Molecular Recognition in a Post-translational Modification of Exceptional Specificity
MUTANTS OF THE BIOTINYLATED DOMAIN OF ACETYL-CoA CARBOXYLASE DEFECTIVE IN RECOGNITION BY BIOTIN PROTEIN LIGASE*

Anne Chapman-SmithDagger §, Timothy W. Morris§, John C. WallaceDagger , and John E. Cronan Jr.Dagger parallel

From the Dagger  Department of Biochemistry, University of Adelaide, Adelaide, South Australia 5005, Australia and the § Departments of Microbiology and Biochemistry, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, Illinois 61801

    ABSTRACT
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Procedures
Results
Discussion
References

We have used localized mutagenesis of the biotin domain of the Escherichia coli biotin carboxyl carrier protein coupled with a genetic selection to identify regions of the domain having a role in interactions with the modifying enzyme, biotin protein ligase. We purified several singly substituted mutant biotin domains that showed reduced biotinylation in vivo and characterized these proteins in vitro. This approach has allowed us to distinguish putative biotin protein ligase interaction mutations from structurally defective proteins. Two mutant proteins with glutamate to lysine substitutions (at residues 119 or 147) behaved as authentic ligase interaction mutants. The E119K protein was virtually inactive as a substrate for biotin protein ligase, whereas the E147K protein could be biotinylated, albeit poorly. Neither substitution affected the overall structure of the domain, assayed by disulfide dimer formation and trypsin resistance. Substitutions of the highly conserved glycine residues at positions 133 and 143 or at a key hydrophobic core residue, Val-146, gave structurally unstable proteins.

    INTRODUCTION
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Procedures
Results
Discussion
References

Biotin is an essential coenzyme that has biological activity only when covalently attached to a class of important metabolic enzymes, the biotin carboxylases and decarboxylases (1, 2). Biotin is attached via an amide linkage to a specific lysine residue of the cognate protein, and this reaction is catalyzed by biotin protein ligase (BPL,1 also known as holocarboxylase synthetase) in two-step Reaction 1 as follows.
<UP>    Step 1: Biotin</UP>+<UP>ATP ⇌ biotinoyl-AMP</UP>+<UP>PP<SUB>i</SUB></UP>
<UP>Step 2: Biotinoyl-AMP</UP>+<UP>apoprotein → biotinoyl-protein</UP>+<UP>AMP</UP>
REACTION 1

This is a post-translational modification of extraordinary specificity. For example BPL recognizes just one of the >4000 different protein species of Escherichia coli, the biotin carboxyl carrier protein (BCCP), and quantitatively attaches biotin to a specific lysine residue of this protein. BCCP is one of the four protein species that comprise acetyl-CoA carboxylase (EC 6.4.1.2), the enzyme catalyzing the first committed step of fatty acid biosynthesis, the conversion of acetyl-CoA to malonyl-CoA (3). Biotinylation is a relatively rare post-translational modification throughout biology, with between one and five biotinylated protein species found in different organisms (4). The sequences of both the BPLs and biotin acceptor protein domains are highly conserved. Moreover, this conservation applies to ligase-domain interactions, since biotinylation occurs when enzyme and protein substrate are derived from widely divergent species (4-7).

The three-dimensional structure of the biotinylated (holo) form of the biotin domain of E. coli BCCP has been determined by both NMR2 and x-ray crystallography (8), giving essentially identical structures. The protein forms a beta -barrel structure, with the biotinyl-lysine exposed on a tight beta -turn within the conserved Ala-Met-Lys-Met biotinylation motif. The BCCP biotin domain adopts a fold similar to those of several lipoyl domains (9-11) which undergo an analogous post-translational modification. The lipoyl cofactor is covalently attached to a specific lysine residue within a highly conserved Asp-Lys-Ala motif by lipoyl ligase via an ATP-activated intermediate (12, 13). The structure of the unbiotinylated (apo) form of the BCCP biotin domain determined by NMR (14)2 is very similar to that of the holoprotein, with both forms of the protein having the same basic fold and some localized small differences. However, we have demonstrated recently that there is a subtle, global alteration in the structure of the domain accompanying biotinylation which can be detected by proteolysis and chemical modification (15). Thus, it appears that these techniques, probably as a consequence of their irreversible nature, are a very sensitive indicator of changes in protein dynamics (16).

The biotin-accepting domain of BCCP undergoes a complex series of protein-protein interactions, since it must interact with BPL to become functional and then with both the carboxylase and carboxyltransferase active sites of the acetyl-CoA carboxylase complex. The precise structural elements within the biotin domain that direct post-translational modification of the specific lysine are unknown. Several studies have shown that the nature of the flanking methionine residues, although not essential for biotinylation, does have an effect on the efficiency of the reaction. Substitution of the Met-Lys-Met sequence with the Asp-Lys-Ala lipoylation motif abolishes biotinylation, and changing either of the Met residues to Lys significantly reduces the extent of modification (17). However, more conservative substitutions of the flanking methionines have little adverse effect on biotinylation (18, 19) but do effect the carboxylation and carboxyl transfer reactions of Propionibacterium shermanii transcarboxylase (20). The extent to which truncated forms of biotin carrier proteins are biotinylated indicates that a minimum of 35-40 residues on either side of the biotin attachment site is necessary to specify biotinylation (3, 4). It is now evident that further truncation, which abolishes biotinylation, removes residues that contribute to the formation of the hydrophobic core of the folded structure (8). Thus, it is clear that BPL recognizes the Met-Lys-Met motif within the context of a folded protein (21). Therefore, mutant proteins that fold improperly are expected to be poor biotin acceptors. Indeed, amino acid substitutions at one of the several highly conserved glycine residues, or within the conserved Pro-X-X-Gly motif found N-terminal to the biotin attachment site, severely reduce the efficiency of biotinylation of the biotin domain from human propionyl-CoA carboxylase in E. coli (19). However, many of these substitutions, especially those of the Gly residues, would be expected to destabilize the structure of the domain and thus the poor biotinylation could well be a secondary consequence of the altered structure rather than a specific defect in recognition by BPL. Such structural alterations cannot be readily detected in vivo.

