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Diisonitrile natural product SF2768 functions as a chalkophore that mediates copper acquisition in Streptomyces thioluteus Lijuan Wang, Mengyi Zhu, Qingbo Zhang, Xu Zhang, Panlei Yang, Zihui Liu, Yun Deng, Yiguang Zhu, Xueshi Huang, Li Han, Shengqing Li, and Jing He ACS Chem. Biol., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acschembio.7b00897 • Publication Date (Web): 13 Nov 2017 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on November 18, 2017
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Diisonitrile natural product SF2768 functions as a chalkophore that mediates
2
copper acquisition in Streptomyces thioluteus
3
Lijuan Wang,1# Mengyi Zhu,1# Qingbo Zhang,2 Xu Zhang,1 Panlei Yang,1 Zihui Liu,3 Yun Deng,1
4
Yiguang Zhu,2 Xueshi Huang,4 Li Han,4 Shengqing Li3 and Jing He1*
5
1
6
Huazhong Agricultural University, Wuhan 430070, China
7
2
8
Microbiology, Guangdong Key Laboratory of Marine Materia Medica, South China Sea Institute
9
of Oceanology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, 164 West Xingang Road, Guangzhou 510301, P. R.
National Key Laboratory of Agricultural Microbiology, College of Life Science and Technology,
CAS Key Laboratory of Tropical Marine Bio-resources and Ecology, RNAM Center for Marine
10
China
11
3
12
University, Wuhan 430070, China
13
4
14
University, Shenyang 110819, China
15
#These authors contributed equally to this work.
16
*For Correspondence: E-mail:
[email protected]; Tel./Fax: +86-27-87280670
State Key Laboratory of Agricultural Microbiology, College of Science, Huazhong Agricultural
Institute of Microbial Pharmaceuticals, College of Life and Health Sciences, Northeastern
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Abstract
2
A non-ribosomal peptide synthetase (NRPS) gene cluster (sfa) was identified in
3
Streptomyces thioluteus to direct the biosynthesis of the diisonitrile antibiotic SF2768.
4
Its biosynthetic pathway was reasonably proposed based on bioinformatics analysis,
5
metabolic profiles of mutants and the elucidation of the intermediate and shunt
6
product structures. Bioinformatics-based alignment found a putative ATP-binding
7
cassette (ABC) transporter related to iron import within the biosynthetic gene cluster,
8
which implied that the product might be a siderophore. However, characterization of
9
the metal-binding properties by high-resolution electrospray ionization mass
10
spectrometry (HR-ESI-MS), metal-ligand titration, thin-layer chromatography (TLC)
11
and chrome azurol S (CAS) assays revealed that the final product SF2768 and its
12
diisonitrile derivatives specifically bind copper, rather than iron, to form stable
13
complexes. Inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS) analysis
14
revealed that the intracellular cupric content of S. thioluteus significantly increased
15
upon incubation with the copper-SF2768 complex, direct evidence for the copper
16
acquisition function of SF2768. Further in vivo functional characterization of the
17
transport elements for the copper-SF2768 complexes not only confirmed the
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chalkophore identity of the compound but also gave initial clues into the copper
19
uptake mechanism of this non-methanotrophic microorganism.
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Introduction
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The essential trace element copper usually serves as a catalytic or structural cofactor
3
in a variety of bacterial cuproproteins, including cytochrome oxidase, NADH
4
dehydrogenase, multicopper oxidase (MCO) and particulate methane monooxygenase
5
(pMMO)1-5. By analogy with iron-binding siderophores, a natural product produced
6
by bacteria that chelates and transports extracellular copper is referred to as a
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“chalkophore”6-8.
8
corresponding copper carriers are expected to universally acquire essential copper
9
from the environment. However, the peptide-based methanobactins are the only
10
well-characterized chalkophores that mediate environmental copper acquisition, in
11
contrast to the widely discovered siderophores9, 10.
