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Vol. 180, Issue 13, 3421-3431, July 1, 1998
Cloning, Sequencing, and Phenotypic
Characterization of the rpoS Gene from Pseudomonas
putida KT2440
María Isabel
Ramos-González* and
Søren
Molin
Department of Microbiology, The Technical
University of Denmark, DK-2800 Lyngby, Denmark
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ABSTRACT |
A gene homologous to the rpoS gene of Escherichia
coli was cloned from a Pseudomonas putida KT2440 gene
bank by complementation of the rpoS-deficient strain
E. coli ZK918. The rpoS gene of P. putida complemented the acid sensitivity and catalase deficiency of the rpoS mutant of E. coli and stimulated
expression of the RpoS-controlled promoter,
bolAp1. The gene was sequenced and found to be
highly similar to the rpoS genes of other gram-negative bacteria. Like in other gram-negative bacteria, a homolog of the nlpD gene was found upstream to the rpoS gene.
A transcriptional fusion of the promoter of the P. putida
rpoS gene to the luxAB genes from Vibrio
harveyi was constructed and used as an inactivated allele of
rpoS for gene replacement of the wild-type copy in the chromosome of P. putida. The resultant
rpoS mutant of P. putida, C1R1, showed
reduced survival of carbon starvation and reduced cross-protection
against other types of stress in cells starved for carbon, in
particular after a challenge with ethanol. Survival in soil
amended with m-methylbenzoate was also reduced in the mutant strain P. putida C1R1. The RpoS protein of
P. putida controls the expression of more than 50 peptides, which are normally expressed in cells after a short period of
carbon starvation.
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INTRODUCTION |
Pseudomonas putida
KT2442, a rifampin-resistant derivative of P. putida
KT2440, has been studied under famine conditions, and its long-term
viability after 1 month of carbon starvation was previously reported
(13). When challenged with nongrowth conditions,
P. putida develops a general cross-protection which enables the cells to survive various environmental stresses
(13); in addition, P. putida exhibits a
specific, temporal expression pattern of protein synthesis in response
to starvation (12). P. putida KT2440 is a
soil bacterium with significance in biodegradation and bioremediation.
It is the natural host for several plasmids which confer the ability to
mineralize toluene and other aromatic compounds (10), and
its environmental application in bioremediation as an engineered,
contained microorganism has been reported (35).
The rpoS gene encodes the transcription factor RpoS, which
was identified as a central regulator during stationary phase
in Escherichia coli (23); its role as the
second principal sigma factor for this physiological state is known
(28, 44). RpoS is involved in survival of famine conditions
(23), in the transition from rod shape to coccus shape as
cells reach stationary phase (22), and in cross-protection
against stress (osmotic, acidic, and oxidative) (25);
recently its role in osmoregulation has been studied
(15). The rpoS gene encoding RpoS, also called
S, has been described for other enteric bacteria
and has been found to modulate virulence (7, 17, 41). Among
nonenteric bacteria, the rpoS gene has been found in
Pseudomonas aeruginosa, even though no phenotypic
characteristic has been associated with the gene (43), and
in P. fluorescens, in which case the gene was described as being responsible for osmoprotection, resistance to oxidative agents, and regulation of antibiotic synthesis (37).
The aims of this work were (i) to correlate the increased resistance of
P. putida to general stress under starvation conditions with the transcription factor RpoS; (ii) to investigate whether this
transcription factor is responsible for the protein synthesis program
displayed as cells stop growing; and (iii) to generate a derivative
strain easy to monitor under suboptimum conditions of growth (which are
more similar to natural conditions in soil).
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Strains, plasmids, and growth and starvation conditions.
The
strains used are listed in Table 1.
The minimal medium used for growth was either AB (6)
supplemented with 0.01 mM Fe · EDTA (catalog no. E6760; Sigma,
St. Louis, Mo.) and 10 mM sodium citrate or modified M9 minimal medium (36) supplemented with 10 mM sodium citrate. Alternatively, 1.5% (wt/vol) lactose-supplemented MacConkey agar (Difco) or rich Luria-Bertani (LB) medium (2) was used. The final
concentrations (in micrograms per milliliter) of antibiotics, when
required, were as follows: ampicillin, 100; carbenicillin, 500;
chloramphenicol, 10; kanamycin, 25 (E. coli strains)
and 50 (P. putida strains); nalidixic acid, 50;
rifampin, 50; streptomycin, 100; and tetracycline, 10. The temperature
under normal growth conditions was 30°C.
Carbon starvation was imposed as described by Givskov et al.
(13), either by harvesting a growing culture (optical
density at 450 nm [OD450] of 0.4) by centrifugation
(preheated rotor and tubes at 30°C) followed by resuspension in
preheated carbon-free minimal medium (AB or M9) or by exhaustion of the
carbon source in AB or M9 medium supplemented with 1 mM sodium citrate
(this condition resulted in starved cultures with an OD450
of 0.4). In all cases, the starvation temperature was 30°C.
Stress challenge protocol.
Growing or carbon-starved
cultures (AB or M9) with a density of about 5 × 108
cells per ml were diluted 100- and 1,000-fold in either AB or M9 medium
and subsequently diluted 1 to 10 in AB or M9 medium supplemented with
either ethanol, H2O2, or NaCl to a final
concentration of 18% (vol/vol), 200 µM, or 2.4 M, respectively. The
ethanol treatment was performed at 25°C (13), whereas the
peroxide and high-osmolarity treatments were performed at 30°C.
Aliquots (0.1 ml), taken from the culture at different time points,
were spread on LB plates, and after incubation for 16 to 24 h at
30°C, viable counts were determined.
In vitro DNA techniques.
