The intracellular carbon flux distribution in wild-type and pyruvate kinase-deficient Escherichia coli was estimated using biosynthetically directed fractional 13 C labeling experiments with [U-13 C 6 ]glucose in glucoseor ammonia-limited chemostats, two-dimensional nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy of cellular amino acids, and a comprehensive isotopomer model. The general response to disruption of both pyruvate kinase isoenzymes in E. coli was a local flux rerouting via the combined reactions of phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) carboxylase and malic enzyme. Responses in the pentose phosphate pathway and the tricarboxylic acid cycle were strongly dependent on the environmental conditions. In addition, high futile cycling activity via the gluconeogenic PEP carboxykinase was identified at a low dilution rate in glucose-limited chemostat culture of pyruvate kinase-deficient E. coli, with a turnover that is comparable to the specific glucose uptake rate. Furthermore, flux analysis in mutant cultures indicates that glucose uptake in E. coli is not catalyzed exclusively by the phosphotransferase system in glucose-limited cultures at a low dilution rate. Reliability of the flux estimates thus obtained was verified by statistical error analysis and by comparison to intracellular carbon flux ratios that were independently calculated from the same NMR data by metabolic flux ratio analysis.The central carbon pathways fulfill anabolic and catabolic functions by providing cofactors and building blocks for macromolecular synthesis as well as energy. While some singlegene knockout mutations in central metabolism preclude growth on glucose, a majority of such variations can potentially be compensated for either by isoenzymes (39) or by a rerouting of carbon fluxes through alternative pathways (7,15,20,42). Usually, the phenotypes of knockout mutants is characterized by quantitative physiological analysis, and conclusions on intracellular metabolism are then based on qualitative interpretation of these results. To reveal cause and effect relationships, however, it is important to gain deeper insight into the complex metabolic responses at the level of intracellular metabolite concentrations and fluxes. These intracellular carbon fluxes, or in vivo reaction rates, are per se nonmeasurable quantities that cannot usually be inferred directly from in vitro enzyme activities because not all in vivo effector concentrations are known. Hence, the intracellular reaction rates are commonly estimated by methods of metabolic flux analysis, which provide a holistic perspective on metabolism (52, 54).The most common approach is based on flux balancing analysis within a stoichiometric model of cellular metabolism (26,41, 50, 52). In this approach, uptake and secretion rates and biosynthetic requirements are balanced in a stoichiometric model, assuming quasi-steady-state material balances on the intermediates. In many cases, however, limited extracellular data and stoichiometric constraints lead to underdetermined systems, so that addition...
Aerobic and anaerobic central metabolism of Saccharomyces cerevisiae cells was explored in batch cultures on a minimal medium containing glucose as the sole carbon source, using biosynthetic fractional (13)C labeling of proteinogenic amino acids. This allowed, firstly, unravelling of the network of active central pathways in cytosol and mitochondria, secondly, determination of flux ratios characterizing glycolysis, pentose phosphate cycle, tricarboxylic acid cycle and C1-metabolism, and thirdly, assessment of intercompartmental transport fluxes of pyruvate, acetyl-CoA, oxaloacetate and glycine. The data also revealed that alanine aminotransferase is located in the mitochondria, and that amino acids are synthesized according to documented pathways. In both the aerobic and the anaerobic regime: (a) the mitochondrial glycine cleavage pathway is active, and efflux of glycine into the cytosol is observed; (b) the pentose phosphate pathways serve for biosynthesis only, i.e. phosphoenolpyruvate is entirely generated via glycolysis; (c) the majority of the cytosolic oxaloacetate is synthesized via anaplerotic carboxylation of pyruvate; (d) the malic enzyme plays a key role for mitochondrial pyruvate metabolism; (e) the transfer of oxaloacetate from the cytosol to the mitochondria is largely unidirectional, and the activity of the malate-aspartate shuttle and the succinate-fumarate carrier is low; (e) a large fraction of the mitochondrial pyruvate is imported from the cytosol; and (f) the glyoxylate cycle is inactive. In the aerobic regime, 75% of mitochondrial oxaloacetate arises from anaplerotic carboxylation of pyruvate, while in the anaerobic regime, the tricarboxylic acid cycle is operating in a branched fashion to fulfill biosynthetic demands only. The present study shows that fractional (13)C labeling of amino acids represents a powerful approach to study compartmented eukaryotic systems.