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Methanobactin (Mbn), isolated from Methylosinus trichosporium OB3b, is the first
13
example of this kind of post-translationally modified peptide6. Mbn is produced to
14
fulfil the copper demand of pMMO, a copper-dependent metalloenzyme responsible
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for the crucial oxidation of methane to methanol in M. trichosporium OB3b11, 12. Mbn
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binds both Cu(II) and Cu(I) by the oxazolone and thioamide groups, reducing Cu(II)
17
to Cu(I) once the copper ion is chelated6,
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comprising a TonB-like receptor, MbnT, and a periplasmic binding protein, MbnE,
19
was recently identified in the import of the intact Cu(I)-Mbn complex into M.
20
trichosporium OB3b11, 16. This result constituted the first insight into Cu(I)-Mbn
21
recognition and internalization in methanotrophic bacteria. Moreover, the biosynthetic
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pathway of Mbn was preliminarily clarified by the identification of its precursor
Since
cuproproteins
are ubiquitous
in
microorganisms,
10, 13-15
. Efficient transport machinery
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peptide and functional research on post-modification enzymes17-19. In addition to the
2
characterization of the Mbn biosynthetic pathway, its copper chelating ability and the
3
transport of the Cu-Mbn complex strengthened the evidence for its chalkophore
4
identity. Production of Mbn-like compounds was shown to be widespread in
5
methanotrophic bacteria8, 10, 19-21. Similar molecules are considered to play ancillary
6
physiological roles in oxidative stress defence22 and metal detoxification23,
7
addition to their roles in copper capture. Further analysis of genome sequence
8
databases revealed that the Mbn operon is not rare in non-methanotrophic bacteria, as
9
can be expected considering the ubiquitous role played by copper as a cofactor in
10
many important enzymes25, 26. However, although many valuable insights into copper
11
trafficking in methanotrophs have been acquired in the past decade, the mechanism by
12
which non-methanotrophic bacteria collect copper from environment has barely been
13
addressed27.
14
Genome sequencing of a prolific actinomycetes strain, Streptomyces thioluteus DSM
15
40027, a producer of aureothin28 and dithiolopyrrolones29, revealed at least 40 poorly
16
studied orphan biosynthetic gene clusters. These clusters include a putative
17
nonribosomal peptide synthetase (NRPS) biosynthetic gene cluster that we
18
successfully cloned from a S. thioluteus genomic library. We identified the product of
19
this pathway as the diisonitrile compound SF2768, which was once considered a
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cryptic antibiotic whose biosynthesis was triggered by exogenous polyether
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compounds in other streptomycetes30. Further functional analysis of the cluster by
22
mutagenesis not only revealed the putative biosynthetic pathway but also resulted in 4
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in
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the production of several analogues of SF2768. In silico homology sequence analysis
2
of the cluster suggested that the product might act as a siderophore since a putative
3
ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporter related to iron import was observed in the
4
cluster. However, the results of different in vitro and in vivo experiments such as
5
metal-ligand complex detection through high-resolution electrospray ionization mass
6
spectrometry (HR-ESI-MS), metal-ligand titrations, thin-layer chromatography (TLC)
7
and chrome azurol S (CAS) assays revealed that SF2768 specifically binds
8
extracellular copper rather than iron and that the complex is transported into S.
9
thioluteus, suggesting a chalkophore function of this diisonitrile. Moreover, in vivo
10
functional characterization of a major facilitator superfamily (MFS) exporter and an
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ABC transporter within the cluster pointed to diisonitrile efflux and copper-SF2768
12
complex internalization functions that constituted a diisonitrile-mediated copper
13
acquisition system.
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Results and discussion
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Identification of the biosynthetic gene cluster for SF2768
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A cosmid genomic library of S. thioluteus was constructed in the integrative vector
4
pJTU2554, and all clones were heterologously expressed in the host Streptomyces
5
lividans ZX131. A transformant of this strain, S. lividans::p13A, which harboured the
6
cosmid p13A (containing orf1-28, Figure 1), showed antimicrobial activity against the
7
gram-positive bacterium Bacillus subtilis 168. Subsequent subcloning experiments
8
into the vector pJTU2554, yielding the new cosmid p13C containing orf12-28,
9
conferred the same antimicrobial activity as p13A. This result indicated that this 24 kb
10
region (sfa, GenBank accession No. KY427327, Figure 1) was sufficient to generate
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the bioactive product. Large-scale fermentation of S. lividans::p13C led to the
12
isolation of compound 1 (obsd m/z 337.1868 [M+H]+, calcd for m/z 337.1870
13
[M+H]+ Figure S1), a colourless oily substance. Detailed analyses by HR-ESI-MS
14
and nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) data disclosed that compound 1 had the same
15
chemical structure as a known diisonitrile metabolite, SF276830,
16
reported to be present as a mixture of two anomers, which was consistent with the
17
double peak at m/z 337.1870 in the extracted ion chromatogram (EIC) shown in
18
Figures 1 and 4B.
