Abstract

Pseudomonas aeruginosa synthesizes phosphorylcholine phosphatase (PchP) when grown on choline, betaine, dimethylglycine or carnitine. In the presence of Mg2+ or Zn2+, PchP catalyzes the hydrolysis of p-nitrophenylphosphate (p-NPP) or phosphorylcholine (Pcho). The regulation of pchP gene expression is under the control of GbdR and NtrC; dimethylglycine is likely the metabolite directly involved in the induction of PchP. Therefore, the regulation of choline metabolism and consequently PchP synthesis may reflect an adaptive response of P. aeruginosa to environmental conditions. Bioinformatic and biochemistry studies shown that PchP contains two sites for alkylammonium compounds (AACs): one in the catalytic site near the metal ion-phosphoester pocket, and another in an inhibitory site responsible for the binding of the alkylammonium moiety. Both sites could be close to each other and interact through the residues 42E, 43E and 82YYY84. Zn2+ is better activator than Mg2+ at pH 5.0 and it is more effective at alleviating the inhibition produced by the entry of Pcho or different AACs in the inhibitory site. We postulate that Zn2+ induces at pH 5.0 a conformational change in the active center that is communicated to the inhibitory site, producing a compact or closed structure. However, at pH 7.4, this effect is not observed because to the hydrolysis of the [Zn2+L2−1L20(H2O)2] complex, which causes a change from octahedral to tetrahedral in the metal coordination geometry. This enzyme is also present in P. fluorescens, P. putida, P. syringae, and other organisms. We have recently crystallized PchP and solved its structure.

1. Introduction

Bacteria possess multiple proteins with the capacity to catalyze the hydrolysis of phosphoric esters in either acidic or alkaline media. In addition to having different optimal pH values for their activity, these enzymes differ in their dependence on metal ions, which are generally divalent cations found in the second or third period of the periodic table. In our previous review, we summarized work showing that the synthesis of Pseudomonas aeruginosa phosphorylcholine phosphatase (PchP) in the presence of low or high orthophosphate concentration depends on choline, betaine, dimethylglycine, or carnitine added to the culture medium as the carbon and/or nitrogen source. In addition, the gene for PchP was located, and the most current information on the kinetic, biochemical, biophysical, and molecular characteristics of PchP was summarized [1]. Phosphorylcholine (Pcho), phosphorylethanolamine, and p-nitrophenylphosphate (p-NPP), substrates of PchP, are hydrolyzed to orthophosphate plus choline, ethanolamine, and p-nitrophenol, respectively [2, 3]. Because P. aeruginosa is an opportunistic Gram-negative bacterium capable of producing infections at different levels in higher organisms, we dedicated our effort toward in-depth characterization of PchP. Therefore, this paper focuses on fundamental studies at the molecular, biochemical, bioinformatic, and biophysical levels, with the goal of compiling all current information on PchP.

2. Molecular Studies

PA5292 was identified as the locus encoding PchP in the P. aeruginosa PAO1 genome using various microbiological and molecular experiments [4]. After this identification our interest was focused on the regulation of pchP gene expression. Wargo et al. reported that the induction of pchP transcription by glycine betaine, a product of choline oxidation, via betaine aldehyde, is mediated by GbdR, an AraC family transcription factor [5]. The same authors also described GbdR as a specific regulator of genes involved in choline metabolism [6]. The construction of a ΔgbdR strain allowed us to confirm the direct impact of GbdR on choline catabolic genes because no growth was detected with this mutant in media with choline, choline/NH4+, or choline/succinate [7]. In addition, with wild-type P. aeruginosa, we have also observed that choline, betaine, dimethylglycine, or carnitine (which is metabolized to betaine) utilization was absolutely necessary for the synthesis of PchP [810]. In addition, it is known that in the absence of preferred sources, a two-component system comprising the global regulators NtrBC and CbrAB is activated by the depletion of nitrogen and carbon in many bacteria including P. aeruginosa [1113]. As choline and the various amino acids are not typically preferred carbon or nitrogen sources, we hypothesized that besides GbdR, enzymes whose synthesis is dependent on choline catabolism might be also under the control of NtrBC and/or CbrAB. In control experiments with histidine where NtrBC and CbrAB were activated [11, 12], no β-galactosidase activity (a measure of pchP expression) was detected [7]. The specific induction produced by choline led us to focus other experiments in this direction, utilizing ΔcbrB, ΔntrC, and ΔntrC/ΔcbrB mutants of P. aeruginosa PAO1, containing the construction P1::lacZ (7) inserted into the bacterial chromosome. These experiments showed that CbrB is crucial when choline is the only nutrient for growth because it was observed that the ΔcbrB strain did not grow in media containing choline as a carbon or carbon/nitrogen source [7]. With choline as nitrogen source and succinate as carbon source, growth of the ΔcbrB mutant was evident, and the increase of β-galactosidase activity was similar to the observed in the wild-type strain [7]. Contrary to experiments with the ΔcbrB mutant, the ΔntrC strain did not grow in a choline/succinate medium but did grow in media containing choline as the carbon or carbon/nitrogen source. In these two last culture media experiments, the β-galactosidase activity was reduced by only 65% with respect to the wild-type strain [7]. The 35% of remnant activity suggested that other regulators besides NtrC might be participating in the synthesis of PchP, but this point has not yet been resolved.