Biomacromolecular structures with a relative molecular mass (M(r)) of 50,000 to 100,000 (50K 100K) have been generally considered to be inaccessible to analysis by solution NMR spectroscopy. Here we report spectra recorded from bacterial chaperonin complexes ten times this size limit (up to M(r) 900K) using the techniques of transverse relaxation-optimized spectroscopy and cross-correlated relaxation-enhanced polarization transfer. These techniques prevent deterioration of the NMR spectra by the rapid transverse relaxation of the magnetization to which large, slowly tumbling molecules are otherwise subject. We tested the resolving power of these techniques by examining the isotope-labelled homoheptameric co-chaperonin GroES (M(r) 72K), either free in solution or in complex with the homotetradecameric chaperonin GroEL (M(r) 800K) or with the single-ring GroEL variant SR1 (M(r) 400K). Most amino acids of GroES show the same resonances whether free in solution or in complex with chaperonin; however, residues 17 32 show large chemical shift changes on binding. These amino acids belong to a mobile loop region of GroES that forms contacts with GroEL. This establishes the utility of these techniques for solution NMR studies that should permit the exploration of structure, dynamics and interactions in large macromolecular complexes.
The response of Escherichia coli central carbon metabolism to genetic and environmental manipulation has been studied by use of a recently developed methodology for metabolic flux ratio (METAFoR) analysis; this methodology can also directly reveal active metabolic pathways. Generation of fluxome data arrays by use of the METAFoR approach is based on two-dimensional13C-1H correlation nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy with fractionally labeled biomass and, in contrast to metabolic flux analysis, does not require measurements of extracellular substrate and metabolite concentrations. METAFoR analyses of E. coli strains that moderately overexpress phosphofructokinase, pyruvate kinase, pyruvate decarboxylase, or alcohol dehydrogenase revealed that only a few flux ratios change in concert with the overexpression of these enzymes. Disruption of both pyruvate kinase isoenzymes resulted in altered flux ratios for reactions connecting the phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) and pyruvate pools but did not significantly alter central metabolism. These data indicate remarkable robustness and rigidity in central carbon metabolism in the presence of genetic variation. More significant physiological changes and flux ratio differences were seen in response to altered environmental conditions. For example, in ammonia-limited chemostat cultures, compared to glucose-limited chemostat cultures, a reduced fraction of PEP molecules was derived through at least one transketolase reaction, and there was a higher relative contribution of anaplerotic PEP carboxylation than of the tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle for oxaloacetate synthesis. These two parameters also showed significant variation between aerobic and anaerobic batch cultures. Finally, two reactions catalyzed by PEP carboxykinase and malic enzyme were identified by METAFoR analysis; these had previously been considered absent in E. colicells grown in glucose-containing media. Backward flux from the TCA cycle to glycolysis, as indicated by significant activity of PEP carboxykinase, was found only in glucose-limited chemostat culture, demonstrating that control of this futile cycle activity is relaxed under severe glucose limitation.
Members of the abundant Hsp70 class of chaperones play essential roles in diverse cellular processes, including the folding and assembly of newly synthesized proteins, the transport of proteins across membranes, the refolding of misfolded proteins, and the regulation of signal transduction proteins (1). Hsp70 chaperones transiently associate with peptide segments of protein substrates, thereby affecting their folding (2). The binding and release of substrates is driven by the ATPase cycle of the Hsp70. ATP binding to the N-terminal nucleotide-binding domain (NBD) 6 induces conformational changes in the C-terminal substrate-binding domain that result in low affinity for substrates and high binding and release rates. ADP on the other hand results in higher affinity for substrates and low binding/release rates and thereby causes the trapping of substrates.The basic chaperone cycle of Hsp70 proteins is modulated by cofactors that affect either ATP hydrolysis or exchange of ADP for ATP. The hydrolysis of ATP is stimulated by J-domainharboring co-chaperones that also deliver substrates and thereby facilitate substrate binding as well as provide specificity to the Hsp70s. Nucleotide exchange factors (NEFs) accelerate nucleotide release by associating with specific conformations of the Hsp70 NBD that exhibit low affinity for ADP and ATP. Rebinding of ATP and the concomitant dissociation of the NEF complete the exchange reaction.