Plasmid DNA was isolated by the
alkaline lysis method (19), using Qiagen Plasmid Mini and
Qiagen Plasmid Midi kits. All DNA manipulations, including restriction
enzyme and alkaline phosphatase reactions, agarose gel electrophoresis,
ligations, transformations, filling in, and digestion of protruding
ends, were performed by using standard procedures (36).
Electrotransformation of P. putida cells was performed
with a Gene Pulser apparatus (Bio-Rad catalog no. 165-2098) according
to the instruction manual. P. putida total DNA was
isolated as described previously (14). DNA fragments were
recovered from agarose gels with a GeneClean kit (Bio 101, Inc., Vista,
Calif.), with suspension of silica to the glassmilk included in the kit
used as an alternative (5). DNA sequencing was carried out
on both strands by the dideoxy sequencing termination method
(38), with 35S-labeled nucleotides, Sequenase
version 1.0 T7 DNA polymerase, and universal or specific
oligonucleotides to prime synthesis. DNA hybridization was performed
basically as described previously (32), with positively
charged nylon membranes from Boehringer.
Mobilization and transposition.
Plasmids were transferred by
conjugation using a filter mating technique (32). Filters
with a mixture of donor, recipient, and helper strain [E.
coli HB101(pRK600)] in a 1:2:1 ratio were incubated overnight at
30°C on the surface of LB plates. The cells were washed and then
suspended in 0.9% NaCl, and serial dilutions were plated on selective
media. Delivery of minitransposons, either in the chromosome of the
target strain or in the cosmids, was performed as described previously
(32, 33).
2D-PAGE analysis of [35S]methionine-labeled
cellular proteins.
Samples of 4 ml of P. putida in
10 mM sodium citrate-supplemented AB minimal medium with an
OD450 of approximately 0.4 were labeled with 4 µl of
[35S]methionine (5 mCi/ml; Amersham catalog no. SJ235)
for 10 min, either during growth or after 1 h of carbon
starvation, and for 15 min after 5 days of carbon starvation. The
cultures were chased for 1 min with 4 µl of unlabeled methionine (10 mg/ml), after which 4 µl of chloramphenicol (50 mg/ml) was added;
after 2 min, the cells were harvested by centrifugation at 0°C
(10,000 × g for 5 min). Cells were lysed and proteins
were precipitated with ice-cold acetone as described previously
(12). The precipitated proteins were resuspended in 20 µl
of sample buffer (50 mM Tris HCl, 0.3% sodium dodecyl sulfate [SDS],
0.6 M
-mercaptoethanol) and 80 µl of ampholyte solution (54%
urea, 240 mM
-mercaptoethanol, 2% Pharmalyte pH 3-10 [Pharmacia
Biotech], 0.5% Triton X-100) was added. Aliquots of 25 µl were
analyzed with a Pharmacia two-dimensional (2-D) polyacrylamide gel
electrophoresis (PAGE) system as recommended by the supplier, using
11-cm Immobiline dry strips (pH 4 to 7) and ExeGel XL SDS-12 to 14%
precast gels. The protein sample was applied to the alkaline end of the
Immobiline strip. After electrophoresis, the gels were fixed, dried,
and monitored for radioactivity (1 day of exposure, except for gels of
cells starved for 5 days, for which exposure times were prolonged to 6 days) as instructed by Pharmacia.
-Galactosidase assays.
-Galactosidase activity was
measured as described previously (27), using Miller's
definition (OD420 per OD600 per minute) for
specific activity units. Samples of stationary-phase cultures were
diluted 10-fold in LB medium and then frozen and melted in ice before
the cells were permeabilized with toluene; the same dilution factor was
used with the samples for monitoring growth at OD600.
-Galactosidase activity, in Miller units, was corrected by the same
dilution factor of 10.
Preparation of inocula and soil microcosm assays.
P. putida strains were grown to exponential phase
(OD660 of about 1) (109 cells/ml) at 30°C
with rotational shaking (200 rpm) in M9 minimal medium supplemented
with 0.5% (wt/vol) glucose. Ten milliliters of the cultures
(1010 cells) was washed in M9 minimal medium and
resuspended in 1 ml of the same medium prior to introduction in the
soil. For soil assays, a cambisol soil (0.63% [wt/wt] organic
matter, 23.4% [wt/wt] CaCO3) was used (31).
Before use, the freshly collected soils were sifted and sterilized
under a vapor stream three times (31). Ninety grams of soil
was placed in each jar. Survival of P. putida strains
was tested in soils unamended and amended with 0.1% (wt/wt) m-methylbenzoate from a stock solution (0.5 M [pH 7.5]).
One milliliter of cells, prepared as described above, was added to each
jar containing the sterile soil to a density of about 108
CFU/g of soil. The soil microcosms (in duplicate) were kept at room
temperature. To recover cells, 5 g of soil was added to 45 ml of
1× M9 medium and shaken at 30°C for 1 h. The number of viable cells was determined as described in legend to Fig. 9.
Nucleotide sequence accession number.
The nucleotide
sequence of the P. putida KT2440 rpoS
gene is under accession no. X91654 (EMBL database).
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RESULTS AND DISCUSSION |
Isolation and characterization of an rpoS-homologous
gene from P. putida KT2440.
