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. 2001 Dec;11(12):2034–2040. doi: 10.1101/gr.196301

Identification of Genes Encoding Amino Acid Permeases by Inactivation of Selected ORFs from the Synechocystis Genomic Sequence

María José Quintero 1, María Luz Montesinos 1, Antonia Herrero 1, Enrique Flores 1,1
PMCID: PMC311220  PMID: 11731493

Abstract

Genes encoding elements of four amino acid permeases were identified by insertional inactivation of ORFs from the genomic sequence of the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. strain PCC 6803 whose putative products are homologous to amino acid permease proteins from other bacteria. A transport system for neutral amino acids and histidine and a transport system for basic amino acids and glutamine were identified as ABC-type transporters, whereas Na+-dependent transport of glutamate was found to be mediated by at least two systems, the secondary permease GltS and a TRAP-type transporter. Except for GltS, substrate specificities of the identified permeases do not match those of previously characterized systems homologous to these permeases.


Availability of sequenced genomes permits new ways of identifying all of the genes required for a physiological function or a set of functions in the cell. In the case of membrane transporters, substrate specificity often correlates with phylogeny (Paulsen et al. 2000) making it possible to attempt the identification of genes encoding putative transporters for particular substrates by sequence comparisons (i.e., by homology searching). However, the number of sequenced bacterial genomes is outgrowing that of bacteria for which a substantial number of transporters has been characterized. Thus, it is common that a protein family including a considerable number of transporters is defined, with regard to substrate specificity, based only on one or a few family members that have been experimentally characterized. To define their substrates, it is therefore of interest to inactivate genes encoding putative membrane transporters in other than the most commonly studied bacteria. In this paper, we present the identification of ORFs from the genomic sequence of the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. strain PCC 6803 that encode elements of amino acid permeases with particular substrate specificities.

The cyanobacteria are phototrophic prokaryotes that carry out oxygenic photosynthesis. They mainly use inorganic sources of carbon (CO2) and nitrogen for growth. The complete sequence of the chromosome of the unicellular cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. strain PCC 6803 has been determined (Kaneko et al. 1996). Consistent with the mostly inorganic nutrition of cyanobacteria, only a low percentage, ∼25%, of the putative transporters that would be encoded in that sequence are predicted to have organic compounds as substrates (Paulsen et al. 2000). The cyanobacteria for which amino acid transport has been investigated generally exhibit transport activities for neutral and, in some strains, basic and/or acidic amino acids (Montesinos et al. 1997). Synechocystis sp. strain PCC 6803 shows the highest activity of basic amino acid transport detected for any cyanobacterium and is unique in that it exhibits a high activity of glutamate transport whereas it shows a negligible aspartate transport activity (Labarre et al. 1987; Montesinos et al. 1997). This cyanobacterium has been described to bear three amino acid transport systems: one for basic amino acids with high affinity for arginine (Ks <1 μM; Flores and Muro-Pastor 1990) that would also transport glutamine with low affinity (Labarre et al. 1987; Flores and Muro-Pastor 1990); one for neutral (both polar and hydrophobic) amino acids excluding glutamine (Labarre et al. 1987); and one for glutamate that would also be a high-affinity glutamine transporter (Labarre et al. 1987). The latter system was, however, not supported by further data that indicated the presence of a transport system specific for glutamate and different from the high-affinity glutamine transport system (Montesinos et al. 1997). Among these systems, some molecular data are available only for the neutral amino acid transporter for which two genes (natA and natB) encoding elements, an ATP-binding subunit and a periplasmic substrate-binding protein, respectively, of an ABC-type permease have been identified (Montesinos et al. 1997). Here we report the identification of other Synechocystis genes encoding amino acid transport elements. The Synechocystis sequences used can be obtained from the CYANOBASE Web page (Kaneko et al. 1996; http://www.kazusa.or.jp/cyano/cyano.html).

