Abstract
Fish population declines from thiamine (vitamin B1) deficiency have been widespread in ecologically and economically valuable organisms, ranging from the Great Lakes to the Baltic Sea and, most recently, the California coast. Thiamine deficiencies in predatory fishes are often attributed to a diet of prey fishes with high levels of thiamine-degrading (e.g., thiaminase) enzymes, such as alewives, rainbow smelt, and anchovies. Since their discovery, thiaminase I enzymes have been recognized for breaking down thiamine into its pyrimidine and thiazole moieties using various nucleophilic co-substrates to afford cleavage, but these studies have not thoroughly considered other factors that could modify enzyme activity. We found the thiaminase I enzyme from Clostridium botulinum efficiently degrades thiamine in the presence of pyridoxine (vitamin B6) as a co-substrate but has relatively limited activity in the presence of nicotinic acid (vitamin B3). Using fluorescence measurements, thiamine degradation in an over-the-counter complete multivitamin formulation was inhibited, and a B-complex formulation required co-substrate supplementation for maximal thiamine depletion. These studies prompted the evaluation of specific constituents contributing to thiaminase I inhibition by both chromatography and fluorescence assays: Cu2+ potently and irreversibly inhibited thiamine degradation; ascorbic acid was a strong but reversible inhibitor; Fe2+, Mn2+ and Fe3+ modulated thiamine degradation to a lesser degree. The enhancement by pyridoxine and inhibition by Cu2+ extended to thiaminase-mediated degradation from Burkholderia thailandensis, Paenibacillus thiaminolyticus, and Paenibacillus apiarius in tryptic soy broth supernatants. These co-substrate limitations and the common presence of inhibitory dietary factors complement recent studies reporting that the intended function of thiaminase enzymes is to recycle thiamine breakdown products for thiamine synthesis, not thiamine degradation.
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Introduction
The biological role of thiaminases—enzymes with the capacity to degrade thiamine, an essential vitamin required by all living organisms—has been a mystery since their discovery more than six decades ago1,2. Thiamine (vitamin B1) in its diphosphate form is an essential cofactor for enzymes involved in ATP generation via the TCA cycle and pentose phosphate pathway. Thiamine deficiency is causative of beriberi and Wernicke–Korsakoff syndrome, primarily affecting the cardiac and central nervous systems, respectively, in humans3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11. Similar disorders have been widespread in aquatic organisms, wildlife, and livestock, yielding the Cayuga, M74, and Early Mortality Syndromes in aquatic organisms; Chastek’s paralysis in foxes; and polioencephalomalacia in sheep and cattle12,13,14. Thiamine deficiencies have been attributed to: (1) an inability to absorb available dietary thiamine (often caused by alcoholism or bariatric surgery)15; (2) genetic factors that limit its cellular uptake or processing7; (3) restricted intake of thiamine-containing foods (e.g., white rice-based diets)16; (4) degradation of thiamine during food processing or storage17,18; or (5) the consumption of foods containing chemical constituents or enzymes that break down or complex with thiamine19. Enzymatic thiamine degradation was postulated as early as 1941, then later identified as being caused by either of two enzymes, thiaminase I (EC 2.1.5.2) or thiaminase II (EC 3.5.99.2). Thiaminase I enzymes break down thiamine into its pyrimidine and thiazole moieties using various nucleophilic co-substrates, including heterocyclic amines and sulfhydryl groups, to afford cleavage (Fig. 1); thiaminase II uses water as its nucleophile.
Bacteria are known producers of these enzymes, though the contributions of these enzymes to thiamine salvage and synthesis have only been recently clarified20,21,22,23. The production of thiaminase II in bacteria is more ubiquitous20,21; however, only select bacteria are known to produce thiaminase I, including Paenibacillus thiaminolyticus, Burkholderia thailandensis, Paenibacillus apiarius, Clostridium sporogenes, and Clostridium botulinum23,24,25,26. Thiaminase I has also been reported from various plants and fish27,28,29,30, although observations from fish have seldom included thorough evaluation of potential microbial origins. Thiaminase activity in the viscera of prey fish has been attributed to the gram-positive bacteria P. thiaminolyticus31,32,33, but this bacterium is not consistently found, suggesting the presence of other microbial or endogenous sources31,34,35. A recent publication describes the genetic basis of thiaminase activity in zebrafish themselves35. The beneficial function of an endogenous thiaminase that would deplete an essential vitamin from its host is not known, nor are the factors that contribute to enzyme expression and activity or whether this enzyme would contribute to normal or pathological levels of thiamine clearance.
Thiamine deficiency in wildlife populations has been identified as a potential threat to multiple taxonomic groups36. For example, managers and scientists have focused on thiamine deficiency as a cause of fishery declines in commercially valuable Baltic Sea37, Laurentian Great Lakes38, and most recently, U.S. Pacific coast salmon fisheries39. These and similar declines have been attributed to thiamine deficiency and consequent mortality in offspring of predatory fish consuming prey with high concentrations of the thiaminase I enzyme40.