19
The involvement of each encoded sequence in the sfa cluster in the biosynthesis of
20
compound 1 was subsequently investigated by PCR-targeting gene inactivation
21
according to a reported strategy33. The EIC traces at m/z 337.1870 from HR-ESI-MS
22
analyses showed that the inactivated mutants ∆sfaA, ∆sfaB, ∆sfaC, ∆sfaD and ∆sfaE 6
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. SF2768 was
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were no longer capable of producing compound 1, while the other mutants persisted
2
in production, demonstrating the indispensable roles of these five genes in compound
3
1 biosynthesis. In contrast to the other four disrupted strains, the inactivated mutant
4
∆sfaE still displayed antimicrobial activity against B. subtilis. Large-scale
5
fermentation of the mutant ∆sfaE was therefore conducted, and two bioactive
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analogues, compounds 3 (obsd m/z 323.2076 [M+H]+, calcd for m/z 323.2078
7
[M+H]+ Figure S2) and 4 (obsd m/z 365.2175 [M+H]+, calcd for m/z 365.2183
8
[M+H]+ Figure S3) were isolated by a bioassay-guided fractionation of ethyl acetate
9
extract. The chemical structures of compounds 3 and 4 were determined from NMR
10
analyses. Compound 3 was the pyran ring-opened derivative of compound 1, and
11
compound 4 was an O-acetylated product of compound 3 (Figure S4).
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Proposed biosynthetic pathway of the diisonitrile compounds
13
Elucidation of the above structures, combined with a sequence analysis of the
14
involved genes, enabled the proposal of a diisonitrile compound SF2768 biosynthetic
15
pathway (Figure 2). A BLAST search (Table 1) revealed that three crucial
16
NRPS-related enzymes, SfaBCD of sfa, shared high sequence homology with
17
MxcEFG of the well-studied biosynthetic cluster for catecholate siderophore
18
myxochelin A biosynthesis (mxc) in Stigmatella aurantiaca; MxcEFG constituted an
19
assembly line for the construction of the myxochelin peptide chain34, 35. In vitro
20
substrate specificity assays of the core NRPS enzyme SfaD confirmed that lysine was
21
most favoured substrate (Figure S5), which is consistent with results from MxcG and
22
supports the possibility that these two enzymes shared similar assembly logic. The 7
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AMP ligase SfaB/MxcE and the peptidyl carrier protein SfaC/MxcF were thus
2
expected to be responsible for the adenylation and transfer of the acyl chain building
3
blocks, and SfaD/MxcG would subsequently mediate skeleton assembly and reductive
4
release.
5
The C-terminal NAD(P)H-dependent RED domain in NRPSs usually catalyses the
6
release of peptide chain by an alternative scheme that involves one or two turns of
7
reduction to produce an aldehyde or alcohol compound35-37. This domain inspired a
8
search for the corresponding aldehyde intermediate of compound 1 in the
9
heterologous expression and mutant strains, resulting in the discovery of another
10
metabolite, 2, in ∆sfaE. Although the isolation of compound 2 was hampered by its
11
low yield, the identification of this expected compound was confirmed by
12
HR-ESI-MS (Figure S6). Based on the structures of compounds 1, 2 and 3, we
13
propose that the post-NRPS δ-hydroxylation modification of the lysine residue was
14
performed by the hydroxylase SfaE, and then the hemiacetal spontaneously formed to
15
afford the final product, 1. When SfaE was absent, the accumulating aldehyde 2 was
16
reduced again by the RED domain to generate the alcohol 3. Compound 4 was found
17
only in the ethyl acetate extract and not in the fermentation broth of ∆sfaE, implying
18
that compound 4 might be an artefact acquired through O-acetylation during
19
extraction.