RESULTS

Neutral Amino Acid Permease

The previously characterized NatA and NatB components of the neutral amino acid transporter of Synechocystis sp. strain PCC 6803 (Montesinos et al. 1997) are most similar to the BraF (ATP-binding subunit) and BraC (periplasmic substrate-binding protein) components, respectively, of the high-affinity branched-chain amino acid transport system of Pseudomonas aeruginosa (Hoshino and Kose 1990). In the Synechocystis genome, neither natA (slr0467) nor natB (slr0559) is clustered with other permease genes (Kaneko et al. 1996). Based on the reported observation that the constituents of ABC-type permeases appear to have evolved with minimal shuffling of constituents between systems (Saier 1998), we sought the inactivation of those Synechocystis ORFs, slr0949, slr1881, and sll0146, whose putative products are most similar to the other subunits of the Bra system, BraD (transmembrane protein), BraG (ATP-binding subunit), and BraE (transmembrane protein), respectively. Inactivation of slr0949, slr1881, and sll0146 with gene-cassette C.K3 (see Methods) rendered strains CSMJ36, CSMJ37, and CSMJ41, respectively. These mutant strains were severely affected in the uptake of all the neutral amino acids tested, except glutamine, whereas uptake of basic (arginine and lysine) or acidic (glutamate) amino acids was much less affected (Table 1). These results indicate that the products of the three ORFs are necessary, together with NatA and NatB, to constitute a functional transporter for neutral amino acids. We have named slr0949 as natD, slr1881 as natE, and sll0146 as natC.

Table 1.

Amino Acid Transport Activities of Synechocystis sp. Strain PCC 6803 and Some Mutants

Substrate amino acid Amino acid transport in strain PCC 6803 (nmol · min−1 · mg Chl−1)a Amino acid transport (% of the wild-type activity)b



CSMJ36 natD (slr0949) CSMJ37 natE (slr1881) CSMJ41 natC (sll0146) CSMJ7 bgtB (sll1270) CSMJ8 bgtA (slr1735) CSMJ11 bgtB bgtA (sll1270 slr1735) CSMJ24 natB bgtB (slr0559 sll1270) CSMJ26 natB bgtA (slr0559 slr1735) CSMJ30 natA bgtB (slr0467 sll1270) CSMJ32 natA bgtA (slr0467 slr1735)










Basic
 Arg 426.7 90 92 86 3 3 3 <1 3 1 1
 His 6.2 n.d.c n.d. n.d. 9 12 10 2 2 5 2
 Lys 52.8 95 88 87 <1 <1 <1 <1 <1 <1 <1
Neutral
 Ala 10.2 1 1 1 80 91 97 <1 <1 1 <1
 Gln 5.9 98 86 89 19 21 22 2 2 3 3
 Gly 9.4 1 1 <1 80 93 89 1 1 2 1
 Leu 7.7 2 1 1 n.d. n.d. n.d. n.d. n.d. n.d. n.d.
 Pro 6.1 1 1 1 79 99 85 <1 <1 <1 1
 Ser 7.0 2 2 2 78 80 96 2 3 2 1
Acidic
 Glu 60.9 87 98 71 99 74 97 89 95 85 84
a

Data are the mean of 6–12 determinations with similar results (within 20% of the mean). 

b

Two to four determinations were performed for each mutant, with similar results. For simplicity, the data are presented as a percent of the wild-type activity. 

c

n.d., not determined. 