A P. putida KT2440 gene bank was generated by random insertion of
chromosomal DNA fragments in the cosmid vector pLAFR3, using E. coli HB101 as a host for transfection
(31b). E. coli ZK918 (3) is an
rpoS-deficient strain (due to a deletional insertion generated with an rpoS::km fusion); it
also carries a chromosomal insertion of a transcriptional fusion of the
bolAp1 promoter to lacZ at the
bolA locus. Since bolAp1 is a
promoter depending on RpoS (22), the phenotype of ZK918 is
RpoS
LacZ
. Other activities depending on
RpoS, such as catalase activity and acid resistance, are also missing
in ZK918 (3). These features made ZK918 suitable as a
reporter strain for complementing the activity of RpoS. The gene bank
was transferred by mobilization to strain ZK918. Acid sensitivity is a
phenotypic characteristic of rpoS-deficient E. coli strains (40). Based on this fact, the conjugation
mix consisting of the P. putida library and
E. coli ZK918 was acid treated before plating as
follows. The cells were suspended in LB medium after the filter mating
(see Materials and Methods) and cultivated to stationary phase. To the
mating mixture was added 2 N HCl to pH 3.0; after acid shock for 30 min at room temperature, neutralization was achieved with 2 N NaOH, and
serial dilutions were plated on MacConkey lactose agar containing kanamycin and tetracycline. This treatment reduced the survival of
transconjugants 10,000-fold. About 1% of the transconjugants surviving
the acid treatment were LacZ+, appearing as red colonies on
MacConkey lactose agar, indicating stimulation of expression from the
bolAp1::lacZ fusion
controlled by RpoS. The catalase activity test of the LacZ+
clones (24- to 36-h colonies were scored for bubbling following the
dropwise addition of H2O2) gave positive
results as expected for RpoS+ cells. Among the
acid-resistant, LacZ+, and catalase-positive
transconjugants, four independent clones, harboring cosmids with
different restriction patterns, were selected. The four cosmids from
the P. putida library complementing the RpoS
phenotype of ZK918 were named pMIR0-1, pMIR1-2,
pMIR1-34, and pMIR2-9. In all cases, the three RpoS-controlled
phenotypic traits mentioned above were cotransferable with the
resistance to tetracycline encoded by the cosmid vector. A 7-kb
BamHI fragment and an internal 3.4-kb EcoRI
fragment (Fig. 1) were present in all
four cosmids. Mutagenesis of pMIR0-1, pMIR1-2, pMIR1-34, and
pMIR2-9 with the mini-Tn5/'Sm contained in pUTSm (Table 1)
generated mutant plasmids which were unable to complement the
rpoS-deficient phenotype of E. coli ZK918.
All of the mutant plasmids had insertions in the 3.4-kb
EcoRI fragment (not shown). One of these mutants was
randomly selected and named pMIR13415 (Fig. 1). The 3.4-kb
EcoRI fragment of pMIR1-34 carrying the
rpoS-complementing gene was further subcloned into pUNØ19
to yield pMIR13450, whose restriction map is shown in Fig. 1. The
sequence of about 1.7 kb of DNA from the half part of the insert of
pMIR13450 which contained the unique AatII site was
determined and submitted to the EMBL database (accession no. X91654).
The sequence was analyzed by the algorithm of Fickett (8) to
detect open reading frames (ORFs) encoding polypeptides. Two ORFs were
found: the C terminus of an ORF which ended at nucleotide 345 (ORF1)
and a complete ORF of 1,008 nucleotides between positions 428 and 1435 (ORF2, whose translated sequence is shown in Fig. 2). The amino acid sequences
corresponding to the ORFs were compared with all entries in the
nonredundant GenBank CDS translations +PDB+SwissProt+PIR as described
in the BLAST program (1) and with the SwissProt ALL library
with the FASTA3 program (29). The data bank sequences
that showed the most sequence identity with the partial ORF1 were
seven precursor sequences encoding the lipoprotein B in gram-negative
bacteria: P. aeruginosa (43), E. coli (42), Haemophilus somnus
(45), H. influenzae (9), Salmonella typhimurium (21), Yersinia
enterocolitica (17), and S. dublin
(SwissProt entry 39700).

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Fig. 1.
Restriction maps of plasmids harboring the P. putida rpoS gene. Plasmids pMIR2-9 and pMIR1-34 are two cosmids
from a P. putida library carrying a gene homologous to
the rpoS gene of E. coli. Plasmid pMIR61
contains the 2.5-kb BamHI/NheI fragment of pMIR11
(Table 1) inserted in the BamHI and XbaI sites of
pUNØ19A (Table 1). Plasmid pMIR13450 carries the 3.4-kb
EcoRI fragment of pMIR1-34 inserted in pUNØ19. Cosmid
pMIR13415 harbors a mini-Tn5/'Sm element in the 3.4-kb
EcoRI fragment of pMIR1-34 (Table 1). Plasmid pMIR492 is the
result of inserting a luxAB cassette at position 43 inside
the ORF rpoS. (The SalI/BamHI fragment
from pUJ20 [Table 1], carrying the genes luxAB from
Vibrio harveyi, after filling in the single-strand ends, was
inserted in the unique AatII site of pMIR61 after removal of
the single-strand protruding ends.) Plasmid pMIR592 was the result of
inserting the fusion rpoSp::luxAB as a
filled-in KpnI/SphI fragment from pMIR492 in the
unique SmaI site of pKNG101 (Table 1). The plasmids listed
on the right represent the relevant cloning vectors omitted from the
maps. A, AatII; B, BamHI;
E, EcoRI; K, KpnI; N,
NheI; P, PstI; S,
SphI.
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Fig. 2.