20
Since the functions of SfaBCDE had been assigned, the last essential ORF, SfaA, was
21
assumed to be involved in the biosynthesis of possible 3-isocyanobutanoic acid
22
building blocks. All prior validated isonitrile synthases belong to the PvcA/IsnA 8
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family of proteins that catalyse isonitrile group formation by transferring the C2 of
2
ribulose-5-phosphate to an α-amino group through redox reactions38-41. However,
3
SfaA shared no similarity with any members of the PvcA/IsnA family of proteins,
4
hinting that SfaA might mediate an isonitrile incorporation mechanism that was not
5
yet clear. While this manuscript was in preparation, Zhang and co-workers reported
6
that the heterologous expression of two similar gene clusters, mma and sco, from
7
Mycobacterium marinum and Streptomyces coeruleorubidus, respectively, in
8
Escherichia coli produced different isonitrile lipopeptides, including compounds 3
9
and 442. Although direct experimental evidence was still missing, they also proposed
10
the involvement of MmaE/ScoE in isonitrile biosynthesis. Since SfaA and MmaE are
11
similar, we hypothesized that their catalytic mechanism, which needs to be proven in
12
vitro, might be identical. Another detail that cannot be ignored was that they verified
13
that thioesterases MmaD/ScoD were essential but that disruption of the homologue
14
Orf16 within sfa did not abolish the production of compound 1 (Figure 1). If sfa and
15
mma/sco share an identical biosynthetic route, a possible explanation is that a
16
substitute for Orf16 that is endogenous to the host, Streptomyces lividans ZX1,
17
participates in the biosynthesis of compound 1. However, the suspected substitute
18
cannot be found in S. lividans through genome scanning (data not shown), implying
19
that a thioesterase-like protein may not be essential in our case. This issue needs to be
20
clarified in further in vitro investigation.
21
Even though gene clusters similar to sfa are widespread among different
22
actinomycetes such as Streptomyces, Mycobacterium, Kutzneria, Rhodococcus, 9
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Actinomadura and Nocardia, the homologues of SfaE are found only in several
2
streptomycetes
3
Mycobacterium, might therefore only produce compounds 3 and 4. This hypothesis is
4
consistent with the results that Zhang and co-workers obtained.
5
Metal chelation properties of SF2768 and its derivatives
6
The wide distribution of gene clusters homologous to sfa suggests that their
7
corresponding products might play an important role in the physiology of these
8
actinomycetes despite most of them having no assigned functions. A putative iron
9
ABC transporter encoded by genes orf19-21 (Table 1) within the sfa cluster, as well as
10
the known affinity of the isonitrile group towards transition elements43, 44, stimulated a
11
search for metal-SF2768 complexes in the fermentation broth by HR-ESI-MS when
12
sixteen different metals were added (Cu(I), Cu(II), Al(III), Ca(II), Cd(II), Cr(II),
13
Fe(II), Fe(III), Mg(II), Mn(II), Mo(V), Pb(II), Zn(II), Co(II), Hg(II) and Ni(II), Figure
14
4). The EIC traces indicated the formation of a copper-SF2768 (Cu-1) complex after
15
supplementation with either Cu(I) or Cu(II), while no change was observed in other
16
samples. Compound 1 unexpectedly degraded upon incubation with Co(II), Hg(II)
17
and Ni(II), resulting in no complex.
18
HR-ESI-MS-based titration experiments performed in vitro with purified 1, 3 and 4 in
19
the presence of different concentrations of Cu(II) determined the chelation
20
stoichiometry of the complexes. Figure 5C shows that compound 1 was completely
21
exhausted upon the addition of 0.5 equivalents of Cu(II), which indicated that all the
22
apo-1 could be fully loaded with copper and form complexes with a stoichiometry of
in
silico
(Figure
3).