However, experiments with choline or dimethylglycine as carbon and nitrogen sources by P. aeruginosa PAO1 P1::lacZ showed the rapid response of the promoter during the beginning of the lag phase of growth; the production of β-galactosidase activity, at the maximum point, was approximately 50% higher in dimethylglycine medium than in choline medium [16]. These results together with findings from other laboratories [5, 6] demonstrated that GbdR and CbrB are indispensable for choline metabolism when it was the carbon source. In addition, GbdR and NtrC are necessary for the expression of PchP; dimethylglycine is likely the metabolite directly involved in the induction of PchP. Therefore, the regulation of choline metabolism and consequently PchP synthesis may reflect an adaptive response of P. aeruginosa to environmental conditions. This is in line with some results described in P. fluorescens, where a similar pattern of regulation for the catabolism of certain amino acids (histidine, proline, leucine, isoleucine, and valine) is also controlled by CbrAB and NtrBC. The specific induction of enzymes involved in their metabolism is indispensable in the presence of the specific substrate [13].

In order to explain the participation of specific regulator GbdR and the global regulators NtrBC and CbrAB in the synthesis of PchP, we first focused our attention on the transcriptional organization of the pchP gene [7]. Bioinformatic predictions, confirmed experimentally by site-directed mutagenesis and transcriptional fusion analyses, led to the conclusion that full pchP expression depends on an upstream region located −188 to −68 bp from the ATG start codon. Although this sequence has a score below the best prediction for a σ54-dependent promoter, it contains (i) the conserved −24 GG and −12 GC elements characteristic of putative σ54-dependent promoters, (ii) a region that resembles an IHF binding site, and (iii) a potential EBP binding site resembling the palindromic NtrC-binding consensus site [17, 18]. The dependence of pchP expression on the σ54 factor was confirmed using a ΔrpoN mutant strain, which showed a strong reduction in expression (70%). On this point, we assumed that the residual expression may result from a second promoter that could be activated by GbdR. Because the upstream region of PA5380 (gbdR), as analyzed by PromScan software, has a high similarity score (86 out of 100) with σ54-dependent promoters, we suggest that a cascade of events happen when choline is the alternative source of carbon, nitrogen, or carbon and nitrogen; (i) NtrB and CbrA respond to the absence or deficiency of the preferred carbon or nitrogen sources. (ii) These sensors activate, through phosphorylation, the respective response regulators NtrC and CbrB, which are enhancers of σ54-dependent promoters. (iii) As choline is an alternative carbon and nitrogen sources for growth, all genes involved in its catabolism or related to choline catabolism, for example, gbdR, pchP (and some other) are first activated. (iv) Once the intracellular concentration of GbdR increased, the enzymes of choline catabolism are directly activated [6] and specifically interact with the pchP promoter near the −12 box [5]. This interaction may move the σ54- polymerase from the promoter, so transcription from other promoter sequences can occur. In conclusion, we are only beginning to understand this activity because pchP expression now appears much more complex than previously anticipated, suggesting that more than one form of RNA polymerase and multiple transcriptional regulators could be involved.

