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Journal of Bacteriology, January 1999, p. 670-674, Vol. 181, No. 2
0021-9193/99/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1999, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Isolation and Characterization of the
nikR Gene Encoding a Nickel-Responsive Regulator in
Escherichia coli
Karinne
De Pina,1
Valerie
Desjardin,1
Marie-Andree
Mandrand-Berthelot,1
Gerard
Giordano,2 and
Long-Fei
Wu2,*
Laboratoire de Génétique
Moléculaire des Microorganismes et des Interactions Cellulaires,
CNRS UMR5577, Institut National des Sciences Appliquées,
69621 Villeurbanne Cedex,1 and
Laboratoire de Chimie Bactérienne, CNRS UPR9043,
Institut de Biologie Structurale et Microbiologie, 13402 Marseille
Cedex 20,2 France
Received 21 September 1998/Accepted 11 November 1998
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ABSTRACT |
Expression of the nickel-specific transport system encoded by the
Escherichia coli nikABCDE operon is repressed by a
high concentration of nickel. By using random transposon
Tn10 insertion, we isolated mutants in which expression of
the nik operon became constitutive with respect to nickel.
We have identified the corresponding nikR gene which
encodes a nickel-responsive regulator. Expression of nikR
was partially controlled by Fnr through transcription from the
nikA promoter region. In addition, a specific transcription start site for the constitutive expression of nikR was
found 51 bp upstream of the nikR gene.
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TEXT |
Nickel has been known for a long
time as a heavy metal toxic to both eukaryotic and prokaryotic
organisms (1, 16). Epidemiological studies have identified
nickel as potentially carcinogenic and allergenic to humans (5,
9). Nickel is also an essential trace element for both eukaryotes
and prokaryotes. The average daily requirement for humans is estimated
to be 0.15 mg per day, and the total quantity in the body is about 10 mg (19). In microorganisms, nickel forms the active center
of at least five classes of metalloenzymes: urease, NiFe-hydrogenase,
methyl coenzyme M reductase, and CO dehydrogenase (7) and
superoxide dismutase (26).
We demonstrated previously that nickel has an antagonistic effect
on the fermentative growth of Escherichia coli
(23). Nickel is essential for activities of three
NiFe-hydrogenase isoenzymes and for bacterial fermentative growth. The
successful production of these nickel-containing enzymes relies on the
efficient uptake of nickel via the high-affinity, nickel-specific ABC
transport system encoded by the nikABCDE operon (11,
21). However, when present at high concentrations (from 0.3 mM in
rich medium), nickel inhibits growth and thus exhibits a toxic effect
(11, 23). E. coli uses two strategies in response
to the toxic concentration of nickel. First, it activates Tar- and
NikA-dependent negative chemotaxis and swarms away from this
repellent agent (4). Second, it blocks the entrance of
nickel through the high-affinity nickel transport system. This is
achieved by repression of the expression of the nik operon
(21, 22). We report here the identification of the
nikR gene which encodes a novel type of metallo-regulatory protein responding specifically to nickel.
Screening for Tn10 insertions in nickel-responsive
regulator element.
To isolate mutants defective in the repression
of nik at a high nickel concentration, we took advantage of
the relatively simple phenotype plate screens for constitutive
expression of
-galactosidase from the nikA-lacZ
fusion. A random collection of 1,100 independent
Tn10 insertions in strain HYD723 [as MC4100, but
nikA::MudI(lacZ Ampr)
(21)], which was performed by using phage lambda 1098 as described by Way et al. (20), was plated on
MacConkey-lactose-tetracycline plates supplemented with 0.5 mM nickel
at a density of about 200 cells per plate. Two colonies, KS01 and KS02,
showing red color under anaerobic conditions were picked, purified, and
characterized further. They exhibited constitutive expression of
-galactosidase activity in the presence of 0.5 mM nickel (Fig.
1). The constitutive expression of the
nik operon in the mutants might be the result of insertion
of Tn10 into a regulatory element or a consequence of
transposition of phage MudI from the nik operon to other
places. In order to assess these possibilities, we analyzed the
phenotype of these double mutants with respect to the restoration of
hydrogenase activity by nickel. Two observations confirmed that they
retained the correct nikA::MudI(lacZ
Ampr) genotype. First, these mutants showed a
hydrogenase-negative phenotype, which was restored by 0.5 mM
NiCl2. Second,
-galactosidase activity and hydrogenase
activity were detected only during anaerobic growth in these double
mutants, which is the same phenotype as that of the parental
nik-lacZ single mutant HYD723 (21).

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FIG. 1.
Complementation analysis of Tn10 insertion
mutants with plasmids carrying the nik region. KS01 and KS02
are Tn10 insertion derivatives of HYD723
(nikA-lacZ). Cells which carried the indicated plasmid were
grown microaerobically at 37°C in LB medium supplemented with 2 µM
ammonium molybdate, 2 µM sodium selenite, and kanamycin (25 µg/ml)
when required (21). Plasmids pLW22, pLW25, and pLW26 were
described previously (24). -Galactosidase activity was
measured for cells treated by addition of 0.0025% sodium dodecyl
sulfate-5% chloroform, and the specific activity is expressed as
nanomoles of o-nitrophenol produced per minute per milligram
bacterial dry weight. Values quoted are the averages of three separate
experiments. Symbols: E, EcoRI; H, HincII; M,
MluI; N, NsiI; S, SspI; V,
EcoRV.
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Mapping, cloning, and sequencing of the nikR gene.
In an attempt to quickly locate the mutations in mutants KS01 and KS02,
the Tn10 insertions were introduced into the wild-type strain MC4100 by transduction with P1cml (10).
Transductants were selected for tetracycline resistance and then
screened for ampicillin resistance. This experiment also allowed us to
genetically purify the Tn10 insertion mutants. In the two
cases, a 98% linkage was found between ampicillin resistance and
tetracycline resistance. This percentage of cotransduction indicated
that the Tn10 integration is approximately 0.02 min away
from the nikA-lacZ fusion on the E. coli
chromosome (25). Therefore, constitutive expression of the
nikA-lacZ fusion in the mutants might be the consequence of
Tn10 insertion in the promoter-operator region of the
nik operon or in a gene coding for a nickel-responsive
regulator, which is located in the immediate vicinity.
To assess these possibilities, in trans complementation
experiments were performed by using various plasmids carrying the nik operon and adjacent regions, which were described
previously (22, 24). Plasmid pLW22 contains a 7-kb
chromosome fragment which covers the entire nik operon as
well as 0.9-kb upstream and 0.9-kb downstream adjacent regions (Fig.
1). Introduction of plasmid pLW22 into mutants KS01 and KS02
completely abolished expression of the nikA-lacZ fusion
(Fig. 1). Successful in trans complementation by
plasmid pLW22 indicated that transposon Tn10 had integrated
into a repressor gene instead of the promoter-operator region of the
nik operon in mutants KS01 and KS02. We designated the
transposon-affected gene as nikR (for nickel-responsive regulator).
The nikR gene is thus located either on the 0.9-kb fragment
upstream or on the 0.9-kb fragment downstream of the nik
operon. Further complementation analysis showed that plasmid pLW26
containing the 0.9-kb downstream fragment was capable of complementing
the Tn10 insertion mutations in mutants KS01 and KS02,
whereas plasmid pLW25 carrying the 0.9-kb upstream fragment was not
able to do so (Fig. 1). Therefore, the nikR gene is located
downstream of the nik operon.
It should be noted that plasmid pLW22, in contrast to plasmid pLW26,
repressed nikA expression in the absence and presence of
nickel. Since both plasmids carry the nikR gene, it seems
unlikely that the constitutive repression generated by pLW22 results
from multiple copies of nikR. Interestingly, plasmid pLW22
harbors in addition the entire nik operon encoding a
functional nickel-specific transport system, which should increase the
intracellular nickel availability required for repression. To minimize
the effects resulting from multiple copies of the nikABCDE
operon, we lowered plasmid copy number by introducing a pcnB
allele into strain KS01/pLW22. Expression from the nikA-lacZ
fusion was relieved to half the level of that of the KS01 strain
without plasmid in the absence of nickel, demonstrating that
overproduction of the high-affinity nickel uptake system was
responsible for the constitutive repression.
