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First published online March 17, 2009; 10.1105/tpc.108.062612 The Plant Cell 21:876-891 (2009) © 2009 American Society of Plant Biologists Uridine-Ribohydrolase Is a Key Regulator in the Uridine Degradation Pathway of Arabidopsis[W]
a Abteilung Pflanzenphysiologie, Fachbereich Biologie, Technische Universität Kaiserslautern, D-67663 Kaiserslautern, Germany 1 Address correspondence to moehlmann{at}biologie.uni-kl.de.
Nucleoside degradation and salvage are important metabolic pathways but hardly understood in plants. Recent work on human pathogenic protozoans like Leishmania and Trypanosoma substantiates an essential function of nucleosidase activity. Plant nucleosidases are related to those from protozoans and connect the pathways of nucleoside degradation and salvage. Here, we describe the cloning of such an enzyme from Arabidopsis thaliana, Uridine-Ribohydrolase 1 (URH1) and the characterization by complementation of a yeast mutant. Furthermore, URH1 was synthesized as a recombinant protein in Escherichia coli. The pure recombinant protein exhibited highest hydrolase activity for uridine, followed by inosine and adenosine, the corresponding Km values were 0.8, 1.4, and 0.7 mM, respectively. In addition, URH1 was able to cleave the cytokinin derivative isopentenyladenine-riboside. Promoter β-glucuronidase fusion studies revealed that URH1 is mainly transcribed in the vascular cells of roots and in root tips, guard cells, and pollen. Mutants expressing the Arabidopsis enzyme or the homolog from rice (Oryza sativa) exhibit resistance toward toxic fluorouridine, fluorouracil, and fluoroorotic acid, providing clear evidence for a pivotal function of URH1 as regulative in pyrimidine degradation. Moreover, mutants with increased and decreased nucleosidase activity are delayed in germination, indicating that this enzyme activity must be well balanced in the early phase of plant development.
Nucleotides are uniquely important since they represent building blocks of genetic information (DNA and RNA), represent major energy carriers, and are also core elements of cofactors such as NAD, FAD, S-adenosylmethionine, or CoA, which serve in essential biochemical reactions, such as the synthesis of phospholipids and polysaccharides. Additionally, nucleotides are components of secondary metabolites like caffeine, cAMP, cGMP, and cytokinins (Boldt and Zrenner, 2003
In the salvage pathway, nucleobases and nucleosides are converted to nucleoside monophosphates by action of phosphoribosyl-pyrophosphatases and nucleoside kinases, respectively. Both phosphoribosyl-pyrophosphatases and nucleoside kinases have been identified in plants on the biochemical and molecular level (Moffatt et al., 2002
Most of our understanding about the salvage pathway and the importance of this process originates from work on protists like Trypanosoma brucei, Leishmania major, and Crithidia fasciculata (Gopaul et al., 1996
Besides other salvage pathway enzymes, nucleosidases have been identified and characterized from protists. These enzymes, also known as nucleoside hydrolases, catalyze the splitting of nucleosides into a ribose and a free base (Magni et al., 1975
Such alterations in the biochemistry of enzyme-catalyzed reactions between different organisms are often beneficial for the development of new pharmaceutical drugs acting as enzyme inhibitors (Mitterbauer et al., 2002
In plants, two examples are known that illustrate the importance of a functioning salvage pathway: mutants deficient in adenine phosphoribosyltransferase are characterized by nonfertile pollen (Moffatt and Somerville, 1988
Such examples have led to a deeper investigation of salvage pathway enzymes in different organisms. Nucleosidases, which are in the focus of this work, are best characterized in protists and yeast, and crystal structures of the homologs from C. fasciculata and Trypanosoma vivax have been resolved (Degano et al., 1996 Therefore, a main issue of this work was to identify such proteins in Arabidopsis thaliana. We aimed to identify homologs to the well-characterized nucleosidase of C. fasciculata in Arabidopsis, generate recombinant proteins, and analyze their enzymatic capacity. In addition, mutant plants with increased or decreased activities of nucleosidase were generated to shed light on the physiological function of this enzyme.
Identification of cDNAs Encoding Putative Nucleosidase Isoforms in Arabidopsis As a first step in identifying putative nucleosidases in Arabidopsis, we looked for the biochemical activity by analyzing nucleosidase activity in crude, desalted extracts from Arabidopsis rosette leaves. We observed that [14C]-labeled uridine, provided at a concentration of 200 µM, was converted to [14C]-uracil by Arabidopsis leaf extracts in a time-dependent manner, with an activity of 68.7 ± 3.0 nmol mg–1 total protein h–1.
To identify the nucleosidase at the molecular level, we looked for Arabidopsis sequences homologous to the well-studied proteins from protists. An Arabidopsis cDNA encoding a protein with high similarity to URH1 from S. cerevisiae was identified. During the biochemical analysis, it turned out that uridine was the main substrate of this enzyme; therefore, it was named Arabidopsis URH1 in analogy to the Uridine-Ribohydrolase 1 (URH1) from bakers' yeast (Kurtz et al., 2002
Arabidopsis URH1 contains the common sequence motive for inosine/uridine preferring nucleosidase isoforms that contains four Asp residues in a conserved domain at the N terminus of the proteins (Figure 1, stars) (Degano et al., 1996
Biochemical Characteristics of URH1 Expressed in Yeast We next characterized the activity of URH1 using the Arabidopsis cDNA to complement a yeast mutant in pyrimidine synthesis and salvage. After expression of Arabidopsis URH1 in the yeast mutant YRZM18 (Mitterbauer et al., 2002 For a more detailed analysis of the properties of the heterologously expressed nucleosidase, two different analysis methods were applied, and for both, yeast extracts were desalted and incubated with potential nucleosidase substrates. First, these substrates were [14C]-radiolabeled and the reaction products were subsequently subjected to thin layer chromatography and analyzed with a phosphor imager. When analyzing the time dependence of uridine hydrolysis in extracts from URH1-expressing yeast cells, most of the label shifted from the upper band in the thin layer chromatography comigrating with the uridine standard toward the lower band, matching the uracil standard, during the course of 20 min of incubation (see Supplemental Figure 1B online). With help of a phosphor imager, the hydrolysis of uridine (200 µM) was quantified, and an almost linear time dependence for the first 5 min was obtained (see Supplemental Figure 1C online). No uridine degradation was observed upon the addition of a boiled yeast extract. The observed enzyme activity after the first 5 min was 0.3 µmol uridine mg–1 protein min–1. In a subsequent experiment, the uridine hydrolase activity of URH1 was determined by separation and quantification of the reaction products by HPLC. With both methods, essentially similar results were obtained. The hydrolysis of uridine in the presence of extract from yeast cells expressing URH1 followed Michaelis-Menten kinetics. From a Hanes plot analysis, an apparent Km value of 2.1 mM was determined (see Supplemental Figure 1D online). The maximal activity was 30.2 µmol uridine mg–1 protein h–1.
Purification of Recombinant URH1 Expressed in E. coli
Biochemical Characteristics of Purified URH1 The substrate-dependent nucleoside cleavage revealed that uridine is the preferred substrate of URH1, showing a maximal catalytic activity of 18.2 mmol mg–1 protein h–1 and an apparent affinity constant of 0.8 mM (Figure 2B, Table 2 ). Inosine is hydrolyzed at a much lower maximal activity of 0.87 mmol mg–1 protein h–1 and an apparent Km value of 1.4 mM (Table 2). A further but less effective substrate that could be identified is adenosine. With this substrate, the maximal activity of URH1 is further reduced compared with uridine and inosine and accounted only for 0.03 mmol mg–1 protein h–1. The apparent Km value for adenosine was determined to be 0.7 mM (Table 2). Cytidine is not a substrate of URH1 (data not shown). Enzyme activity was linear for at least 10 min for all substrates tested.
Isopentenyladenine-riboside (IPR) inhibited uridine hydrolysis in a competition study and was thus suspected to function also as substrate for URH1 (see Supplemental Figure 1E online). When IPR was used as substrate in corresponding experiments, hydrolysis to isopentenyl-adenine was clearly demonstrated. IPR was cleaved in a time- and substrate-dependent manner, and a constant activity was observed for at least 10 min (Figure 2C). The calculated apparent Km value was 0.44 mM (Figure 2D, Table 2). A boiled enzyme preparation was used as control and showed no cleavage of IPR.