Thiaminase I-induced thiamine deficiency has been commonly treated for many decades in domestic animals as diverse as sheep and fish through thiamine supplementation. Still, the variable circumstances leading to thiamine deficiency in these organisms have remained perplexing41. As thiaminase I requires a nucleophilic co-substrate for thiamine degradation, it is not only the enzyme levels but also the concentrations and identities of endogenous co-substrates that dictate l enzyme activity. Prior studies indicated that adding pyridine, an exogenous co-substrate, to fecal samples of lambs and whole blood samples of crucian carp (Carassius carassius) increased their thiaminase activity14,42. This indicated that insufficient levels of endogenous co-substrates were present in the samples to support maximal activity of the thiaminase I42 and supplementation with saturating concentrations of exogenous substrates allowed the maximum possible thiaminase I activity14,42,43. This suggests that thiamine-degrading activity by thiaminase I is influenced by dietary substrate composition and the thiamine degradation that is maximally possible with a co-substrate replete diet. In other studies, prolonged exposure was required to reproduce the symptoms of thiamine deficiency in hatchery fish consuming food with depleted thiamine content from the addition of P. thiaminolyticus44,45,46. Similarly, we noted an unexpected resilience of mammalian skeletal muscle cells in culture depleted of thiamine using recombinant thiaminase from C. botulinum. These observations prompted our inquiry into the efficiency of thiamine depletion and understanding of thiaminase-mediated thiamine depletion in complex matrices.
In this work, we investigated dietary constituents, including amino acids, vitamins, and minerals, that impact the extent and kinetics of thiamine digestion by thiaminase I from C. botulinum. Our studies were carried out with recombinant thiaminase I from C. botulinum that was overexpressed in Escherichia coli using both pure constituents and over-the-counter vitamin formulations. Thiaminase I from C. botulinum offers a notable example of this enzyme, with the destruction of thiamine potentially causing an exacerbation of the neurotoxic effects during a botulism infection47. C. botulinum Type A, B and F strains are known to produce thiaminase I, with Types A and B commonly associated with human disease24. Although studies on thiamine and botulism are limited, the available information suggests that thiamine supplementation can reduce toxicity and improve clinical outcomes48,49. We also consider the extent to which our primary findings, showing constituents that enhance and inhibit recombinant C. botulinum thiaminase activity, apply to thiaminases in culture supernatants produced by B. thailandensis, P. thiaminolyticus, and P. apiarius.
Materials and methods
Production and characterization of thiaminase I from Escherichia coli
The pET-28 plasmid containing the gene for C. botulinum thiaminase I (BcmE)50 was kindly provided to us by Dr. Chunhao Li and transformed into E. coli BL21. This His-tagged thiaminase was overexpressed in E. coli and was purified using a Ni-chelate resin using previously reported procedures51. The concentration of the purified enzyme was determined using the microBCA assay (ThermoFisher) and purity assessed using SDS-PAGE with Coomassie staining (see Supplementary Fig. S1).
Screening for thiaminase I natural co-substrates
To determine the effectiveness of various co-substrates towards thiamine degradation, a panel of amino acids and vitamins was incubated with thiamine at 37 °C for 2 h in the presence and absence of thiaminase I. The reactions were then treated with alkaline potassium ferricyanide to oxidize the remaining thiamine to thiochrome prior to fluorescence detection. Thiochrome is the highly fluorescent oxidation product of thiamine, which itself is not fluorescent52. Thiaminase-free controls were included to account for constituents that can potentially interfere with the efficiency of thiochrome conversion or yield background fluorescence unrelated to thiaminase. The difference in thiochrome fluorescence intensity from samples treated with and without thiaminase is attributed to thiamine, with the loss of signal corresponding to its degradation. The loss of thiochrome fluorescence was used to determine thiaminase I co-substrate effectiveness. For reactions showing significant activity and dietary relevance, we further monitored thiamine loss due to enzymatic thiamine degradation by LC–MS–MS to confirm observations based on the fluorescence intensity.
Potential co-substrate stock solutions including amino acids and vitamins were prepared at 100 mM in water or DMSO, depending on their solubility at this concentration. These constituents were diluted to 3 mM, thiamine to 30 µM, and thiaminase to 1.5 µg/mL in 20 mM MES/20 mM sodium chloride. These 3× dilutions were combined to yield a solution containing 150 µL of 1 mM co-substrate, 10 µM thiamine, and 0.5 µg/mL thiaminase I in triplicate in a polypropylene microtiter plate. The same compositions with buffer only in lieu of the thiaminase were used as a negative control. 4-Nitrothiophenol (4-NTP), a known efficient thiaminase I co-substrate48, was used as a positive control for thiaminase activity, and buffer or DMSO only at the same final dilution as used in co-substrates were included as vehicle controls. We restricted our panel of possible co-substrates to those that exhibited complete solubility at 3 mM in either water or 3% (v/v) DMSO in water. The plate was incubated in a pre-heated incubator at 37 °C for 2 h, unless otherwise specified. 5 µL of the samples were then diluted with 45 µL HPLC grade water in a black, 96-well microtiter plate (Eppendorf), then 100 µL of freshly prepared 0.0075% (w/v) potassium ferricyanide in 15% (w/v) sodium hydroxide (hereafter referred to as alkaline potassium ferricyanide) was added. After rapid mixing, the fluorescence was measured at λex = 360/15 nm, λem = 450/15 nm. GraphPad Prism version 9.4.1 was used for plotting and data analysis.
Liberation of thiamine from multivitamin supplements
Vitamin B1, Vitamin B Complex, and Multivitamin (Rite-Aid) pills were diluted with 50 mL simulated gastric fluid (0.7% hydrochloric acid, 0.9% (w/v) sodium chloride) and incubated at 37°C with vigorous vortexing every 30 min. over 2 h. Under these conditions, the pills completely disintegrated leaving free floating solids. The 50 mL falcon tubes were centrifuged at 3000×g for 5 min. The supernatant was removed and filtered through 0.45 µm pore membranes before further analysis. The composition of these vitamin formulations is listed in Supplementary Table S1.
Screening for thiaminase I inhibitors
Potential inhibitors were diluted to 3 mM, in a mixture containing thiamine (30 µM) and pyridoxine (3 mM), and thiaminase to 1 µg/mL in 20 mM MES/20 mM sodium chloride. These 3× dilutions were combined in equal volumes to yield a solution containing 1 mM pyridoxine, 10 µM thiamine, and 0 or 0.33 µg/mL thiaminase I in triplicate in a polypropylene microtiter plate. The effect of inorganic ions (Ca2+, Co2+, Cu2+, Fe2+, Fe3+, Mg2+, and Mn2+), selected amino acids, and vitamins on thiaminase activity was assessed as above after incubation in a pre-heated incubator at 37 °C for 1 and 2 h, unless otherwise specified. We restricted our panel of possible inhibitors to those that exhibited complete solubility at 3 mM in either water or 3% (v/v) DMSO in water.
To confirm the inhibition from ascorbic acid, 0.33 µg/mL thiaminase and either control buffer or 100 µM ascorbic acid was incubated with varying concentrations of ascorbate oxidase (0.003–0.2 U/mL) for 2 h at 37 °C in 20 mM MES/20 mM sodium chloride. Aliquots of the resulting digests were assayed for thiamine concentration using thiochrome as above.
Determining the kinetics and concentration-dependence of thiamine degradation and inhibition
The kinetics of thiamine degradation were assessed by diluting pyridoxine and nicotinic acid to final concentrations of 6 nM to 100 µM, in a mixture containing 10 µM thiamine, and 0 or 0.33 µg/mL thiaminase I in triplicate in a polypropylene microtiter plate. Thiaminase activity was assessed by conversion to thiochrome as above after incubation in a pre-heated incubator at 37 °C for 5 min to 4 h. Determination of the Vmax and Km was carried out using GraphPad and a Michaelis–Menten fit.
The kinetics of inhibition were assessed by diluting CuCl2 and ascorbic acid to final concentrations of 6 nM–100 µM, in a mixture containing 100 µM pyridoxine, 10 µM thiamine, and 0 or 0.33 µg/mL thiaminase I in triplicate in a polypropylene microtiter plate. Thiaminase activity was assessed by conversion to thiochrome as above after incubation in a pre-heated incubator at 37°C for 15 min. to 5 h. Determination of the IC50 was carried out using GraphPad and a 4-parameter inhibitor vs response non-linear fit.
Chromatographic reaction monitoring
Reactions containing 10 µM thiamine, 100 µM pyridoxine or nicotinic acid and the presence or absence of thiaminase (0.33 µg/mL) in 20 mM MES, 20 mM NaCl, pH 6.5 were incubated for 2 h at 37 °C. To assess reaction inhibition, 100 µM Cu2+ or ascorbic acid was also included. The solutions were then transferred to 10 kDa MWCO centrifugal filters (Pall) and centrifuged for 5 min at 10,000×g to remove thiaminase. The filtrates were assayed with modifications of the method reported by Verstraete et al.53. The method used a Phenomenex Gemini NX-C18 column (100 mm × 3 mm, 3 µm particle size), Waters Xevo TQD LC–MS–MS system, using mobile phases 10 mM ammonium bicarbonate pH 8.8 and methanol. A flow rate of 400 µL/min was used throughout the 8-min run, starting with a linear increase in methanol from 0 to 50% in three minutes, followed by a rapid increase in methanol to 95% over the next 0.5 min. This was maintained for 2 min before rapidly returning to 100% ammonium bicarbonate for 2.5 min for equilibration. UV detection was set at 220 nm and 245 nm. At the end of each day, the column was washed with 100% methanol.