Basic Amino acid and Glutamine Permease

The putative product of ORF sll1270 from the Synechocystis genome resembles a fusion protein between a periplasmic substrate-binding protein (N-terminal half) most similar to Escherichia coli GlnH (a glutamine-binding protein) and an integral membrane protein (C-terminal half) most similar to E. coli GlnP (a transmembrane protein of a glutamine ABC-type transporter). A sll1270::C.C1 mutant, strain CSMJ7, was constructed. This mutant showed a low activity of uptake of arginine, histidine, and lysine, whereas uptake of the tested neutral amino acids (except glutamine) and of glutamate was much less affected (Table 1). Glutamine uptake was also severely affected. These results identify the product of sll1270 as an element of the previously described Synechocystis transport system for basic amino acids and glutamine (Labarre et al. 1987; Flores and Muro-Pastor 1990). The third element, an ATP-binding subunit, of the E. coli Gln system is GlnQ, and we inactivated the Synechocystis ORF whose putative product is most similar to GlnQ, slr1735. Strain CSMJ8 carrying slr1735::C.K3 showed a phenotype of amino acid uptake identical to that of the sll1270 mutant, as did strain CSMJ11, a slr1735::C.K3 sll1270::C.C1 double mutant (Table 1). These results imply that the products of the two ORFs encode elements of the same transporter. We have named slr1735 as bgtA and sll1270 as bgtB (bgt stands for basic amino acid and glutamine transport). BgtA would represent an ATP-binding subunit and BgtB would carry periplasmic substrate-binding protein and transmembrane protein domains of an ABC-type permease.

Uptake was also tested for arginine, glutamine, histidine, and lysine concentrations of 1 μM and 100 μM. For both strains CSMJ7 and CSMJ8, lysine uptake was always ≤1% of the wild-type levels, whereas uptake was <1% and ∼20% of the wild-type levels for 1 μM and 100 μM arginine, respectively. Another arginine transport system, with lower affinity for arginine than Bgt, appears therefore to be expressed in Synechocystis sp. strain PCC 6803. Consistently, strains CSMJ7, CSMJ8, and CSMJ11 were still able to grow using 5 mM L-arginine as the nitrogen source, but their growth rate constants (determined as described in Montesinos et al. 1995) were ∼20% that of the wild-type strain. Glutamine uptake in strains CSMJ7 and CSMJ8 was most severely affected at 100 μM (∼5% of the wild-type levels) than at 1 μM (∼40%). These results are consistent with previously reported data (Labarre et al. 1987; Flores and Muro-Pastor 1990) and suggest that Bgt, which is a high-affinity system for basic amino acids, represents a low-affinity, high-capacity system for glutamine. Uptake of histidine in the bgt mutants was also more severely affected at 100 μM (∼4% of the wild-type levels) than at 1 μM (∼25%). Therefore, transport system(s) exhibiting a higher affinity than Bgt for both glutamine and histidine appear to be expressed in Synechocystis sp. strain PCC 6803. Transport assays carried out with strains CSMJ7 and CSMJ8 for glutamine concentrations of 1, 5, 10, 15, and 20 μM indicated a Ks (glutamine) of ∼2 μM.

nat bgt Double Mutants

Strains CSX28a (natA::C.K3) and CSX18a (natB::C.K3) (Montesinos et al. 1997) were transformed with plasmids carrying bgtA(slr1735)::C.C1 or bgtB(sll1270)::C.C1 constructs, and natA bgtA (strain CSMJ32), natA bgtB (CSMJ30), natB bgtA (CSMJ26), and natB bgtB (CSMJ24) double mutants were obtained. Amino acid uptake assays carried out with these strains (Table 1) indicated that mutation of the two systems resulted in a very low transport activity of any of the basic or neutral amino acids tested, whereas the glutamate transport activity was much less affected. Additionally, uptake of glutamine and histidine was also tested for substrate concentrations of 1 μM and 100 μM, and activities ≤3% of the wild-type activities were observed in every case. These results indicate that the Nat system is responsible for the high-affinity transport activities of glutamine and histidine discussed above and that the Bgt and Nat transporters together account for most of the transport activity detected for the tested amino acids except glutamate in Synechocystis sp. strain PCC 6803.