The
other
actinomycetes,
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1:2 (Cu:1). The measured m/z value (735.2898) of the Cu-1 complex was consistent
2
with that of a singly charged cupric complex of the form [2M1+Cu(I)]+, suggesting the
3
reduction of Cu(II) to Cu(I) during the chelation process (Figure 5AB). The presence
4
of the prominent M+2 peak at m/z 737.2892 that was expected from
5
height was approximately one-half the height of the base peak, coincided with the
6
natural isotope abundance of copper (Figure 5B). A new spot, representing the
7
copper-dimerized 1 complex, with a Rf (retention factor) value lower than that of
8
monomeric 1 appeared in the TLC plate (Figure 5D), which corroborated the
9
HR-ESI-MS result in Figure 5B. Analogues 3 and 4 behaved similarly in this
65
Cu, whose
10
chelation-based ligand dimerization and metal reduction.
11
It was surprising that the corresponding diisonitrile metabolites formed complexes
12
with Cu(I) and Cu(II) rather than Fe(II) or Fe(III) in the metal binding experiments
13
because sfa had been predicted to be a potential siderophore biosynthetic gene cluster
14
according
15
ion-sequestering small-molecule compounds, are produced and secreted by almost all
16
aerobic bacteria, fungi and higher plants to satisfy the iron demand of the producers45.
17
Moreover, some siderophores bind non-ferric metal ions with different affinities27 to
18
fulfil additional physiological functions such as tolerance to heavy metals46,
19
resistance to host redox defence48, 49 and other potential functions. Nevertheless, their
20
highest affinity was for iron. To further rule out the possibility of diisonitrile
21
compounds binding ferric iron as siderophores and to further determine their genuine
22
role, we conducted Fe- and Cu-CAS assays50, 51, which constitute canonical tests to
to
bioinformatics
analyses.
Siderophores,
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well-known
ferric
47
,
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identify siderophores and chalkophores, respectively. A colour change clearly
2
confirmed the ability of compounds 1, 3 and 4 to displace CAS from copper, but not
3
iron (Figure 5E). The three diisonitrile compounds chelated copper with EC50 values
4
approximately 4-fold higher than that of EDTA but 3-fold lower than that of
5
2,2’-bipyridine (Figure 5F). These results collectively supported the potential role of
6
diisonitriles in S. thioluteus as chalkophores and not as siderophores. Previously
7
reported chalkophores or copper-binding natural products usually possess functional
8
groups such as nitrogen heterocycles (oxazolone, imidazolone, thiazole, etc.) or
9
thioamide moieties10, 49, 52. This study is the first demonstrating that the isonitrile
10
groups of compound 1 and its analogues could act as a potential copper-binding motif.
11
Copper complex uptake assay
12
A compound that is defined as a chalkophore should be capable of not only binding
13
Cu(II) or Cu(I) but also shuttling the copper ion into cells. To verify the chalkophore
14
identity of compound 1, we employed ICP-MS to measure the intracellular cupric
15
concentration of wild-type S. thioluteus upon incubation with 5 µM freshly made
16
copper complexes (Cu-1, Cu-3 and Cu-4) for 2 hours, and cells without treatment
17
were used as the control. Cells treated with Cu-3 and Cu-4 contained similar
18
intracellular cupric ion concentrations (9.44±0.86 and 8.91±0.69 ppb Cu/mg dry cells)
19
as the control (8.60±0.59 ppb Cu/mg dry cells), while cells incubated with Cu-1
20
contained significantly more (13.17±1.13 ppb Cu/mg dry cells), which demonstrated
21
that Cu-1 was effectively imported into S. thioluteus (Figure 6A, Table S4). We
22
hypothesized that the complexes Cu-3 and Cu-4 were not efficiently internalized 12
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because their subtle structural differences resulted in the inability to be effectively
2
recognized by the receptor responsible for import. These data provided direct
3
evidence that SF2768 chelated extracellular copper and promoted its intake into S.
4
thioluteus.
5
In vivo functional characterization of the transport elements
6
Bioinformatics predicted that the putative ABC transporter Orf19-21 is a candidate
7
transport element for the complex Cu-1 (Table 1). The function of Orf19-21 was
8
investigated by a feeding the cells
9
possesses two stable isotopes in a 2.2:1 ratio (63Cu:65Cu). This ratio is expected to be
10
changed by the addition of 65Cu in this assay. The intracellular concentrations of 63Cu
11
and
12
gene-inactivated mutant strain ∆orf19-21, with and without incubation with 65Cu-1 at
13
a final concentration of 5 µM, were determined by ICP-MS. Although the intracellular
14
63
15
decrease was smaller in ∆orf19-21 than in S. lividans::p13C. This result indicated a
16
loss of function of the putative ABC transporter Orf19-21 that led to reduced uptake
17
of the isotopic complex (Figure 6B, Table S5). The direct interaction between Cu-1
18
and Orf19 needs to be identified through future biochemical and structural biological
19
studies.