The so far largely uncharacterized central carbon metabolism of the yeast Pichia stipitis was explored in batch and glucose-limited chemostat cultures using metabolic-flux ratio analysis by nuclear magnetic resonance. The concomitantly characterized network of active metabolic pathways was compared to those identified in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, which led to the following conclusions. (i) There is a remarkably low use of the non-oxidative pentose phosphate (PP) pathway for glucose catabolism in S. cerevisiae when compared to P. stipitis batch cultures. (ii) Metabolism of P. stipitis batch cultures is fully respirative, which contrasts with the predominantly respiro-fermentative metabolic state of S. cerevisiae. (iii) Glucose catabolism in chemostat cultures of both yeasts is primarily oxidative. (iv) In both yeasts there is significant in vivo malic enzyme activity during growth on glucose. (v) The amino acid biosynthesis pathways are identical in both yeasts. The present investigation thus demonstrates the power of metabolic-flux ratio analysis for comparative profiling of central carbon metabolism in lower eukaryotes. Although not used for glucose catabolism in batch culture, we demonstrate that the PP pathway in S. cerevisiae has a generally high catabolic capacity by overexpressing the Escherichia coli transhydrogenase UdhA in phosphoglucose isomerase-deficient S. cerevisiae.The two yeasts Saccharomyces cerevisiae and Pichia stipitis exhibit fundamentally different modes of metabolic regulation in glucose-containing media. At high extracellular concentrations of glucose, one observes simultaneous fermentation and respiration (respiro-fermentative metabolism) in S. cerevisiae at high growth rates even under fully aerobic conditions (11,34,53). In Crabtree-positive yeasts, such as S. cerevisiae, elevated glucose concentrations induce the carbon catabolite repression response (16), resulting in low levels of transcription of genes involved in respiration and in the tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle. In contrast, the Crabtree-negative P. stipitis exhibits predominantly respirative metabolism even at high glucose concentrations (33). These obvious differences in metabolic regulation between the two yeasts provide motivation for investigation of potential differences in the central carbon pathways. Stable isotope labeling experiments appear to be a promising approach, since it reveals in vivo activity of pathways and reactions (10,43). Biosynthetically directed fractional (BDF) 13 C labeling of amino acids can provide comprehensive insight into central carbon metabolism, yielding a network of active pathways and quantification of intracellular flux ratios (36,37,44,46); its use in the present study promises to expand on the results of earlier labeling studies in yeast that focused on intermediates or products of individual pathways or reactions (14,17,20,22,41,57). BDF 13 C labeling is achieved by growing cells on mixtures of unlabeled and uniformly 13 C-labeled [U-13 C 6 ]glucose (40, 44). Using two-dimensional (...
Transverse relaxation-optimized spectroscopy (TROSY) or generation of heteronuclear multiple quantum coherences during the frequency labeling period and TROSY during the acquisition period have been combined either with cross-correlated relaxation-induced polarization transfer (CRIPT) or cross-correlated relaxation-enhanced polarization transfer (CRINEPT) to obtain two-dimensional (2D) solution NMR correlation spectra of (15)N,(2)H-labeled homo-oligomeric macromolecules with molecular weights from 110 to 800 kDa. With the experimental conditions used, the line widths of the TROSY-components of the (1)H- and (15)N-signals were of the order of 60 Hz at 400 kDa, whereas, for structures of size 800 kDa, the line widths were about 75 Hz for (15)N and 110 Hz for (1)H. This paper describes the experimental schemes used and details of their setup for individual measurements. The performance of NMR experiments with large structures depends critically on the choice of the polarization transfer times, the relaxation delays between subsequent recordings, and the water-handling routines. Optimal transfer times for 2D [(15)N,(1)H]-CRIPT-TROSY experiments in H(2)O solutions were found to be 6 ms for a molecular weight of approximately 200 kDa, 2.8 ms for 400 kDa, and 1.4 ms for 800 kDa. These data validate theoretical predictions of inverse proportionality between optimal transfer time and size of the structure. The proton longitudinal relaxation times in H(2)O solution were found to be of the order of 0.8 s for structure sizes around 200 kDa, 0.4 s at 400 kDa, and 0.3 s at 800 kDa, which enabled the use of recycle times below 1 s. Since improper water handling results in severe signal loss, the water resonance was kept along the z-axis during the entire duration of the experiments by adjusting each water flip-back pulse individually.
The reaction cycle and the major structural states of the molecular chaperone GroEL and its cochaperone, GroES, are well characterized. In contrast, very little is known about the nonnative states of the substrate polypeptide acted on by the chaperonin machinery. In this study, we investigated the substrate protein human dihydrofolate reductase (hDHFR) while bound to GroEL or to a singlering analog, SR1, by NMR spectroscopy in solution under conditions where hDHFR was efficiently recovered as a folded, enzymatically active protein from the stable complexes upon addition of ATP and GroES. By using the NMR techniques of transverse relaxation-optimized spectroscopy (TROSY), crosscorrelated relaxation-induced polarization transfer (CRIPT), and cross-correlated relaxation-enhanced polarization transfer (CRINEPT), bound hDHFR could be observed directly. Measurements of the buildup of hDHFR NMR signals by different magnetization transfer mechanisms were used to characterize the dynamic properties of the NMR-observable parts of the bound substrate. The NMR data suggest that the bound state includes random coil conformations devoid of stable native-like tertiary contacts and that the bound hDHFR might best be described as a dynamic ensemble of randomly structured conformers.dihydrofolate reductase ͉ transverse relaxation-optimized spectroscopy (TROSY) ͉ cross-correlated relaxation-induced polarization transfer (CRIPT) ͉ protein folding
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