and other phyla of eubacteria, for which whole-genome sequences were publicly available (www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Genomes/index.html). Amino acid sequences were aligned using Clustal X version 1.83, and this alignment was the basis for a codon-based, gapped nucleotide alignment. To minimize effects of base composition bias across taxa, the third positions were excluded, and the evolutionary model of Galtier and Gouy was applied (7) using the PHYLO_WIN phylogenetic analysis program (8). Positions with gaps were ignored. Phylograms of purA and purB sequences with bootstrap values of
70% for nodes under distance (neighbor-joining), maximum likelihood, and maximum parsimony criteria are shown in Fig. 2.
![]() View larger version (39K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 2. Phylograms from codon-based nucleotide sequence alignments with the third position excluded of the purA (left) and purB (right) genes of the following bacteria (B), archaea (A), and eukaryotes (E): Agrobacterium tumefaciens (B), Anabaena variabilis (B), Aquifex aeolicus (B), Arabidopsis thaliana (E), Archaeoglobus fulgidus (A), Bacillus subtilis (B), Bartonella henselae (B), Borrelia hermsii (B), Burkholderia pseudomallei (B), Clostridium perfringens (B), Danio rerio (E), Deinococcus radiodurans (B), Drosophila melanogaster (E), Escherichia coli K-12 (B), Fusobacterium nucleatum (B), Lactobacillus plantarum (B), Leishmania major (E), Leptospira interrogans serovar Copenhageni (B), Magnetococcus sp. strain MC-1 (B), Methanocaldococcus jannaschii (A), Methanococcoides burtonii (A), Methanosarcina acetivorans (A), Mus musculus (E), Mycobacterium tuberculosis H37Rv (B), Nicotiana tabacum (E), Plasmodium falciparum (E), Prochlorococcus marinus MIT9313 (B), Pseudomonas aeruginosa (B), Rhodopseudomonas palustris (B), Saccharomyces cerevisiae (E), Staphylococcus aureus N315 (B), Streptomyces coelicolor (B), Synechococcus sp. strain WH8102 (B), Thermoanaerobacter tengcongensis (B), Treponema denticola (B), Xenopus laevis (E), and Yersinia pestis CO92 (B). Arrows indicate spirochetes. Bootstrap values for nodes with 70% support by neighbor-joining distance (1,000 replicates; number above the line) and/or maximum-likelihood criteria (100 replicates; first number below the line) are shown. Italicized numbers below the line are bootstrap values (percent) by maximum parsimony criterion. Bars in each panel provide the scale for nucleotide distance.
|
These findings indicate that purA and purB in RF Borrelia have a different evolutionary history than orthologous genes in leptospiral and treponemal spirochetes. The preceding phylogenetic analysis, the aforementioned differences between the hpt-purA-purB gene cluster and other chromosomal coding sequences in GC skew, and the unusual location of these operational genes among the rRNA genes lead us to conclude that the hpt-purA-purB locus was acquired by horizontal gene transfer (13). This could have happened before or in the last common ancestor for LB and RF Borrelia species, with subsequent selective loss of the locus from the LB species lineage, but a more parsimonious explanation is that it occurred in the RF lineage after the last common ancestor. Moreover, if there was a putative loss of the purA and purB functions in LB Borrelia spp., this would more likely, in our view, have been the consequence of in situ degradation of the genes, the manifestations of which would still be detectable as pseudogenes or sequence fragments (5), rather than a precise and complete deletion of the cluster.
Although the adaptive contributions of this acquisition for RF Borrelia in either vertebrate host or arthropod vector remain to be established, in the neuroinvasive K1 strain of E. coli the disruption of the purA gene was associated with decreased invasion of the blood-brain barrier (11), and PurA mutants of Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium had attenuated virulence (15).
Nucleotide sequence accession numbers. The 5,846-nt IGS of B. hermsii and the 5,814-nt IGS of B. miyamotoi were assigned GenBank accession numbers AY803734 and AY531879, respectively.
|
|
|---|
This article has been cited by other articles:
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Copyright © 2009 by the American Society for Microbiology. For an alternate route to Journals.ASM.org, visit: http://intl-journals.asm.org | More Info»