Determining the impact of inhibitors on other thiaminases
Burkholderia thailandensis E264 (ATCC 700388), Paenibacillus thiaminolyticus (B-4156), and Paenibacillus apiarius (B-23460) were cultured in tryptic soy broth (TSB) in a shaking waterbath at 30 °C for 48 h. The Paenibacillus spp. were obtained from the USDA NRRL Culture Collection and B. thailandensis from the American Type Culture Collection. The OD was monitored at 600 nm. The cultures were transferred to 1.5 mL centrifuge tubes, centrifuged for 5 min. at 16×g, and supernatant collected. The supernatant was pooled and filtered through 0.2 µM PVDF syringe filters. The bacterial supernatants were aliquoted and stored at − 80 °C. The high background from sterile TSB did not permit determination of the protein concentration using the MicroBCA assay, so normalization in downstream thiaminase activity assays was on the basis of the OD600 taken prior to supernatant collection. The activity of the supernatants at various dilutions made in sterile TSB was assessed using fluorescence intensity measurements made in the presence of a thiamine, cosubstrate and/or an inhibitor. The final composition of 10 µM thiamine, 100 µM pyridoxine or 100 µM nicotinic acid and 0–100 µM Cu2+ or ascorbic acid in diluted in 20 mM MES/20 mM sodium chloride, pH 6.5 (two-thirds of the overall reaction mixture) and cultured media diluted with sterile TSB (one-third of the overall reaction mixture) was incubated at 37 °C for one to three hours. 5 µL of the reaction mixture was diluted with 45 µL water, then 100 µL potassium ferricyanide in 15% (w/v) sodium hydroxide was added prior to measurement using 360/40 nm excitation, 450/50 nm emission.
Results
Screening for efficient Clostridium botulinum thiaminase I co-substrates
Naturally occurring co-substrates that yielded degradation in the presence of C. botulinum thiaminase I were pyridoxine (vitamin B6), nicotinic acid (niacin, vitamin B3) and folic acid (vitamin B9) (see Fig. 2a, Supplementary Fig. S2). Pyridoxine yielded 60.6% degradation, nicotinic acid yielded 42.5% degradation, and folic acid yielded 16.9% under the same conditions. A small amount of degradation of thiamine was observed in the presence of l-methionine (8.0%) and l-histidine (10.1%). None of the other l-amino acids or vitamins yielded significant degradation of thiamine in the presence of thiaminase, suggesting the presence of dietary pyridoxine or nicotinic acid was required for thiaminase activity.
In a subsequent experiment, the congeners of vitamin B6 (pyridoxine, pyridoxal, and pyridoxamine) were compared, yielding 89.5% degradation in the presence of pyridoxamine, 86% degradation with pyridoxine, and 75% degradation with pyridoxal (Fig. 2b). Nicotinamide, which differs from nicotinic acid by an amide group in lieu of a carboxylic acid group, was ineffective as a co-substrate. This indicated that small differences in co-substrate structure have a marked impact on thiaminase I activity.
The positive control, 4-nitrothiophenol (4-NTP), a known effective co-substrate for many thiaminases27,54, was the most effective co-substrate in our experiments. However, it should be noted that this compound, in the absence of thiaminase, suppressed either thiochrome formation or thiochrome fluorescence relative to buffer only (− 33.4%) (see Supplementary Fig. S2). This highlighted the necessity to measure thiochrome values in the absence of thiaminase to serve as a control to compensate for variable thiochrome responses in the matrix. The co-substrate efficacy results were interpreted as a percent change of fluorescence (Fig. 2b) in the presence versus absence of thiaminase for the respective co-substrate (see Supplementary Fig. S2).
We then investigated the co-substrate concentration dependence of thiamine breakdown. Thiamine at a concentration of 10 µM was incubated with thiaminase I and pyridoxine, nicotinic acid, or 4-NTP from 10 µM to 10 mM for up to 24 h at 37 °C. Both 4-NTP and pyridoxine were effective co-substrates, yielding complete thiamine degradation by 100 µM. However, nicotinic acid appeared to be only able to degrade approximately 58% of the available thiamine despite high concentrations (up to 10 mM) of co-substrate and extended time for enzymatic action (Fig. 3a). The incomplete degradation of thiamine with nicotinic acid suggested inhibition of thiaminase I induced by high concentrations of nicotinic acid itself or by the product of the nicotinic acid-thiamine reaction. For pyridoxine and nicotinic acid, Km values of 14.6 µM and 84.2 µM, and Vmax values of 35.8 and 4.6 nmol/L/min, respectively, were observed (Fig. 3b).
As these reactions were monitored by fluorescence alone, overlapping fluorescence spectra of thiochrome with the formed product between the co-substrate and the thiamine pyrimidine ring could not be excluded. We thus monitored these reactions also by chromatographic separation with UV detection (see Fig. 4, Supplementary Table S2). The inefficiency of nicotinic acid (ret. time = 2.50 min) as a co-substrate was confirmed, with only a 34.0% reduction of thiamine peak area (ret. time = 3.32 min) after 2 h at 37 °C, relative to 58.4% with pyridoxine (ret. time = 3.13 min) under otherwise identical conditions. In the presence of thiaminase and pyridoxine, we observed the formation of a new peak at 3.47 min, corresponding to the adduct between the thiamine pyrimidine ring and pyridoxine, and a reduction in pyridoxine peak area by 42.9%. In the presence of thiaminase and nicotinic acid, we observed the formation of a new peak at 2.90 min, corresponding to the adduct between the thiamine pyrimidine ring and nicotinic acid, and a reduction in nicotinic acid peak area by 7.7%. This experiment confirmed that the pyridoxine-thiamine pyrimidine conjugation product is more efficiently formed and that both thiamine and its co-substrate are depleted during thiaminase I-mediated action.
