Affiliation:
1. Microbiology Department, The University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia, USA
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The gastric pathogen
Helicobacter pylori
possesses a highly active urease to support acid tolerance. Urea hydrolysis occurs inside the cytoplasm, resulting in the production of NH
3
that is immediately protonated to form NH
4
+
. This ammonium must be metabolized or effluxed because its presence within the cell is counterproductive to the goal of raising pH while maintaining a viable proton motive force (PMF). Two compatible hypotheses for mitigating intracellular ammonium toxicity include (i) the exit of protonated ammonium outward via the UreI permease, which was shown to facilitate diffusion of both urea and ammonium, and/or (ii) the assimilation of this ammonium, which is supported by evidence that
H. pylori
assimilates urea nitrogen into its amino acid pools. We investigated the second hypothesis by constructing strains with altered expression of the ammonium-assimilating enzymes glutamine synthetase (GS) and glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH) and the ammonium-evolving periplasmic enzymes glutaminase (Ggt) and asparaginase (AsnB).
H. pylori
strains expressing elevated levels of either GS or GDH are more acid tolerant than the wild type, exhibit enhanced ammonium production, and are able to alkalize the medium faster than the wild type. Strains lacking the genes for either Ggt or AsnB are acid sensitive, have 8-fold-lower urea-dependent ammonium production, and are more acid sensitive than the parent. Additionally, we found that purified
H. pylori
GS produces glutamine in the presence of Mg
2+
at a rate similar to that of unadenylated
Escherichia coli
GS. These data reveal that all four enzymes contribute to whole-cell acid resistance in
H. pylori
and are likely important for assimilation and/or efflux of urea-derived ammonium.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
41 articles.
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