Department of Microbiology, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York, USA.
Department of Natural Resources, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York, USA.
Appl Environ Microbiol. 2018 Aug 31;84(18). doi: 10.1128/AEM.01268-18. Print 2018 Sep 15.
Thiamine is essential to life, as it serves as a cofactor for enzymes involved in critical carbon transformations. Many bacteria can synthesize thiamine, while thiamine auxotrophs must obtain it or its precursors from the environment. Thiaminases degrade thiamine by catalyzing the base-exchange substitution of thiazole with a nucleophile, and thiaminase I specifically has been implicated in thiamine deficiency syndromes in animals. The biological role of this secreted enzyme has been a long-standing mystery. We used the thiaminase I-producing soil bacterium as a model to ascertain its function. First, we generated thiamine auxotrophs, which are still able to use exogenous precursors (thiazole and hydroxymethyl pyrimidine), to synthesize thiamine. We found that thiaminase I extended the survival of these strains, when grown in defined media where thiamine was serially diluted out, compared to isogenic strains that could not produce thiaminase I. Thiamine auxotrophs grew better on thiamine precursors than thiamine itself, suggesting thiaminase I functions to convert thiamine to useful precursors. Furthermore, our findings demonstrate that thiaminase I cleaves phosphorylated thiamine and toxic analogs, which releases precursors that can then be used for thiamine synthesis. This study establishes a biological role for this perplexing enzyme and provides additional insight into the complicated nature of thiamine metabolism and how individual bacteria may manipulate the availability of a vital nutrient in the environment. The function of thiaminase I has remained a long-standing, unsolved mystery. The enzyme is only known to be produced by a small subset of microorganisms, although thiaminase I activity has been associated with numerous plants and animals, and is implicated in thiamine deficiencies brought on by consumption of organisms containing this enzyme. Genomic and biochemical analyses have shed light on potential roles for the enzyme. Using the genetically amenable thiaminase I-producing soil bacterium , we were able to demonstrate that thiaminase I helps salvage precursors from thiamine derivatives in the environment and degrades thiamine to its precursors, which are preferentially used by auxotrophs. Our study establishes a biological role for this perplexing enzyme and provides insight into the complicated nature of thiamine metabolism. It also establishes as a robust model system for studying thiamine metabolism.
硫胺素是生命所必需的,因为它作为涉及关键碳转化的酶的辅助因子。许多细菌可以合成硫胺素,而硫胺素营养缺陷型必须从环境中获得它或其前体。硫胺酶通过催化噻唑与亲核试剂的碱基交换取代来降解硫胺素,而硫胺酶 I 特别与动物的硫胺素缺乏综合征有关。这种分泌酶的生物学作用一直是一个长期存在的谜。我们使用产硫胺酶 I 的土壤细菌 作为模型来确定其功能。首先,我们生成了硫胺素营养缺陷型,它们仍然能够使用外源性前体(噻唑和羟甲基嘧啶)合成硫胺素。我们发现,与不能产生硫胺酶 I 的同工型菌株相比,在连续稀释硫胺素的限定培养基中生长时,硫胺酶 I 延长了这些菌株的存活时间。硫胺素营养缺陷型在硫胺素前体上的生长情况要好于硫胺素本身,这表明硫胺酶 I 的功能是将硫胺素转化为有用的前体。此外,我们的研究结果表明,硫胺酶 I 切割磷酸化的硫胺素和有毒类似物,释放出可用于硫胺素合成的前体。这项研究确立了这种令人费解的酶的生物学作用,并为硫胺素代谢的复杂性质以及单个细菌如何操纵环境中重要营养物质的可用性提供了更多的见解。硫胺酶 I 的功能一直是一个长期存在的、悬而未决的谜团。尽管硫胺酶 I 活性与许多植物和动物有关,并与因食用含有这种酶的生物而导致的硫胺素缺乏有关,但这种酶仅为一小部分微生物所产生。基因组和生化分析为该酶的潜在作用提供了一些线索。我们使用遗传上易于操作的产硫胺酶 I 的土壤细菌 ,证明了硫胺酶 I 有助于从环境中的硫胺素衍生物中回收前体,并将硫胺素降解为其前体,营养缺陷型更倾向于使用这些前体。我们的研究确立了这种令人费解的酶的生物学作用,并为硫胺素代谢的复杂性质提供了新的见解。它还确立 为研究硫胺素代谢的强大模型系统。