Activity of thiaminase I in dietary supplement formulations
To understand these results in a dietary context, we treated commercially available vitamin B1, vitamin B complex, and multivitamin tablets with simulated gastric fluid to liberate the constituents from the formulations. After neutralization and normalization to an equivalent thiamine concentration (1 or 10 µM) based on the label claim, these extracts were incubated with buffer or thiaminase I in the presence or absence of added pyridoxine (100 µM or 1 mM, Fig. 5). The B complex formulation contained six other B vitamins, para-aminobenzoic acid, inositol, choline bitartrate, and cellulose. The multivitamin complex formulation contained numerous other vitamins, minerals, and inactive excipients. The B-complex and multivitamin formulations contained molar ratios of 1.6:1.0 and 2.1:1.0 pyridoxine to thiamine, assuming complete liberation and dissolution. Both formulations contained nicotinamide, rather than nicotinic acid, hence this was not factored in as a co-substrate. The B1 formulation contained only thiamine as an active ingredient along with inactive constituents. The complete compositions of these formulations are provided in Supplementary Table S1.
In all formulations, there was no apparent degradation of released thiamine in the absence of thiaminase I, irrespective of the presence of pyridoxine (Fig. 5). However, in the presence of thiaminase I, the thiamine degradation in the formulations varied significantly. In the vitamin B1 formulation, there was 8.5% degradation of thiamine in the absence of 100 µM pyridoxine and 99.4% degradation in its presence, indicating the necessity of a co-substrate for enzyme activity. The low levels of degradation in the absence of a secondary nucleophile suggest the potential for trace levels of natural co-substrates available in the vegetable source excipients or that thiamine itself can act inefficiently as a co-substrate55. In the B-complex formulation, there was 47.5% degradation of thiamine in the absence of 100 µM pyridoxine and 97.9% degradation in its presence. By contrast, no degradation of thiamine was observed in the multivitamin formulation either in the absence or presence of additional 100 µM pyridoxine. In both the B-complex and multivitamin formulations, the excess of existing pyridoxine would yield sufficient co-substrate availability for significant thiamine digestion upon adding thiaminase, and additional pyridoxine would seem unnecessary. However, despite the excess of pyridoxine, thiamine degradation was incomplete or negligible, suggesting that thiaminase I inhibitors were present. These results were confirmed by the fluorescence spectra, showing retention of thiamine in the multivitamin formulation, but degradation of thiamine as a function of pyridoxine concentration in the vitamin B1 and B-complex formulations (see Supplementary Fig. S3).
Impact of non-cofactor natural constituents on Clostridium botulinum thiaminase I activity
To account for the presence of inorganic ions in the multivitamin formulation, and likely in food sample matrices, we investigated the impact of FeSO4, FeCl3, MgCl2, CaCl2, MnCl2, CoCl2, and CuCl2 on C. botulinum thiaminase I activity. Thiamine was incubated with thiaminase I and pyridoxine in the presence of these inorganic compounds at concentrations from 100 nM to 10 µM for 1 to 21 h at 37 °C. These inorganic compounds themselves had no significant impact on thiochrome formation (see Supplementary Fig. S4) and thus did not pose a detection interference, but they did impact the kinetics of thiamine degradation. The amount of thiamine degraded after one hour was up to 16.7% and 23.5% greater in the presence of Fe3+ and Mn2+ ions, respectively, suggesting an enhancement in thiaminase activity. By contrast, the amount degraded was up to 13.7% less in the presence of Fe2+ ions, suggesting an inhibition of thiaminase activity (see Supplementary Fig. S4). These effects occurred in a concentration-dependent manner, with 100 µM Fe2+ markedly reducing thiamine degradation to 13% and 100 µM Fe3+ increasing thiamine degradation to 88% versus 60% in the absence of either cation after 1 h (Fig. 6). There was no notable impact of Ca2+, Mg2+, or Co2+ (see Supplementary Fig. S4) ions on enzyme activity under the conditions used, suggesting that these differences were a function of the identity of the cationic species rather than the chloride counter ions. After an incubation period of 21 h, thiamine degradation was complete with all inorganic additives, except Cu2+, suggesting that micromolar concentrations of Fe2+ slowed degradation kinetics but did not irreversibly inhibit the enzyme.