Glutamate Permeases

ORF slr1145 of Synechocystis sp. strain PCC 6803 (Kaneko et al. 1996) would encode a protein with 42% identity to the GltS Na+/glutamate permease of Escherichia coli (Deguchi et al. 1990). Our amino acid uptake assays are normally performed in the presence of 12.5 mM of Na+ ions, and under these conditions Synechocystis sp. strain PCC 6803 shows a glutamate uptake activity with an apparent Ks of 49 μM and a Vmax of 529 nmole/min per mg of Chl (Montesinos et al. 1997). We have now observed that glutamate uptake in this cyanobacterium is dependent on the presence of Na+ in the incubation buffer. When Tricine-KOH substituted for Tricine-NaOH as the incubation buffer, maximal activity of transport of 10 μM glutamate was observed when the cells were supplemented with ∼50 mM NaCl, ≤5% of the maximal activity was observed without added NaCl, and ∼50% of the maximal activity was observed in the presence of 150 mM NaCl (results not shown).

A Synechocystis slr1145::C.K3 mutant was generated and named strain CSMJ6. Assays of uptake of Arg, Lys, Ala, Gln, Gly, Pro, and Ser indicated that the transport of none of them was impaired in this mutant (data not shown). However, uptake of glutamate in Tricine-NaOH buffer (∼12.5 mM Na+) was reduced in CSMJ6, depending on the concentration of glutamate used, to 56% to 69% of the values exhibited by the wild-type strain (4.8 ± 0.8 and 8.5 ± 2.7 nmole of glutamate/min per mg of Chl for strains CSMJ6 and PCC 6803, respectively, for 1 μM glutamate; 51.9 ± 9.7 and 76.2 ± 20.3 for strains CSMJ6 and PCC 6803, respectively, for 10 μM glutamate; and 227.5 ± 41.2 and 330.9 ± 27.8 for strains CSMJ6 and PCC 6803, respectively, for 100 μM glutamate; data are the mean and standard deviation from four to seven independent determinations). A similar decrease in uptake was found for the CSMJ6 mutant when glutamate uptake was tested with different Na+ concentrations (Table 2). Consistent with its homology to E. coli GltS, we conclude that the ORF slr1145 product is a Na+-dependent glutamate transporter and that ORF slr1145 represents a Synechocystis sp. strain PCC 6803 gltS gene. However, at least another glutamate transporter appears to be expressed in this cyanobacterium.

Table 2.

Na+-Dependent Glutamate Transport in Synechocystis sp. Strain PCC 6803 and gltS and gtr Mutants

Strain Genotype Glutamate uptake (nmol · mg Chl−1)a



16 mM NaCl 46 mM NaCl


PCC 6803 Wild type 271 ± 99 301 ± 86
CSMJ6 gltS (slr1145) 164 ± 39 184 ± 50
CSX67 gtrAB (sll1102/sll1103) 198 ± 57 212 ± 39
CSX68 gtrC (sll1104) 203 ± 47 243 ± 66
CSMJ20 gltS gtrAB (slr1145 sll1102/sll1103) 151 ± 51 160 ± 40
CSMJ22 gltS gtrC (slr1145 sll1104) 107 ± 28 131 ± 39
a

The assays were performed for 10 min with 10 μM [14C]glutamate in 25 mM Tricine-KOH (pH 8.1) buffer supplemented with the indicated NaCl concentrations. The figures shown are the mean and standard deviation of the data from four or five independent experiments. With no added NaCl, activities were ∼15 nmol · mg Chl−1 for the wild type and negligible for the mutants. 