20
We also assessed the concentration of compound 1 in the intracellular and supernatant
21
fractions of the heterologous strain S. lividans::p13C and the mutant strain ∆orf12 (in
22
which the gene encoding the putative MFS transporter that might mediate drug efflux
65
Cu-1 in vivo. Naturally occurring copper
65
Cu in the heterologous expression strain S. lividans::p13C and the
Cu:65Cu ratio of both strains declined upon
65
Cu-1 addition, the extent of the
13
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was inactivated). Figure 6C shows that the extracellular/intracellular content ratio of
2
compound 1 was significantly decreased when orf12 was knocked out,
3
unambiguously demonstrating that Orf12 was involved in the export of the proposed
4
chalkophore in the model of the SF2768-mediated copper acquisition system.
5
Model of SF2768-mediated copper acquisition system
6
After the elucidation of the diisonitrile natural product SF2768 biosynthetic pathway,
7
we demonstrated the chalkophore activity of this product in S. thioluteus by several
8
experiments. Further identification of the transport elements for the copper-SF2768
9
complex provided new clues to a copper uptake mechanism in a non-methanotrophic
10
strain. A primary model is proposed based on the above data to showcase this
11
diisonitrile-mediated copper acquisition system of S. thioluteus. The metabolite
12
SF2768 is synthesized by the enzymes encoded by the sfa operon and then exported
13
by the MFS transporter Orf12. SF2768 scavenges environmental copper by chelation
14
of Cu(II) and its reduction to Cu(I) ions. The copper-SF2768 complex is then
15
internalized by the ABC transporter Orf19-21. The chelated copper is released via an
16
unknown mechanism and binds cuproproteins. The copper-free SF2768 is exported
17
again and reused.
18
Copper plays a crucially important role in physiological development and secondary
19
metabolite production in Streptomyces species53, 54. The morphological development
20
of many streptomycetes is completely dependent on the bioavailability of copper
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ions54. Moreover, many proteins in Streptomyces require copper for function,
22
including laccases (for oxidizing a variety of organic and inorganic substrates)55, 56, 14
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lipocyanins (involved in electron-transfer processes)57, and multicopper oxidase58 and
2
tyrosinase-like copper-containing monooxygenases (the production of secondary
3
metabolites)59. The wild-type strain S. thioluteus also exhibits distinct denitrifying
4
activity, and a copper-containing dissimilatory nitrite reductase was identified in its
5
denitrification, which may contribute to the global nitrogen cycle60. Despite copper
6
being known to participate in the life cycle of Streptomyces, a copper uptake system
7
was unnoticed and has not been well characterized in bacteria due to copper’s
8
potential toxicity and the low bacterial intracellular requirement for copper27, 61. This
9
relatively unstudied system stands in contrast to the well-studied efflux systems that
10
respond to high concentrations of copper. In our study, a novel copper chelator used to
11
uptake copper from the environment was discovered. The potential transport systems
12
involved in SF2768 export and Cu-SF2768 complex import were also identified. This
13
study provides a new understanding of molecular mechanisms of copper trafficking
14
and homeostasis in non-methanotrophic bacteria. The regulation mechanism by which
15
the SF2768-mediated copper acquisition system maintains copper homeostasis in S.
16
thioluteus will be addressed in our future research.
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Methods
2
Detailed experimental procedures are described in Supporting Information.
3
Conflict of interest
4
The authors declare no conflict of interest.
5
Acknowledgements
6
We thank G. Kenney from Northwestern University for the helpful discussion about
7
the oxidation state of the complexed copper. This project was supported by the
8
National Natural Science Foundation of China (31270136) and the Fundamental
9
Research Funds for the Central Universities (2009PY006 and 2662014PY053).
