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Journal of Bacteriology, November 1998, p. 5961-5967, Vol. 180, No. 22
0021-9193/98/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1998, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Transcriptional Activation of the Bacillus
subtilis ackA Gene Requires Sequences Upstream of the
Promoter
Andrew J.
Turinsky,1
Frank J.
Grundy,2
Jeong-Ho
Kim,3
Glenn H.
Chambliss,3 and
Tina
M.
Henkin2,*
Department of Microbiology, The Ohio State
University, Columbus, Ohio 432102;
Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Albany
Medical College, Albany, New York 122081;
and
Department of Bacteriology, University of Wisconsin,
Madison, Wisconsin 537063
Received 7 April 1998/Accepted 8 September 1998
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ABSTRACT |
Transcriptional activation of the Bacillus subtilis
ackA gene, encoding acetate kinase, was previously shown to
require catabolite control protein A (CcpA) and sequences upstream of
the ackA promoter. CcpA, which is responsible for
catabolite repression of a number of secondary carbon source
utilization genes in B. subtilis and other gram-positive
bacteria, recognizes a cis-acting consensus sequence,
designated cre (catabolite response element), generally located within or downstream of the promoter of the repressed gene. Two
sites resembling this sequence are centered at positions
116.5 and
56.5 of the ackA promoter and have been termed
cre1 and cre2, respectively. Synthesis of
acetate kinase, which is involved in the conversion of acetyl coenzyme
A to acetate, is induced when cells are grown in the presence of an
easily metabolized carbon source such as glucose. In this study,
cre2, the site closer to the promoter, and the region
upstream of cre2 were shown to be indispensable for
CcpA-dependent transcriptional activation of ackA, whereas
cre1 was not required. In addition, insertion of 5 bp
between cre2 and the promoter disrupted activation, while 10 bp was tolerated, suggesting face-of-the-helix dependence of the
position of cre2 and/or upstream sequences. DNase
footprinting experiments demonstrated binding of CcpA in vitro to
cre2 but not cre1, consistent with the genetic
data. Activation of ackA transcription was blocked in a
ptsH1/crh double mutant, suggesting involvement of this
pathway in CcpA-mediated transcriptional activation.
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INTRODUCTION |
The mechanism of carbon catabolite
regulation in gram-positive bacteria appears to be fundamentally
different from that employed by enteric gram-negative bacteria. The
absence of detectable amounts of cyclic AMP under normal growth
conditions in Bacillus subtilis has long indicated that the
regulation of secondary carbon source utilization genes in B. subtilis is different from that of Escherichia coli,
which relies on cyclic AMP as an effector of the CAP/CRP protein (see
references 17 and 25 for a
review). Unlike the positive regulatory mechanism found in E. coli, carbon catabolite regulation in gram-positive bacteria
appears to be mediated by transcriptional repression, requiring
trans-acting CcpA (catabolite control protein A), a member
of the LacI-GalR family of bacterial regulatory proteins
(16), and a cis-acting consensus sequence, designated cre (20, 51). The
cis-acting site, first identified in the regulation of the
gene for
-amylase (amyE) and termed amyO, is a
palindromic sequence structurally similar to the E. coli lac
and gal operators (38, 51). Elements resembling
the consensus sequence have been found in other secondary carbon source utilization genes, including acsA and acu
(12), hut (52), gnt
(33), xyl (26), bgl
(27), lev (29), and mmg
(1). Catabolite repression of these genes is relieved upon
mutation of the consensus sequences or expression in a ccpA mutant.
CcpA homologs have been identified in a number of other gram-positive
organisms, including B. megaterium (21),
Staphylococcus xylosus (8), Clostridium
acetobutylicum (4), and Lactobacillus casei
(35). Western analysis suggests that proteins with related antigenic determinants are widely distributed in gram-positive bacteria
(28), although it has not been demonstrated that these proteins are functional homologs of CcpA. The cre element
has also been found in a large number of genes in a variety of
gram-positive organisms (20), although the significance of
most of these sequences has not been tested. A second B. subtilis gene related to ccpA has recently been
identified (2); this gene, designated ccpB, appears to play a role in catabolite repression under low-oxygen growth conditions.