Expression Pattern and Subcellular Localization of URH1
To analyze the subcellular localization of URH1, the protein sequence was explored by standard prediction software. However, no indications for organelle targeting information within the N-terminal part of the URH1 protein were obtained. For a deeper analysis, a green fluorescent protein (GFP) fusion construct was used for transient tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) protoplast transformation. Green fluorescence in these protoplasts was evenly distributed in the cytosol, as shown in Figure 3G. Circular areas showing no fluorescence signals were where cytoplasm was excluded by chloroplasts (Figure 3G).
Analysis of Mutants with Altered Uridine Hydrolase Activity The relative transcript levels of all types of mutants were determined by real-time PCR. All selected overexpressor lines exhibit at least 10-fold elevated transcript levels; in the case of Os URH1 overexpression lines #6 and #10, transcript increased up to 100-fold (Figure 4A ). By contrast, microRNA lines showed 3- to 7-fold reduced transcript levels in lines #7, #5, and #4, respectively (Figure 4A). These alterations in transcript levels were accompanied by similar alterations in enzyme activity. At URH1 overexpressor lines showed 10- to 20-fold higher degradation of uridine compared with wild-type activities (Figure 4B). In the mutants expressing the rice homolog, the strongest line (#10) even showed a 30-fold higher uridine hydrolysis activity (Figure 4B). In the microRNA lines, the differences in uridine hydrolase activity were less pronounced. However, lines #4 and #5 exhibited significantly reduced activities accounting for 30 and 57% of wild-type level, respectively (Figure 4B).
Subsequent to the observation of altered enzyme activities in extracts of mutants, the ability to degrade imported uridine in vivo was analyzed using intact, 7-d-old seedlings. In accordance to the results obtained before, all overexpressor mutants released significantly more [14C]-CO2 from labeled, imported uridine compared with wild-type seedlings. At URH1–overexpressing lines #1, #2, and #11 released 28, 32, and 34% CO2, respectively, whereas wild-type seedlings only gave rise to 20% CO2 of the previously imported uridine (Figure 4C). For Os URH1–expressing mutants #6, #10, and #11, the corresponding liberation was 29, 31, and 28%, respectively (Figure 4C). All three analyzed microRNA mutants exhibited CO2 release in the range of 13% of the imported uridine (Figure 4C). Nucleotide analogs like 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) and 5-fluorouridine (5-FD) are used in cancer therapy because after incorporation into DNA and RNA they are toxic to cells. Furthermore, they have proven useful in the exploration of enzyme functions in many facets of nucleotide metabolism. When wild-type seeds were germinated on 5-FD, growth was arrested shortly after onset of germination. Interestingly, growth of both At URH1 and Os URH1 overexpressor mutants was almost unaffected by 5-FD (Figure 5A ). By contrast, microRNA lines performed like wild-type seeds and did not grow (Figure 5A). Obviously, 5-FD is degraded to a much higher extent in mutants with increased uridine hydrolase activity. In addition to the substrate of URH, its product uracil was provided to seedlings in form of the toxic fluorinated analog 5-FU. Similarly, increased expression of URH enhanced resistance of the corresponding seedlings toward 5-FU (100 µM; Figure 5B). Moreover, 35S:At URH1 clearly showed higher resistance toward 5-fluoroorotic acid (5-FO) when provided at 20 and 50 µM (Figure 5B). This substrate analog to orotic acid is an intermediate of pyrimidine de novo synthesis. Similar results were obtained with mutants expressing Os URH1.