The DNA sequence of the nik locus which covers the
nikABCDE genes and a 423-bp downstream region was
previously reported (11). No open reading frame (ORF) was
revealed by computer analysis of this 423-bp fragment. We rechecked the
sequence of the 423-bp area and sequenced its 200-bp downstream region
by using the T7 sequencing kit of Pharmacia with Deaza
35Sequencing Mixes to overcome G-C compression. The new
sequence corrected seven errors in the old one and was in full
agreement with the E. coli genome sequence in this region
(15). An ORF that predicted a polypeptide of 133 amino acids
was revealed. This ORF, designated nikR, was
transcribed in the same direction as the nikE gene and
was separated from nikE by 5 bp. This ORF corresponded to the hypothetical 15.1-kDa YhhG
protein described in the E. coli genome database.
Identification of the predicted polypeptide NikR.
The sequence
of the nikR gene predicts a polypeptide of 133 amino acids
with a molecular weight of 15,093 and a calculated pI of 6.22. The
hydropathy plot of the putative polypeptide revealed a highly
hydrophilic protein. The product of the nikR gene was first
identified by expression of nikDER genes from plasmid pHD4 by an in vivo T7 expression system (17). Autoradiography
revealed two prominent bands with apparent molecular masses of 28 and
30 kDa and a much fainter band of 15 kDa (Fig.
2, lane 2). These bands were not observed
in strain K38/pGP1-2 carrying vector pT7-6 alone without an insert
(lane 1), and their apparent molecular masses correspond to those
calculated for the nikD (26.5 kDa), nikE (29.6 kDa), and nikR (15.1 kDa) gene products, respectively. This
result suggests that nikR may be expressed from the same transcriptional unit as the nikD and nikE genes
from the T7
10 promoter under this condition, although its
expression was much weaker than that of the other two genes.

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FIG. 2.
Specific expression of the nikR,
nikD, and nikE gene products, under control of
the T7 10 promoter in E. coli K38/pGP1-2. Cells
containing vector pT7-6 (lane 1), its derivative pHD4, harboring
nikDER (lane 2), vector pKSM710 (lane 4), and its derivative
p8611, harboring nikR (lane 3), were labeled with
[35S]methionine and [35S]cysteine and
separated by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis
on a 17% denaturing polyacrylamide gel. Molecular mass standards (in
kilodaltons) and NikE, NikD, and NikR proteins are indicated on the
right and on the left, respectively.
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In order to increase the specific expression of the nikR
gene, we then introduced a NcoI site at the position of the
ATG initiation codon of nikR and cloned nikR
into plasmid pKSM710 (8). In the resulting plasmid, p8611,
the nikR gene can be expressed optimally from the T7
10 promoter. Introduction of the NcoI site substituted the second codon, GAA (Glu), for CAA (Gln). Insertion of plasmid p8611
into strain K38/pGP1-2 led to the specific synthesis of a
polypeptide with an apparent molecular mass of 15 kDa (Fig. 2; compare
lanes 3 and 4), similar to that predicted from the nucleotide sequence
of nikR. We concluded that the nikR gene indeed encodes a polypeptide chain. The authenticity of this polypeptide as
the product of the nikR gene was proven by determination of the N-terminal sequence. Proteins were separated by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel (15%) electrophoresis and then
electroblotted onto a polyvinylidene difluoride membrane. After
being stained with PONCEAU S (Sigma), the NikR band was excised. The
N-terminal amino acid sequence of NikR was determined by automated
Edman degradation of NikR using an Applied Biosystems gas-phase
sequencer. Over a stretch of seven amino acids
(Met-Glu-Arg-Val-Thr-Ile-Thr), the sequence was identical to the
first seven amino acids predicted from the nikR nucleotide
sequence, except for the second amino acid, which was changed from Gln
to Glu after introduction of the NcoI site.