CcpA is constitutively expressed in B. subtilis (1a,
17, 34) and is therefore likely to require a signalling pathway to control its activity. The details of this pathway are not completely clear. CcpA has been shown to bind in vitro to the HPr protein of the
phosphoenolpyruvate-dependent phosphotransferase system when HPr is
phosphorylated at Ser-46, and this interaction affects the DNA binding
activity of CcpA (5, 11, 22). The ATP-dependent phosphorylation of Hpr at Ser-46 is catalyzed by the
ptsK-encoded kinase, activity of which is stimulated by
fructose 1,6-bisphosphate (41). A mutant form of HPr
containing an alanine substitution at Ser-46 (ptsH1) results
in the complete or partial loss of catabolite repression of several
genes that are subject to control by CcpA (3, 6, 29, 42);
however, the ptsH1 mutation has no effect on repression of
amyE (50), suggesting at least one other
mechanism for CcpA activation. Crh, an HPr-like protein that can only
be phosphorylated at Ser-46, has recently been identified in B. subtilis (10) and may provide an alternate pathway for
control of CcpA activity.
Along with its role as a transcriptional repressor, CcpA is also
required for the activation of at least two carbon excretion pathways,
acetoin biosynthesis (43) and acetate production
(13). Acetyl coenzyme A (acetyl-CoA) and acetate are
interconverted by two separate pathways in B. subtilis.
Phosphotransacetylase, the product of the pta gene,
catalyzes the conversion of acetyl-CoA to the intermediate acetyl
phosphate (39), while conversion of acetyl phosphate to
acetate is catalyzed by acetate kinase, encoded by ackA
(13). Utilization of acetate by its conversion back to
acetyl-CoA requires the acsA gene product, acetyl-CoA synthetase (14). The acsA gene contains a
cre site downstream of the transcription start site, and
transcription is repressed by CcpA in the presence of excess glucose
(12, 14). In contrast to its effect on acsA
transcription, CcpA activates transcription of ackA during
growth in the presence of excess glucose (13).
Activation of ackA transcription requires sequences upstream
of the ackA promoter (13). Two cre
sites, designated cre1 and cre2, are centered at
positions
116.5 and
56.5 relative to the transcription start site
of ackA (Fig. 1). These sites
differ from amyO by a single base substitution of an A to a
T; this substitution at amyO has no effect on repression
(51). In addition, cre1 contains a one-base
insertion. While cre sequences are generally positioned
within or downstream of the promoter in genes that are repressed by
CcpA, cre1 and cre2 are located upstream of the ackA promoter. In this study, the roles of these sites in
the CcpA-dependent activation of ackA transcription were
investigated. Mutational analyses demonstrated that cre2 and
the region immediately upstream of this site are required for
transcriptional activation and that the position of cre2
relative to the
35 region of the ackA promoter is
important for function.

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FIG. 1.
(A) Structure of the ackA promoter region.
The positions of cre1 and cre2 upstream of the
ackA promoter are shown. (B) Mutations in cre1
and cre2. The G-to-T substitutions in cre1 and
cre2 are labeled G8T1 and G8T2, respectively. Mutation of
the upstream region of cre1 is labeled AA45CG1. indicates the base that was deleted in cre1 to generate a
sequence identical to cre2. The amyO consensus
sequence is included for comparison. gra-115 and
gra-30 indicate mutations which eliminate repression at
amyO (51).
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Bacterial strains and growth conditions.
The bacterial
strains used in this study are listed in Table
1. Plasmids were propagated in E. coli DH5
grown in LB medium (32). B. subtilis was grown in tryptose blood agar base (Difco), 2XYT, or
TSS medium (9) with NH4Cl as the nitrogen source
and 1% Casamino Acids as the carbon source, in the presence or absence of 1% glucose. All growth was at 37°C. Antibiotics (Sigma) were used
at the following concentrations: ampicillin, 50 µg/ml;
chloramphenicol, 5 µg/ml for selection and 0.1 µg/ml for
induction; erythromycin, 1 µg/ml for selection and 0.1 µg/ml
for induction; lincomycin, 25 µg/ml; kanamycin, 5 µg/ml;
spectinomycin, 200 µg/ml. Amino acids were added to TSS medium at 50 µg/ml as required for auxotrophic strains. X-Gal
(5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indolyl-
-D-galactopyranoside) was
used at 40 µg/ml as an indicator of
-galactosidase activity.