These results point to altered overall pyrimidine nucleotide metabolism in mutants. Therefore, it was of interest to analyze the germination efficiency of corresponding seeds, as these fast-growing tissues show substantial demand for nucleotides to serve DNA, RNA, and nucleotide sugar synthesis on the one hand and for amino acids to serve protein synthesis on the other hand. Exact balancing of the respective synthesis and degradation pathways is therefore essential in the early phase of germination. Thus, germination on standard soil was monitored for all mutants. Seeds imbibed for 24 h were transferred to a growth chamber with a 10-h/14-h day/night regime. All seeds used for this experiment were of the same age. It was obvious that wild-type seeds germinated much faster. Compared with mutants, the radicle was visible in wild-type plants 38 h after transfer to the growth chamber. Sixty hours after transfer to the growth chamber, wild-type plants showed green, expanded cotyledons, whereas At URH1 overexpressor mutants still showed no germination (Figure 5C). In Os URH1 overexpressor mutants, the radicle emerged, and in microRNA mutants, hypocotyls and radicle started growth 60 h after transfer to the growth chamber (Figure 5C).
In previous experiments, we observed increased nucleoside degradation in liquid-grown seedlings under conditions of nitrogen starvation (M. Flörchinger, S. Hach, B. Jung, M. Traub, R. Wartenberg, C. Salzig, P. Lang, and T. Möhlmann, unpublished results). Therefore, we took advantage of the seedling liquid culture (Scheible et al., 2004
Quantitation of amino acids in extracts of liquid-grown seedlings revealed most prominent changes in the contents of Arg. Arg is of special interest in this context because it shares the precursor carbamoyl phosphate with pyrimidine de novo synthesis. Under conditions of full nitrogen supply (for details, see Methods) 35S:At URH and 35S:Os URH plants contained 19 to 38% higher Arg levels and amiRNA mutants even 51 to 78% higher levels compared with wild-type seedlings, the latter with a content of 13.7 µmol g–1FW (Figure 6B). Under conditions of nitrogen starvation, only 35S:At URH and 35S:Os URH accumulated higher Arg levels, accounting for 32 to 65% of the wild-type content (Figure 6C). Here, control seedlings contained much lower contents compared with growth conditions under full nitrogen supply, accounting for 1.05 µmol g–1FW (Figure 6C). The overall contents of amino acids in nitrogen supplied and nitrogen starved seedlings were not significantly altered between the wild type and mutants (data not shown). To obtain a deeper understanding of the integration of URH function in nucleotide metabolism, the response of de novo synthesis and salvage pathway in addition to degradation in our mutants was analyzed. When the transcript levels of key enzymes of pyrimidine de novo synthesis (CPSase, ATCase, DHODH, and UMPSase; see Figure 7 ) were quantified by real-time PCR, no significant differences between wild-type plants, overexpressors, and amiRNA mutants became obvious (see Supplemental Figure 3 online). To analyze salvage of pyrimidines, the activities of uridine kinase (UK) and uracil phosphoribosyltransferase (UPRT) were determined on 20-d-old soil-grown seedlings. Again, no significant differences in the activities between the wild type and mutants appeared (see Supplemental Figure 2 online). The wild-type activity for UK was 15.9 nmol mg protein–1 h–1 and 30.6 nmol mg–1 protein h–1 for UPRT (see Supplemental Figure 4 online). Similar results were obtained with liquid-grown seedlings.
Importance of Nucleoside Salvage Salvage of purines and pyrimidines is an essential biochemical process operating in all living organisms (Zrenner et al., 2006
URH1 Is a Member of the Inosine-Uridine Nucleosidase Protein Family of Prokaryotes and Eukaryotes, Excluding Mammals
The presence of the sequence motif DXDXXXDD groups At URH1 into a cluster of nucleosidases from prokaryotes and eukaryotes and is called a hallmark of nucleosidase activity (Versées and Steyaert, 2003 In Arabidopsis, a homolog to URH1, named URH2, exists, sharing a relatively high degree of similarity with URH1. However, the function of URH2 is unclear, and we were unable to detect nucleosidase activity in URH2 expressing yeast or E. coli cells.
Uridine Is the Preferred Substrate of URH1, while Inosine, Adenosine, and Cytokinin Ribosides Are Accepted URH1 expressed as recombinant protein in E. coli could be purified to near homogeneity by affinity chromatography (Figure 2A). In addition, a high enzyme activity was recovered in the purified enzyme. This is illustrated by a 600 times higher activity of the enzyme purified from E. coli compared with the crude yeast extract (Table 2). These changes in total activity might also explain the differences in affinity between both enzymes. It has to be anticipated that further cellular components in the yeast extract interfere with URH1 activity and thus lead to the observed lower affinity of URH1 toward uridine when expressed in yeast (Table 2).