In order to identify recognition determinants within the folded domain, we have addressed the problem of structural alteration introduced by amino acid substitution. We used localized mutagenesis of the C-terminal 87 residues of the E. coli BCCP biotin domain (BCCP87) coupled with a genetic selection to identify regions of the domain that are candidates for a role in biotin domain-BPL interactions. We purified several of these mutant biotin domain proteins that showed reduced biotinylation in vivo and have characterized the defect in vitro. This approach has allowed us to distinguish putative BPL interaction mutations from structurally defective proteins.

    EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
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Abstract
Introduction
Procedures
Results
Discussion
References

Bacterial Strains-- Generalized transduction with P1vir and bacterial matings were carried out as described by Miller (22). Strain CY481 (bio-lacZ; Ref. 23) was transduced to tetracycline resistance using a P1 lysate of strain SJ16 (24). Tetracycline-resistant transductants were screened for beta -alanine-dependent growth on minimal E glucose solid media, and one such auxotroph was saved as TM1 (panD2 zad220::Tn10). The lacIq plasmid pMS421 (25) was inserted into strain TM1 to give TM5. The F' factor from strain XL1-Blue was transferred by conjugation into tetracycline-sensitive derivatives of TM1 (selected by the method of Maloy and Nunn (26)), with selection for tetracycline resistance and counterselection for streptomycin resistance, to give strain TM21 (F'(proAB lacIq M15 Tn10) panD2). Culture media contained 100 µg/ml ampicillin, 10 µg/ml tetracycline, 30 µg/ml chloramphenicol, 30 µg/ml streptomycin, or 30 µg/ml spectinomycin, as appropriate.

Plasmids and Plasmid Construction-- Nucleic acid manipulations were carried out using standard techniques (27). Plasmid pMR16 (28), which carries a synthetic gene encoding acyl carrier protein (ACP), and pLS4, which encodes BCCP, were the source of the gene fragments used for the ACP-BCCP fusion construct. pLS4 carries a 1.6-kb HindIII-PstI fragment of the accBC operon (3) in pTZ18U (29). The EcoRI-ClaI ACP fragment and the 0.3-kb NcoI-SstII BCCP fragment were sequentially inserted into polylinker sites of the cloning vector pMTL21 (30) followed by enzymatic manipulation of the polylinker sequences in order to place the ACP and BCCP gene fragments into the same translational reading frame. The DNA encoding the fusion protein consists of the sequence encoding the first 70 residues of ACP linked by the sequence 5'-CGACGTCACGCGCGCGTC-3' (encoding the linker peptide, DVTRAS) to the sequence encoding the last 87 residues of BCCP. The hybrid gene was obtained by EcoRI-PstI digestion and inserted into the expression vector pKK223-3 (31) cut with the same enzymes to give pTM4D. This plasmid was propagated in lacIq strains to allow inducible expression from the tac promoter. Plasmid pTM4E was constructed by introducing the f1 origin of replication derived from pUC1813, via pCY50,3 into pTM4D. BCCP biotin domain variants expressing single amino acid substitutions were produced by ligating appropriate restriction fragments from mutagenized pTM4E derivatives into plasmid pTM53, which encodes the C-terminal 87 residues of BCCP (BCCP87) under the control of the T7 promoter (32).

Methoxylamine Mutagenesis-- Restriction fragments isolated from separate ScaI or NcoI plus SstII digests of pTM4E (6.7 and 6.4 kb, respectively) were annealed as described by Kalderon et al. (see Ref. 33; with the addition of 1.0 M NaCl to the annealing buffer) to produce gapped heteroduplexes with 0.3-kb single-stranded loops. These heteroduplexes were subjected to localized mutagenesis by treatment with 1.0 M methoxylamine hydrochloride for 3-60 min essentially as described (34, 35). After removal of methoxylamine and ethanol precipitation, the treated DNA was transformed directly into TM21, with selection for ampicillin resistance on rich broth plates. The resulting colonies were then screened for production of the ACP-BCCP fusion by scoring growth on MacConkey lactose medium. The lactose induces high level expression of the gene encoding the fusion protein. If the fusion protein is produced and stable, induction will result in growth inhibition due to titration of biotin ligase and the intrinsic toxicity of ACP overproduction (25). Strains sensitive to lactose were then screened for derepression of bio operon expression (see below), and the remaining candidates were assayed for production of the full-length fusion protein and biotinylation by radioactive labeling in vivo (see below).

Derepression of bio-lacZ Fusion Strains-- Strains of interest were scored by a radial streak assay in which single colonies were suspended in 0.5 ml of medium E and then streaked outward from the center of minimal E plates containing 5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indoyl-beta -D-galactoside (X-gal; 80 µg/ml) and lacking biotin. A filter paper disc in the center of the plate was then spotted with 20 µl of 500 µM biotin. After overnight incubation at 37 °C, bio-lacZ derepression resulted in a sharp blue/white interface near the outer edge of each growth streak. The distance between this interface and the biotin-saturated disc was taken as an indicator of biotin consumption. For quantitative assessment of derepression, the beta -galactosidase activity of liquid cultures was measured as described by Miller (22), with cells disrupted with SDS and chloroform.