Genetic techniques.
Restriction endonucleases were purchased
from New England BioLabs or Promega and used as described by the
manufacturer. Preparation of single-stranded M13 template DNA and
double-stranded plasmid DNA and dideoxynucleotide sequencing
(Sequenase; United States Biochemicals) were performed by using
standard techniques. Oligonucleotide primers were purchased from
Cruachem and are shown in Table 2. PCR
was carried out on a Perkin-Elmer DNA Thermal Cycler 480 using a
Gene-Amp kit (Perkin-Elmer Cetus). B. subtilis
transformation was carried out as described previously (15).
ackA deletion analysis and operator mutations.
Mutations in the region upstream of ackA were generated by
PCR-mediated oligonucleotide-directed mutagenesis. All PCRs were performed on a 1.35-kb EcoRI fragment which contained the
ackA promoter and 1 kb of DNA upstream of the promoter. The
1.35-kb fragment was inserted into the EcoRI site of plasmid
pGEM7Zf(+) (Promega). The EcoRI site in pGEM7Zf(+) is
flanked by a KpnI restriction site on the 5' end and an
XbaI restriction site on the 3' end. Truncation of the
region upstream of ackA used preexisting restriction sites
or the creation of new sites by PCR. The 3' end of each deletion
fragment made use of the same XbaI site and primer M13Sal. Wild-type activity was based on expression from the 1.35-kb
ackA fragment.
The G8T1 mutation in cre1 was generated by PCR using the
1.35-kb EcoRI fragment as the template, with primers M13Rev
and TH449 (5' fragment) and M13Sal and TH448 (3' fragment) in separate
reactions. The products were digested with KpnI plus
HindIII and HindIII plus XbaI,
respectively, and inserted together into plasmid pFG328 digested with
KpnI and XbaI to regenerate the 1.35-kb fragment with a HindIII site at cre1. The G8T2
mutation in cre2 was generated in a similar manner by using
primers M13Rev and AckO2 (5' fragment) and primers M13Sal and AckO1 (3'
fragment). The AA45CG1 mutation in cre1 was generated by
mismatched PCR mutagenesis (45). Primers AA45CG1, containing
the mutation, and M13Sal were used in one reaction to generate the
downstream portion of the ackA fragment, and primers Ack4
and M13Rev were used to generate an overlapping upstream fragment. The
PCR fragments were gel purified, mixed in equimolar concentrations,
denatured, and annealed to form heteroduplex molecules, and the 3' ends
of the heteroduplex molecules were extended in a second PCR using
primers M13Rev and M13Sal. The resulting fragment was then cloned by
using KpnI and XbaI. The C
D1 mutation was
generated in a similar manner by using primer C
D1 in place of AA45CG1.
Insertions of 5 and 10 bp between the ackA promoter and
cre2 were obtained by using oligonucleotide primers with
BamHI sites. Two separate amplification reactions were set
up for each insertion. PCR of the upstream fragment for the two
insertions with primers AckBRV and M13Rev and digestion with
KpnI and BamHI produced a 1-kb fragment that
contained the two cre sites with a BamHI site at
the 3' end. Amplification of the downstream fragments with primers
M13Sal and AckBam5 or AckBS for the 5- or 10-bp insertions, respectively, and digestion with BamHI and XbaI
resulted in two 350-bp fragments with a BamHI site just
upstream of the
35 region of the promoter. Ligation of the AckBRV
fragment with the AckBam5 or AckBS fragment resulted in a 5- or 10-bp
insertion, respectively, between the ackA promoter and
cre2. All mutations were verified by DNA sequencing.