The high specific activity of purified, recombinant URH1 enabled us to determine that URH1 could act on additional substrates such as inosine and adenosine. Thus, the substrate spectrum of URH1, converting purine and pyrimidine nucleosides, is generally similar to that of the homologs from C. fasciculata and L. major. In addition, the fact that At URH1 is unable to use cytidine as a substrate concurs with the finding that cytosine cannot be metabolized by plants (Moffatt et al., 2002
Only few reports exist on nucleosidases purified from plant tissues. For example, uridine nucleosidase has been purified from mung bean (Phaseolus radiatus) (Achar and Vaidyanathan, 1967
Apart from a high nucleosidase activity, URH1 is characterized by the ability to cleave the cytokinin-riboside IPR (Figures 2C and 2D). This finding of a dual function of URH1 in nucleoside and cytokinin metabolism is surprising at a first glance. However, such a dual function has also been reported for other proteins of the salvage pathway, namely, adenosine kinase, adenine phosphoribosyl-transferase, and rice Equilibrative Nucleoside Transporter2 (ENT2). The latter protein transports cytokinin-ribosides in addition to nucleosides (von Schwartzenberg et al., 1998
It is well accepted that the main site of cytokinin biosynthesis in plants is the root (Kieber, 2002
Recently, a novel cytokinin activating enzyme has been discovered in rice, converting cytokinin monophosphates to the active base form. This protein, named lonely guy (LOG), is essentially important for the correct development of the shoot meristem and is specifically expressed in the meristem tip (Kurakawa et al., 2007
Altered Nucleosidase Activity Effects Uridine Degradation, Nitrogen Starvation, Stress Response, and Germination
In principle, both uridine and uracil, the product of nucleosidase activity, can be salvaged to UMP by UK or UPRT (Moffat and Ashihara, 2002
The salvage pathway operates in the cytosol, and accordingly URH1 is located in this compartment as observed by GFP-based localization studies (Figure 4G). The same is true for so far identified UK and UPRT isoforms (Islam et al., 2007
Attenuation of nitrogen starvation stress response in form of reduced anthocyanin accumulation in nucleosidase overexpressors further indicates that reprogramming from uridine salvage to degradation occurs in corresponding liquid grown seedlings (Figure 6A). By contrast, microRNA lines showed increased anthocyanin levels, supporting this view. By increasing nucleoside degradation, nitrogen bound in the large pool of nucleotides and RNA may become available for amino acid synthesis. Liquid-grown seedlings with higher URH activity are characterized by increased contents of Arg, and, interestingly, both Arg synthesis and pyrimidine de novo synthesis depend on the shared precursor carbamoyl phosphate (Figure 7). As the transcript levels of de novo synthesis genes were unchanged in mutants, this result may be indicative for a reduced rate of pyrimidine de novo synthesis in URH overexpressor lines, based on allosteric regulation of key enzymes. For example, the reaction catalyzed by ATCase in pyrimidine de novo synthesis (Figure 7) is known to be strictly controlled by pyrimidine levels (Chen and Slocum, 2008
During germination of Arabidopsis seeds, storage proteins are degraded to amino acids to allow synthesis of new proteins, nucleotide de novo synthesis, and synthesis of other nitrogen-containing metabolites. It's a matter of debate whether nucleotide de novo synthesis or salvage pathway activity prevails during germination. From germination studies with different plant systems, it was concluded that the salvage pathway is very active within the first hour after imbibition and de novo synthesis is delayed (Stasolla et al., 2003
In young seedlings, the expression pattern of URH is highly similar to that of ATCase (Chen and Slocum, 2008
Another possible function may be the processing of uridine after it has been imported from the soil. Interestingly, import of uridine via the roots is catalyzed by ENT3, an equilibrative nucleoside transporter, which is also expressed in the root vasculature (Traub et al., 2007 In sum, we conclude that uridine nucleosidase, URH1, plays a pivotal role in the regulation of nucleoside, mainly uridine, degradation.
