México
| Article
Betaine aldehyde dehydrogenase from Pseudomonas aeruginosa: cloning, over-expression in Escherichia coli, and regulation by choline and salt
Autor
VILLALOBOS LÓPEZ, MIGUEL ANGEL
Institución
Resumen
Abstract In the human pathogen Pseudomonas aeruginosa,
betaine aldehyde dehydrogenase (BADH) may play
a dual role assimilating carbon and nitrogen from
choline or choline precursors—abundant at infection
sites—and producing glycine betaine, which protects the
bacteria against the high-osmolarity stress prevalent in
the infected tissues. We cloned the P. aeruginosa BADH
gene and expressed the BADH protein in Escherichia
coli. The recombinant protein appears identical to its
native counterpart, as judged by Western blot, N-terminal
amino acid sequence, tryptophan-fluorescence
emission spectra, circular-dichroism spectroscopy, sizeexclusion
chromatography, and kinetic properties.
Computational analysis indicated that the promoter
sequence of the putative operon that includes the BADH
gene has a consensus-binding site for the choline-sensing
transcription repressor BetI, and putative boxes for
ArcA and Lrp transcription factors but no known
elements of response to osmotic stress. This is consistent
with the strong induction of BADH expression by
choline and with the lack of effect of NaCl. As there
were significant amounts of BADH protein and activity
in P. aeruginosa cells grown on glucose plus choline, as
well as the BADH activity exhibiting tolerance to salt, it
is likely that glycine betaine is synthesized in vivo and
could play an important osmoprotectant role under
conditions of infection.