Construction of lacZ fusions.
ackA-lacZ
transcriptional fusions were generated by cloning the sequenced
ackA fragment into E. coli plasmid pFG328
(13) by using KpnI or BamHI at the 5'
end and XbaI at the 3' end. The fusions were incorporated
into specialized transducing phage SP
by homologous recombination
between the plasmid and the prophage contained in strain ZB307A. The
resulting phage were purified by passage through strain ZB449 (SP
cured) and used to transduce isogenic wild-type and CcpA
strains (12).
-Galactosidase measurements.
Strains carrying the
ackA-lacZ transcriptional fusions were grown in TSS medium
in the presence or absence of 1% glucose and maintained in early
exponential growth by serial dilutions for adaptation to the growth
medium. Samples were then taken at 30-min intervals until 2 h past
entry into stationary phase (T0).
-Galactosidase assays were performed as described by Miller
(32), by using toluene permeabilization of the cells. All
growth experiments were repeated at least twice and showed less than
10% variation.
Acetate production.
Cells were grown in TSS medium with 1%
Casamino Acids in the presence or absence of glucose (0.25%). Samples
were harvested at 30 min prior to T0, and
culture supernatants were assayed for acetate by using a kit purchased
from Boehringer Mannheim.
DNase footprinting.
A DNA fragment containing the
ackA promoter region between positions
195 and +18 was
subcloned into plasmid pUC18 and labeled at the 3' ends with
[
-32P]dATP by using Klenow fragment (Promega). The
labelled DNA was gel purified and recovered by electroelution as
described previously (23). Purification of the CcpA protein
and DNase footprinting were carried out as described by Kim et al.
(24).
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RESULTS |
Deletion analysis.
Deletion of the entire region upstream of
the ackA promoter eliminates transcriptional activation in
the presence of glucose (13). This region contains two
sequences resembling amyO, the sequence in the
amyE promoter region where the CcpA protein binds to repress
transcription during growth in glucose (23, 24, 51). These
sequences, designated cre1 and cre2 (Fig. 1),
were considered likely targets for CcpA-dependent transcriptional
activation of ackA. To precisely identify the sequences
required for transcriptional activation, a more detailed deletion
analysis was performed. Transcriptional fusions to lacZ
using deletion fragments extending from 3 bp to 1 kb upstream of the
35 region of the ackA promoter (Fig.
2) were introduced in single copy into
the B. subtilis chromosome by using specialized transducing
phage SP
. Expression of the fusions was monitored in TSS medium
containing 1% Casamino Acids in the presence (induced) or absence
(uninduced) of 1% glucose.

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FIG. 2.
Deletion analysis of the region upstream of the
ackA promoter. Each number in parentheses indicates the
distance of the deletion end point from the transcription start point
(arrow). The two black boxes indicate the positions of the
cre sites. Cells were grown in TSS medium containing 1%
Casamino Acids (uninduced) or TSS medium containing 1% Casamino Acids
and 1% glucose (induced). -Galactosidase activity is expressed in
Miller units (32). Values are shown for samples taken 30 min
prior to entry into stationary phase. Results for AckHincII were
previously reported (13). The ratio indicates the level of
induction during growth in the presence of glucose.
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Deletion of the region upstream of cre1 had no effect on
induction of ackA-lacZ expression (Fig. 2). The shortest
deletion fragment, AckHincII (13), made use of a
HincII restriction site just upstream of the
35 region of
the ackA promoter. This mutant was previously shown to
exhibit reduced basal activity and no induction by growth in the
presence of glucose. Based on these results, two additional deletion
mutants were generated by using sites in the region separating the two
cre sites. AckKpn2, which included sequences 11 bp upstream
of cre2, resulted in loss of transcriptional activation of
ackA-lacZ in the presence of glucose. AckBam3, which
contained cre2 along with the entire region separating the
two sites (42 bp upstream of cre2), retained full
transcriptional activation. This region encompasses 70 bp upstream of
the
35 region of the ackA promoter. These results
indicated that sequences between cre1 and the AckKpn2
deletion end point are necessary for transcriptional activation of
ackA in the presence of glucose.