Protein Expression, Purification, and Analysis-- Growth experiments requiring minimal media were carried out in medium E (36) supplemented with 0.4% glucose, 1 µg/ml thiamine, 0.1% vitamin-free casamino acids, and the indicated concentrations of biotin and beta -alanine. For labeling BCCP or ACP in the fusion proteins, these media contained either 75-200 nM [3H]biotin (1 µCi/ml) and 10 µM beta -alanine or 2-5 µM [3H]beta -alanine (3-25 µCi/ml) and 100-200 nM biotin, respectively. After growth overnight in 0.2 ml of 3H-containing media, cells were subcultured into 1.0 ml of fresh 3H media, and fusion protein production was induced by the addition of isopropylthiogalactoside (IPTG) to 1 mM. Whole cell lysates were prepared for SDS-PAGE essentially as described by Chapman-Smith et al. (32) except that the reductant used was 10 mM dithiothreitol. Sample loading was normalized by optical density measurements prior to electrophoresis. Gels were fixed in 10% acetic acid, 10% methanol, treated with Enlightening (NEN Life Science Products) for 30 min, dried under vacuum, and exposed to preflashed x-ray film at 70 °C.

Isolated wild type and mutant biotin domain peptides were expressed from derivatives of pTM53 in strain BL21(lambda DE3) and purified essentially as described previously (32). Additional purification by gel filtration chromatography using Superdex 75 (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech) and reduction of disulfide-bonded dimers were carried out as described in Chapman-Smith et al. (15). Trypsin digestion, high performance liquid chromatography analysis, and peptide quantitation were carried out as described previously (15, 32). Other protein methods and analyses were as described previously (15, 32) except that trypsin digestions were done in the presence of 1 mM DTT. Preliminary experiments showed that trypsin retained activity in the presence of 1 mM DTT using apoBCCP87 as a substrate, whereas 10 mM DTT inhibited the activity 3-4-fold (data not shown).

In Vitro Biotinylation Assays-- BPL activity was measured by following incorporation of [3H]biotin into acid-precipitable material over time, with either wild type apoBCCP87 or the mutant apoproteins as the biotin acceptor. Unless otherwise stated, the assays contained 40 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.0, 3 mM ATP, 5.5 mM MgCl2, 5 µM biotin, 5 pmol of [3H]biotin (specific activity 35-44 Ci/mmol), 100 mM KCl, 1.4 mM beta -mercaptoethanol, 0.1 mg/ml bovine serum albumin carrier protein, and the indicated concentrations of apoprotein in a final volume of 100 µl. The reaction was initiated by addition of purified E. coli biotin ligase (BirA; the gift of Dr. Dorothy Beckett) to a final concentration of 12.5 nM and incubated at 37 °C for up to 30 min, during which time the reaction was linear at saturating substrate concentrations. Aliquots taken at various time intervals were spotted onto dry 2 × 2-cm squares of Whatman 3MM paper to which 100 µl of 5 mM biotin and 100 µl of 10% trichloroacetic acid had previously been applied. The pretreatment with trichloroacetic acid was found to be necessary to prevent the reaction continuing on the filter. After air-drying, the filters were washed batchwise twice in ice-cold 10% trichloroacetic acid and once in ethanol, dried, and the acid-insoluble radioactivity measured. The optimal pH for activity was determined in assays over a pH range 4.5-11.0, with the following buffer systems at 40 mM: sodium acetate, pH 4.5-5.5, sodium phosphate, pH 6.0-7.5, sodium MOPS, pH 6.0-8.0, Tris-HCl, pH 7.0-9.5, and sodium CAPS, pH 9.0-11.0. For analysis of kinetic experiments, the maximum amount of added [3H]biotin that could be fixed by the enzyme was determined from a reaction with 0.25 µM enzyme (since [3H]biotin had a 3-fold lower counting efficiency on the filter paper when not bound to protein). In some experiments, to obtain sufficiently high levels of radioactivity for accurate detection, it was necessary to allow the reaction to continue until greater than 10% of the limiting substrate had been utilized. In this case the data were transformed for altering substrate concentration by the method of Lee and Wilson (37) and plotted as transformed values s' and v'. Values for Km and Vmax were determined by fitting a plot of substrate concentration against rate directly to the Michaelis-Menten equation using GraphPad Prism for MacIntosh (GraphPad Software Inc, San Diego, CA). In cases where a reasonable estimate of Vmax could not be obtained due to practical limitations to the substrate concentration range, constants were determined by linear regression with data in double-reciprocal form using GraphPad Prism.

    RESULTS
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Procedures
Results
Discussion
References

Expression of ACP-BCCP Fusions-- In order to isolate mutant biotin domains deficient in biotinylation in vivo, we constructed protein fusions to the BCCP biotin domain that could be detected using a straightforward assay that did not depend on biotinylation (Fig. 1A). Acyl carrier protein (ACP) from E. coli was chosen as the N-terminal reporter group for the fusions because it is small (77 amino acids), stable, and can be specifically labeled (through its covalently linked 4'-phosphopantetheine prosthetic group) with [3H]beta -alanine (38). The ACP-BCCP fusion plasmid pTM4D encoded the 70 N-terminal residues of ACP followed by a short artificial linker and then the C-terminal 87 residues of BCCP (BCCP87). BCCP87 was chosen as the fusion sequence because fusion proteins that encoded only the last 55 or 67 residues of BCCP were not biotinylated in vivo (39). The lacIq host strains TM5 and TM21 required both biotin and beta -alanine for growth which allowed efficient labeling and detection of the expressed fusion proteins. When expressed in the presence of [3H]biotin or [3H]beta -alanine and analyzed by SDS-PAGE ("Experimental Procedures"), the ACP-BCCP fusion was efficiently and specifically labeled with both radioactive compounds (Fig. 1B), indicating that both components were properly recognized by their cognate modification enzymes (BPL and holo-ACP synthase). Moreover, the native forms of both modified proteins were also present thus providing internal standards for the labeling reactions and gel electrophoresis. The fusion protein was stable in vivo, as judged by the high yields of labeled material and the lack of detectable proteolysis products.