10
Supporting Information
11
Detailed experimental procedures; Supplementary figures and tables; Details of
12
strains, plasmids and primers; HR-ESI-MS and NMR spectra of the compounds. This
13
material is available free of charge via the Internet at http://pubs.acs.org.
14
References
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Figure legends: Figure 1. Genetic organization of the SF2768 biosynthetic gene cluster (sfa) in Streptomyces thioluteus and the metabolite profile of the gene inactivated strains in this study. The open reading frames involved in biosynthesis and transport are colored. The EIC traces of compound 1 (m/z 337.1870) in the heterologous expression and mutant strains are shown on the right. Observation of the double peak at m/z 337.1870 is consistent with the presence of two anomers of compound 1 as reported. Figure 2. Proposed biosynthetic pathway of the diisonitrile natural products in this study. Abbreviations: C, condensation domain; A, adenylation domain; PCP, peptidyl carrier protein; RED, reductase; 2-OG, α-ketoglutarate. The numbers 1 to 4 denote the corresponding compounds. Figure 3. Homologous gene clusters of sfa in different actinomycetes. The negative sign represents the product of corresponding gene cluster has not yet been reported. Figure 4. HR-ESI-MS detection of the metal-compound complexes in the fermentation broths when different metals were added. Figure 5. (A) HR-ESI-MS analyses of the copper-compound complexes. After incubation with Cu(II), the EIC traces of the diisonitriles (black lines) disappeared and the putative copper-compound complexes were tracked respectively ([2M1+Cu]+, orange; [2M3+Cu]+, red; [2M4+Cu]+, blue). (B) Mass spectra of the complexes with distinct isotopic distribution for copper. (C) Titration of the diisonitriles and Cu(II). Relative abundance of the copper-compound complex was measured and normalized by integration of ion intensities. (D) RP-TLC for detection of the complexes. (E) Concentration dependent Cu-CAS and Fe-CAS assays. (F) Copper chelating activities (EC50) of 1, 3, 4 and positive controls (2,2’-bipyridine and EDTA). The Cu-CAS solution used in chelating activities assay was ten-fold diluted. Figure 6. (A) In vivo characterization of copper-diisonitriles complexes import in S. thioluteus (p=0.005, n=6). (B) In vivo characterization of 65Cu-1 import in S. lividans::p13C and ∆orf19. The cells without isotopic incubation were used as controls. Uptake of 65Cu-1 led to a decreased 63 Cu:65Cu ratio. Results shown are the mean of six replicates with error bars representing SEM (p=0.0148, n=6). (C) SF2768 level in the extracellular (left) and intracellular (middle) fractions and their ratio (right) of the heterologous strain S. lividans::p13C and ∆orf12. Results shown are the mean of three replicates with error bars representing SEM (p=0.0101, n=3). P-values were calculated by two-tailed unpaired t-test using a 95% confidence interval.
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Table 1. Deduced functions of the open reading frames in the sfa cluster (GenBank accession No. KY427327). Size ORF
Homologous protein/Genbank accession Deduced functions
(aa)
(Identity/Positives %) SwissProt hits
3 4 5 6 7
Orf12
484
Cephamycin export protein
CmcT/Q04733.1 (40/55)
Orf13
365
3-oxoacyl-ACP synthase
FabH3/O54151.1 (60/72)
Orf14
78
Acyl carrier protein
AcpP/Q47NG1.1 (37/63)
Mxc
Mma
SfaA
295
Tau, Putative dioxygenase
Mb0100/P67756.1 (42/61)
MmaE (43/60)
Orf16
177
FcoT-like thioesterase
Mb0101/P64686.1 (37/53)
MmaD (39/52)
SfaB
530
AMP ligase
MxcE (26/41)
MmaC (32/47)
SfaC
85
Phosphopantetheine attachment domain
MxcF (51/67)
MmaB (28/38)
SfaD
1426
Non-ribosomal peptide synthetase
MxcG (53/67)
MmaA (30/43)
Orf19
330
Iron ABC transporter substrate-binding protein
WP_057576127.1 (73/83)
Orf20
320
Iron chelate uptake ABC transporter
YvrB/O34451.1 (43/62)
Orf21
267
Iron(III) dicitrate transport ATP-binding protein