Mutation of Ccp boxes.
The results of the deletion analysis
indicated that cre2 is not sufficient for transcriptional
activation and that cre1 is not required. To specifically
test the role of these elements, substitutions were made which
corresponded to mutations known to eliminate repression at
amyO (51; Fig. 1B). As shown in Fig. 3A, the wild-type ackA-lacZ
fusion reaches maximal induction toward the end of exponential growth.
A single base substitution in cre2, termed G8T2, eliminated
transcriptional activation of ackA in the presence of
glucose. The level of activity was less than the basal activity of the
wild-type fusion and was comparable to the activity obtained with the
deletion of both elements (Fig. 2). This indicates that cre2
is necessary for transcriptional activation and also plays a role in
basal expression in the absence of glucose.

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FIG. 3.
Effect of mutations in cre sites on
expression of ackA-lacZ transcriptional fusions. Cells were
grown in TSS medium containing 1% Casamino Acids (open symbols) or TSS
medium containing 1% Casamino Acids and 1% glucose (filled symbols).
-Galactosidase activity is expressed in Miller units
(32). The vertical arrows indicate time of entry of the
culture into stationary phase. (A) Effect of the G8T2 cre2
mutant (squares) compared to the wild-type fusion (circles). (B) Effect
of the G8T1 cre1 mutant (squares) compared to the wild-type
fusion (circles). (C) Effect of the C D1 mutation in cre1
(squares) compared to the wild-type fusion (circles).
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Two different mutations in cre1 were tested. The G8T1
mutation, which was identical to the mutation made in cre2,
had no effect on ackA-lacZ expression (Fig. 3B), in contrast
to the drastic effect of this substitution in cre2. These
substitutions targeted the downstream region of the elements. To test
the possibility that only a portion of cre1 is necessary, a
second mutation in the upstream portion of cre1, termed
AA45CG1, was generated. This mutation also had no effect on
transcriptional activation of ackA (data not shown). These
results, in conjunction with the deletion analysis, demonstrate that
cre2, but not cre1, is required for transcriptional activation of ackA.
cre1 differs from cre2 by the presence of an
extra cytosine 5 bp from the 3' end (Fig. 1B). A deletion of this extra
base, termed C
D1, was tested to determine if the presence of a
second cre2 sequence would increase transcriptional
activation of ackA. This mutation resulted in reduction of
both the basal and induced levels of expression but had no effect on
the induction ratio (Fig. 3C). The presence of a "perfect" element
at the position of cre1 apparently interferes with the
normal function of cre2, possibly by sequestering the CcpA
protein in a nonfavorable interaction.
Linker insertions.
The center of cre2 is located
21.5 bp upstream of the
35 region of the ackA promoter. To
determine whether the position of the cre site is important
in transcriptional activation of ackA, insertions of 5 and
10 bp were made between cre2 and the
35 region of the
ackA promoter. The 5-bp insertion, which positioned
cre2 on the opposite face of the DNA helix from its normal
position, eliminated glucose induction and decreased expression
approximately 10-fold (Fig. 4). Insertion
of 10 bp, which is predicted to position cre2 on the same
face of the DNA helix as in the wild type but 10 bp further upstream,
resulted in normal expression and glucose activation. These results
demonstrate a face-of-the-helix dependence between the location of
cre2, and/or upstream sequences, and the ackA
promoter.

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FIG. 4.
Effect of linker insertions between cre2 and
the ackA promoter. The 35 and 10 regions of the
ackA promoter are indicated. Cells were grown in TSS medium
with 1% Casamino Acids as the carbon source (uninduced) or in TSS
medium with 1% Casamino Acids and 1% glucose (induced). Values shown
are for samples taken 30 min prior to entry into stationary phase and
indicate -galactosidase activity expressed in Miller units
(32). The ratio reflects the level of induction during
growth in the presence of glucose.
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Expression of ackA in a CcpA mutant.