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Fig. 1.   Expression and labeling of ACP-BCCP fusion proteins from pTM4D and pTM4E. A, upon addition of IPTG to strains carrying plasmids pTM4D or pTM4E, ACP-BCCP fusion proteins are expressed and modified post-translationally by BPL and ACP synthase. The modification reactions are depicted sequentially, although the order of events is unknown. pTM4D and pTM4E differ only in their origins of replication, as detailed under "Experimental Procedures." Restriction sites in the plasmid that were used to prepare gapped heteroduplexes are indicated. B, strain TM5 carrying pKK223-3 (lanes 1 and 3) or pTM4D (lanes 2 and 4) was labeled with [3H]biotin or [3H]beta -alanine, and samples were prepared for SDS-PAGE as described under "Experimental Procedures." Bands showing labeling of endogenous BCCP and ACP are indicated.

Our genetic selection for mutant fusion proteins deficient in biotinylation was based on the observation that basal expression of the ACP-BCCP hybrid gene of pTM4D increased the minimal concentration of biotin required for growth of strains blocked in biotin synthesis (bio strains). For growth in both liquid and solid minimal media ("Experimental Procedures"), bio strains harboring plasmid pTM4D required about 20 nM exogenous biotin, whereas strains carrying the vector plasmid (or no plasmid) grew readily on media containing about 1 nM biotin (data not shown).

Isolation of Biotinylation-defective Mutations within the BCCP Biotin Domain-- Mutagenesis was localized to the BCCP-coding sequence by use of a mutagen specific to single-stranded DNA and gapped heteroduplexes in which only the BCCP DNA was single-stranded. Plasmid pTM4E DNA with 0.3-kb single-stranded loops containing the BCCP87 coding sequence ("Experimental Procedures") was treated in vitro with methoxylamine, and the mutagenized DNA was rapidly purified and transformed directly into strain TM21 with selection for ampicillin resistance on RB plates ("Experimental Procedures"). This initial selection step was based on the increased biotin requirements of bio-lacZ hosts harboring plasmid pTM4D mentioned above. The biotin content of RB medium is only ~5 nM (determined by bioassay on strain SA291 using the disc assay method of del Capillo-Campbell et al. (40)). Thus, strains carrying mutant plasmids that encoded fusion proteins that were poorly biotinylated would be expected to form colonies on RB medium since the defect in biotinylation would relieve the requirement for higher biotin concentrations (Fig. 2). In order to further sort these candidate colonies (and eliminate molecular siblings), each colony was then screened for its ability to repress the bio-lacZ reporter in a biotin-dependent manner using a radial streak assay ("Experimental Procedures"). This screen is based on the sophisticated regulatory system that controls biotin synthesis in E. coli. The BPL of E. coli functions not only as an enzyme but as the repressor regulating transcription of the biotin biosynthetic gene operon. E. coli BPL binds to the biotin operon operator only when complexed with biotinoyl-AMP, the product of the first half-reaction, whereas protein biotinylation consumes the biotinoyl-AMP and thus acts as an antagonist of DNA binding (4, 23). Therefore, overproduction of a biotin acceptor protein results in derepression of biotin operon transcription which in the present case is readily assayed by beta -galactosidase production from the lacZ gene inserted into the biotin operon of the host strain chromosome (Fig. 2). (The bio mutation in these strains results from insertion of a promoter-less lacZ gene into the biotin operon such that the bioF gene is disrupted and the bio promoter drives the synthesis of beta -galactosidase). As expected from prior studies using a different biotin acceptor protein (4, 23), induction of the parental fusion protein encoded by pTM4D/E resulted in an approximately 10-fold increase in bio-lacZ transcription at all biotin concentrations tested (data not shown) and was accompanied by greatly diminished biotinylation of endogenous BCCP (cf. Fig. 1B, lanes 1 and 2). Thus, overproduction of an exogenous biotin acceptor protein successfully competed with endogenous BCCP for the limited supply of biotin and also reduced occupancy of the bio operator by the BirA repressor.


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Fig. 2.   A schematic illustration of the selection and screen used in isolation of mutants defective in biotinylation. A, in the absence of the ACP-BCCP fusion plasmid pTM4D/E, the bio host strain showed normal growth on 5 nM biotin and no beta -galactosidase production from the lacZ gene fused to the biotin operon regulatory region. Intact acetyl-CoA carboxylase comprises two of each of four proteins (3). AccC is the biotin carboxylase subunit and AccA and AccD together constitute the transcarboxylase activity. BCCP is the AccB gene product. B, basal expression of the wild type biotin domain fusion protein from pTM4D or pTM4E resulted in insufficient biotinylation of endogenous BCCP at low biotin concentration (<5 nM), leading to formation of inactive acetyl-CoA carboxylase. With sufficient biotin to support growth (20-40 nM), overproduction of the biotin acceptor domain following induction with IPTG resulted in derepression of bio operon transcription, assayed by production of beta -galactosidase. Strains harboring plasmids encoding a mutant fusion protein defective in biotinylation were expected to behave like the strain lacking pTM4D/E (A). Basal expression of a poorly biotinylated mutant biotin domain fusion protein restored growth on 5 nM biotin. The extent of bio operon induction was assessed in the presence of IPTG using the radial streak assay (discussed in the text). In fact, strains that survived selection at low biotin showed varying levels of derepression at a given biotin concentration, and the extent of induction of the biotin operon provided an approximate indication of the severity of the biotinylation defect.

This latter observation allowed development of the radial streak assay in which each mutant fusion candidate strain was placed on an X-gal indicator plate containing IPTG to induce expression of the fusion protein and then subjected to a gradient of biotin concentrations. At a given biotin concentration, strains that produced biotin domains deficient in biotin acceptance were expected to have lower levels of bio operon expression (hence shorter extents of blue cell growth due to X-gal cleavage by beta -galactosidase) than the wild type strain carrying pTM4E, since the mutant proteins would compete poorly with the wild type (full-length) BCCP for the BPL-biotinoyl-AMP complex. Strains having decreased extents of bio operon induction (similar to that given by the host strain lacking pTM4E) were then further characterized by labeling with [3H]beta -alanine and [3H]biotin.

