Affiliation:
1. Burnett School of Biomedical Sciences, College of Medicine, University of Central Florida, Orlando, Florida, USA
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Selenium is a trace element that plays critical roles in redox biology; it is typically incorporated into “selenoproteins” as the 21st amino acid selenocysteine. Additionally, selenium exists as a labile non-selenocysteine cofactor in a small subset of selenoproteins known as selenium-dependent molybdenum hydroxylases (SDMHs). In purinolytic clostridia, SDMHs are implicated in the degradation of hypoxanthine, xanthine, and uric acid for carbon and nitrogen. While SDMHs have been biochemically analyzed, the genes responsible for the insertion and maturation of the selenium cofactor lack characterization. In this study, we utilized the nosocomial pathogen
Clostridioides difficile
as a genetic model to begin characterizing this poorly understood selenium utilization pathway and its role in the catabolism of host-derived purines. We first observed that
C. difficile
could utilize hypoxanthine, xanthine, or uric acid to overcome a growth defect in a minimal medium devoid of glycine and threonine. However, strains lacking selenophosphate synthetase (
selD
mutants) still grew poorly in the presence of xanthine and uric acid, suggesting a selenium-dependent purinolytic process. Previous computational studies have identified
yqeB
and
yqeC
as potential candidates for cofactor maturation, so we subsequently deleted each gene using CRISPR-Cas9 technology. We surprisingly found that the growth of the Δ
yqeB
mutant in response to each purine was similar to the behavior of the
selD
mutants, while the Δ
yqeC
mutant exhibited no obvious phenotype. Our results suggest an important role for YqeB in selenium-dependent purine catabolism and also showcase
C. difficile
as an appropriate model organism to study the biological use of selenium.
IMPORTANCE
The apparent modification of bacterial molybdenum hydroxylases with a catalytically essential selenium cofactor is the least understood mechanism of selenium incorporation. Selenium-dependent molybdenum hydroxylases play an important role in scavenging carbon and nitrogen from purines for purinolytic clostridia. Here, we used
Clostridioides difficile
as a genetic platform to begin dissecting the selenium cofactor trait and found genetic evidence for a selenium-dependent purinolytic pathway. The absence of
selD
or
yqeB
—a predicted genetic marker for the selenium cofactor trait—resulted in impaired growth on xanthine and uric acid, known substrates for selenium-dependent molybdenum hydroxylases. Our findings provide a genetic foundation for future research of this pathway and suggest a novel metabolic strategy for
C. difficile
to scavenge host-derived purines from the gut.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology