Affiliation:
1. Microbial Biology, Ruhr University Bochum, Bochum, Germany
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Agrobacterium tumefaciens
is a facultative phytopathogen that causes crown gall disease. For successful plant transformation
A. tumefaciens
requires the membrane lipid phosphatidylcholine (PC), which is produced via the methylation and the PC synthase (Pcs) pathways. The latter route is dependent on choline. Although choline uptake has been demonstrated in
A. tumefaciens
, the responsible transporter(s) remained elusive. In this study, we identified the first choline transport system in
A. tumefaciens
. The ABC-type choline transporter is encoded by the chromosomally located
choXWV
operon (ChoX, binding protein; ChoW, permease; and ChoV, ATPase). The Cho system is not critical for growth and PC synthesis. However, [
14
C]choline uptake is severely reduced in
A. tumefaciens choX
mutants. Recombinant ChoX is able to bind choline with high affinity (equilibrium dissociation constant [
K
D
] of ≈2 μM). Since other quaternary amines are bound by ChoX with much lower affinities (acetylcholine,
K
D
of ≈80 μM; betaine,
K
D
of ≈470 μM), the ChoXWV system functions as a high-affinity transporter with a preference for choline. Two tryptophan residues (W40 and W87) located in the predicted ligand-binding pocket are essential for choline binding. The structural model of ChoX built on
Sinorhizobium meliloti
ChoX resembles the typical structure of substrate binding proteins with a so-called “Venus flytrap mechanism” of substrate binding.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
12 articles.
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