Four independent mutagenesis experiments, in which heteroduplexes were exposed to methoxylamine for different periods, resulted in the identification of a total of 82 candidates that survived selection on low biotin and exhibited decreased repression of the bio-lacZ reporter. When examined by SDS-PAGE of [3H]beta -alanine-labeled samples, only 42 of the 82 candidates expressed full-length fusion proteins. Fig. 3 shows the labeling observed in a representative sample of these isolates. Many of the mutant fusions were apparently less stable than the wild type fusion as shown by production of [3H]beta -alanine-labeled peptides. Virtually all of the candidates that survived this last screen were moderately to severely deficient in biotinylation as determined by [3H]biotin labeling (Fig. 3). By comparison of the relative levels of labeling with [3H]beta -alanine and [3H]biotin, a total of 27 mutants were selected for DNA sequence analysis (Table I). The mutations recovered were very nonrandom with residues Thr-76, Ser-85, Gly-89, Glu-119, Gly-133, Gly-143, and Glu-147 being altered in multiple isolates. The E119K mutation was found in 16 isolates. The location of the mutations within the primary structure of the biotin domain is shown in Fig. 4A. Many of these isolates carried multiple mutations, thus precluding straightforward interpretation of the biotinylation phenotypes.


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Fig. 3.   [3H]Biotin and [3H]beta -alanine labeling of the ACP-BCCP fusion protein in biotinylation-defective mutants. Individual isolates of strain TM21 carrying mutant derivatives of pTM4E that had survived selection on low biotin and reestablished bio-lacZ repression (Fig. 2) were labeled with [3H]biotin or [3H]beta -alanine as indicated. The whole cell lysates were separated by SDS-PAGE, and incorporated radioactivity was detected as described under "Experimental Procedures." Each panel shows a composite of several experiments, chosen to illustrate the range of labeling observed with different isolates. TM21 carrying pTM4E expressing the wild type fusion protein (WT) was included with each set of mutants evaluated to standardize for variations in the extent of labeling observed among experiments. The mutations present in the isolates are given in Table I, and isolate 224 was one of 13 isolates carrying only the E119K mutation.

                              
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Table I
Characterization of mutated acetyl-CoA carboxylase-BCCP fusion constructs having defective biotinylation
The amounts of [3H]biotin and [3H]beta -alanine incorporated into full-length fusion protein, in mutated acetyl-CoA carboxylase-BCCP isolates which survived selection on low biotin and had reestablished bio-lacZ repression (Fig. 2), were assessed by SDS-PAGE of labeled cell extracts as described under "Experimental Procedures" (Fig. 3). ++++ indicates wild type levels of incorporation, and - indicates extremely weak or undetectable incorporation. The mutations present in selected isolates were identified by sequence analysis. Only those mutations resulting in missense substitutions are shown. ts indicates the temperature-sensitive accB allele sequenced by Li and Cronan (3). NA, not applicable.


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Fig. 4.   Structure of the BCCP biotin-accepting domain showing isolated missense mutations. A, the missense mutations identified by sequence analysis of mutated ACP-BCCP fusions selected by the procedure outlined in Fig. 2 are shown below the corresponding wild type residue of the BCCP87 biotin-accepting domain. The biotinylated lysine, residue 122 of intact BCCP, is indicated. Residues forming beta -strands in the folded structure are underlined. Bold type indicates mutations found in multiple isolates. B, three-dimensional structure of the holoBCCP biotin domain, with the position of the single amino acid substitutions in the purified mutant BCCP87 proteins indicated by arrows. (Figure was prepared using MOLSCRIPT (47) from the PDB coordinates for BCCP80 derived by Athappily and Hendrickson (8))

Expression and Purification of Biotin Domain Mutants-- In order to evaluate the effect of individual amino acid substitutions on biotinylation, sequences encoding selected mutations were inserted individually into pTM53, a pET16 derivative used for production of wild type BCCP87 ("Experimental Procedures" and Ref. 32). The mutations were chosen on the basis of the frequency with which they had been selected following mutagenesis, the severity of the biotinylation-defective phenotype produced, and the availability of suitable flanking restriction sites to allow subcloning of the mutated segment into the sequence encoding wild type BCCP87 such that each construct contained only a single mutation. The selected mutations (Fig. 4B) included substitutions at structurally important and highly conserved residues as well as at positions considered less likely to disrupt the structure of the domain (chosen by analogy to the related lipoyl domains since no biotin domain structure was available at that time). Six different singly substituted BCCP87 variants were expressed for production of unbiotinylated protein and purified as described under "Experimental Procedures." As expected, substitutions that resulted in a change in net charge eluted at a different pH on anion exchange chromatography (data not shown). Both substitutions at Gly-133 resulted in apoproteins that showed evidence of proteolytic degradation during purification, as determined by SDS-PAGE and mass spectrometry. The apoG133D BCCP87 was particularly susceptible to proteolysis. During gel filtration chromatography to separate intact protein from proteolyzed fragments, the Gly-133 mutant proteins also showed a marked tendency to aggregate. Hence, the yields of apoG133S were relatively low, and apoG133D could not be recovered in significant quantities. ApoG133S, E119K, G143E, V146I, and E147K were purified to homogeneity as judged by PAGE performed in the presence or absence of SDS. Molecular mass determination by mass spectrometry confirmed both the expected amino acid substitutions and the biotinylation state of the purified protein samples (Table II).

                              
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Table II
Mass spectrometric analysis of the purified mutant BCCP87 proteins

Structural Stability of BCCP87 Mutants-- Disulfide-linked dimers were detected to varying extents by mass spectrometry (Table II) and PAGE (data not shown) in the purified G133S, G133D, G143E, and V146I protein samples, as seen previously in some preparations of wild type apoBCCP87 (15). This suggested that the availability of the single cysteine residue of the protein (Cys-116 in intact BCCP) could be used as a probe for structural alterations of the mutant domains. Since the recent NMR structures of apoBCCP87 show that Cys-116 is a buried residue that forms part of the hydrophobic core (14),2 the extent of disulfide dimer formation in the mutant apoproteins would reflect the extent to which the Cys-116 residues of two protein molecules were solvent-exposed and thus indicate a disruption of the native structure. Therefore, the tendency of the mutant apoproteins to form disulfide-linked dimers was investigated. Following reduction with DTT and gel filtration, samples were concentrated in the absence of reductant and analyzed for the presence of disulfide-linked dimers by nondenaturing PAGE (Fig. 5). Under these conditions, no dimer formation was observed for the wild type, E119K, or E147K mutant proteins. The V146I and G143E formed dimers to some extent, with 66 and 30%, respectively, of these proteins remaining monomeric. G133S was predominantly in the dimeric form, which persisted even when 10 mM DTT was present during concentration of the protein (data not shown). The rapid reformation of dimers of some mutant proteins precluded quantitative assessment of the accessibility of Cys-116 by reaction with sulfhydryl reagents (15).


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Fig. 5.   Disulfide-linked dimer formation. Samples of the BCCP87 mutant proteins that had been reduced with excess DTT, followed by removal of DTT by gel filtration chromatography ("Experimental Procedures"), were concentrated in the absence of reductant in a Centricon 10 device (Amicon) that had been pretreated with 1% bovine serum albumin according to the manufacturers' instructions. The protein samples were run on non-denaturing PAGE in the presence and absence of 2% beta -mercaptoethanol (beta -ME) as indicated. Lanes 1 and 7 represent holo and apo wild type BCCP87, respectively, and lanes 2-6 represent in order the apo mutant proteins E147K, E119K, G133S, V146I, and G143E. Since the relative mobilities of the proteins in this system reflect both size and charge differences, several monomer (1o) and dimer (2o) species are indicated.

Previously, we used limited proteolysis to detect a subtle structural difference between apo- and holoBCCP87 (15). Together with the degradation observed during purification of several mutant proteins this suggested that proteolysis could be used as a sensitive indicator of possible structural perturbations caused by the amino acid substitutions. The apoBCCP87 mutant proteins were digested with trypsin under reducing conditions, to avoid the relatively rapid dimer formation characteristic of several of the mutant proteins. These digestions were carried out with 1 mM DTT (a 20-fold molar excess of reductant over protein) which was sufficient to maintain all of the mutant proteins in the monomeric form except apoG133S. The results shown in Fig. 6 indicate that the susceptibility of the apo form of the E119K and E147K proteins to trypsin digestion was equivalent to the wild type protein, whereas the V146I and G143E proteins showed increased sensitivity, and the G133S substitution resulted in extremely rapid degradation. Thus, the relative stabilities of the different mutant proteins were the same when evaluated using two different probes for structural alteration, i.e. disulfide dimerization and trypsin susceptibility.


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Fig. 6.   Trypsin sensitivity of wild type and mutant apoBCCP87 proteins. Proteins were treated with trypsin at a protease:BCCP ratio of 1:40 (w/w) as described under "Experimental Procedures." Samples taken at varying time intervals were acidified, digestion products separated by reverse phase high performance liquid chromatography, and the remaining undigested protein quantitated from the peak areas on the chromatograms ("Experimental Procedures"). The results are expressed as the percentage of the initial intact protein remaining at a given time. Wild type (), E147K (black-square), E119K (black-diamond ), G133S(black-triangle), V146I (open circle ), and G143E (bullet ).

Kinetics of Biotinylation-- To evaluate the ability of the individual mutant proteins to act as substrates for E. coli BPL in vitro, it was first necessary to determine the optimal conditions for biotinylation of the wild type domain in a convenient assay system ("Experimental Procedures"). Assays of enzyme activity over the pH range 4.5-11.0 showed that maximal activity occurred in Tris-HCl, pH 8.0-8.5. Activity was higher in the Tris-HCl buffer than in MOPS or CAPS buffers, whereas sodium phosphate buffer was inhibitory. The enzyme was active over the range 5.5-10.0, with ~10% maximal activity at pH 5.5 and 50% at pH 10.0. As reported by other workers (41), K+ ions (50-100 mM) stimulated activity. The Km values for apoBCCP87, biotin, and ATP were 4.39 ± 0.37 µM, 0.49 ± 0.07 µM, and about 0.3 mM, respectively.

The BCCP87 mutant proteins were assayed at varying concentrations for the efficiency of biotinylation by BPL (Fig. 7). Kinetic constants derived from these data are given in Table III. The values for kcat/Km for the different substrates show that the G143E protein had a similar affinity for the enzyme as wild type BCCP87, whereas the V146I protein was a slightly poorer substrate. The E147K substitution reduced the affinity about 3-fold. The E119K protein was an extremely poor biotinylation substrate. Biotinylation could only be detected when concentration of enzyme in the assay was increased 10-fold, and we were unable to obtain sufficiently high substrate concentrations to derive accurate kinetic constants for this protein. However, it was clear from assays carried out over the concentration range available (Fig. 7B) that the E119K mutation reduced the affinity of the biotin domain for the enzyme about 100-fold. The Km value determined for the G133S protein also could only be approximated and indicated that this protein was a poor substrate. The addition of 10 mM DTT to the assays to reduce the spontaneously formed G133S disulfide dimers increased the rate of biotinylation (Fig. 7A), whereas the presence of additional reductant had no effect on biotinylation of apo wild type BCCP87 (data not shown).


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Fig. 7.   Biotinylation of mutant apoBCCP87 proteins by E. coli BPL. The wild type and mutant BCCP87 proteins were assayed over the indicated concentration range in the in vitro biotinylation reaction, and the data were analyzed as described under "Experimental Procedures." The lines represent non-linear regression to the Michaelis-Menten equation using GraphPad Prism ("Experimental Procedures"). A, wild type (), E147K (black-square), G133S (black-triangle), G133S +10 mM DTT (triangle ), V146I (open circle ), and G143E (bullet ). B, the assays were carried out with a 10-fold higher enzyme concentration (125 nM) over 1 min with wild type BCCP87 () and 15 min with E119K BCCP87 (black-diamond ). Note the different axes for the two proteins.

                              
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Table III
Kinetic constants for the reaction of wild type and mutant BCCP87 proteins with E. coli BPL
The wild type and mutant BCCP87 proteins were assayed in the in vitro biotinylation reaction over a range of protein concentrations (Fig. 7 and "Experimental Procedures"), and the data were analyzed to derive Km and Vmax ("Experimental Procedures"). The values given represent the mean and S.D. for two to four determinations for wild type and the G143E, V146I, and E147K mutant proteins. The Km for the G133S and E119K proteins was estimated from a double-reciprocal plot at low substrate concentrations from the data shown in Fig. 7. ND, not determined.


    DISCUSSION
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Procedures
Results
Discussion
References

Our biological selection method allows facile isolation of mutant biotin accepting domains defective in interaction with BPL and is sufficiently robust that it can be applied to pools of randomly produced mutants. In addition, the ACP-BCCP fusion strategy enabled us to assess the expression, size, and stability of the fusions by an assay that did not depend on biotinylation. Incorporation of both biotin and beta -alanine readily eliminated chain termination mutants and allowed the extent of biotinylation relative to total fusion protein production to be easily determined. The mutated residues of these fusion proteins were decidedly non-random, and the most defective of the mutated proteins, E119K, was repeatly isolated. It should be noted that, although the heteroduplex technique results in mutagenesis of both the coding and non-coding DNA strands, methoxylamine can mutagenize only those codons that contain cytosine or guanine bases. Moreover, mutations at the third position of a codon will often be silent due to the degeneracy of the genetic code. These parameters preclude mutagenesis of some positions of BCCP87 (such as the AAA codon that encodes the biotinylated lysine residue) and limit the possible amino acid substitutions at mutable positions. Therefore, some of the nonrandom nature of our mutant collection can be attributed to our mutagenesis protocol. Another bias lies in our construction of singly mutant domains from the isolates with multiple mutations. For example we constructed the V146I domain since the E119K,V146I double mutant appeared more defective in biotinylation in vivo than the E119K mutant (Fig. 3), and the substitution seemed likely to alter the hydrophobic core of the protein. However, in vitro the V146I mutation had only a modest effect on biotinylation of the domain suggesting that the in vivo results were due to synergy between the two mutations rather than a simple additive effect. This is consistent with the location of the two mutated residues in the biotin domain (8, 14).2 The Calpha atoms of these two residues lie only 9.5 Å apart, and the structure is such that the altered packing required to accommodate isoleucine at position 146 could be propagated to the Glu-119 region. It should also be noted that all of the singly mutant proteins we examined retained some ability to accept biotin in vivo, and thus it seems difficult to completely block biotinylation of BCCP87 with only a single amino acid change. Indeed, the only mutant proteins we isolated that were completely defective in biotinylation in vivo each contained at least three amino acid substitutions (Table I).

The two mutant proteins with Glu to Lys substitutions (at residues 119 or 147) behave as authentic interaction mutants. The E119K protein is inactive as a substrate for BPL, whereas the E147K protein could be biotinylated, albeit poorly. Neither substitution seemed to affect the overall structure of the domain, as expected from the surface location of the parent lysine residues. Both proteins were indistinguishable from the wild type domain when assayed for disulfide dimer formation (Fig. 5) or trypsin resistance (Fig. 6). Therefore, we conclude that the E119K and E147K mutant domains are primarily defective in interaction with BPL. The surface of the biotin-binding pocket of the BirA protein (42) has several positively charged residues, and our data suggest that these residues may be involved in the correct positioning of the biotin acceptor protein at the catalytic site. Thus, alteration of the surface charge on the biotin domain surface that interacts with the ligase may affect the recognition between the two proteins. The notion of a matching of charged surfaces is consistent with mutational studies of the biotin domain of human propionyl-CoA carboxylase where changing the conserved PMP motif to PKP had a more pronounced effect on the efficiency of biotinylation than replacing all three residues with alanine (19). Several other observations suggest that charge maintenance may be particularly significant in the immediate vicinity of the biotinyl lysine, i.e. at Glu-119. A biotinylation consensus sequence selected from a largely randomized peptide library (43) has few residues that are strictly conserved with respect to the sequence around the biotinylation site in proteins. However, one of the derived constraints is for either Glu or Asp at the position equivalent to Glu-119 in BCCP (43), a finding consistent with the dramatically increased Km of the E119K mutant we observed. In addition, substituting Lys for either of Met residues that flank the biotinylated lysine greatly reduces biotinylation of the BCCP biotin domain in vivo (17). It is interesting that the functionally analogous interaction between lipoate ligase and the lipoyl domains also appears to require charge conservation at the position equivalent to Glu-119. Substitution of lysine for the Glu found two residues upstream of the lipoylated Lys in many lipoyl domains dramatically reduces lipoylation of both human glycine cleavage enzyme and E. coli pyruvate dehydrogenase (44, 45).