TRAP permeases are binding protein-dependent secondary transport systems that consist of a periplasmic substrate-binding protein and two different integral membrane proteins (Forward et al. 1997; Rabus et al. 1999). ORFs sll1102 and sll1103 of Synechocystis sp. strain PCC 6803 (Kaneko et al. 1996) would encode proteins homologous to the membrane components, DctQ and DctM, respectively, of a Rhodobacter capsulatus TRAP transporter (Forward et al. 1997), whereas ORF sll1104 would encode a polypeptide homologous to glutamine (26.7% identity to E. coli GlnH), glutamate (24.2% identity to Corynebacterium glutamicum GluB) and glutamate/glutamine/aspartate/asparagine (22.7% identity to R. capsulatus BztA) binding proteins of ABC-type transporters. Because sll1102, sll1103, and sll1104 are tightly clustered in the Synechocystis genome, it has been suggested that they might together encode a TRAP-type glutamine transport system (Forward et al. 1997). A sll1102sll1103 mutant, strain CSX67, was generated in which a 370-bp BamHI fragment, including part of sll1102 and part of sll1103, was substituted by the C.K3 gene-cassette, and a sll1104::C.K3 mutant was also generated and named strain CSX68. Uptake assays with Arg, Lys, Ala, Gln, Gly, Pro, Ser, and Leu indicated that CSX67 and CSX68 were not impaired in the transport of any of these amino acids (not shown). Because of the homology of the putative ORF sll1104 product to glutamine-binding proteins, glutamine uptake was further tested in the mutants at substrate concentrations of 1, 2, 10, 20, 100, and 200 μM, but no effect on the uptake rates, as compared with those exhibited by the wild type, was observed (not shown). However, Na+-dependent glutamate uptake was reduced in the CSX67 and CSX68 mutants to ∼70%–80% of the wild-type values (Table 2). These values represent a small but reproducible decrease in activity. We suggest that ORFs sll1102, sll1103, and sll1104 encode a TRAP-type Na+-dependent glutamate transporter and will name them as gtrA, gtrB, and gtrC, respectively (gtr stands for glutamate and TRAP).

gltS gtr Double Mutants

Using mutants CSX67 and CSX68 as parental strains, gltS gtr double mutants were generated. A gltS(slr1145):C.C1 construct was transferred to strains CSX67 and CSX68 and mutant strains CSMJ20 (derivative of CSX67) and CSMJ22 (derivative of CSX68) were obtained. Na+-dependent glutamate uptake was significantly decreased in the CSMJ20 and CSMJ22 mutants (Table 2). The effects of the slr1145 and sll1104 mutations were additive, that is, mutant CSMJ22 exhibited the expected activity for a strain carrying mutations in the two transporters, GltS and Gtr, if they worked independently. No such additive effect was observed for the slr1145 and sll1102/sll1103 mutations in strain CSMJ20, although its glutamate uptake activity was lower than those exhibited by mutants CSMJ6 and CSX67. The reason for the lack of additivity of the mutations in strain CSMJ20 was not further investigated.

DISCUSSION

Synechocystis Amino Acid Permeases

The four amino acid permeases identified in Synechocystis sp. strain PCC 6803 are summarized in Table 3, where the transporter classification (TC) family (Saier 2000) to which each of those permeases belongs is also indicated. Nat is a transport system for neutral amino acids and histidine that seems to be widespread in cyanobacteria (Montesinos et al. 1997). In contrast with earlier suggestions (Labarre et al. 1987), our results show that Nat also transports glutamine and that it does so with high affinity (Ks, 2 μM). Thus, the high-affinity glutamine transport system described by Labarre et al. (1987) is Nat itself. Five genes encoding subunits of the Nat permease have been identified whose putative products would constitute a typical ABC-type transporter: a periplasmic substrate-binding protein, two transmembrane subunits, and two ATP-binding subunits. The Bgt system is an ABC-type permease that corresponds to the high-affinity basic amino acid transport system that also transports glutamine with low affinity (Labarre et al. 1987; Flores and Muro-Pastor 1990). One of its components, BgtB, represents an unusual fusion between a periplasmic substrate-binding protein and an integral membrane protein with five or six putative transmembrane segments. We do not know whether the functional Bgt permease is made up of BgtA and BgtB homodimers or whether other genes encode complementary transmembrane and ATP-binding subunits. In contrast to the operon structure commonly observed for genes encoding ABC-type permeases in many bacteria, the nat and bgt genes are spread in the Synechocystis genome (Kaneko et al. 1996). As pointed out by Tomii and Kanehisa (1998), in the Synechocystis genome there are less cases of conserved operons, but more cases of multiple components of a transporter being fused into a single gene, than in other genomes.