Cultivation of Plants Wild-type and transgenic Arabidopsis thaliana plants (ecotype Columbia) were used throughout. Prior to germination, seeds were incubated for 1 d in the dark at 4°C for imbibition in standardized ED73 soil (Weigel and Glazebrook, 2002
Quantification of Anthocyanin and Amino Acid Content
For determination of the total anthocyanin content, 100 mg frozen tissue was boiled for 3 min in 1 mL H2O:HCl:1-propanol (81:18:1) and stored for 1 d at room temperature in the dark. After centrifugation (14,000g, 15 min) the anthocyanin content was determined as absorbance measured at 535 nm. This value was corrected according to the Rayleigh's formula (Acorrected = A535 – 2.2A650) (Lange et al., 1971
To determine free amino acids, 50 mg of frozen plant material was extracted with 80% ethanol at 80°C and centrifuged. After evaporating the supernatant to dryness, the amino acids and standards were derivatized as described previously (Rolletschek et al., 2002
Cloning of At URH1 amiRNA
Generation of 35S:At URH1 and 35S:Os URH1 Mutant Plants
Quantitation of Respiratory Use of [14C]-Uridine
Construction of the Sequence Alignment
Complementation of Yeast Cells
Heterologous Expression of At URH1 in E. coli
To start autolysis of E. coli harboring URH1 by endogenous lysozyme, cells were thawed at 37°C and 1 mM PMSF, 1 mg mL–1 DNase, and 1 mg mL–1 RNase were added. Additional cell disruption was performed by sonification. After centrifugation (30 min, 100,000g, 4°C), the crude extract was used for URH1 purification with immobilized-metal affinity chromatography according to a modified protocol form the supplier (Qiagen). For purification of URH1, a crude extract from E. coli cells was incubated for 1 h with Ni-NTA under constant stirring and transferred to an Econo-Pac chromotography column (Bio-Rad). Nonspecific proteins were removed by washing the column with binding buffer consisting of 10 mM imidazole, 10 mM NaCl, and 50 mM Na2PO4, pH 8.0, and washing buffer containing 60 mM imidazole, 10 mM NaCl, and 50 mM Na2PO4, pH 8.0. The synthesized At URH1 protein was eluted with buffer consisting of 500 mM imidazole, 10 mM NaCl, and 50 mM Na2PO4, pH 8.0. The elution buffer was exchanged with 50 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.5, using a Nap5 column (GE Healthcare) and used for nucleosidase measurement and SDS-PAGE. SDS-PAGE was performed as described by Laemmli (1970)
Staining for GUS Activity
Transient Expression of a URH1-GFP Fusion Construct
Quantitative RT-PCR
Determination of Nucleosidase Activity For measuring hydrolysis of nucleosides by HPLC, 30 µL of yeast crude extract or purified URH1 were incubated with 30 µL of corresponding substances at 30°C. The reaction was terminated as described above. A Dionex P680-HPLC system with an UV170U detector (Dionex) and the column system CC8/4 ND 100-5 C18-ec and Nucleodur 100-5 C18-ec (Macherey-Nagel) were used. For separating the nucleosides from nucleobases, an eluent consisting of 50 mM ammoniumacetat and 1% methanol, pH 5.2, was used, whereas for uridine, inosine, adenosine, and isoplentenyladenine-riboside, 0, 2.5, 7.5, or 12.5% acetonitrile were added, respectively.
Determination of Pyrimidine Salvage Activities
Accession Numbers
Supplemental Data
This work was financially supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (Grant MO 1032/3-1). We thank R. Mitterbauer (University of Natural Resources and Applied Life Sciences, Vienna) for providing the yeast strain YRZM18 and G. Amoroso (University of Kaiserslautern) for critical reading of the manuscript.
The author responsible for distribution of materials integral to the findings presented in this article in accordance with the policy described in the Instructions for Authors (www.plantcell.org) is: Torsten Möhlmann (moehlmann{at}biologie.uni-kl.de).
[W] Online version contains Web-only data. www.plantcell.org/cgi/doi/10.1105/tpc.108.062612 Received August 12, 2008; Revision received February 3, 2009. accepted March 3, 2009.
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