HHMI Author Manuscript HHMI Author Manuscript Published as: Science. 2012 July 27; 337(6093): . Absence of detectable arsenate in DNA from arsenate-grown GFAJ-1 cells Marshall Louis Reaves1,2, Sunita Sinha3, Joshua D. Rabinowitz1,4, Leonid Kruglyak1,5,6, and Rosemary J. Redfield3,† 1Lewis Sigler Institute for Integrative Genomics, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ, USA 2Department of Molecular Biology, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ, USA 3Department of Zoology, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada 4Department of Chemistry, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ, USA 5Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Lewis-Sigler Institute for Integrative Genomics, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ, USA 6Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ, USA Abstract A strain of Halomonas bacteria, GFAJ-1, has been reported to be able to use arsenate as a nutrient when phosphate is limiting, and to specifically incorporate arsenic into its DNA in place of phosphorus. However, we have found that arsenate does not contribute to growth of GFAJ-1 when phosphate is limiting and that DNA purified from cells grown with limiting phosphate and abundant arsenate does not exhibit the spontaneous hydrolysis expected of arsenate ester bonds. Furthermore, mass spectrometry showed that this DNA contains only trace amounts of free arsenate and no detectable covalently bound arsenate. Wolfe-Simon et al. isolated strain GFAJ-1 from the arsenic-rich sediments of California’s Mono Lake by its ability to grow through multiple subculturings in artificial Mono Lake medium AML60 that lacked added phosphate but had high concentrations of arsenate (+As/ −P condition) (1). Because GFAJ-1 grew in −P medium only when arsenate was provided, and because significant amounts of arsenate were detected in subcellular fractions, growth was attributed to the use of arsenate in place of phosphate. However, the basal level of phosphate contaminating the −P medium was reported to be 3–4 μM (1), which previous studies of low-phosphate microbial communities suggest is sufficient to support moderate growth (2). GFAJ-1 grew well on medium supplemented with ample phosphate but no arsenate (1500 μM PO4, +P/-As condition), indicating that GFAJ-1 is not obligately arsenate-dependent. Wolfe-Simon et al. (1) further reported that arsenic was incorporated into the DNA backbone of GFAJ-1 in place of phosphorus, with an estimated 4% replacement of P by As based on the As:P ratio measured in agarose gel slices containing DNA samples. This †Corresponding author: redfield@zoology.ubc.ca. Supplementary Materials: www.sciencemag.org Materials and Methods Fig. S1 References (9–11) Tables S1 to S2 HHMI Author Manuscript HHMI Author Manuscript HHMI Author Manuscript Reaves et al. Page 2 finding was surprising because arsenate is predicted to reduce rapidly to arsenite in physiological conditions (3, 4), and because arsenate esters in aqueous solution are known to be rapidly hydrolyzed (5). We have now tested this report by culturing GFAJ-1 cells supplied by the authors (1) and by analyzing highly purified DNA from phosphate-limited cells grown with and without arsenate. Wolfe-Simon et al. reported that GFAJ-1 cells grew very slowly in AML60 medium (doubling time ~12 hours), and that, when phosphate was not added to the medium, cells failed to grow unless arsenate (40 mM) was provided (1). However, although we obtained strain GFAJ-1 from these authors, in our hands GFAJ-1 was unable to grow at all in AML60 medium containing the specified trace elements and vitamins, even with 1500 μM sodium phosphate added as specified in (1). We confirmed the strain’s identity using RT-PCR and sequencing of 16S rRNA, using primers specified