Table 3.

Identified Amino Acid Permeases of Synechocystis sp. Strain PCC 6803

Permease TC familya Substrate(s) ORF Gene Putative gene-product






Nat 3.A.1 Neutral amino acids and histidine slr0467 natA ATP-binding subunit
slr0559 natB Periplasmic substrate-binding protein
sll0146 natC Integral membrane protein
slr0949 natD Integral membrane protein
slr1881 natE ATP-binding subunit
Bgt 3.A.1 Basic amino acids and glutamine slr1735 bgtA ATP-binding subunit
sll1270 bgtB Periplasmic substrate-binding and integral membrane protein
GltS 2.A.27 Glutamate slr1145 gltS Monocomponent permease
Gtr 2.A.56 Glutamate sll1102 gtrA Integral membrane protein
sll1103 gtrB Integral membrane protein
sll1104 gtrC Periplasmic substrate-binding protein
a

Transporter classification (TC) family according to Saier (2000): 3.A.1, ABC-type uptake permeases; 2.A.27, glutamate: Na+ symporter family; 2.A.56, tripartite ATP-independent periplasmic transporter family. 

The Bgt and Nat systems together account for most of the transport activities of amino acids (other than glutamate) that have been observed in Synechocystis sp. strain PCC 6803, although the permease responsible for the low-affinity transport of arginine observed in bgt mutants has not yet been identified. The Nat system appears to have a role in recapture of hydrophobic amino acids leaked from the cells (Labarre et al. 1987; Montesinos et al. 1997), and it might also have a nutritional role in uptake of amino acids like proline that can be used as a poor nitrogen source by Synechocystis sp. strain PCC 6803 (M.J. Quintero, A. Herrero, and E. Flores, unpubl.). Bgt can also have a nutritional role, for instance in the uptake of arginine that can serve as a nitrogen source for this cyanobacterium (Flores and Muro-Pastor 1990). Because this permease shows an affinity much higher for arginine than for any other amino acid, it has been suggested that it should be considered to represent an arginine transporter (O. Köster, H. Ullrich, and F. Jüttner, unpubl.).

We have found that the glutamate transport activity of Synechocystis sp. strain PCC 6803 is Na+-dependent and have identified two permeases involved in this activity: GltS, a monocomponent secondary permease, and GtrABC, a TRAP-type transporter. Because GltS and GtrABC would together account for no more than about 60% of the wild-type activity, other Na+-dependent glutamate transport system(s) must be present in this cyanobacterium. Some of the nat mutants that have been analyzed are somewhat affected in glutamate uptake (Table 1, see also Montesinos et al. 1997), but we do not know whether the Nat system might represent a significant way for glutamate uptake in strain PCC 6803. The relatively high activity of glutamate transport in strain PCC 6803 appears therefore to result from addition of the activities of several independent transporters which, nonetheless, are functionally similar as all of them are Na+ dependent and appear to work with a similar range of glutamate concentrations. In the genome sequence of Anabaena sp. strain PCC 7120, a cyanobacterium that exhibits a glutamate transport activity much lower (about 1.2%) than that of Synechocystis sp. strain PCC 6803 (Montesinos et al. 1997), no homologs to gltS or gtr are found (Kazusa DNA Research Institute, http://www.kazusa.or.jp/cyano/anabaena/). The physiological role(s) of the Synechocystis Na+-dependent glutamate transport activities are currently unknown.