We also screened for inhibition or enhancement of thiaminase activity in the presence of pyridoxine and various natural constituents (see Supplementary Fig. S5), finding that ascorbic acid (vitamin C) was a potent inhibitor of thiaminase I activity. The IC50 was 266 nM, with complete inhibition of thiaminase activity at concentrations greater than 4.5 µM (Fig. 7a). By HPLC, in the presence of pyridoxine, thiaminase, and thiamine, the expected peak at 3.45 min corresponding to the pyrimidine-pyridoxine adduct was formed and thiamine (retention time = 3.30 min) was depleted (Fig. 7b). With the addition of ascorbic acid to the above composition, thiamine was retained and no product peak was detected (Fig. 7c). The specificity of ascorbic acid inhibition was confirmed by depleting ascorbic acid with ascorbate oxidase and observing the return of thiamine degradation (see Supplementary Fig. S6). We then evaluated the inhibitory kinetics of ascorbic acid, confirming that thiamine degradation was inhibited in a time-dependent and ascorbic acid concentration-dependent manner. The percentage of thiamine degraded decreased with increasing ascorbic acid concentration, but increased with time at all concentrations tested, indicating that this inhibition was reversible (Fig. 7d). This inhibition—which is effective on the order of a few hours—may be a significant factor in dietary thiamine retention, given the time course of passage of thiamine through the GI tract.
Cu2+ was a more potent inhibitor of thiamine degradation than ascorbic acid, with an IC50 of 132 nM for thiaminase activity in the presence of thiamine and pyridoxine and complete inhibition of thiamine digestion at 1 µM (Fig. 8a). Similar to ascorbic acid, thiamine (retention time = 3.30 min) was not depleted with the addition of Cu2+ to the above composition of pyridoxine, thiamine, and thiaminase, and the peak corresponding to the pyrimidine-pyridoxine adduct (retention time = 3.45 min) was not formed (Fig. 8b). This indicated that the degradation of thiamine was inhibited. However, in contrast to ascorbic acid, no time-dependent effect of Cu2+ on thiaminase inhibition was observed. At a concentration of 1.25 µM or greater, thiamine degradation was fully inhibited and did not recover after 4 h (Fig. 8c). We observed that the IC50 remained static for Cu2+ through time, though increased over time for ascorbic acid, illustrating the reversibility differences in their inhibitory actions (Fig. 8d).
Impact of natural constituents on thiaminase I activity from other bacteria
We extended our investigation to examine thiaminases produced by B. thailandensis, P. thiaminolyticus, and P. apiarius and secreted into the culture supernatants as the bacteria grow. Under equivalent conditions for growth, collection and analysis, the thiaminase activity of P. thiaminolyticus was approximately eight times greater than B. thailandensis and P. apiarius using 4-NTP (1.42 nmol thiamine degraded/min, Fig. S7), a known effective co-substrate for diverse thiaminase I enzymes27,43,54. The activity of the latter two supernatants were roughly equivalent to each other and to a tenfold dilution of P. thiaminolyticus (0.17 ± 0.05 nmol thiamine degraded/min). The complexity of the conditioned culture medium did not permit quantitative and discreet qualitative assessments of enzyme activity or a direct concentration for comparison of the secreted thiaminases. However, for all bacterial supernatants, the thiamine degradation activity was augmented by pyridoxine and inhibited by Cu2+. To digest an equivalent amount of thiamine in culture supernatant from P. thiaminolyticus diluted in sterile TSB, approximately four and eight times less thiaminase would be needed in the presence of 100 µM nicotinic acid and pyridoxine, respectively (Fig. 9a). For B. thailandensis, no degradation of thiamine was observed in culture supernatant diluted in sterile TSB in the absence or presence of nicotinic acid, but the addition of pyridoxine permitted degradation (Fig. S8). Negligible degradation (~ 6%) by P. apiarius was observed in the highest concentration of supernatant tested and only with the addition of pyridoxine. It is of note that TSB itself was inhibitory to thiaminase activity with thiaminase added from either C. botulinum or P. thiaminolyticus sources (Fig. S9).
We observed that the addition of Cu2+ reduced the activity of all thiaminases in the crude supernatants (Fig. 9b, Figs. S8, S10), suggesting that this inhibition is conserved across thiaminases. At low concentrations of crude thiaminases from P. thiaminolyticus and high concentrations from P. apiarius in TSB, we observed a small, but statistically significant inhibition by 100 µM ascorbic acid (Fig. S11). However, we did not observe the inhibition of enzyme activity by ascorbic acid at high concentrations of any crude supernatants or purified C. botulinum in this complex culture media. Ascorbic acid can form complexes or become oxidized56,57,58 and this may impact its accessibility or stability in TSB. The presence of complex media also brings numerous potential inhibitors and cofactors, all of which may impact the stoichiometry and kinetics required for thiaminase inhibition. Overall, our results, including this concentration-dependent inhibition, speak to likely complexities of thiaminase-activity in varied diets, with the efficiency of thiamine digestion dependent on the source, contact time, and the concentrations of the enzyme, thiamine, co-factor composition and their respective stoichiometries all playing roles.