FecE/P15031.1 (45/59)
SfaE
253
Asparaginyl beta-hydroxylase
Asph/Q8BSY0.1 (31/49)
Orf23
257
Cyclohexyl-isocyanide hydratase
InhA (32/50) Q8G9F9.1
Orf24
333
ABC transporter substrate-binding protein
WP_026219843.1 (75/83)
Orf25
511
Ribose import ATP-binding protein
RbsA/Q9K6J9.1 (37/57)
Orf26
347
L-arabinose transport system permease protein
AraH/P0AE26.2 (35/52)
Orf27
503
Serine protease
WP_052860930.1 (72/80)
Orf28
230
ECF RNA polymerase sigma factor
SigL/H8EXN1.1 (39/50)
The compared gene clusters include Mxc (Stigmatella aurantiaca, Genbank: AF299336) and Mma (Mycobacterium marinum, MmaE: ACC38728, MmaD: ACC38727, MmaC: ACC38726, MmaB: ACC38725 and MmaA: ACC38724). SfaD, MxcG and MmaA were predicted to load lysine based on conserved amino acid residues for the substrate specificity62, SfaD: DAEDVGTV, MxcG: DAEDIGTV, MmaA: DIEDVGSV.
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Figure 1. Genetic organization of the SF2768 biosynthetic gene cluster (sfa) in Streptomyces thioluteus and the metabolite profile of the gene inactivated strains in this study. The open reading frames involved in biosynthesis and transport are colored. The EIC traces of compound 1 (m/z 337.1870) in the heterologous expression and mutant strains are shown on the right. Observation of the double peak at m/z 337.1870 is consistent with the presence of two anomers of compound 1 as reported. 117x98mm (300 x 300 DPI)
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Figure 2. Proposed biosynthetic pathway of the diisonitrile natural products in this study. Abbreviations: C, condensation domain; A, adenylation domain; PCP, peptidyl carrier protein; RED, reductase; 2-OG, αketoglutarate. The numbers 1 to 4 denote the corresponding compounds. 59x25mm (300 x 300 DPI)
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Figure 3. Homologous gene clusters of sfa in different actinomycetes. The negative sign represents the product of corresponding gene cluster has not yet been reported. 84x51mm (300 x 300 DPI)
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Figure 4. HR-ESI-MS detection of the metal-compound complexes in the fermentation broths when different metals were added. 112x187mm (300 x 300 DPI)
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Figure 5. (A) HR-ESI-MS analyses of the copper-compound complexes. After incubation with Cu(II), the EIC traces of the diisonitriles (black lines) disappeared and the putative copper-compound complexes were tracked respectively ([2M1+Cu]+, orange; [2M3+Cu]+, red; [2M4+Cu]+, blue). (B) Mass spectra of the complexes with distinct isotopic distribution for copper. (C) Titration of the diisonitriles and Cu(II). Relative abundance of the copper-compound complex was measured and normalized by integration of ion intensities. (D) RP-TLC for detection of the complexes. (E) Concentration dependent Cu-CAS and Fe-CAS assays. (F) Copper chelating activities (EC50) of 1, 3, 4 and positive controls (2,2’-bipyridine and EDTA). The Cu-CAS solution used in chelating activities assay was ten-fold diluted. 87x54mm (300 x 300 DPI)
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Figure 6. (A) In vivo characterization of copper-diisonitriles complexes import in S. thioluteus (p=0.005, n=6). (B) In vivo characterization of 65Cu-1 import in S. lividans::p13C and ∆orf19. The cells without isotopic incubation were used as controls. Uptake of 65Cu-1 led to a decreased 63Cu:65Cu ratio. Results shown are the mean of six replicates with error bars representing SEM (p=0.0148, n=6). (C) SF2768 level in the extracellular (left) and intracellular (middle) fractions and their ratio (right) of the heterologous strain S. lividans::p13C and ∆orf12. Results shown are the mean of three replicates with error bars representing SEM (p=0.0101, n=3). P-values were calculated by two-tailed unpaired t-test using a 95% confidence interval. 96x84mm (300 x 300 DPI)
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