by Wolfe-Simon et al. (1); this gave a sequence identical to that reported for strain GFAJ-1. We then found that addition of small amounts of yeast extract, tryptone or individual amino acids to basal AML60 medium allowed growth, with doubling times of 90–180 minutes. Medium with 1 mM glutamate added was therefore used for subsequent experiments (12). With 1500 μM phosphate but no added arsenate (Wolfe-Simon et al.’s −As/+P condition), this medium produced ~ 2 × 108 cells/ml, similar to the −As/+P yield obtained by WolfeSimon et al. (1). As expected, the growth yield depended on the level of phosphate supplementation (Fig. 1), with even unsupplemented medium allowing significant growth (~ 2 × 106 cells/ml). As ICP-MS analysis showed that this medium contained only 0.5 μM contaminating phosphate, our supplementing with an additional 3.0 μM phosphate replicates Wolfe-Simon et al.’s ‘−P’ culture condition. The growth analyses shown in Fig. 1 were performed in the absence of arsenate, and showed that GFAJ-1 does not require arsenate for growth in media with any level of phosphate. The cause of the discrepancies between our growth results and those of Wolfe-Simon et al. is not clear. The arsenate dependence they observed may reflect the presence in their arsenate (purity and supplier unknown) of a contaminant that filled the same metabolic role as our glutamate supplement. Our +As and −As cultures grew to similar densities, and we never observed cases where +As cultures grew but −As cultures did not. The phosphate dependence we observed is also consistent with that expected from work on other species (2). To investigate the possible incorporation of arsenate into the GFAJ-1 DNA backbone, we purified and analyzed DNA from GFAJ-1 cells grown in four differently supplemented versions of AML60 medium, matching those analyzed by Wolfe-Simon et al. i.e. −As/−P: no arsenate, 3.5 μM phosphate; +As/−P: 40 mM arsenate, 3.5 μM phosphate; −As/+P: no arsenate, 1500 μM phosphate; +As/+P: 40 mM arsenate, 1500 μM phosphate. Initial purification of DNA consisted of two preliminary organic extractions, precipitation from 70% ethanol, digestion with RNase and proteinase, two additional organic extractions, and a final ethanol precipitation (12). DNA was collected from 70% ethanol by spooling rather than centrifugation, since this reduces contamination with other substances insoluble in ethanol (6). Wolfe-Simon et al. suggested that arsenate ester bonds in GFAJ-1 DNA might be protected from hydrolysis by intracellular proteins or compartmentalization of the DNA (7). We therefore tested whether purification exposed GFAJ-1 DNA to spontaneous hydrolysis. Gel analysis of DNA immediately after purification revealed fragments of > 30 kb, whether cells were grown with limiting or abundant phosphate, and with or without 40 mM arsenate (Fig. 2A). We also reexamined this DNA after two months of storage at 4 °C. All preparations HHMI Author Manuscript Science. Author manuscript; available in PMC 2013 December 02. HHMI Author Manuscript HHMI Author Manuscript Reaves et al. Page 3 showed very similar sized fragments of dsDNA and of ssDNA (Figs. 2B and 2C), with no evidence of hydrolysis. Haemophilus influenzae DNA served as a control for gel migration, indicating that GFAJ-1 DNA is not associated with hydrolysis-protecting proteins or other macromolecules that might have persisted through the purification. Unless arsenate-ester bonds are intrinsically stable in DNA, our analysis estimates a minimum separation between arsenates in the DNA backbone of at least 25 kb, three orders of magnitude below that estimated by Wolfe-Simon et al. Arsenate in bonds that were stable to spontaneous hydrolysis should be detectable as free arsenate, arsenate-containing mononucleotides, or arsenate-containing