4.6 Article

A recently evolved diflavin-containing monomeric nitrate reductase is responsible for highly efficient bacterial nitrate assimilation

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 295, Issue 15, Pages 5051-5066

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.RA120.012859

Keywords

nitrogen metabolism; Mycobacterium smegmatis; mycobacteria; reductase; protein evolution; assimilatory nitrate reductase; diflavin reductase; Mycolicibacterium smegmatis; nitrate assimilation

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31430004, 31830002, 81671988, 91751000, 91951000, 91856112, 31970032, 81991532, 31800123]
  2. Research Unit Fund of Li Ka Shing Institute of Health Sciences [7103506]
  3. Hong Kong Health and Medical Research Fund [12110622]
  4. National Key R&D Program of China [2019YFA0905100, 2018YFD0500900, 2017YFC1201200]
  5. National Science and Technology Major Program of China [2018ZX10302301]
  6. Strategic Priority Research Program of the Chinese Academy of Sciences [XDB19040200]
  7. Key Research Program of the Chinese Academy of Sciences [KFZD-SW-219-5]
  8. International Partnership Program of the Chinese Academy of Sciences [153D31KYSB20170121]

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Nitrate is one of the major inorganic nitrogen sources for microbes. Many bacterial and archaeal lineages have the capacity to express assimilatory nitrate reductase (NAS), which catalyzes the rate-limiting reduction of nitrate to nitrite. Although a nitrate assimilatory pathway in mycobacteria has been proposed and validated physiologically and genetically, the putative NAS enzyme has yet to be identified. Here, we report the characterization of a novel NAS encoded by Mycolicibacterium smegmatis Msmeg_4206, designated NasN, which differs from the canonical NASs in its structure, electron transfer mechanism, enzymatic properties, and phylogenetic distribution. Using sequence analysis and biochemical characterization, we found that NasN is an NADPH-dependent, diflavin-containing monomeric enzyme composed of a canonical molybdopterin cofactor-binding catalytic domain and an FMN?FAD/NAD-binding, electron-receiving/transferring domain, making it unique among all previously reported hetero-oligomeric NASs. Genetic studies revealed that NasN is essential for aerobic M. smegmatis growth on nitrate as the sole nitrogen source and that the global transcriptional regulator GlnR regulates nasN expression. Moreover, unlike the NADH-dependent heterodimeric NAS enzyme, NasN efficiently supports bacterial growth under nitrate-limiting conditions, likely due to its significantly greater catalytic activity and oxygen tolerance. Results from a phylogenetic analysis suggested that the nasN gene is more recently evolved than those encoding other NASs and that its distribution is limited mainly to Actinobacteria and Proteobacteria. We observed that among mycobacterial species, most fast-growing environmental mycobacteria carry nasN, but that it is largely lacking in slow-growing pathogenic mycobacteria because of multiple independent genomic deletion events along their evolution.

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