Regulation of nikR gene expression.
The dependence
on nickel for the NikR-mediated repression of expression of the
nik operon suggests that nickel functions as either a
corepressor of NikR or an inducer for the expression of
nikR. In order to study nikR expression, a
nikR-uidA operon fusion was constructed. The
promoterless uidA-Kanr cassette encoding
-glucuronidase was obtained by SmaI digestion of
plasmid pUIDK3 (2) and was inserted into the
unique ApaLI site in the nikR gene of plasmid
pKS1014, which is a derivative of pACYC184 containing the
7-kb BamHI-HindIII fragment of pLW21 (24). The resulting plasmid, pKS1015, was checked by
restriction endonuclease digestion and was found to contain the correct
fusion of the uidA-Kanr cassette within the
nikR gene. Insertion of the
uidA-Kanr cassette into nikR was also
confirmed by the defect in nikR function. Compared
with pKS1014, pKS1015 was no longer able to repress the expression of the nikA-lacZ fusion in the double mutant KS01
[nikA::MudI(lacZ Ampr)
nikR::Tn10] (data not shown).
Expression of the nikR gene was first analyzed by monitoring
activity of the
-glucuronidase produced as a result of
plasmid pKS1015.
-Glucuronidase was not detectable in the
wild-type strain, NM522 [F' lacIq
(lacZ)M15
proA+B+/supE thi
(lac-proAB)
(hsdMS-mcrB)5],
harboring the parental plasmid pKS1014, suggesting that the chromosomal
copy of the uidA gene was not expressed under these growth
conditions in the absence of inducer. Introduction of plasmid
pKS1015 (nikR-uidA) conferred on strain NM522 a specific
-glucuronidase activity of about 400 units, which was
increased more than sixfold under anaerobic conditions (Table
1). Neither aerobic nor anaerobic
expression of nikR was affected by the addition of 0.5 mM
nickel in the growth medium. Therefore, expression of the
nikR gene is independent of nickel, which may function as a
corepressor of NikR in the regulation of expression of the
nik operon.
To avoid multiple-copy effect, the nikR-uidA fusion was
recombined back into the chromosome of the recD strain, D355
[F
lac-3350 galK2 galT22 
recD1014 rpsL179 IN(rrnD-rrnE)1]
(13), after linearization of plasmid pKS1015 with
EcoRI and KpnI. The resulting nikR
mutation was then moved into strain MC4100 (araD139
(argF-lac)U169 rpsL150 relA1 flbB5301 ptsF25 deoC1
rbsR) via P1cml transduction (10), selecting
for kanamycin resistance and giving rise to strain KS04. To
ascertain a successful recombination, biosynthesis of NikA was analyzed by immunoblotting, as described previously (4). As expected, the NikA protein was not detected by anti-NikA antiserum in a crude extract of the wild-type parental strain, MC4100, grown in
the presence of 0.5 mM nickel. In contrast, KS04 synthesized NikA
constitutively in the absence or presence of nickel in the growth
medium, indicating the defect of the chromosomal nikR gene (data not shown). Compared with expression from plasmid pKS1015, the
-glucuronidase activity was reduced by 10-fold and 6-fold in strain
KS04 grown under aerobic and anaerobic conditions, respectively (Table
1). However, nikR expression remained inducible by anaerobic conditions and independent of nickel concentration.
The fnr gene product is required for the anaerobic
expression of several respiratory enzymes (6). Expression of
the nik operon has been reported to be under the positive
control of Fnr (21). To test whether or not the anaerobic
induction of the nikR-uidA expression depends on Fnr,
nikR expression was examined in an fnr
background. The fnr derivative of KS04 was constructed by
transduction with a P1cml lysate grown on strain MC4100nir (as MC4100, but fnr-22 zcj-261::Tn10)
(21), selecting for tetracycline resistance and then scoring
for the absence of nitrate reductase. Since the fnr mutation
led to a 3.5-fold reduction in anaerobic nikR-uidA
expression in the resulting double mutant KS04Fnr compared with
expression in the parental single mutant KS04, nikR
expression seems to be regulated partially by Fnr (Table 1).