Apart from the ORFs listed in Table 3, the other ORFs from the Synechocystis genome that are predicted to encode amino acid permeases (see I.T. Paulsen, M.K. Sliwinski, and J. Garg, http://www.biology.ucsd.edu/∼ipaulsen/transport/) are a set of ORFs (slr0447, slr1200, slr1201, sll0764, and sll0374), which have been found to constitute an ABC-type permease for urea rather than for amino acids (A. Valladares, M.L. Montesinos, A. Herrero, and E. Flores, unpubl.).

Permease Substrate Specificities

Homology searches have permitted the identification of ORFs encoding amino acid permeases in Synechocystis sp. strain PCC 6803. However, the precise specificity of an identified transporter did not generally correspond to those of the previously characterized permeases that are most similar to the investigated Synechocystis permease. Thus, Bgt is most similar to GlnHPQ of E. coli, a glutamine permease, Nat is most similar to Bra of P. aeruginosa, a branched-chain amino acid permease, and GtrC, the periplasmic substrate-binding protein of the TRAP-type Gtr permease, is most similar to GlnH. Only one member of the family of TRAP transporters, the DctPQM system for transport of C4-dicarboxylates in R. capsulatus (Forward et al. 1997), had been previously characterized both molecularly and functionally. Our results showing that the Synechocystis GtrABC system is involved in glutamate uptake support the contention that TRAP permeases can mediate transport of substrates other than C4-dicarboxylates (Jacobs et al. 1996; Rabus et al. 1999). On the other hand, Synechocystis GltS, which is the second GltS permease that has been characterized, has the same substrate specificity as E. coli GltS (Deguchi et al. 1990).

METHODS

Generation of Mutants

The ORFs of the Synechocystis sp. strain PCC 6803 chromosome (Kaneko et al. 1996) inactivated in this work are summarized in Table 4. DNA fragments corresponding to those ORFs were amplified by PCR using primers whose coordinates in the strain PCC 6803 chromosome are indicated in Table 4. Isolation of genomic DNA from cyanobacteria (Cai and Wolk 1990) and PCR amplification (Quintero et al. 2000) were carried out as described previously. The PCR products were cloned in vector pGEM-T (Promega). The identity of the cloned fragment was verified by restriction endonuclease analysis or by sequencing. Gene-cassette C.K3 or C.C1 (Elhai and Wolk 1988) was inserted by standard procedures into the endonuclease restriction site(s) indicated in Table 4 for each ORF. These restriction sites were unique in the corresponding DNA fragment except for the two BamHI sites in the insert carrying part of sll1102 and sll1103; in this case, a deletion of 370 bp accompanied the insertion of the C.K3 cassette. Growth of E. coli DH5α, isolation of plasmid DNA, and DNA restriction and ligation were carried out by standard methods (Sambrook et al. 1989).

Table 4.

ORFs of Synechocystis sp. Strain PCC 6803 Inactivated in This Worka

ORF ORF coordinates Oligonucleotides coordinates Inserted cassette and insertion site




slr1145 809450–810658 809342–809362, 810371–810351 C.K3 or C.C1, NcoI (Klenow-filled)
sll1270 1116021–1114429 1116052–1116033, 1115052–1115072 C.C1, KpnI
slr1735 1317712–1318470 1317628–1317647, 1318781–1318761 C.K3 or C.C1, SmaI
slr0949 2017104–2017964 2017139–2017158, 2018372–2018353 C.K3, HpaI
slr1881 1239490–1240212 1239564–1239583, 1240494–1240475 C.K3, StuI
sll0146 2192051–2190933 2191877–2191858, 2190922–2190941 C.K3, SmaI
sll1102, sll1103 1914652–1914113, 1914113–1912776 1914799–1914779, 1913403–1913423 C.K3, 2 BamHI sites
sll1104 1912786–1911896 1912674–1912654, 1911573–1911593 C.K3, XbaI
a

The names and chromosome coordinates (Kaneko et al. 1996) of the inactivated ORFs are indicated in the first and second columns, respectively. The coordinates of the oligonucleotides used for PCR amplification of those ORFs are indicated in the third column. The inserted antibiotic resitance-encoding gene cassette and the restriction endonuclease insertion site(s) are indicated in the last column. 

