Affiliation:
1. Department of Biological Sciences, University of Texas at Dallas, Richardson, Texas, USA
2. Center for Systems Biology, University of Texas at Dallas, Richardson, Texas, USA
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Salmonella enterica
has two CyuR-activated enzymes that degrade cysteine, i.e., the aerobic CdsH and an unidentified anaerobic enzyme;
Escherichia coli
has only the latter. To identify the anaerobic enzyme, transcript profiling was performed for
E. coli
without
cyuR
and with overexpressed
cyuR
. Thirty-seven genes showed at least 5-fold changes in expression, and the
cyuPA
(formerly
yhaOM
) operon showed the greatest difference. Homology suggested that CyuP and CyuA represent a cysteine transporter and an iron-sulfur-containing cysteine desulfidase, respectively.
E. coli
and
S. enterica
Δ
cyuA
mutants grown with cysteine generated substantially less sulfide and had lower growth yields. Oxygen affected the CyuR-dependent genes reciprocally;
cyuP-lacZ
expression was greater anaerobically, whereas
cdsH-lacZ
expression was greater aerobically. In
E. coli
and
S. enterica
, anaerobic
cyuP
expression required
cyuR
and cysteine and was induced by
l
-cysteine,
d
-cysteine, and a few sulfur-containing compounds. Loss of either CyuA or RidA, both of which contribute to cysteine degradation to pyruvate, increased
cyuP-lacZ
expression, which suggests that CyuA modulates intracellular cysteine concentrations. Phylogenetic analysis showed that CyuA homologs are present in obligate and facultative anaerobes, confirming an anaerobic function, and in archaeal methanogens and bacterial acetogens, suggesting an ancient origin. Our results show that CyuA is the major anaerobic cysteine-catabolizing enzyme in both
E. coli
and
S. enterica
, and it is proposed that anaerobic cysteine catabolism can contribute to coordination of sulfur assimilation and amino acid synthesis.
IMPORTANCE
Sulfur-containing compounds such as cysteine and sulfide are essential and reactive metabolites. Exogenous sulfur-containing compounds can alter the thiol landscape and intracellular redox reactions and are known to affect several cellular processes, including swarming motility, antibiotic sensitivity, and biofilm formation. Cysteine inhibits several enzymes of amino acid synthesis; therefore, increasing cysteine concentrations could increase the levels of the inhibited enzymes. This inhibition implies that control of intracellular cysteine levels, which is the immediate product of sulfide assimilation, can affect several pathways and coordinate metabolism. For these and other reasons, cysteine and sulfide concentrations must be controlled, and this work shows that cysteine catabolism contributes to this control.
Funder
HHS | NIH | National Institute of General Medical Sciences
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
42 articles.
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