3. Bioinformatic Studies

Initial bioinformatics studies indicated that PchP belongs to the haloacid dehalogenase hydrolase (HAD) superfamily. According to the following reference [[24], (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Structure/cdd/cddsrv.cgi)], “The haloacid dehalogenase-like superfamily includes L-2-haloacid dehalogenase, epoxide hydrolase, phosphoserine phosphatase, phosphomannomutase, phosphoglycolate phosphatase, P-type ATPase, and many others, all of which use a nucleophilic aspartate in their phosphoryl transfer reaction. All members possess a highly conserved alpha/beta core domain, and many also possess a small cap domain, the fold and function of which is variable. Members of this superfamily are sometimes referred to as belonging to the DDDD superfamily of phosphohydrolases.” The pchP gene published in the Pseudomonas genome database V2 indicates that it codes for a protein containing 349 amino acids. However, because PchP is exported to the periplasmic space, it produces a mature protein containing 327 amino acids. Therefore, motifs I, II, and III, which are characteristic of enzymes belonging to the HAD superfamily, are found at 31DMDNT35, 166S, and 242K/261GDTPDSD267 (the aspartyl residues involved in the catalysis of PchP are denoted in bold and underlined) [25, 26].

3.1. Molecular Modeling

As previously indicated [24], all members of the HAD superfamily share a similar catalytic mechanism that uses a nucleophilic aspartate, but the overall homology among these enzymes is small. Their sequence identity is less than 15% and is focused on three short motifs that form the active site [27]. In previous modeling studies of PchP, threading techniques were employed using the Methanococcus jannaschii phosphoserine phosphatase atomic coordinates as a template (mjPSP, PDB code 1F5S) [28]. This model was very useful for determining the catalytic relevance of the residues in the active site and for the description of phosphate and Mg2+ binding [25, 26]. However, the template was much shorter than PchP, and 3d-pssm did not model several regions; consequently the final PchP model was segmented. These problems required major improvements to the model to allow the use of a docking approach to make advances in determining the quaternary ammonium-binding site. Therefore, a strategy was implemented combining protein fold recognition and comparative modeling by satisfaction of spatial restraints. First, the PchP sequence (lacking the signal peptide) was submitted to the PHYRE server [29], which is a more accurate and updated version of 3d-pssm. This server performs alignments with proteins of known structure according to sequence identity, secondary structure as predicted by PSI-PRED, and solvent accessibility. The best-ranked template was phosphoserine phosphatase from M. jannaschii, with 100% confidence, but once again, template size was a problem. While mjPSP has 222 residues, PchP has 327; this results in regions without a template for PchP modeling. In addition, the secondary structure predicted for those regions was coiled and formed large loops. Therefore, it was not possible to model those loops with an acceptable level of accuracy, and those regions were discarded for the next step (residues 56–67, 120–136, and 206–224). This edited alignment was the input alignment for MODELLER. The final model was minimized and equilibrated using molecular dynamics, and the regions containing the three mega-loops that were eliminated (indicated by arrows) are shown in Figure 1(a). Like all members of the HAD superfamily, the model of PchP possesses an α/β core domain that consists of a central parallel β-sheet flanked by α-helices on both sides. The catalytic scaffold is located in this central core, which is composed of four loops. Loop 1 contains the nucleophilic aspartate, loops 2 and 3 contain the serine from motif II and the lysine from motif III, respectively, and loop 4 contains the two aspartate residues of motif III involved in metal coordination. Despite the absence of the three mega-loops, the new model was significantly improved compared to the previous one [25] and allowed docking studies to be performed in the active site region.

3.2. Docking Assays

Docking studies with Pcho performed with wild-type PchP (wtPchP) only showed one major conformation for the substrate regardless of whether the entire protein or only the HAD pocket was mapped (Figure 1(b)). The alternative conformations were very similar, with only slightly modified rotation angles. The presence of two interaction sites for Pcho in PchP was measured in crude extracts [30] and in the purified enzyme [3], and attention was focused on finding an explanation for this observation. A second conformation of Pcho was detected when the docking study was performed with the wtPchP-Pcho complex obtained after the first docking. A second molecule of Pcho was docked into the pocket at its alkylammonium moiety in an empty zone of the pocket (Figure 1(b)). The binding energy of the second conformation was found to be much higher (−75.5 Kcal mol−1 versus −4.9 Kcal mol−1), indicating that the substrate first binds in the catalytic position with high affinity, and only when this site is occupied is a second molecule of substrate able to bind into the pocket in an inhibitory conformation. The inhibitory conformation of the substrate may block the entry and/or exit of the substrate and products; the enzyme-substrate-substrate complex can be productive, but with much lower efficiency. This result explains the inhibition caused by high concentrations of substrate. Considering the pocket shape detected by ICM-Pro, as well as the kinetic and docking results, we hypothesized that the binding pocket is composed of a catalytic site (with a subsite for the phosphate moiety and a subsite for the alkylammonium moiety) together with an inhibitory site capable of recognizing the alkylammonium moiety of Pcho (or another NR4+ group) (Figure 1(b)). Therefore, it appeared likely that different alkylammonium compounds (AACs) could bind to both sites. Kinetic experiments seemed to confirm this possibility (the data are discussed at the end of the next section).

4. Biochemical Studies

PchP was discovered as an acid phosphatase (AcPase) whose activity, measured with p-nitrophenylphosphate (p-NPP) in the presence of Mg2+ at pH 5.0, is inhibited by choline, betaine, acetylcholine, Pcho, and many AACs [8, 9, 15]. These unusual acid phosphatase characteristics, measured in the laboratory [8, 31] or described by other authors [3236], led to the proposal that the AcPase produced by P. aeruginosa grown in the presence of choline or derivative metabolites is capable of catalyzing the hydrolysis of p-NPP, Pcho, and phosphoethanolamine [3]. Remarkably, the optimum pH (measured in the presence of Mg2+) depends on the substrate used; it is approximately 5.0 and 6.0 for p-NPP and phosphoethanolamine, respectively. The optimal pH range for Pcho was found to have a plateau between 5.0 and 8.0 [3]. Considering these data and the fact that PchP acts in the periplasmic space (a compartment where the pH may vary according to environmental conditions) [37], kinetic properties, including saturation by substrate, activation by divalent cations, and inhibition by AACs, were studied with Pcho as the substrate at pH 5.0 and 7.4, and with p-NPP as the substrate at pH 5.0 (with this latter substrate, there is no enzymatic activity at pH 7.4). The first studies were performed with a recombinant enzyme, initially as an intein fusion [4, 25, 26] and later with the enzyme expressed with a histidine tag [38]. The catalytic importance of the aminoacyl residues on motifs, I, II, and III was shown through site-directed mutagenesis of the aspartyl (31D, 33D) and threonyl (35T) residues of motif I, of the seryl (166S) residue of motif II, and of the lysyl (242K), glycyl (261G), and aspartyl residues (262D, 265D, and 267D) of motif III (Figure 1(c)) [25]. By comparison with the phosphoserine phosphatase of M. jannaschii [28], 31D is phosphorylated during phosphoester hydrolysis, and the oxygen atom of the carboxyl group of 31D may be involved in nucleophilic attack on the phosphorus atom of the substrate (either p-NPP or Pcho). The 33D residue is important for catalysis because it participates in the phosphorylation of 31D. Considering the motif III residues 262D, 265D, and 267D, it has been shown that 262D and 267D are the aspartyl residues involved in catalysis. Additionally, it has been shown that the positively charged group of lysyl residue 242K is necessary to stabilize the negative charge of the phosphate [25]. After confirming the residues that interact with phosphate and magnesium, we focused our interest on the interaction with the choline moiety of the substrate. This approach was based on comparison to the human enzyme PHOSPHO1 (a phosphocholine/phosphoetanolamine phosphatase also belonging to the HAD superfamily) [39], PHOSPHO2 [40], and choline binding proteins of Gram (+) bacteria [41]. We selected residues 42E, 43E, and the aromatic triplet 82YYY84 as possible candidates to interact with Pcho and p-NPP. Using a comprehensive approach including homology modeling, site-directed mutagenesis, and kinetic and docking studies, we show that the residues mentioned above interact differently with Pcho and p-NPP. We found that 43E of PchP is critical for the distinctive inhibition produced by high concentrations of Pcho and that the absence of the side chain in that position makes PchP a more efficient acid phosphatase. 42E has relevance in substrate recognition because its substitution with alanine decreased activity with p-NPP but increased activity with Pcho. Because mutations in residues 43E and the three tyrosines affect both the affinity for substrate and the inhibitory effect for high levels of Pcho, we believe that both a catalytic and regulatory site are present in PchP and that they are near each other in space and even share residues [42]. After identifying the catalytic pocket of PchP through kinetic experiments and developing a single structural model [25, 26], the interactions of the phosphate moiety with the activating metal ions Mg2+, Zn2+, and Cu2+ were investigated [26]. The first results obtained with the recombinant enzyme confirmed previous findings [3, 43]. The new results indicated that at pH 5.0, with p-NPP plus suitable concentrations of different metal ions, the activity of PchP measured in the presence of Zn2+ or Cu2+ was higher compared to that with Mg2+. Classic kinetic experiments such as saturation curves with substrate or metal ions led to the conclusion that with the p-NPP substrate, the catalytic efficiency of PchP activated by Zn2+ is approximately 2.5- or 3.2-fold more efficient than with Cu2+ or Mg2+, respectively. The 𝐾M value of p-NPP was found to be identical when the enzyme was measured with Mg2+ or Zn2+ but increased approximately 3.5-fold in the presence of Cu2+. However, the 𝐾A value indicated that Zn2+ and Cu2+ have higher affinity than Mg2+ for the metal site of PchP (0.01 mM, 0.02 mM, and 0.6 mM for Zn2+, Cu2+, and Mg2+, resp.) [26]. These results with wtPchP led to experiments designed to obtain kinetic parameters with different mutants. Although different catalytic constants were obtained, no appreciable difference with respect to the activation produced by different divalent cations was detected. Other divalent cations such as Mn2+, Co2+, and Cr2+ (experiments were performed in strict conditions to avoid the oxidation of Cr2+ to Cr3+) also activated acid phosphatase activity. The results obtained by replacing Zn2+ with Co2+ will be useful for the study of different physicochemical properties through the utilization of electronic spectroscopy of Co2+-PchP derivatives. The catalytic site of PchP lacks both histidine and cysteine, two amino acids that contribute nitrogen or sulfur atoms to coordination complexes in many Zn2+- or Cu2+-dependent enzymes that generally form tetrahedral or square planar complexes, respectively [4447]. The utilization of the METALDETECTOR program [48] also indicated that the probability that either histidine or cysteine bound to the metal ion was very low (less than 10% [49]). After this information our focus was placed on the idea that Zn2+, Cu2+, and Mg2+ may form octahedral coordination complexes with the oxygen atom of the carboxylic group of aspartic acid and the main chain carbonyl oxygen. Therefore, we concluded that the three metal ions form an octahedral complex with electron pairs from six oxygen atoms from the two –COO–, one (Oδ1) (31D), one (Oδ2) (262D), one carbonyl (33D), one phosphate (O1–P), and two water molecules [25, 26, 38]. All of these donor groups are Lewis bases, and the metal ions are Lewis acids. Pearson [50, 51] introduced the concept of “hardness,” (η) “The nonchemical meaning of the word “hardness” is resistance to deformation or change;” this concept is useful for explaining the reasons why Cu2+ and Zn2+ are better activators than Mg2+. Chemically speaking, “hardness is resistance of the chemical potential to change in the number of electrons” [52]. This author also introduced the concept of chemical hardness and softness in connection with the behavior of Lewis acids and bases, adding, “hard acids prefer to coordinate to hard bases and soft acids to soft bases.” Therefore, an acid with hardness 𝜂A would prefer to bind to a base with similar hardness, 𝜂B. In our case [26], Mg2+ is a hard acid (𝜂A = 32.5), whereas Zn2+ and Cu2+ have intermediate values (with 𝜂A values of 8.3 and 10.8, resp.) [52]. The hardness parameters (𝜂B) for Lewis bases participating in octahedral complexes are approximately 6 to 7. Because these values are closer to the hardness values of Zn2+ and Cu2+ and are supported by kinetic data, we conclude that it is easier for these metal ions to form coordination complexes in the active site of PchP than for Mg2+. Next, the catalytic mechanism of PchP was studied; Cu2+ was discarded for simplicity, and the following experiments were performed with Mg2+ and Zn2+. The catalytic constant (𝑘cat) values with p-NPP [53] or Pcho [15] as substrates were found to be 1.7- and 1.2-fold higher for Zn2+ than for Mg2+, respectively. The experiments were performed at pH 5.0 (in acetate buffer) and pH 7.4 (in Hepes buffer) because with Pcho as the substrate and Mg2+ as the activator, the optimal pH is a plateau between 5.0 and 8.0 [3]. The first experiments, which were needed to set experimental conditions for the following kinetic studies, were surprising. With Mg2+, the same enzymatic activity was measured at pH 5.0 and 7.4. With Zn2+, pronounced activity was found at pH 5.0, but no activity was detected at pH 7.4 (Figure 2). We next focused on this lack of PchP activity with Zn2+ at neutral or alkaline pH values. The model of the enzyme, including amino acids in the vicinity of motifs I, II, and III, was considered in addition to the ionization of different PchP active site groups involved in the ionization of Pcho and the possible hydrolysis of the metal ion [38]. The model presented in Figure 1(c) shows the hydrophobic amino acid residues located in the β-sheets motifs I (27YAVF30) and III (257ILVA260). These residues are responsible for creating an environment with a low dielectric constant (ε) which according to Dudev and Lim [54] is necessary for the coordination of the metal ion. Kinetic results, obtained at pH 7.4 with saturated Mg2+ and low Zn2+ concentrations and analyzed with the simulator DYNAFIT [55], indicated that Zn2+ might bind to free PchP or PchP-Mg2+ complexes with the same affinity to form the nonproductive complex E-Zn2+. In addition to this experiment, it has also been shown that inhibition produced by Zn2+ in the presence or absence of Mg2+ is reversible and dependent on the pH of the reaction. To explain the changes in activity with Zn2+ and without Mg2+, the ionization state of the enzyme was ruled out as a factor. However, we considered in detail the change of Pcho ionization due to the inactivation of PchP at pH 7.4. We considered the ionization of O-Pcho using the software [ACD, Inc. (http://www.acdlabs.com)] according to the equations O=P(O-choline)(OH)2O=P(O-choline)(OH)O+H+,p𝐾26.0(a)O=P(O-choline)(OH)OO=P(O-choline)(O)2=+H+,p𝐾38.0(b) Equation (b) was discarded, and (a) was used. The Henderson-Hasselbalch equation (pH=p𝐾a+log[A]/[HA]) was used for pH 5.0, 7.4, and pH was set to the p𝐾2 value. According to (a):at pH 5.0; 5.0=6.0+log[A]/[HA] and results in the following: [A]/[HA]=0.1, at pH 6.0; 6.0=6.0+log[A]/[HA] and results in the following: [A]/[HA]=1, at pH 7.4; 7.4=6.0+log[A]/[HA] and results in the following: [A]/[HA]=25,

at pH 7.4, the main ionic species [A]=[O=P(O-choline)(OH)O] is approximately 250 times more concentrated than at pH 5.0. Under the assay conditions, this anion (free in solution or as a substrate bound to the enzyme) is neutralized by monovalent cations present in the reaction buffer (Na+ or K+ at pH 5.0 or 7.4). This is true when enzyme’s activity is measured in the presence of Mg2+ or Zn2+. The protonation/deprotonation of O-phosphocholine at different pH values does not change in the presence of Mg2+ or Zn2+. Therefore, it was assumed that the inhibition produced by Zn2+ is caused by an intrinsic property of this ion. The catalysis produced by PchP in the metal ion binding site to form either an octahedral complex [Mg2+L2−1L20(H2O)2] or [Zn2+L2−1L20(H2O)2] is formed by Me2+-two COO (provided by 31D and 262D residues), -one C=O (provided by 33D), -one O=P (from O=P(O-choline)(OH)O or O=P(O-choline)OH2), and the oxygen atoms from two molecules of water. The charge on O=P(O-choline)(OH)O was ignored because it is not part of the coordination sphere of the metal ion. After these considerations, the results were explained considering the molecular model of the PchP active site [25, 26, 38] in addition to previously described data and theoretical calculations [44, 45, 5664] related to the coordination of the metal ion with water and their hydrolysis at different pH values, the interaction of carboxylic and carbonyl groups, the substitution of metal ions in the active site, and the hydrophobic cavity with a low ε proximal to the active site of PchP. The inhibition produced by Zn2+ at pH 7.4 may be interpreted as the change from octahedral to tetrahedral coordination geometry, which is produced by the hydrolysis of the [Zn2+L−12L02(H2O)2] complex. Zn2+, which has an octahedral coordination at pH 5.0 and forms a complex with a charge of zero [Zn2+L−12L02(H2O)2], may change to a negatively charged complex of either [Zn2+L−12L02(OH)−1(H2O)]−1 or [Zn2+L−12L02 (OH)−12]−2 at pH 7.4. Therefore, the loss of catalytic activity at pH 7.4 may produce changes in the coordination geometry at the metal binding site of PchP from an octahedral (active enzyme) to a tetrahedral (inactive enzyme) arrangement. Contrary to what occurs with Zn2+, the neutral complex of [Mg2+L−12L02(H2O)2] that forms an octahedral complex does not change between pH 5.0 and 7.4. The consequence is that at both pH values, the PchP activity is similar when Mg2+ is utilized as an activator ion [38] (Figure 2). An interesting point emergent of our results is to emphasize that the presence or absence of activity in enzymes of the HAD superfamily may be caused by the hydrolysis of the metal produced by variation of the pH in the reaction mixture. For example, an enzymatic activity measured at neutral or alkaline pH can be active when Mg2+ is present but can be inactivated by Zn2+ or other ions belonging to the transition metals. As above indicated, the another point of interest was to understand the catalytic mechanism of PchP with Pcho as the substrate, Mg2+ or Zn2+ as activators, and the effect produced by AACs. Saturation curves with different concentrations of Pcho analyzed in the DYNAFYT software have led to the conclusion that the catalytic mechanism follows a random sequential mechanism for the binding of Pcho, Mg2+, or Zn2+ (Figure 3) [15]. However, these ions do not change the 𝐾M value of Pcho. The noteworthy difference between these ions is that the 𝐾A value for Zn2+ is approximately one thousand times lower than the values obtained with Mg2+. Another difference is that Zn2+ is more effective than Mg2+ at avoiding the inhibition produced by high Pcho concentrations. A random mechanism also occurs for the interaction of a second substrate molecule at the second site of the enzyme, which apparently has an affinity for the choline moiety of the substrate or another AAC. These mechanisms are independent of the characteristics of the central metal ion; however, Zn2+ is more effective than Mg2+ at alleviating the inhibition produced by the entry of the second Pcho molecule or different AACs [15]. This result suggests that Zn2+ induces a conformational change in the active center that is communicated to the peripheral anionic site and produces a compact or closed structure. In contrast, a relaxed or open conformation occurs when Mg2+ acts as the metal ion activator of the enzyme. To confirm the presence of a second site for the alkylammonium moiety in the PchP molecule, the following compounds were utilized: trimethylamine, tetramethylammonium, choline, chlorocholine, betaine, hexamethonium, decamethonium, tubocurarine, and neostigmine. All these compounds produce inhibition with both competitive and partially uncompetitive components. The presence of two 𝐾i values also indicates that these compounds, independent of the degree of inhibition produced (the changes produced for the nonalkylammonium moiety present in the inhibitor), might bind to two sites of PchP (e.g., for tetramethylammonium, the 𝐾i1 and 𝐾i2 values are 0.17 and 0.035 mM, respectively) [15]. The concordance between these results and the above-mentioned bioinformatic studies led to the proposal that PchP contains an active site with subsites where the metal ion, the phosphate, and the trimethylammonium moieties are bound. The inhibitory site responsible for the inhibition by high substrate concentrations or different AACs could be a peripheral site located in the vicinity of the active site (Figures 1(b) and 1(c)).