To assess whether nikR is autoregulated, the wild-type
nikR allele was provided in trans to mutant
KS04 by plasmid pKS1014 carrying the entire nik operon
in addition to nikR. The anaerobic
-glucuronidase
activity was reduced by about twofold in the resulting strain,
KS04/pKS1014, compared with that in KS04 carrying vector pACYC184
without an insert. Therefore, nikR appears to be partially autoregulated.
The partial autoregulation and the Fnr-mediated activation of
nikR expression could be the consequence of transcriptional regulation of nikR at the level of the promoter of the
nik operon. This hypothesis is supported by the
finding, in the promoter-operator region of the nik
operon (11), of an inverted repeated sequence composed
of a 14-base dyad, AATCAGTATGACGA-N10-TCGTCATACTTATT, which may serve as a NikR binding site and of a partially
conserved FNR box located just upstream. Indeed, introduction, by
P1cml-mediated transduction, of the
nikA::MudI insertion upstream of the
nikR gene in mutant KS06 had a strong polar effect on
nikR-uidA expression (Table 1), which was reduced to a level
similar to that of KS04Fnr. In addition, neither the fnr
mutation nor the presence of multiple copies of
nikR+ in trans had further effect on
the nikR-uidA expression in mutant KS06 (Table 1). These
results suggest that the invariable aerobic
-glucuronidase activity
and the remaining anaerobic
-glucuronidase activity in the double
mutant KS06 could be more a consequence of nikR-uidA
expression from another promoter than that of the nikABCDE operon.
Mapping of the transcriptional start site for nikR.
To
identify the promoter responsible for constitutive nikR
transcription, total RNA isolated from wild-type strain NM522 harboring plasmid pLW22 was subjected to primer extension analysis by using the
synthetic oligonucleotide NikR (5'-GCTCAGGCGATCCAGCG-3'). This oligonucleotide is complementary to the DNA sequence from bp
59 to bp 44 downstream of the translation start codon of
nikR. The same extension product of 111 bp was detected from
cultures grown anaerobically without or with 0.5 mM NiCl2
(Fig. 3), identifying the A residue
located 51 bp upstream of the ATG of nikR as the transcription start site. A putative
10 box (TACAAA) was
found, but a sequence homologous to the
35 box with the proper
spacing was not identified. This result confirms that expression of
nikR is independent of nickel concentration and indicates
that this gene is constitutively expressed from its own promoter.

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FIG. 3.
Determination of the constitutive nikR
transcription start site. Total RNAs (50 µg) isolated from E. coli NM522/pLW22 grown anaerobically in Luria broth in the absence
(lane 1) or presence (lane 2) of 0.5 mM NiCl2 were analyzed
by primer extension with primer NikR (see text). The DNA sequence
ladder (lanes TGCA) was obtained with the same primer and plasmid pLW22
as a template. Part of the sequence and the nikR
transcription start site are indicated on the right.
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Functional similarity between NikR and Fur proteins.
Bacteria
require numerous metal ions, such as iron, nickel, and cobalt, for
growth and have consequently evolved several distinct, high-affinity
uptake systems (14). However, at high concentrations, metal
ions are also potentially toxic elements because they can catalyze the
formation of dangerously reactive hydroxyl radicals, which can damage
virtually all cellular constituents. Therefore, expression of these
systems is generally tightly regulated. A common feature of many of
these uptake systems is that their expression is induced by metal ion
starvation and repressed by high concentrations of metal. The best
known example is the iron-responsive regulation of the expression of
the high-affinity iron uptake pathway and bacterial virulence factors
(12). It is mediated by the ferric uptake regulation (Fur)
repressor protein or diphtheria toxin repressor (DtxR) (14,
18).