di-nucleotides after enzymatic digestion of purified DNA. We therefore used liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS) to analyze GFAJ-1 DNA for arsenate after digestion with P1 and snake venom nucleases (12). Relevant molecular species were identified by negative mode, full scan, high-mass resolution LC-MS analysis (12). This method was used to analyze two independent replicate DNA preparations from cells grown in either +As/−P or −As/+P medium, and fractions from CsCl gradient analyses of these DNAs. The initial DNA preparations of +As/−P DNAs contained some free arsenate anion (H2AsO4−) (Table 1); similar to levels reported by Wolfe-Simon et al. (1). This arsenate was largely removed by three serial washes with distilled water; digested washed DNA contained arsenate at a level slightly higher than in the water blank (Fig. 3 and Table 1). Thus, we concluded that most of the arsenate we detected after preliminary DNA purification arose by contamination from the arsenate-rich (40 mM) growth medium. Further analyses compared the nuclease-digested and washed fractions obtained from CsCl isopycnic density gradient centrifugation of the DNAs (Fig. 3) (12). The arsenate detection limit for these measurements was ~ 5 × 10−8 M (Table S1); a level that if present in the fractions with the most DNA would correspond to an As:P ratio of < 0.1%, 50-fold lower than the 4% ratio reported by Wolfe-Simon et al. Although traces of arsenate (or a contaminant of similar mass to arsenate) were found in several fractions of the CsCl gradient, the arsenate peak never exceeded the limit of detection, and a similar intensity signal at m/z of arsenate was observed in the water blank. There was no evidence that the arsenate trace co-migrated with the DNA. In contrast, normal phosphate-containing deoxynucleotides were observed in rough proportion to the abundance of DNA throughout the gradient for both the +As/−P and −As/+P cells (Fig. 4A and Table S2). Likewise, no arsenate-conjugated mono- or dinucleotides were detected by exact mass (Figs. 4B and 4D). Although retention time and ionization efficiency could not be validated using standards for these molecules, their behavior, if the molecules were stable, would be expected to resemble their phosphorylated analogs sufficiently to allow detection. Finally, an enrichment of deoxynucleosides per ng DNA obtained from GFAJ-1 grown in the +As/ −P condition, relative to either −As/+P or −As/−P conditions, could indicate nicked DNA resulting from arsenate-ester hydrolysis. However, we did not detect any enrichment despite detecting deoxyadenosine, deoxyguanosine, deoxycytidine, and thymidine (Fig. S1 and Table S2). Thus, while we detected arsenate associated with GFAJ-1 DNA, we found no evidence for arsenate bound sufficiently tightly to resist washing with water, nor able to comigrate with the DNA in a CsCl gradient. Differences in DNA purity can readily explain the conflict of these results with Wolfe-Simon et al.’s claim that GFAJ-1 uses arsenate to replace scarce phosphate in its DNA. Our LC-MS analyses rule out incorporation of arsenic in DNA at the ~ 0.1% level, and a much lower limit is suggested by our gel analysis of DNA integrity. Given the chemical similarity of arsenate to phosphate, it is likely that GFAJ-1 may sometimes assimilate HHMI Author Manuscript Science. Author manuscript; available in PMC 2013 December 02. HHMI Author Manuscript HHMI Author Manuscript Reaves et al. Page 4 arsenate into some small molecules in place of phosphate, such as sugar phosphates or nucleotides. Although the ability to tolerate or correct very low level incorporation of arsenic into DNA could be a contributor to the arsenate resistance of GFAJ-1, such low level incorporation would not be a biologically functional substitute for