Multiple alignments of the P. putida
ORF2 sequence with homologous sequences derived from the nonredundant
GenBank CDS translations +PDB+SwissPot+PIR. An alignment with RpoS
proteins from members of the pseudomonads and enteric bacteria is
shown. The sequences of the RpoS proteins of P. fluorescens (P.f.), P. aeruginosa
(P.a.), E. coli (E.c.),
and S. typhimurium (S.t.) were derived from
Samiguet et al. (37), Tanaka and Takahashi (43),
Swiss-Prot entry 13445, and Swiss-Prot entry 37400, respectively. The
P. putida (P.p.) RpoS sequence (ORF2)
was determined in this study. *, amino acid conserved in all
sequences; ., residue that belonged to the same group in all sequences
(neutral changes). Changes of amino acids in the following groups were
considered neutral: (i) A, G, P, S, and T; (ii) D, N, E, and Q; (iii)
R, H, and K; (iv) I, L, M, and V; (v) F, Y, and W; and (vi) C. For
consensus 1, pseudomonad RpoS was used as reference; for consensus 2, both pseudomonad RpoS and enteric RpoS were used.
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The PROSITE search for conserved domains in the amino acid sequence
derived from ORF2 produced two matches with
70:
sigma70_1 at residue 124 and sigma70_2 at residue 293. However, the
sequences that showed the most extensive sequence identity with the
complete ORF2, shown in Table 2, were the
genes encoding RNA polymerase sigma factor RpoS from the pseudomonads
P. fluorescens (37) and P. aeruginosa (43) and from the enteric bacteria E. coli (28), S. typhimurium
(30), Y. enterocolitica (17), Serratia entomophila (accession no. ), and
Shigella flexneri (41). The putative protein
would be 38.1 kDa with a pI of 5.19. A potential ribosome binding
sequence, AGGA (39), was found 12 bp upstream of the
potential initiation ATG codon. Downstream of the
rpoS-homologous gene (ORF2) and between nucleotides 1450 and
1480, a hairpin structure (
G° =
19.6 kcal/mol
[47]) typical of a Rho-independent transcription
terminator was identified.
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Table 2
Identities and similarities of P. putida
KT2440 rpoS gene and RpoS sigma factor sequences with other
rpoS gene and RpoS amino acid sequences from
the database
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A multiple alignment of ORF2 with two RpoS amino acid
sequences of pseudomonads and two enterobacterial RpoS sequences
was performed with the computer program SEQUENCE, and the
results obtained are shown in Fig. 2. The overall identity between the deduced P. putida KT2440 ORF2 sequence and that of the
known Pseudomonas RpoS proteins was about 87% (overall
similarity of 95%); compared to the enterobacterial RpoS proteins,
there was about 65% identity (overall similarity of 83%) (Table 2).
On the basis of the nucleotide and predicted amino acid sequences,
we hereafter refer to the ORF2 of P. putida KT2440 as
the rpoS gene and to its gene product as RpoS. No
cross-reaction with the P. putida RpoS protein was detected with a polyclonal antiserum against E. coli
RpoS (not shown). A possible reason for this could be that the
amino-terminal sequence of the P. putida RpoS was
different from that of the E. coli RpoS (Fig. 2). In
E. coli, the expression of RpoS is regulated at the
levels of transcription, translation, and protein stability (24). It has been suggested that in E. coli,
the amino-terminal part of the sequence might be involved in
translational regulation of RpoS, through a mechanism where the
Shine-Dalgarno sequence and the initiation codon are sequestered in a
secondary structure of the mRNA; under inducing conditions, this
structure may be altered and the frequency of translational initiation
may be increased (15, 24). In this context, the 58 residues
in the amino-terminal end of the protein should be considered of
relevance in further studies in order to investigate the regulation of
rpoS gene expression in pseudomonads.
Generation of an rpoS merodiploid strain and an
rpoS-deficient strain.
Plasmid pMIR592 (Fig. 1) was
introduced into P. putida KT2440 to obtain a
replacement of the functional rpoS gene in its chromosome with a copy of the rpoS gene interrupted by luxAB
at codon 15. The gene replacement was accomplished through homologous
recombination. As a result of a single crossover event, one cointegrate
containing isolate was selected and named R6C1; after the second
crossover, one isolate which carried the mutant rpoS gene
only, C1R1 (Fig. 3), was obtained. The
selection of double crossovers, based on resistance to sucrose,
was due to the conditional lethality which the sacBR genes,
carried by pKNG101 and thus by pMIR592, conferred in the presence of
sucrose. The genomes of P. putida R6C1 and C1R1 and
other independent isolates similarly generated were examined by
Southern blotting, and the analysis revealed correct single and double
recombinant events, respectively, at the rpoS gene (not
shown).

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Fig. 3.
Replacements of the rpoS gene with the
luxAB insertion mutant rpoS gene. A single
homologous recombination event between the functional rpoS
present on the chromosome of P. putida KT2440 and the
inactivated rpoS present on pMIR592 was isolated by
selection for resistance to streptomycin (pMIR592 [Fig. 1]). One of
the Smr (see the footnote to Table 1 for abbreviations)
transconjugants was selected and named R6C1; this merodiploid strain
contained the entire plasmid pMIR592 integrated in the genome. A second
crossover event at the rpoS locus was selected by
cultivating R6C1 overnight in LB without streptomycin (about 10 generations) and subsequent plating on LB medium supplemented with 10%
sucrose. Sucr colonies were analyzed by replica plating.
One of the Sucr Sms Lux+ colonies
was called C1R1. The genomes of three merodiploid isolates (from three
independent matings) obtained as the result of the first recombination
event and the genomes of six clones (two from each merodiploid)
obtained as the result of the resolution of the merodiploids after the
second recombination event were examined by Southern blot analysis,
which revealed correct single and double recombination events,
respectively, at the rpoS locus (not shown).