The results described above indicate that NikR resembles a Fur or DtxR
counterpart and functions as a nickel-responsive regulator in
nickel metabolism. Interestingly, when NikR was used as a query sequence to scan the nr database (all nonredundant GenBank CDS translations+PDB+SwissProt+PIR+PRF by using the Blastp program (http://www.expasy.ch/cgi-bin/blastncbi.p1), the 12 best-scoring sequences were as follows, in decreasing order: six
conserved hypothetical proteins from Methanococcus
jannaschii (Y549_METJA), Archaeoglobus
fulgidus (AE001054), Helicobacter pylori
(AE000635), Methanobacterium thermoautotrophicum
(AE000835 and AE000842), and Methanococcus jannaschii
(Y767_METJA); Fur protein from Vibrio cholerae
(FUR_VIBCH); Rho1 GDP-GTP exchange protein 2 from Saccharomyces cerevisiae (ROM2_YEAST); SCP-1 from Homo
sapiens (D67035); and three Fur proteins, from
Vibrio anguillarum (FUR_VIBAN), Vibrio vulnificus (FUR_VIBVU), and Vibrio
parahaemolyticus (AB003752). Therefore, the
only apparent functionally related proteins are the four ferric uptake
regulator proteins. The Smallest Sum Probability P(N) score obtained by
sequence comparison between NikR and these Fur proteins ranges from
0.60 to 0.97, which is too low to establish sequence relatedness
between them. However, NikR contains two motifs which are perfectly
conserved in the four Fur proteins described above. The first motif
consists of STQHHHXXL, corresponding to residues 73 to 81 of NikR. This
motif is located in a region that shows the highest solvent
accessibility score in NikR and that is composed of a histidine-rich
stretch of 5 amino acids. The sequence of the stretch is
His-His-His-His-Asp (HHHHD) in NikR and (His)-His-His-Asp-His
[(H)HHDH] in 16 Fur-like proteins from gram-negative bacteria. The
corresponding histidine-rich region of Fur-like proteins from
gram-positive bacteria and Synechococcus does not contain
aspartate. Some of these residues may provide a ligand(s) for metal
coordination, and the position of the Asp might be of importance for
metal specificity. The second motif, DXGXVXXFXDDXIXXR, corresponds to
residues 104 to 119 of NikR and it is not as well conserved as the
first one in the 16 Fur-like proteins.
To assess a possible functional substitution of NikR with Fur, we
tested the effect of a fur deletion on
nikA-lacZ expression by introducing
fur::Tn903 from strain QC1732 into
HYD723 or by complementation of the nikR deficiency in KS01
by the fur gene. In neither case was the regulation pattern
of the nik operon expression altered (data not shown). The
nonexchangeability may rely on the low level of similarity between the
NikR and FurR proteins and on the difference in the structures of the
repressor-binding sites. The potential NikR-binding site contains two
half sites of 14 bp separated by 10 bp (see above), whereas the perfect
dyad of the Fur box is separated by one nucleotide (3). In
vivo and in vitro experiments will help to determine the precise DNA
motif involved in the contact with NikR.
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
This work was supported by grants from the Centre National de la
Recherche Scientifique to UMR CNRS 5577 and UPR CNRS 9043, the
"Programme de Recherche Fondamentale en Microbiologie, Maladies Infectieuses et Parasitaires" (to M.A.M. and L.F.W.), and the Ligue
Nationale contre le Cancer, Comité des Bouches-du-Rhône no.
471.96 (to L.F.W. and G.G.).
We thank J. Robert-Baudouy for her constant support for this work. We
acknowledge C. C. Richardson, K. Ippen-Ihler, and D. Touati for
plasmids pT7-6 and pKSM710 and fur strains, respectively.
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FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Laboratoire de
Chimie Bactérienne, UPR9043, Institut de Biologie Structurale et
Microbiologie, CNRS, 31 chemin Joseph Aiguier, 13402 Marseille Cedex
20, France. Phone: (33) 4 91 16 44 31. Fax: (33) 4 91 71 89 14. E-mail:
wu{at}ibsm.cnrs-mrs.fr.
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0021-9193/99/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1999, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
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