phosphate, and thus would have no significant impact on the organism’s requirements for phosphate. From a broader perspective, GFAJ-1 cells growing in Mono Lake face the challenge of discriminating an essential salt (PO4, 400 μM) from a highly abundant but toxic chemical mimic (AsO4, 200 μM). Similar salt management challenges are encountered by many other microorganisms, for instance those growing in environments with scarce potassium and plentiful ammonia (8). Organisms typically adapt to such conditions not by incorporating the mimic in place of the essential salt but by enriching for the salt at multiple stages, from preferential membrane transport to the selectivity of metabolic enzymes. The end result is that the fundamental biopolymers conserved across all forms of life remain, in terms of chemical backbone, invariant. (9) (10) (11) Supplementary Material Refer to Web version on PubMed Central for supplementary material. Acknowledgments MLR is supported by a Graduate Research Fellowship from the National Science Foundation. JDR is supported by the CAREER Award from the National Science Foundation. LK is an Investigator of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute and a James S. McDonnell Foundation Centennial Fellow. RJR thanks the Canadian Institutes of Health Research for funding, Jodi Blum and Ron Oremland for providing strain GFAJ-1, Maryam Khoshnoodi for the trace element mix, the Charles Thompson lab for use of their BioScreen Analyzer, and Simon Silver and Christopher Rensing for helpful discussions. We also thank the ICP Laboratory in the Department of Geosciences at Princeton University for assistance with ICP-MS analysis. References 1. Wolfe-Simon F, et al. Science. 2011; 332:1163. [PubMed: 21127214] 2. Cotner JB, Hall EK, Scott JT, Heldal M. Front Microbiol. 2010; 1:132. [PubMed: 21687767] 3. Schoepp-Cothenet B, et al. Science. 2011; 332:1149. author reply 1149. [PubMed: 21622707] 4. Lebrun E, et al. Mol Biol Evol. 2003; 20:686. [PubMed: 12679550] 5. Baer C, Edwards JO, Rieger PH. Inorg Chem. 1981; 20:905. 6. Avery OT, Macleod CM, McCarty M. J Exp Med. 1944; 79:137. [PubMed: 19871359] 7. Wolfe-Simon F, et al. Science. 2011; 332:1149j. 8. Hess DC, Lu W, Rabinowitz JD, Botstein D. PLoS Biol. 2006; 4:e351. [PubMed: 17048990] 9. Wang L, et al. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2011; 108:2963. [PubMed: 21285367] 10. Lu W, et al. Anal Chem. 2010; 82:3212. [PubMed: 20349993] 11. Zimmermann MT, Kloczkowski A, Jernigan RL. BMC Bioinformatics. 2011; 12:264. [PubMed: 21711533] 12. Materials and methods are available as supplementary material on Science Online. HHMI Author Manuscript Science. Author manuscript; available in PMC 2013 December 02. Reaves et al. Page 5 HHMI Author Manuscript HHMI Author Manuscript HHMI Author Manuscript Fig. 1. Growth curves of GFAJ-1 in AML60 medium supplemented with different concentrations of phosphate Each line is the mean of 10 replicate 300 μl cultures in wells of a Bioscreen C Growth Analyzer. The phosphate additions used to replicate the ‘−P’ and ‘+P’ conditions of (1) are indicated. Science. Author manuscript; available in PMC 2013 December 02. Reaves et al. Page 6 HHMI Author Manuscript HHMI Author Manuscript HHMI Author Manuscript Fig. 2. Integrity of GFAJ-1 chromosomal DNA after long-term storage Lanes: 1 and 7: HindIII digest of lambda DNA; 2: H. influenzae chromosomal DNA; 3–6: GFAJ-1 chromosomal DNA grown in the specified combinations of As and P (−As: no arsenate; +As, 40 mM arsenate; −P, 3 μM added phosphate, +P, 1500 μM added phosphate). Panel A. ~100 ng of GFAJ-1 DNA immediately after purification. Panel B. 200 ng of the same DNAs after 2 months storage in Tris EDTA at 4°C. Panel C. The same DNAs as B, but 800 ng/lane and after 10 min at 95 °C. Science. Author manuscript; available