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The special design of the above-described rpoS mutants
allowed investigations of expression from the rpoS promoter
due to the inserted luxAB reporter cassette. Monitoring of
bioluminescence from strains R6C1 and C1R1 could in addition indicate
if RpoS had any effect on its own expression. Expression from the
fusion rpoSp::luxAB inserted in the
chromosomes of P. putida R6C1 and C1R1 is shown in Fig.
4 as measurements of luminescence
in relative light units (LU) (34). In both strains,
the rpoS promoter was active throughout the growth phase,
followed by a quick decay in light emission as the cells entered
stationary phase. Our results show that rpoS transcription
is not induced in cells at the end of the exponential phase of growth.
Previously, Lange and Hengge-Aronis showed that in E. coli, rpoS transcription was not significantly induced
in cells entering stationary phase in minimal media (24). Also, our data indicate that the rpoS gene does not seem to
be involved in the control of its own transcription. The quick
decay of light as cells stop growing, commonly observed in isolates bearing luxAB genes, likely reflects the requirement for an
energy-generating activity in the cells in order for them to be
bioluminescent, which makes the luxAB reporter system useful
in monitoring of situations of low energy; however, it is a limitation
when gene expression is studied under carbon starvation conditions.

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Fig. 4.
Growth-dependent expression of the rpoS genes
of P. putida R6C1 ( , ), and P. putida C1R1 ( , ). Exponentially growing cells in 10 mM
citrate-supplemented AB minimal medium were diluted in the same
medium, and growth (open symbols) and emission of light (solid symbols)
were measured. Measurement of luminescence in liquid culture was
carried out as described previously (34). LU values are not
normalized per cell. Notice that the same range of log units, four, is
plotted in both y axes, and therefore the curve slopes of
light emission and optical density are comparable. Experiments were
repeated with three cultures; results of a typical experiment from a
single culture are presented. Duplicate measurements of LU in a single
experiment yielded an average standard deviation of 10%.
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Phenotypic characterization of the P. putida rpoS
mutant. (i) Effect of rpoS on survival of carbon
starvation.
The P. putida rpoS-deficient strain
C1R1 was investigated for its survival of carbon starvation compared to
the P. putida parental strain KT2440. The results are
shown in Fig. 5. The increase in cell
number in the early starvation phase is consistent with previous
findings for P. putida (13, 20). Viable
counts of the rpoS-deficient strain C1R1 were reduced about
100-fold after 2 weeks of carbon starvation, whether starvation was
accomplished by exhaustion of the citrate or by a shift to medium with
no carbon source (not shown). Viable counts of the carbon-starved
rpoS-proficient strain KT2440 were constant during the time
of the experiment, and even after 3 to 4 weeks there was no significant
change in viable counts compared to the prestarvation level (~5 × 108 CFU). The same response to C starvation as for the
wild-type strain was exhibited by the merodiploid strain, R6C1. The
survival subpopulation of the mutant strain C1R1 was regrown, taken
through a new cycle of carbon starvation, and found to be like the
start population. To clarify the mechanisms which might be responsible for the survival of 1% of the bacterial population, more
investigations are required. However, no extra copy of the
rpoS gene was detected in either Southern blot or
pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) analysis (31a). The
further generation of double mutants of the rpoS-deficient
strain C1R1, which were unable to emit light (dark mutants produced by
transposition, for example), will contribute to the identification of
putative regulators which by controlling the expression of the
rpoS gene might be the key to understanding the mechanisms
responsible for survival of the subpopulation to C starvation.

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Fig. 5.
Long-term survival of P. putida strains.
Carbon starvation of P. putida KT2440 ( ), R6C1
( ), and C1R1 ( ) cells was accomplished through exhaustion of 1 mM
citrate present in AB minimal medium as described in Materials and
Methods. Exponentially growing cells in 10 mM citrate-supplemented AB
minimal medium were centrifuged, the supernatant was discarded, and the
cells were resuspended in 1 mM citrate-supplemented AB medium up to
3 × 107 to 4 × 107 cells per ml.
Time zero was defined in day 0 as cultures reached stationary phase.
Survival of the starved cultures was monitored by determination of
viable counts on LB plates, supplemented with streptomycin in the case
of R6C1. Each starvation condition was repeated at least twice with two
cultures each time. Means and standard deviations of duplicate
experiments with the same cultures are plotted. Some of the error bars
are too small to be distinguished.
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(ii) Effect of rpoS in cross-protection to stress.
Growing cells and carbon-starved cells were challenged with ethanol,
hydrogen peroxide, and high medium osmolarity. Conditions (i.e.,
concentration, time, and temperature) were chosen such that a rapid
decline in the survival of a growing culture was obtained
(13). No difference between rpoS-proficient and
rpoS-deficient exponentially growing cells was observed
after challenge with these treatments. P. putida KT2440
and R6C1 cells carbon starved for 24 h or longer developed a high
level of resistance to ethanol, resulting in at least
1,000-times-higher viable counts than was found for growing cells after
12 min of treatment (not shown). Carbon-starved
rpoS-deficient C1R1 cells were significantly more sensitive
to ethanol, showing 100-fold-lower viable counts than the wild type
after 30 min of treatment (Fig. 6A).
Carbon starvation induced a high level of resistance to
H2O2 in the strains, including C1R1, which was
only slightly more sensitive to the oxygen stress than the
RpoS+ strains (Fig. 6B). Resistance to high
osmolarity was also induced by carbon starvation (only 10% of growing
RpoS+ cells survived after 30 min of osmotic stress,
whereas up to 90% of the starved cells survived 60 min of stress).
Again, starved C1R1 rpoS cells were slightly more sensitive
than RpoS+ strains during the first hour of the osmotic
stress (Fig. 6C).

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Fig. 6.
