TY - JOUR
T1 - Queuosine salvage in Bartonella henselae Houston 1
T2 - a unique evolutionary path
AU - Quaiyum, Samia
AU - Yuan, Yifeng
AU - Sun, Guangxin
AU - Ratnayake, R. M.Madhushi N.
AU - Hutinet, Geoffrey
AU - Dedon, Peter C.
AU - Minnick, Michael F.
AU - Crécy-Lagard, Valérie de
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 The Authors.
PY - 2024
Y1 - 2024
N2 - Queuosine (Q) stands out as the sole tRNA modification that can be synthesized via salvage pathways. Comparative genomic analyses identified specific bacteria that showed a discrepancy between the projected Q salvage route and the predicted substrate specificities of the two identified salvage proteins: (1) the distinctive enzyme tRNA guanine-34 transglycosylase (bacte-rial TGT, or bTGT), responsible for inserting precursor bases into target tRNAs; and (2) queuosine precursor transporter (QPTR), a transporter protein that imports Q precursors. Organisms such as the facultative intracellular pathogen Bartonella henselae, which possess only bTGT and QPTR but lack predicted enzymes for converting preQ1 to Q, would be expected to salvage the queuine (q) base, mirroring the scenario for the obligate intracellular pathogen Chlamydia trachomatis. However, sequence analyses indicate that the substrate-specificity residues of their bTGTs resemble those of enzymes inserting preQ1 rather than q. Intriguingly, MS analyses of tRNA modification profiles in B. henselae reveal trace amounts of preQ1, previously not observed in a natural context. Complementation analysis demonstrates that B. henselae bTGT and QPTR not only utilize preQ1, akin to their Escherichia coli counterparts, but can also process q when provided at elevated concentrations. The experimental and phylogenomic analyses suggest that the Q pathway in B. henselae could represent an evolutionary transition among intracellular pathogens – from ancestors that synthesized Q de novo to a state prioritizing the salvage of q. Another possibility that will require further investigations is that the insertion of preQ1 confers fitness advantages when B. henselae is growing outside a mammalian host.
AB - Queuosine (Q) stands out as the sole tRNA modification that can be synthesized via salvage pathways. Comparative genomic analyses identified specific bacteria that showed a discrepancy between the projected Q salvage route and the predicted substrate specificities of the two identified salvage proteins: (1) the distinctive enzyme tRNA guanine-34 transglycosylase (bacte-rial TGT, or bTGT), responsible for inserting precursor bases into target tRNAs; and (2) queuosine precursor transporter (QPTR), a transporter protein that imports Q precursors. Organisms such as the facultative intracellular pathogen Bartonella henselae, which possess only bTGT and QPTR but lack predicted enzymes for converting preQ1 to Q, would be expected to salvage the queuine (q) base, mirroring the scenario for the obligate intracellular pathogen Chlamydia trachomatis. However, sequence analyses indicate that the substrate-specificity residues of their bTGTs resemble those of enzymes inserting preQ1 rather than q. Intriguingly, MS analyses of tRNA modification profiles in B. henselae reveal trace amounts of preQ1, previously not observed in a natural context. Complementation analysis demonstrates that B. henselae bTGT and QPTR not only utilize preQ1, akin to their Escherichia coli counterparts, but can also process q when provided at elevated concentrations. The experimental and phylogenomic analyses suggest that the Q pathway in B. henselae could represent an evolutionary transition among intracellular pathogens – from ancestors that synthesized Q de novo to a state prioritizing the salvage of q. Another possibility that will require further investigations is that the insertion of preQ1 confers fitness advantages when B. henselae is growing outside a mammalian host.
KW - Bartonella henselae
KW - TGT enzyme
KW - YhhQ
KW - intracellular parasite
KW - queuosine
KW - tRNA modification
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85203352316&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1099/mic.0.001490
DO - 10.1099/mic.0.001490
M3 - Article
C2 - 39234940
AN - SCOPUS:85203352316
SN - 1350-0872
VL - 170
JO - Microbiology (United Kingdom)
JF - Microbiology (United Kingdom)
IS - 9
M1 - 001490
ER -