Discussion/conclusions
Early studies on thiamine deficiency in captive foxes were associated with raw fish diets, with the cause of thiamine destruction referred to as the ‘fish factor’ or ‘fish principle’ before the conclusive determination of its enzymatic nature59,60. Identification of the thiamine cleavage products and susceptibility to heat indicated an enzyme source, which was then studied extensively in the 1940s and 1950s60. This enzyme required a nucleophilic co-substrate to carry out thiamine cleavage. For the C. botulinum thiaminase, we found that among the natural organic compounds tested, only pyridoxine and nicotinic acid showed significant activity, with pyridoxine acting as a far more efficient co-substrate. Negligible amounts of thiamine were degraded in the presence of thiaminase and the commercially available Vitamin B1 formulation, contrasting with complete degradation with the addition of pyridoxine. In experiments with the B-Complex formulation, approximately half of the thiamine could be degraded in the formulation, with the other half degraded with additional exogenous co-substrate. This illustrated the need for sufficient concentrations of the co-substrate to be present for thiaminase I to have a significant impact on thiamine levels. Exogenous pyridoxine was also a better co-substrate than nicotinic acid for thiaminase I enzymes released by B. thailandensis, P. thiaminolyticus, and P. apiarius cultured in crude tryptic soy broth. Pyridoxine also augmented or was required for thiamine degradation in these complex mixtures. This was of note as P. thiaminolyticus cultures grown in complex media have been employed for thiaminase-mediated thiamine depletion of foods in animal feeding studies44,45,46. Without further co-substrate additions or high levels of thiaminase produced by the bacteria under the culture conditions employed, the efficiency of thiamine depletion from foods in such studies may be blunted.
Our results also indicated that having sufficient co-substrate concentrations was not the only chemical factor dictating the efficacy of thiaminase in complex mixtures. In the multivitamin formulation, no degradation of thiamine was observed despite exogenous pyridoxine addition, suggesting the presence of inhibitors to enzyme activity. We identified several constituents that modulated enzyme activity, notably that copper (Cu2+) and ascorbic acid were potent inhibitors of thiaminase activity, while manganese (Mn2+) and iron (Fe3+) accelerated its action. Our results on Cu2+ inhibition and Mn2+ activation in the C. botulinum thiaminase are consistent with results from early studies in thiaminases found in carp viscera, fresh water mussel, and whole homogenized fish30,60,61. Neither the divergent effects of Fe2+ and Fe3+ nor the inhibitory effects of ascorbic acid on thiaminase activity have been previously reported, other than a published personal communication from a hatchery manager noting a significant improvement survival in fry experiencing Early Mortality Syndrome through immersion in a bath of vitamin C62.
In our experiments, Cu2+ was an irreversible inhibitor of thiaminase I activity from C. botulinum. The thiaminase I from C. botulinum shares structural similarity with group II periplasmic binding proteins common to transport of small molecules for gram-negative bacteria. However, this protein uniquely has enzymatic activity not retained by other members of this protein family63,64. Cysteine residues have been identified as active site nucleophiles in the degradation of thiamine by several thiaminases55,63,65,66, and, notably, mutation of a cysteine residue (C143S) in the C. botulinum thiaminase and a cysteine residue (C113S) in the P. thiaminolyiticus thiaminase abolished their activity55,63. It has been postulated that cysteine residues can chelate certain transition metals, noting that copper chloride has been shown to inactivate botulism neurotoxin serotype A67. In this neurotoxin, mutation of a cysteine residue (C165) was found to negate the inhibitory actions of copper in this metalloprotease67. At the organism level, it could be extrapolated that the presence of dietary copper may confer some resistance to thiaminase I-mediated thiamine degradation.
The finding that ascorbic acid was an efficient inhibitor of thiaminase I was particularly notable as this is an essential nutrient in both humans and salmonine fishes68,69, unlike many other organisms that are capable of its synthesis. Thiamine deficiency is common in humans whose diets consist primarily of white rice which is devoid of both thiamine and ascorbic acid70. Salmonine fishes, including lake trout, Atlantic salmon, and Baltic salmon, are particularly prone to thiamine deficiency and supplementation of hatchery-reared salmonines with vitamin B1 has been widely employed to avoid mortality71,72,73,74,75. Rainbow smelt and anchovies, both of which are prey in diets of salmonine predators with offspring that have experienced thiamine deficiency, contain insignificant amounts of ascorbic acid70. Ascorbic acid has beneficial impacts on salmonid health, including optimal growth and development, resistance to nitrites, and resistance to bacterial challenges69,76,77,78. The variable dietary intake of ascorbic acid without de novo synthesis and diets predominated by thiaminase-active prey fish may lead salmonine fishes to be particularly susceptible to thiaminase degradation of thiamine and subsequent thiamine depletion. The inhibition of a purified thiaminase I by ascorbic acid was distinct in defined buffer, but we note that more investigations are needed on the relationship between ascorbic acid and inhibition of thiaminase I in complex media.