The reduction
in basal expression caused by mutations of the ackA upstream
region could be due to loss of normal CcpA-dependent activation during
growth in the absence of glucose or to other factors. As previously
shown (13), mutation of ccpA resulted in reduced
expression of ackA and loss of activation during growth in
glucose (Table 3). Mutation of
cre2 or deletion of the region just upstream of
cre2 reduced expression twofold more than the CcpA mutation
alone, in both the wild-type and CcpA mutant strains; this suggests
that while most of the reduction in basal expression of these mutants
is likely to be due to loss of interaction with CcpA, there may be
additional factors. The insertion of 5 bp between cre2 and
the
35 region of the promoter dramatically reduced basal expression.
The reduction is apparently not due to improper positioning of CcpA on
the wrong face of the DNA helix, since it was also observed in the CcpA
mutant. Since sequences upstream of cre2 are also required
for activation, this reduction in basal activation could be caused by
effects of this upstream region on regulatory events other than CcpA
binding.
DNase footprinting.
Binding of the CcpA protein to the
ackA promoter region was directly tested by in vitro DNase
footprinting (Fig. 5). Protection of
cre2 was readily observed, with an affinity comparable to
that of amyO (24); in contrast, little if any
protection of cre1 was detected. These results are
consistent with the genetic data indicating that cre2 is the
critical element for CcpA-dependent activation. In addition, binding of
CcpA to the ackA cre2 element in vitro was not dependent on
any other protein.

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FIG. 5.
DNase footprinting of the ackA promoter
region. End-labeled ackA DNA (0.5 nM) was incubated with
purified CcpA protein in TGED buffer (10 mM Tris-HCl [pH 7.4], 1 mM
dithiothreitol, 50 mM KCl, 5% glycerol, 2 µg of bovine serum
albumin) with 2 µg of poly(dI-dC)-poly(dI-dC) as competitor DNA for
15 min at room temperature. DNase I footprinting was carried out as
previously described (24), and digested DNA was resolved on
a 6% DNA sequencing gel. A/G and C/T are DNA sequencing ladders; the
control contained no CcpA protein. Strand polarities and cre
sites (B1, cre1; B2, cre2) are labeled.
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Role of HPr/Crh in ackA transcriptional
activation.
Phosphorylation of the HPr and Crh proteins has been
suggested to play a key role in CcpA-mediated repression of carbon
source utilization genes (6, 10). The effects of the
ptsH1 mutation, which specifically blocks ATP-dependent
phosphorylation of HPrSer-46, and a crh null mutation on
ackA transcription were therefore tested (Table
4). While neither single mutation had any
effect, the double mutant exhibited a phenotype similar to that of a
CcpA mutant. As a control, the effect of the ptsH1 mutation
on glucose repression of gluconate kinase activity was tested; the
results were identical to those previously reported (6),
confirming that the mutation is intact (data not shown). These results
suggest that CcpA-mediated activation of ackA requires
either HPrSer-46-P or Crh-P.
Acetate production.
The effect of ackA
transcriptional activation on production of acetate was tested by
measurements of acetate accumulation in the culture supernatant.
B. subtilis excretes large amounts of acetate during growth
in media containing glucose (48). Acetate production is
dependent on acetate kinase, and growth of an ackA null
mutant is inhibited by addition of glucose to the medium (13). Both wild-type and CcpA mutant strains produced very
low levels of acetate (0.04 g/liter) during growth in TSS medium in the
absence of glucose; addition of 0.25% glucose resulted in acetate
accumulation to 0.84 g/liter in the wild-type strain and to 0.35 g/liter in the CcpA mutant 30 min prior to T0.
Normal acetate production is therefore apparently dependent on
CcpA-directed activation of ackA transcription.
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DISCUSSION |
The B. subtilis ackA gene encoding acetate kinase is
involved in the production of acetate from acetyl phosphate during
growth in media containing large amounts of glucose. Transcription of ackA is induced during growth in glucose. This induction was
previously shown to require CcpA and sequences upstream of the
promoter, which include two cre-like sequences
(13). In this study, the role of these two sites in the
CcpA-dependent transcriptional activation of ackA was investigated.
