| Literature DB >> 25587430 |
Adam Gilbertsen1, Bryan Williams1.
Abstract
Agmatine, decarboxylated arginine, is an important intermediary in polyamine production for many prokaryotes, but serves higher functions in eukaryotes such as nitric oxide inhibition and roles in neurotransmission. Pseudomonas aeruginosa relies on the arginine decarboxylase and agmatine deiminase pathways to convert arginine into putrescine. One of the two known agmatine deiminase operons, aguBA, contains an agmatine sensitive TetR promoter controlled by AguR. We have discovered that this promoter element can produce a titratable induction of its gene products in response to agmatine, and utilized this discovery to make a luminescent agmatine biosensor in P. aeruginosa. The genome of the P. aeruginosa lab strain UCBPP-PA14 was altered to remove both its ability to synthesize or destroy agmatine, and insertion of the luminescent reporter construct allows it to produce light in proportion to the amount of exogenous agmatine applied from ~100 nM to 1mM. Furthermore it does not respond to related compounds including arginine or putrescine. To demonstrate potential applications the biosensor was used to detect agmatine in spent supernatants, to monitor the development of arginine decarboxylase over time, and to detect agmatine in the spinal cords of live mice.Entities:
Keywords: Pseudomonas; agmatine; arginine decarboxylase; bioluminescence; polyamines
Year: 2014 PMID: 25587430 PMCID: PMC4287709 DOI: 10.3390/bios4040387
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biosensors (Basel) ISSN: 2079-6374
Figure 1The arginine decarboxylase and agmatine deiminase pathways.
Bacterial strains.
| Parent strain | Phenotype | Genotype | Source or reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| PA14 | Wild-type | [ | |
| WT | This work | ||
| WT | CTX-Lux | This work | |
| AgDi Knockout | [ | ||
| AgDi Knockout, | This work | ||
| AgDi Knockout, | This work | ||
| Arginine Decarboxylase Knockout | This work | ||
| Arginine Decarboxylase Knockout, | ∆ | This work | |
| Arginine Decarboxylase Knockout, | This work | ||
| AgDi Knockout, Arginine Decarboxylase Knockout | This work | ||
| This work | |||
| AgDi Knockout, Arginine Decarboxylase Knockout, | This work | ||
| Competent cells for cloning purposes | Invitrogen | ||
| Vehicle for conjugative mating to | [ |
Plasmids.
| Plasmid | Description | Features | Source or reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mini-ctx-lux | See Reference | [ | |
| pEX18-Ap | Gene replacement vector | See Reference | [ |
| CTXnoT7 | Contains Lux operon, T7 promoter removed to reduce background expression | No T7 | This work |
| Contains Lux operon induced by agmatine via the inserted promotion system of the primary agmatine deiminase, T7 promoter removed to reduce background expression | No T7, | This work | |
| pBAD202 | Arabinose induced expression vector | See manufacturer | Invitrogen |
| SpeBAD | Arabinose induced expression vector of SpeA | This work | |
| speA KO | pEX18-Ap based cloning vector with | Designed for disruption of chromosomal | This work |
Figure 2Construction of the aguRB:lux reporter plasmid for integration into the P. aeruginosa chromosome. See text for details.
Figure 3Agmatine response element behavior in mutants of the arginine decarboxylase and agmatine deiminase pathways. The agmatine “reporter construct” was inserted into the genomes of select mutant combinations in P. aeruginosa known to contribute to agmatine metabolism. Where indicated these mutant/reporter combinations were grown with or without agmatine. Filled boxes represent strains containing the aguRB-lux agmatine response element in their genomes, unfilled boxes contain the empty lux operon vector integrated into their genome. The y-axis represents relative luminescence/OD600 of each well at 3 h of growth. Values above the filled bars are agmatine concentrations as determined by UPLC-MS/MS in micromolar. Error bars represent SEM of three wells. ND—none detected by mass spectrometry.
Figure 4Agmatine titration in the agmatine biosensor. Each well contains 1 × 106 CFU of either the agmatine biosensor (ΔspeA, aguA:gm, Δagu2ABCA’, aguRB:lux) or its vector control (ΔspeA, aguA:gm, Δagu2ABCA’, ctx:lux) in 200 μL of LB broth with the indicated concentration of stimulant. The y-axis shows the relative luminescence/OD600 at 3 h of growth. Error bars are SEM of three wells.
Figure 5Detection of agmatine secretion in clinical isolates. The agmatine biosensor was grown in LB media with the indicated amount of agmatine, or grown in 50% LB and 50% spent supernatant from a 24 h liquid culture of clinical isolates. The y-axis represents the relative luminescence/OD600 of each well after 3 h growth. Values above the bars representing spent supernatants are agmatine concentrations of those supernatants as determined by UPLC-MS/MS in micromolar. Error bars are SEM of three wells.
Figure 6Monitoring arginine decarboxylase production through agmatine detection. The gene for arginine decarboxylase in P. aeruginosa (speA) was cloned without a promoter into the pBAD plasmid which uses a titratable arabinose promoter to induce cloned gene products. Each well contained 1 × 106 CFU of the SpeA expressing E. coli strain and the agmatine biosensor or its vector control as described for Figure 3. The x-axis indicates which variant of the reporter strain is present and the concentration of arabinose in each culture starting at time 0. Each well also contained 1 mM arginine as a substrate for the reaction. The y-axis represents the relative luminescence/OD600 of the well at 10 h of growth. Error bars are SEM of three wells.
Figure 7Detection of agmatine in mouse spinal cords. The agmatine biosensor P. aeruginosa was seeded with agmatine into the spinal columns of anesthetized mice. A Xenogen© In Vivo Imaging System was used to capture the luminescence produced in the alive but anesthetized mice every hour for three hours. Four mice per group were injected, missing images represent mice that died before imaging. (A) Images captured demonstrating intensity of luminescence over spinal cords; (B) Graphical representation of the average relative luminescence in each group of mice. Error bars indicate SEM.