More broadly, our results indicate that it is important to consider overall dietary composition when considering the impact of thiaminase as a thiamine-degrading constituent. Dietary thiamine will be degraded in the presence of thiaminase when in the presence of appropriate co-substrates, but other dietary constituents will also inhibit its degradation. The lack or presence thereof, respectively, can yield markedly reduced effects on thiaminase activity despite the presence of the enzyme at high levels. Both commonly applied assays to assess thiaminase activity (the 4-nitrothiophenol assay and radiometric assays) supply high concentrations of co-substrate to the reaction, which is similarly supplemented with high concentrations of thiamine27,43,54,79. These conditions provide a measure of the maximal thiaminase activity possible in the sample, but are not reflective of the degradation characteristics in the native sample matrix which may lack sufficient levels or appropriate co-substrates or contain inhibitors. We speculate that the diets including significant levels of copper or l-ascorbyl-phosphate as a source of ascorbic acid44,45,46, which have been employed in feed preparation studies for understanding thiamine depletion effects, may reduce the efficiency of thiamine depletion, confounding laboratory reproductions of the effects and kinetics of thiamine deficiency. At the same time, it is important to be mindful that thiaminase I-mediated thiamine depletion would also deplete nucleophilic co-substrates80. As both pyridoxine and nicotinic acid deficiencies are associated with similar neurologic and developmental symptoms attributed to thiamine deficiency74,81, including erratic and spiral swimming, hyperexcitability, encephalopathy, and reduced growth82,83,84, depletion of these vitamins should not be overlooked in the overall clinical picture when thiaminase I is implicated.
We note that our experiments were restricted to constituents with significant water-solubility, therefore other constituents present in natural diets may contribute to thiaminase-mediated thiamine degradation. Our observation of thiaminase I inhibition by several ions and another vitamin (ascorbic acid) found in GI tracts and external environments suggests that similar inhibitions might be observed by other common dietary constituents. Additionally, our results primarily focused on the thiaminase I enzyme from C. botulinum. Although we observed a similar enhancement of thiaminase I activity by pyridoxine and inhibition by Cu2+ with crude supernatants from B. thailandensis, P. thiaminolyticus, and P. apiarius, it is known that thiaminases from different sources have different co-substrate specificities85 therefore might respond differently to potential inhibitors. Expanding this work on both co-substrates and inhibitors to purified thiaminases from other bacterial, plant, insect, or fish sources would elucidate the universality of these findings.
Thiaminase I is a secreted enzyme that has been postulated to reduce thiamine availability to microbial competitors, predisposing them to harm from other toxins and providing a competitive advantage favoring microbes that can synthesize their own thiamine from precursors22,86. However, examples of two microbial enzymes described as having thiamine-degrading properties have been found to function to salvage degraded thiamine and recycle components suited for the complicated synthesis of thiamine20,23,87. In fact, some microorganisms preferentially use precursors for thiamine synthesis, and are incapable of uptake of exogenous intact thiamine23,87. Thiamine is primarily used to supplement human and animal nutrition and is excreted in the urine in its parent form, though metabolism leads to excretion of pyrimidine and thiazole degradation products88. Thiamine is also readily degraded in aquatic environments to components that can be recycled by bacteria for thiamine synthesis20. The degradation of thiamine increases the availability of its two primary constituents or their analogues for bacteria, plants, and fungi with enzymes that can salvage these compounds for use in synthesizing thiamine, potentially providing an advantage over organisms that must synthesize thiamine from more fundamental components20,23. Recognition of the thiamine salvage and thiamine synthesis functions20,23,87 leads to questioning the functional purpose of microbial enzymes reported as thiaminases.
Aside from thiaminase I enzymes utilizing thiamine degradation products for thiamine synthesis, we postulate that the adduct formed from the thiamine pyrimidine ring and natural nucleophilic cosubstrates, such as pyridoxine or nicotinic acid, may favor certain bacteria, either as a preferential substrate or as an inhibitory compound to competitors. It is, for example, known that some degradation products of thiamine are toxic analogues that inhibit enzymatic reactions for which thiamine is a required cofactor78,79,80,81,82.
We suggest that the dietary presence of vitamin C and Cu2+ may influence the manifestation of thiamine deficiency in animals with diets including thiaminase I. Our investigations do not consider all possible dietary sources of thiaminase I-mediated enhancement or inhibition, nor thermal processing methods used to inactivate thiaminases in pre-prepared foods89,90, but maintain that focusing solely on enzyme activation and inhibition leads to a different perspective of thiaminase I than has been commonly considered in investigations of fish or other animal mortality associated with this enzyme. Although the results reported here largely focus on one bacterial thiaminase I enzyme with thiamine-degrading properties, they provide a new perspective regarding a group of enzymes with widely recognized associations with plants (e.g. bracken fern) and animals (fish, ruminant mammals) that have perplexed researchers since their discovery more than 80 years ago.
Data availability
The datasets supporting the conclusions of this article are available upon reasonable request from the corresponding author.
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Acknowledgements
The authors would like to thank Nathan Tumey and members of the Tumey lab for instrument access and assistance with setting up the LC-MS-MS method. They thank Amber Tuske and Kimchi Le for their assistance with experiments supportive of this work.
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K.E. conceptualized and designed the study, carried out experiments, wrote the main manuscript text and supplied resources. E.A. and C.K. contributed insightful discussions, revised the manuscript, and supplied resources. E.R. and P.W. carried out experiments. All authors reviewed the manuscript and contributed to revisions.
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Edwards, K.A., Randall, E.A., Wolfe, P.C. et al. Dietary factors potentially impacting thiaminase I-mediated thiamine deficiency. Sci Rep 13, 7008 (2023). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-023-34063-5
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-023-34063-5
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