Transformation of Synechocystis sp. with plasmids carrying the disrupted DNA fragments was carried out as described previously (Quintero et al. 2000). Transformants were selected in BG11 solid medium supplemented with 25 μg of kanamycin (Km)/mL for clones carrying the C.K3 cassette or 10 μg of chloramphenicol (Cm)/mL for those carrying C.C1. To facilitate segregation of the mutant chromosomes, individual colonies were re-isolated from Kmr or Cmr transformants and grown in liquid medium supplemented with up to 300 μg of Km/mL or 20 μg of Cm/mL, respectively. To test whether the resulting mutant strains were homozygous for the mutant chromosomes, PCR amplification using the corresponding primers and genomic DNA from each mutant as template and/or Southern blot using the corresponding PCR-amplified DNA fragments as probes were carried out (Quintero et al. 2000). Strains homozygous for the mutated chromosome were obtained for all the disrupted ORFs. Double mutants were obtained following the same methodology using a single mutant as parental strain.

The orientation (direct or inverse) of the inserted cassette with respect to that of the inactivated Synechocystis ORF was determined for strains CSMJ6 (slr1145::C.K3, direct), CSMJ8 (slr1735::C.K3, direct), CSMJ36 (slr0949::C.K3, inverse), CSMJ37 (slr1881::C.K3, inverse), and CSMJ41 (sll0146::C.K3, direct). For ORFs slr1735 and sll0146, mutants with the cassette inserted in the inverse orientation were also analyzed, and results identical to those described in this work for the direct orientation were obtained. In any case, no transport phenotypes resulting from polar effects are expected for the mutants generated in this work, because, with the exception of the sll1102-sll1103-sll1104 cluster, the inactivated ORFs are not clustered with other putative transporter-encoding genes (Kaneko et al. 1996).

Uptake Assays

Cells from shaken cultures grown at 30°C in the light in BG11 medium (supplemented with antibiotics, 25 μg of Km/mL and/or 10 μg of Cm/mL, in the case of the mutants) were harvested by low-speed centrifugation at room temperature, washed twice with 25 mM N-tris(hydroxymethyl)-methylglycine (Tricine)-NaOH buffer (pH 8.1), and resuspended in the same buffer. To test the effect of Na+, Tricine-KOH buffer was used. The concentration of chlorophyll a (Chl) in the cell suspension was determined in methanolic extracts (Mackinney 1941). The uptake assays were performed for 10 min (1 min in the case of arginine and glutamate), unless otherwise indicated, at 30°C in the light (white light from fluorescent lamps) and were started by mixing a suspension (1.0 mL) of cells containing 4–10 μg of Chl with a solution (0.1 mL) of L-[U-14C]amino acid (4.5 to 70 μCi/μmole) (radioactive amino acids were from Amersham or New England Nuclear). Final concentration of amino acid in the assay was 10 μM unless otherwise indicated. At the end of the incubation, a 1-mL sample was filtered (0.45-μm pore size Millipore HA filters were used) and the cells on the filters were washed with 5–10 mL Tricine buffer. The filters carrying the cells were then immersed in a scintillation cocktail, and their radioactivity was measured. Retention of radioactivity by boiled cells was used as a blank.

Acknowledgments

This work was supported by grants PB97–1137 and PB98–0481 from the Ministerio de Ciencia y Tecnología, Spain.

The publication costs of this article were defrayed in part by payment of page charges. This article must therefore be hereby marked “advertisement” in accordance with 18 USC section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.

Footnotes

E-MAIL flores@cica.es; FAX 34 95 446 0065.

Article and publication are at http://www.genome.org/cgi/doi/10.1101/gr.196301.

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