In contrast, our in vitro studies of the other purified proteins indicate that the defective biotinylation was the secondary consequence of defective domain folding. Substitution of other residues for the highly conserved glycine residues at positions 133 and 143 in BCCP destabilized the structure of the biotin domain. The G133S protein seems unable to fold stably (even under strongly reducing conditions), and thus the data we obtained most probably represent analysis of a mixture of the monomer and disulfide dimer forms of the protein. Gly-133 forms a turn between two beta -strands on the face of the molecule opposite the biotinyl-Lys (8, 14).2 Since substitution of any amino acid side chain larger than Gly (or Ala) would produce a steric clash with the Ile-155 side chain and the Ser and Asp substitutions introduce a polar group into this hydrophobic region, we conclude that the increased Km reflects a defect in domain structure rather than an alteration directly affecting recognition by BPL. Indeed the G133S mutation is known to result in a temperature-sensitive accB phenotype in vivo (3). The residual biotinylation we observed probably reflects interaction of BPL with a small and short-lived fraction of the protein that is properly folded. Expression of the G133S mutant protein in the presence of abnormally high levels of biotin ligase (from pCY216; Ref. 32) produced a biotinylated protein that largely behaved like the wild type domain during purification with no indication of proteolysis (data not shown). However, purified holo-G133S BCCP87 did dimerize slowly during storage and was less stable to handling than the wild type holoprotein. Thus, it is apparent that, while apoG133S is highly unstable and subject to rapid dimerization and proteolysis, once biotinylated it becomes more stable and can function as an acetyl-CoA carboxylase subunit in vivo. Indeed, with the exception of the E119K protein, all of the mutant proteins could be produced in the biotinylated form in the presence of excess BPL and readily purified (Table II), consistent with the partial nature of the defects determined by the in vitro assays (Fig. 3 and Table III). The V146I protein also probably has a subtle structural defect. Although more stable than the proteins with substitutions of the glycine residues, the protein was less stable than the wild type protein, consistent with a role for Val-146 in structuring the hydrophobic core of the domain (8, 14).2

The increased protease sensitivity of the structural mutants suggests that randomly produced BCCP biotin domain mutant proteins could be evaluated for structural alterations in crude cell lysates without protein purification. Furthermore, our in vitro analysis of the effect of the Val and Gly substitutions is consistent with straightforward predictions from the available structural information. Together, this suggests an approach that would allow efficient elimination of primarily structural defects to facilitate identification of additional interaction mutations.

Our kinetic analysis of the interaction of the wild type biotin domain with E. coli biotin ligase under steady state conditions gave kinetic constants that are not entirely consistent with those determined from initial rate measurements of the enzyme reaction (46). The values given here for the specificity constant kcat/Km were in the same range as previously published data (46); however, the Km for apoBCCP87 was several orders of magnitude lower. It seems likely that this apparent discrepancy is due to the contribution of product dissociation, which is rate-limiting in the system of Nenortas and Beckett (46), to the Km determined here under steady state conditions.4 Indeed, more recent measurements of the initial rate in which the slower second phase of the reaction is included gives a Km for the reaction in the same range as the one determined in the present study.4 Similarly, the ~10-fold higher Km for biotin is most probably due, in part, both to the different assay conditions and to the inclusion in the steady state measurements of additional rate constants following biotin binding.

It would be valuable to obtain values for the interactions of the wild type and mutant proteins by direct measurement of the BPL-domain interactions. However, these are very challenging experiments since the BPL species that binds the biotin domain is the BPL·biotinoyl-AMP complex rather than the uncomplexed protein (46). Hence, during the binding measurement the biotin domain will be rapidly converted from substrate to product, resulting in uninterpretable data. One approach to this problem would be to utilize a nonhydrolyzable analogue of biotinoyl-AMP, but no such analogue is known for this or any other acyl adenylate. A second approach would be to replace the substrate lysine residue with a residue unable to accept biotin. We have converted the substrate lysine residue to a leucine reside, but we find that this protein is a poor inhibitor of biotinylation of the native domain5 and thus seems to be poorly recognized by the enzyme. Although we plan further attempts to find a suitable residue, it is possible that BPL recognition absolutely requires lysine at position 122.

    ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

We thank Dr. Dorothy Beckett for the gift of purified E. coli biotin ligase and discussion of the kinetic data and Denise Turner for technical assistance with protein purification.

    FOOTNOTES

* This work was supported by Australian Research Council Grant A09531996 (to J. C. W.) and National Institutes of Health Grant AI15650 (to J. E. C.).The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. The article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.

Present address: Proctor and Gamble & Pharmaceuticals, 8700 Mason-Montgomery Rd., Mason, OH 45040.

parallel To whom correspondence should be addressed: Dept. of Microbiology, University of Illinois, B103 Chemical and Life Sciences Laboratory, 601 S. Goodwin Ave., Urbana, IL 61801. Tel.: 217-333-7919; Fax: 217-244-6697; E-mail: j-cronan{at}uiuc.edu.

The abbreviations used are: ACP, acyl carrier protein; BCCP, biotin carboxyl carrier protein; BPL, biotin protein ligase [EC 6.3.4.10]; CAPS, cyclohexylamino-1-propanesulfonate; DTT, dithiothreitol; IPTG, isopropylthiogalactoside; MOPS, morpholinepropanesulfonate; PAGE, polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis; X-gal, 5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indoyl-beta -D-galactoside; kb, kilobase pair.

2 E. L. Roberts, N. Shu, M. J. Howard, R. W. Broadhurst, A. Chapman-Smith, J. C. Wallace, J. E. Cronan, Jr., and R. N. Perham, manuscript in preparation.

3 J. Cronan, unpublished results.

4 D. Beckett, personal communication.

5 A. Chapman-Smith, S. Mortellaro, S. Polyak, J. Cronan, and J. Wallace, unpublished results.

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Top
Abstract
Introduction
Procedures
Results
Discussion
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