Ornithine is the central intermediate in the arginine degradative pathway and its regulation in Bacillus subtilis

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Abstract

The Gram-positive model bacterium Bacillus subtilis is able to utilize a variety of proteinogenic and non proteinogenic amino acids as sources of carbon, energy and nitrogen. The utilization of the amino acids arginine, citrulline and ornithine is catalyzed by enzymes that are encoded in the rocABC and rocDEF operons and by the rocG gene. Expression of these genes is under control of the alternative sigma factor SigL. RNA polymerase associated to this sigma factor depends on an ATP-hydrolyzing transcription activator to initiate transcription. The RocR protein acts as transcription activator for the roc genes. In this work, we have studied the contributions of all enzymes of the Roc pathway to the degradation of arginine, citrulline and ornithine. This identified the previously uncharacterized RocB protein as responsible for the conversion of citrulline to ornithine. In vitro assays with the purified enzyme suggest that it acts as a manganese-dependent N-carbamoyl-L-ornithine hydrolase that cleaves citrulline to ornithine and carbamate. So far, the molecular effector that triggers transcription activation by RocR has not been unequivocally identified. Using a combination of transcription reporter assays and biochemical experiments we demonstrate that ornithine is the molecular inducer for RocR activity. Our work suggests that binding of ATP to RocR triggers its hexamerization, and binding of ornithine then allows ATP hydrolysis and activation of roc gene transcription. Thus, ornithine is the central molecule of the roc degradative pathway as it is the common intermediate of arginine and citrulline degradation and the molecular effector for the transcription regulator RocR.

IMPORTANCE

Amino acids serve as building blocks for protein biosynthesis in each living cell but can also be used as sources of carbon, energy and nitrogen. In this work we have identified ornithine as the central player in the utilization of arginine, citrulline and ornithine in the Gram-positive bacterium B. subtilis . Ornithine is the common intermediate after the first steps of arginine and citrulline degradation. We have identified the so far uncharacterized protein RocB as the enzyme responsible for the cleavage of citrulline to ornithine and carbamate. Moreover, we demonstrate that ornithine is the molecular effector that triggers ATPase activity of the transcription factor RocR. Binding of ornithine to RocR and the subsequent hydrolysis of ATP allow a functional interaction with the alternative sigma factor SigL and subsequent transcription activation of all genes of the degradative pathway.

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  1. Thank you so much for your paper! Metabolism of amino acids is extremely important to study but also very complex. It's also a really vast field so I really appreciate it when scientists decide to take a deep dive and uncover the existing metabolic pathways. Kudos for that! As excited as I am about L-amino acids, I'm even more excited to understand the metabolism of D-amino acids. I was wondering if you have considered applying your experimental approach to understand the metabolic pathway for D-arginine? May be also other D-amino acids? I think we know little about the metabolism of D-amino acids in B. subtilis and about the regulation of the metabolic enzymes. Thank you for your time!