Stress challenges of carbon-starved cultures of
P. putida KT2440 ( ), R6C1 ( ), and C1R1 ( ).
Starvation (for 48 h) was accomplished by exhaustion of 1 mM
citrate from minimal medium M9. (A) Challenge with 18% (vol/vol)
ethanol; (B) challenge with 200 µM H2O2; (C)
challenge with 2.4 M NaCl. Viable counts present in each of the
prechallenge samples (time zero) were normalized to 1. Survival was
determined as relative viable counts. Each challenge experiment was
repeated at least twice with two cultures each time. Means and standard
deviations of duplicate experiments with the same cultures are plotted.
Some of the error bars are too small to be distinguished.
|
|
(iii) Synthesis of proteins after a shift to carbon
starvation.
A 2D-PAGE system was used for the separation and
analysis of [35S]methionine-labeled proteins from
P. putida KT2440 and the rpoS derivative
C1R1. [35S]methionine-labeled proteins from either
growing cells, cells starved for carbon for 1 h, or cells starved
for 5 days were analyzed. The different physiological states of the
cells resulted in highly different patterns of labeled proteins,
although it was possible to identify a common pool of background
peptides from growing and 1-h starving cells. Identical patterns of
protein synthesis were obtained from growing cells of the wild-type and
rpoS mutant strains of P. putida (not
shown). In contrast, significant differences were observed between
carbon-starved cultures of the two strains: (i) for 1-h starvation, 39 polypeptide spots were missing in C1R1 (peptides positively dependent
on RpoS [PPD]) and 13 new spots appeared which were not detected in
the wild type (peptides negatively dependent on RpoS [PND]) (Fig.
7); (ii) for 5 days of starvation, 14 PPD
were missing in C1R1 and 7 PND were not detected in the wild type (not
shown). It was not possible to identify whether the PPD and PND
observed after 5 days of carbon starvation corresponded to some of the
PPD and PND observed after 1 h of carbon starvation because
long-term C-starved cells resulted in a highly different pattern of
labeled proteins. A program of protein synthesis as P. putida cells stop growing was reported previously
(12). The differences between the wild-type and
P. putida rpoS-deficient strains obtained in
protein synthesis after the shift to carbon starvation indicate that
RpoS acts as a central regulator of stationary-phase gene
expression in P. putida. Similar differences in the
pattern of protein synthesis between rpoS-proficient and
-deficient strains have been reported for E. coli
(23), and RpoS-controlled E. coli promoters have been identified (3, 22, 23).

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Fig. 7.
2D-PAGE autoradiograms of carbon starvation-induced
proteins of P. putida KT2440 (A) and P. putida C1R1 (B) 60 min after removal of the carbon source. Cells
were cultivated in 10 mM citrate-supplemented AB minimal media. Spots
positively (not present in panel B) and negatively (not present in
panel A) dependent on rpoS are enclosed in boxes and stars,
respectively. Molecular mass decreases from top to bottom (100 to 5 kDa), and pH decreases from left to right.
|
|
(iv) Expression of rpoS-controlled E. coli promoters in P. putida.
Expression of
the growth-phase-dependent E. coli promoters
bolAp1 and ficp, carried by plasmids
pGM112 and pGM115, respectively, was monitored in growing
cultures of P. putida KT2440, R6C1, and C1R1 (Fig.
8). Plasmid pGM118 is a control plasmid
expressing the background transcription activity of the vector. No
-galactosidase activity was detected from any of these strains until
the cultures were about to enter the stationary phase. The
-galactosidase activities measured in stationary-phase cells of
P. putida KT2440(pGM112) and R6C1(pGM112) increased
from a background level of 200 to 600 Miller units (Fig. 8A and B).
Likewise, the
-galactosidase activity of the same two strains
harboring pGM115 increased from 200 to 900 units (Fig. 8A and B). For
the rpoS-deficient strain P. putida C1R1
(Fig. 8C), however, only marginal increases above the background level
of gene expression were measured. It was recently reported that these
promoters are induced in wild-type P. putida cells after entry into stationary phase, and the induction was associated with the detection of a chromosomal fragment hybridizing with the
E. coli rpoS gene in Southern blot analysis
(26). Thus, the lack of induction of ficp and
bolAp1 in the rpoS-deficient background (C1R1 [Fig. 8C]) confirms that induction of these two genes, also in P. putida, is dependent on a
functional rpoS gene. The increase in
-galactosidase
activity in early stationary phase with the vector pGM118 alone without
any promoter is RpoS independent since it was observed in the wild type
and the mutant; it could be explained by an increase in plasmid copy
number. The marginal induction of ficp expression at
the entrance to stationary phase in C1R1 was not observed with the
rpoS-deficient strain E. coli MC4100 (not
shown). Further studies of expression with growth-dependent Pseudomonas promoters might be helpful in revealing whether
sigma factors other than RpoS are involved in transcription at
stationary phase in P. putida.

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Fig. 8.
Expression from bolAp1 and
ficp in P. putida KT2440 (A), P. putida R6C1 (B), and C1R1 (C) bearing either pGM112 ( , ),
pGM115 ( , ), or pGM118 ( , ). P. putida
cells were electrotransformed with plasmids pGM112
(bolAp1), pGM115 (ficp), and pGM118
(control vector, no promoter), and expression from the plasmids
carrying bolAp1 and ficp was studied
in growing cultures. Exponentially growing LB cultures were used as
inoculates, and cells were grown in the same LB medium supplemented
with the appropriate antibiotics. OD600 (open symbols) and
specific -galactosidase (B~gal) activities (solid symbols) were
monitored. -Galactosidase activities are not the result of
subtracting the background levels that are synthesized from the vector
pGM118 alone. Duplicate measurements of -galactosidase activities in
a single experiment yielded an average standard deviation of 5%.
|
|
(v) Effect of rpoS on survival in soil.