Deletion analysis of the region upstream of the ackA
promoter localized sequences necessary for transcriptional activation to 107 bp upstream of the transcription start site. Mutation of cre2, which is centered 56.5 bp upstream of the
transcription start site, eliminated transcriptional activation and
identified cre2 as a key regulatory sequence.
cre1, which is centered at
116.5, is outside of the region
identified by deletion analysis as being sufficient for transcriptional
activation. The presence of a sequence identical to cre2,
except for a single additional base, six helical turns upstream and
with no apparent function is somewhat surprising. cre1 may
be necessary under growth conditions other than those employed in this
study and may assume a role similar to that suggested for two CcpA
auxiliary sequences in the xyl operon (11).
cre1 could also be required for regulation by a different
regulatory factor, such as CcpB, which is apparently active under
conditions of low aeration (2); the effect of a
ccpB mutation on ackA expression has not been
tested. The genetic data on the relative effects of cre1 and
cre2 are consistent with DNase I footprinting analyses of
CcpA binding to the ackA promoter region in vitro; CcpA
bound to cre2 with much higher affinity than to
cre1.
The position of the CcpA binding site at
56.5 is intermediate between
the standard position of class I activators (
61.5 or farther
upstream, in 10-bp increments) and class II activators (
41.5); the
best-studied example is the E. coli CAP (CRP) protein (9, 25). The E. coli Cra protein, a CcpA homolog,
also acts as both a repressor and an activator of target genes
(40, 46); its binding site for activation of the
ppsA gene is centered at
45.5 (37). A variety
of molecular mechanisms for transcriptional activation have been
reported (18, 19). The most common mechanisms involve
interactions with the C-terminal domain of the
subunit (
-CTD) of
RNA polymerase (RNAP), for class I activators, and interactions with
the
subunit, for class II activators, or both. The only
transcriptional activator of this type characterized in detail in
B. subtilis is the phage
29 p4 protein, which binds at
82 and interacts with
-CTD (30, 31).
Transcriptional activation of ackA was lost with a 5-bp
insertion between cre2 and the promoter and was
reestablished with a 10-bp insertion, demonstrating a position effect
suggestive of face-of-the-helix dependence. A similar effect has been
demonstrated for class I activators in E. coli where the
position of the binding site relative to the transcription start site
can vary as long as the sites for activator and RNAP binding remain on
the same face of the DNA helix (7, 49). CcpA could activate
transcription via a direct interaction with RNAP or could be required
for binding or correct positioning of a second factor which, in turn,
interacts with RNAP. Alternatively, the insertion of 5 bp could disrupt interactions between RNAP and sequences upstream of cre2 or
factors bound to these sequences. The similarity of the phenotype of
the ptsH1/crh mutant to that of the CcpA mutant
suggests that these proteins play a role in the control of CcpA
activity, as has been proposed for genes repressed by CcpA. The reduced
levels of
-galactosidase activity observed with the 5-bp insertion
compared to that of the wild-type fusion expressed in a CcpA (or
ptsH1/crh) mutant, or the G8T2 fusion expressed
in the wild type versus a CcpA mutant strain, suggest that elements in
addition to CcpA and HPr/Crh are involved. Transcriptional activation
dependent on multiple proteins has been reported for a number of
systems, including the E. coli ansB, malK, and
nir promoters, and can employ a variety of mechanisms
(19, 44, 47, 53). It will be of great interest to
characterize the role of the region upstream of cre2 and the molecular mechanism of transcriptional activation.
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
This work was supported by grant MCB-9723091 from the National
Science Foundation (T.H.) and by National Institutes of Health grant
GM34324 (G.C.).
We thank I. Martin-Verstraete for providing the crh mutant.
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FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of
Microbiology, The Ohio State University, 484 W. 12th Ave., Columbus, OH
43210. Phone: (614) 688-3831. Fax: (614) 292-8120. E-mail: henkin.3{at}osu.edu.
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Journal of Bacteriology, November 1998, p. 5961-5967, Vol. 180, No. 22
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Copyright © 1998, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
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