5. Biophysical Properties and Crystallization of PchP

Simultaneously, attention was focused on studying the physicochemical properties of PchP to facilitate crystallizing the enzyme. The first approach to obtaining enough enzyme to achieve its crystallization and to study its physicochemical properties was performed as previously described [53]. The enzyme was purified from urea, and the inclusion bodies were solubilized and refolded by dialysis. The refolded PchP consisted of a mixture of native PchP and an alternatively folded enzyme aggregate that was slowly converted to the native state. It was proposed that the active enzyme is a dimer, and the catalytic parameters of native PchP for the hydrolysis of p-NPP were found to be in excellent agreement with the values reported previously for PchP expressed in Escherichia coli as an N-terminal fusion to intein or a histidine tag and purified in the folded state [25, 26, 53]. Although some data were collected, the preparation was not useful for obtaining crystals capable of diffracting. Therefore, efforts were focused on obtaining the enzyme as previously described [38]. Using this preparation technique, crystals were obtained [65], and the crystallization of PchP in the presence of different ligands will be used to solve its structure and to reveal the catalytic mechanism and the possible conformations produced by the different ligands. A structure of the enzyme has recently been obtained and is shown in Figure 4.

6. Other Microorganisms Containing PchP

Before the PA5292 gene in the P. aeruginosa PAO1 genome was found to be responsible for the synthesis of PchP [4], this protein was known as a hypothetical protein. This enzyme is also present in P. fluorescens, P. putida, and P. syringae [49, 66]. The PchPs found in these bacteria were also activated by Mg2+, Zn2+, and Cu2+; Zn2+ was the best metal activator of all these enzymes. The kinetic data and the 𝐾A values for the metal ions defined two groups; one of the groups is formed by P. aeruginosa and P. putida and has a low affinity for Mg2+ with apparent 𝐾A values of 130 𝜇M and 190 𝜇M, respectively, and the other group is formed by P. fluorescens and P. syringae, which have a high affinity for Mg2+ with apparent 𝐾A values of 38 𝜇M and 30 𝜇M, respectively. Catalytic efficiency is defined as the relationship 𝑉max/𝐾M; in this respect, the enzyme isolated from P. fluorescens is better at catalyzing the hydrolysis of p-NPP in the presence of Mg2+, Zn2+, or Cu2+ with 𝑉max/𝐾M values of 2.3, 2.5, and 3.4 for Mg2+, Zn2+, and Cu2+, respectively, followed by those of P. aeruginosa and P. putida (0.3–0.4 Umg−1mM−1 for the three metals) and finally by P. syringae (0.03–0.04 Umg−1mM−1, for the three metals) [49]. Finally, information from many genomes utilizing the precomputed BLAST results for “http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/protein/15600485 phosphorylcholine phosphatase [Pseudomonas aeruginosa PAO1]” matched 351 proteins in 173 species (331 bacteria, represented principally by Pseudomonas and Burkholderia species such as P. aeruginosa, P. fluorescens, P. syringae, P. savastanoi, P. entomophila, P. putida, B. ambifaria, B. cenocepacia, B. multivorans, and other bacteria such as Azospirillum sp, and Lutiella nitrofe). PchP activity has also been found in plant pathogenic fungi such as Glomerella graminicola, Leptosphaeria maculans, Pyrenophora teres, P. tritici, Gibberella zeae, Nectria haematococca, Verticillium albo-atrum, Magnaporthe oryzae, and Phaeosphaeria nodorum [67]. A multiple alignment of PchP found in different organisms utilizing Clustal X [19] is shown in Figure 5(a); evolutionary relationships and a phylogenetic tree produced by the software [2023] are shown in Figure 5(b). Because all of these organisms might contain PchP with similar properties to the enzyme found in P. aeruginosa, and the crystallized enzyme in the presence of different ligands will soon be solved, the global approach used by our group to study PchP will culminate with the determination of its structure. We expect that further studies might be applied to the development of new and very effective inhibitors of PchP through metal binding, phosphate binding, or alkylammonium binding levels.

Acknowledgments

Carlos Eduardo Domenech is an honorary professor consult at the UNRC (ad honorem) and is a retired career member of the Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas (CONICET). Angela Teresita Lisa is career member of the CONICET. Paola Rita Beassoni acknowledges fellowship support from CONICET; Lisandro Horacio Otero is from CONICET and the Ministerio de Ciencia y Técnología-Córdoba (MinCyT-Cba). The authors thank Dr. Armando Albert and Dr. Lourdes Infantes (Instituto de Química-Física "Rocasolano", Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas, Ciencia e Investigación, Madrid, Spain) who allowed them to use the structure of PchP before publication (Otero et al. 2011, in preparation). They would also like to thank Dr. Danilo Gonzalez-Nilo of the Centro de Bioinformática y Simulación Molecular, Universidad de Talca, Talca, Chile, for his valuable help on the docking experiments performed with the ICM program. They also appreciate the participation of Cristhian Boetsch and Diego G. Sanchez (UNRC) in the performance of bioinformatics and molecular experiments, respectively. Their thanks are to ACD, Inc. (http://www.acdlabs.com), which provided the ionization constants for phosphorylcholine. This work was supported by grants from SECYT-UNRC, and CONICET of Argentina given to Angela Teresita Lisa, and MinCyT-Cba given to Angela Teresita Lisa and Paola Rita Beassoni. Angela Teresita Lisa also acknowledges the support from Red Bio-Bio-Mol I and Red de Bioinformática y Biología de Sistemas from the Secretaría de Políticas Universitarias (SPU) of Argentina. Lisandro Horacio Otero would also like to thank Fundación Carolina, Spain for fellowship support.

Disclosure

Carlos Eduardo Domenech dedicates this paper to Professor Dr. Antonio Blanco, National University of Cordoba, Argentina, from whom Carlos Eduardo Domenech learned that the quality of a scientist is measured by the honesty, the seriousness, and responsibility in scientific work, selfless teaching, and mutual respect between all laboratory personnel and the entire scientific community.