P.
putida strains were introduced in cambisol soil at a density of
2 × 108 to 4 × 108 cells per g.
P. putida KT2440 and C1R1 survived at densities higher
than 108 cells per g for almost 1 month (27 days) in
unamended soil, and the same result was obtained with cells that
harbored the TOL plasmid pWWO (Fig. 9A).
pWWO confers on P. putida the ability to degrade
contaminants such as toluene and alkylbenzoates (10). In
soils amended with m-methylbenzoate (Fig. 9B), the
population (CFU) of P. putida KT2440 decreased by about
1 log after 3 days and remained more or less constant thereafter, with
a slight tendency to decrease. However, the population of the
rpoS-deficient strain, C1R1, decreased by about 1.5 logs
after 3 days and by about 3 logs after 1 month, by the end of the
experiment (Fig. 9B). Strains bearing the TOL plasmid in amended soils
remained at levels above the inoculum size throughout the experiment.
Levels of survival of the wild-type and mutant populations were the
same in the unamended soil, probably because the bacterial cells were
not carbon starved due to the organic matter present in the cambisol
soil. In the absence of m-methylbenzoate, the presence of
the TOL plasmid had no effect on survival. As the microcosms had been
amended with the contaminant, pWWO played a major role in survival: the
populations of P. putida KT2440(pWWO) and
C1R1(pWWO) increased above 109 cells per g, whereas
the populations of the same host strains, wild-type and C1R1, without
TOL declined to 107 and 105 cells per g of
soil, respectively. Thus m-methylbenzoate caused stress to
cells without the TOL plasmid and supported the growth in soil of
bacteria containing the TOL plasmid. The rpoS-deficient strain C1R1 was more sensitive than the wild type to contaminant stress
with m-methylbenzoate. However, the biodegradation
capability conferred by the TOL plasmid protected the rpoS
mutant against the toxic effect of m-methylbenzoate.

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Fig. 9.
Survival of P. putida strains in soil.
(A) P. putida KT2440 ( ), its
rpoS-deficient derivative strain P. putida
C1R1 ( ), P. putida KT2440(pWWO) ( ), and
P. putida C1R1(pWWO) ( ) were introduced in unamended
sterile soil in independent jars; (B) symbols as in panel A, but the
microcosms were amended with 0.1% (wt/wt) m-methylbenzoate.
For each determination, five different dilutions were plated by the
drop-plating technique (20-µl drops were laid on selective plates).
Mean values are shown, and maximum and minimum values are presented
with error bars. Data are from a single experiment, although microcosms
were run in duplicate, and typically the same result was observed.
Selective medium for P. putida strains bearing the TOL
plasmid was 5 mM m-methylbenzoate-supplemented M9; for
strains without the TOL plasmid the same medium was supplemented with 5 mM benzoate.
|
|
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
We thank G. W. Huisman for E. coli ZK918 and
for advice on cloning of the rpoS gene from
P. putida; we thank G. Miksch for plasmids pGM112,
pGM115, and pGM118. We also thank Michael Givskov and Mogens Kilstrup
for help with the 2D-PAGE and Flemming G. Hansen for use of his
computer program SEQUENCE. We thank Silvia Marqués and
J. L. Ramos for communicating unpublished results, and we thank
M. A. Ramos-Díaz for useful discussions on PFGE.
This work was supported by grants to S.M. from the Danish Biotechnology
Program and to M.I.R.-G., who held a Spanish Government postdoctoral
research fellowship. The work was further supported by the Plasmid
Foundation.
 |
ADDENDUM |
After this paper was submitted, the sequence of the
Pseudomonas tolaasii rpoS gene became available in the DDBJ
database. The identity between the P. putida RpoS
protein and that of P. tolaasii was about 90%, and the
similarity was 97%. As for the other known pseudomonad RpoS proteins,
the amino-terminal sequence of P. tolaasii RpoS was
more conserved than that of the enteric bacteria.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author. Present address: Department of
Biochemistry and Molecular and Cellular Biology of Plants, DOT Group, Estación Experimental del Zaidin (Consejo Superior de
Investigaciones Científicas), Profesor Albareda, 1, 18008-Granada, Spain. Phone: 34-58-121011. Fax: 34-58-129600. E-mail:
maribel.ramos{at}eez.csic.es.
 |
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Espinosa-Urgel, M., Ramos, J.-L.
(2004). Cell Density-Dependent Gene Contributes to Efficient Seed Colonization by Pseudomonas putida KT2440. Appl. Environ. Microbiol.
70: 5190-5198
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Sevo, M., Buratti, E., Venturi, V.
(2004). Ribosomal Protein S1 Specifically Binds to the 5' Untranslated Region of the Pseudomonas aeruginosa Stationary-Phase Sigma Factor rpoS mRNA in the Logarithmic Phase of Growth. J. Bacteriol.
186: 4903-4909
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Subsin, B., Thomas, M. S., Katzenmeier, G., Shaw, J. G., Tungpradabkul, S., Kunakorn, M.
(2003). Role of the Stationary Growth Phase Sigma Factor RpoS of Burkholderia pseudomallei in Response to Physiological Stress Conditions. J. Bacteriol.
185: 7008-7014
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Teran, W., Felipe, A., Segura, A., Rojas, A., Ramos, J.-L., Gallegos, M.-T.
(2003). Antibiotic-Dependent Induction of Pseudomonas putida DOT-T1E TtgABC Efflux Pump Is Mediated by the Drug Binding Repressor TtgR. Antimicrob. Agents Chemother.
47: 3067-3072
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Hulsmann, A., Rosche, T. M., Kong, I.-S., Hassan, H. M., Beam, D. M., Oliver, J. D.
(2003). RpoS-Dependent Stress Response and Exoenzyme Production in Vibrio vulnificus. Appl. Environ. Microbiol.
69: 6114-6120
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Ramos-Gonzalez, M.-I., Ben-Bassat, A., Campos, M.-J., Ramos, J. L.
(2003). Genetic Engineering of a Highly Solvent-Tolerant Pseudomonas putida Strain for Biotransformation of Toluene to p-Hydroxybenzoate. Appl. Environ. Microbiol.
69: 5120-5127
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Kadouri, D., Jurkevitch, E., Okon, Y.
(2003). Involvement of the Reserve Material Poly-{beta}-Hydroxybutyrate in Azospirillum brasilense Stress Endurance and Root Colonization. Appl. Environ. Microbiol.
69: 3244-3250
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Aguilar, C., Bertani, I., Venturi, V.
(2003). Quorum-Sensing System and Stationary-Phase Sigma Factor (rpoS) of the Onion Pathogen Burkholderia cepacia Genomovar I Type Strain, ATCC 25416. Appl. Environ. Microbiol.
69: 1739-1747
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Holmstrom, K., Gram, L.
(2003). Elucidation of the Vibrio anguillarum Genetic Response to the Potential Fish Probiont Pseudomonas fluorescens AH2, Using RNA-Arbitrarily Primed PCR. J. Bacteriol.
185: 831-842
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Wunsch, P., Herb, M., Wieland, H., Schiek, U. M., Zumft, W. G.
(2003). Requirements for CuA and Cu-S Center Assembly of Nitrous Oxide Reductase Deduced from Complete Periplasmic Enzyme Maturation in the Nondenitrifier Pseudomonas putida. J. Bacteriol.
185: 887-896
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Ramos-Gonzalez, M.-I., Olson, M., Gatenby, A. A., Mosqueda, G., Manzanera, M., Campos, M. J., Vichez, S., Ramos, J. L.
(2002). Cross-Regulation between a Novel Two-Component Signal Transduction System for Catabolism of Toluene in Pseudomonas mendocina and the TodST System from Pseudomonas putida. J. Bacteriol.
184: 7062-7067
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Ilves, H., Horak, R., Kivisaar, M.
(2001). Involvement of {sigma}S in Starvation-Induced Transposition of Pseudomonas putida Transposon Tn4652. J. Bacteriol.
183: 5445-5448
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Koch, B., Worm, J., Jensen, L. E., Hojberg, O., Nybroe, O.
(2001). Carbon Limitation Induces {sigma}S-Dependent Gene Expression in Pseudomonas fluorescens in Soil. Appl. Environ. Microbiol.
67: 3363-3370
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Kojic, M., Venturi, V.
(2001). Regulation of rpoS Gene Expression in Pseudomonas: Involvement of a TetR Family Regulator. J. Bacteriol.
183: 3712-3720
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Kelly, A. F., Park, S. F., Bovill, R., Mackey, B. M.
(2001). Survival of Campylobacter jejuni during Stationary Phase: Evidence for the Absence of a Phenotypic Stationary-Phase Response. Appl. Environ. Microbiol.
67: 2248-2254
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Manzanera, M., Aranda-Olmedo, I., Ramos, J. L., Marqués, S.
(2001). Molecular characterization of Pseudomonas putida KT2440 rpoH gene regulation. Microbiology
147: 1323-1330
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Ruiz, J. A., López, N. I., Fernández, R. O., Méndez, B. S.
(2001). Polyhydroxyalkanoate Degradation Is Associated with Nucleotide Accumulation and Enhances Stress Resistance and Survival of Pseudomonas oleovorans in Natural Water Microcosms. Appl. Environ. Microbiol.
67: 225-230
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Vílchez, S., Manzanera, M., Ramos, J. L.
(2000). Control of Expression of Divergent Pseudomonas putida put Promoters for Proline Catabolism. Appl. Environ. Microbiol.
66: 5221-5225
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Ojangu, E.-L., Tover, A., Teras, R., Kivisaar, M.
(2000). Effects of Combination of Different -10 Hexamers and Downstream Sequences on Stationary-Phase-Specific Sigma Factor sigma S-Dependent Transcription in Pseudomonas putida. J. Bacteriol.
182: 6707-6713
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Eberl, L., Ammendola, A., Rothballer, M. H., Givskov, M., Sternberg, C., Kilstrup, M., Schleifer, K.-H., Molin, S.
(2000). Inactivation of gltB Abolishes Expression of the Assimilatory Nitrate Reductase Gene (nasB) in Pseudomonas putida KT2442. J. Bacteriol.
182: 3368-3376
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Suh, S.-J., Silo-Suh, L., Woods, D. E., Hassett, D. J., West, S. E. H., Ohman, D. E.
(1999). Effect of rpoS Mutation on the Stress Response and Expression of Virulence Factors in Pseudomonas aeruginosa. J. Bacteriol.
181: 3890-3897
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Canosa, I., Yuste, L., Rojo, F.
(1999). Role of the Alternative Sigma Factor sigma S in Expression of the AlkS Regulator of the Pseudomonas oleovorans Alkane Degradation Pathway. J. Bacteriol.
181: 1748-1754
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Ramos-Díaz, M. A., Ramos, J. L.
(1998). Combined Physical and Genetic Map of the Pseudomonas putida KT2440 Chromosome. J. Bacteriol.
180: 6352-6363
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