in PMC 2013 December 02. HHMI Author Manuscript Reaves et al. Page 7 Fig. 3. LC-MS analysis of arsenate in purified and CsCl fractioned DNA from arsenate-grown GFAJ-1 cells Representative extracted ion chromatograms for arsenate (mass-to-charge ratio, m/z = 140.9174 +/− 3 ppm) are shown as the chromatographic retention time in minutes plotted against intensity in ion counts. Sample identity is indicated to the right, along the axis extending into the page. DNA from arsenate-grown GFAJ-1 cells (+As/−P undigested gDNA) was analyzed by LC-MS at a 1:10 dilution, as were the water wash (+As/−P wash of gDNA), the same DNA following washing and enzymatic digestion (+As/−P washed, digested DNA), and finally, fractions of the same DNA after a CsCl gradient purification and digestion (+As/−P CsCl Fractions #1 – #8, with DNA concentrating in Fractions #6, #7, and #8). Potassium arsenate standards (Std 1.7e-6 to 1.7e-8 [M]) and a water blank were also analyzed. One of four representative experiments is shown. HHMI Author Manuscript HHMI Author Manuscript Science. Author manuscript; available in PMC 2013 December 02. Reaves et al. Page 8 HHMI Author Manuscript HHMI Author Manuscript HHMI Author Manuscript Fig. 4. LC-MS analysis of deoxynucleotides from purified and CsCl fractioned DNA from arsenate-grown GFAJ-1 cells Science. Author manuscript; available in PMC 2013 December 02. HHMI Author Manuscript Reaves et al. Page 9 Representative extracted ion chromatograms are shown as the chromatographic retention time in minutes plotted against intensity in ion counts. One of four representative experiments is shown. A. and B. Extracted ion chromatograms for A. deoxyadenosine-phosphate (dAMP; m/z = 330.0609 +/− 5 ppm) and B. its arsenate analog deoxyadenosine-arsenate (dAMA; m/z = 374.0087 +/− 5 ppm). DNA from arsenate grown GFAJ-1 cells (+As/−P washed, digested gDNA) was washed, digested, and analyzed by LC-MS, as was the same DNA following a CsCl gradient purification and digestion (+As/−P CsCl Fractions #1 – #8). To keep the peak on scale, the signal for +As/−P washed, digested gDNA has been multiplied by 0.5. This observed large peak matches the known retention time of dAMP. C. and D. Extracted ion chromatograms for C. the dideoxynucleotide deoxyadenosinephosphate (dAMP-dAMP; m/z = 643.1185 +/− 5 ppm) and D. its mono-arsenate analog deoxyadenosine-arsenate-deoxyadenosine-phosphate (dAMA-dAMP; m/z = 687.0663 +/− 5 ppm). DNA from arsenate grown GFAJ-1 cells (+As/−P washed, digested gDNA) was washed, digested, and analyzed by LC-MS, as was the same DNA following a CsCl gradient purification and digestion (+As/−P CsCl Fractions #1 – #8). Partially digested −As/+P DNA shows a large peak at the exact mass of dAMP-dAMP. HHMI Author Manuscript HHMI Author Manuscript Science. Author manuscript; available in PMC 2013 December 02. HHMI Author Manuscript HHMI Author Manuscript HHMI Author Manuscript Table 1 DNA, arsenate and nucleotide content of samples measured by absorbance and LC-MS. Reaves et al. Science. Author manuscript; available in PMC 2013 December 02. Sample A260 (DNA) Arsenate Compound dAMP dAMA dAMP-dAMP dAMA-dAMP AU (μg) Peak Area, ion counts Digested CsCl Fractions: (increasing density) #1 (top) 0.03 (0) 0 0 154 0 0 #2 0.01 (0) 0 0 0 0 0 #3 0.02 (0) 226 0 0 0 0 #4 0.01 (0) 0 160 0 0 0 #5 0.01 (0) 0 0 0 0 0 #6 0.82 (4.5) 157 39,000 0 0 0 #7 1.12 (6.7) 373 52,000 0 0 0 #8 (bottom) 0.44 (1.9) 300 3,700 0 0 197 Water blank 0 (0) 329 0 0 0 0 −As/+P partial digest (3.3) 515 0 0 21,000 210 +As/−P washed, digested DNA (1.7) 2625 186,457 0 241 202 +As/−P whole DNA (1:10 dil.) +As/−P wash of gDNA (300μL) (1.7) 2794 562 0 781 0 0 (0) 9545 182 207 0 221 Arsenate Standards [molar] 1.66×10−8 329 1.66×10−7 1959 1.66×10−5 59,925 Expected if DNA As:P = 0.04 (6.7) ~122,000 >0 >0 Page 10