Affiliation:
1. Defence R&D Canada-Suffield, Medicine Hat
2. Canada West Biosciences, Calgary, Alberta, Canada
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The conversion of ketomethiobutyrate to methionine has been previously examined in a number of organisms, wherein the aminotransferases responsible for the reaction have been found to be members of the Ia subfamily (L. C. Berger, J. Wilson, P. Wood, and B. J. Berger, J. Bacteriol. 183:4421-4434, 2001). The genome of
Bacillus subtilis
has been found to contain no subfamily Ia aminotransferase sequences. Instead, the analogous enzymes in
B. subtilis
were found to be members of the If subfamily. These putative aspartate aminotransferases, the
yugH
,
ywfG
,
ykrV
,
aspB
, and
patA
gene products, have been cloned, expressed, and characterized for methionine regeneration activity. Only YkrV was able to convert ketomethiobutyrate to methionine, and it catalyzed the reaction only when glutamine was used as amino donor. In contrast, subcellular homogenates of
B. subtilis
and
Bacillus cereus
utilized leucine, isoleucine, valine, alanine, phenylalanine, and tyrosine as effective amino donors. The two putative branched-chain aminotransferase genes in
B. subtilis
,
ybgE
and
ywaA
, were also cloned, expressed, and characterized. Both gene products effectively transaminated branched-chain amino acids and ketoglutarate, but only YbgE converted ketomethiobutyrate to methionine. The amino donor preference for methionine regeneration by YbgE was found to be leucine, isoleucine, valine, phenylalanine, and tyrosine. The
B. subtilis ybgE
gene is a member of the family III of aminotransferases and falls in a subfamily designated here IIIa. Examination of
B. cereus
and
Bacillus anthracis
genome data found that there were no subfamily IIIa homologues in these organisms. In both
B. cereus
and
B. anthracis
, two putative branched-chain aminotransferases and two putative
d
-amino acid aminotransferases were discovered as members of subfamily IIIb. These four sequences were cloned from
B. cereus
, expressed, and characterized. Only the gene product from the sequence designated Bc-BCAT2 was found to convert ketomethiobutyrate to methionine, with an amino donor preference of leucine, isoleucine, valine, phenylalanine, and tyrosine. The
B. anthracis
homologue of Bc-BCAT2 was also cloned, expressed, and characterized and was found to be identical in activity. The aminooxy compound canaline was found to be an uncompetitive inhibitor of
B. subtilis
YbgE and also inhibited growth of
B. subtilis
and
B. cereus
in culture.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology