Affiliation:
1. Biotech Center and Department of Plant Biology and Pathology, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, New Jersey 08901
2. Department of Molecular Biology, Princeton University, Princeton, New Jersey 08544
Abstract
ABSTRACT
A variant of the diaminopimelate (DAP)-lysine biosynthesis pathway uses an
ll
-DAP aminotransferase (DapL, EC 2.6.1.83) to catalyze the direct conversion of
l
-2,3,4,5-tetrahydrodipicolinate to
ll
-DAP. Comparative genomic analysis and experimental verification of DapL candidates revealed the existence of two diverged forms of DapL (DapL1 and DapL2). DapL orthologs were identified in eubacteria and archaea. In some species the corresponding
dapL
gene was found to lie in genomic contiguity with other
dap
genes, suggestive of a polycistronic structure. The DapL candidate enzymes were found to cluster into two classes sharing approximately 30% amino acid identity. The function of selected enzymes from each class was studied. Both classes were able to functionally complement
Escherichia coli dapD
and
dapE
mutants and to catalyze
ll
-DAP transamination, providing functional evidence for a role in DAP/lysine biosynthesis. In all cases the occurrence of
dapL
in a species correlated with the absence of genes for
dapD
and
dapE
representing the acyl DAP pathway variants, and only in a few cases was
dapL
coincident with
ddh
encoding
meso
-DAP dehydrogenase. The results indicate that the DapL pathway is restricted to specific lineages of eubacteria including the
Cyanobacteria
,
Desulfuromonadales
,
Firmicutes
,
Bacteroidetes
,
Chlamydiae
,
Spirochaeta
, and
Chloroflexi
and two archaeal groups, the
Methanobacteriaceae
and
Archaeoglobaceae.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
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