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Journal of Bacteriology, August 2001, p. 4914-4917, Vol. 183, No. 16
Department of Molecular Microbiology and
Institute for Biomembranes, Utrecht University, 3584 CH
Utrecht,1 Department of Molecular Cell
Physiology, Free University, 1081 HV Amsterdam,2
and Swammerdam Institute for Life Sciences, University of
Amsterdam,1018 WS Amsterdam,3 The Netherlands
Received 26 February 2001/Accepted 22 May 2001
We have tested the hypothesis that the autoamplification of
two-component regulatory systems results in "learning" behavior, i.e., that bacteria respond faster or more extensively to a signal when
a similar signal has been perceived in the past. Indeed, the induction
of alkaline phosphatase activity upon phosphate limitation was faster
if the cultures had been limited for phosphate previously, and this
faster response correlated with the autoamplification of the cognate
two-component system.
The adaptation of bacteria to
fluctuating environmental conditions often proceeds via two-component
regulatory systems, which usually consist of a sensor in the
cytoplasmic membrane and a cytoplasmic response regulator (16,
24). Upon stimulation, the sensor autophosphorylates and the
phosphoryl group is subsequently transferred to the cognate regulator,
eventually resulting in a suitable response, e.g., the activation of
the transcription of a specific set of genes. An example of a
two-component regulatory system is found in the pho regulon
of Escherichia coli (29). Growth of E. coli under inorganic phosphate (Pi)
limitation results in the induction of the synthesis of many proteins,
including the periplasmic enzyme alkaline phosphatase (28)
and the high-affinity uptake systems for Pi (the
Pst system) (26) and for
sn-glycerol-3-phosphate and sn-glycerophosphoryl
diesters (the Ugp system) (15). These proteins function to
scavenge traces of Pi or phosphorylated compounds from the extracellular medium. The expression of the genes encoding these proteins is controlled by a two-component regulatory system consisting of the sensor PhoR and the transcriptional activator PhoB
(11, 12). In addition to PhoR and PhoB, the Pst system plays a role in regulation, since disruption of any of the genes of the
pstSCAB-phoU operon usually leads to the constitutive
expression of the pho regulon (29).
The regulatory genes phoB and phoR form an
operon, which is subject to autoamplification (6, 22),
meaning that signal transfer through the PhoB-PhoR system
stimulates its own expression. Such autoamplification of the regulatory
genes has been reported for several two-component regulatory systems
(for examples, see references 4 and 18).
However, its physiological role has not been studied explicitly so far.
Provided that the regulatory proteins PhoB and PhoR are stable, their
amplification upon signal transduction could, among other
possibilities, lead to some kind of "learning" behavior, i.e., it
could allow the cells to respond faster or more extensively when the
system is repeatedly triggered. In this study, we have evaluated this
behavior of E. coli in its response to
Pi limitation.
Isolation of a phoA(Ts) mutant.
To determine
whether autoamplification of signal transduction components leads to
faster responses upon repeated stimulation, we wanted to measure the
kinetics of the induction of the pho regulon. Expression of
at least one component of the pho regulon, i.e.,
phoA encoding alkaline phosphatase, can be determined
quantitatively (27). To ensure that the background enzyme
activity is low even after repeated exposure to
Pi limitation, we decided to isolate a
temperature-sensitive phoA mutant. Strain MC4100
(3) was mutagenized with ethyl methanesulfonate (EMS)
(14) and plated on HEPES-buffered synthetic medium
(27) containing 0.5% glucose, supplemented with 40 µM
K2HPO4
(low-Pi medium [LPi]) and
with 40 µg of the alkaline phosphatase substrate
5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indolylphosphate (XP) (2)
ml
0021-9193/01/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JB.183.16.4914-4917.2001
Copyright © 2001, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Autoamplification of a Two-Component Regulatory
System Results in "Learning" Behavior
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1 and solidified with 2% agarose. After
overnight incubation at 42°C, white colonies were picked, streaked on
similar LPi plates, and incubated at either 30 or
44°C. One of the colonies that was blue after overnight incubation at
30°C but remained white after incubation at 44°C was designated
CE1477 and studied in detail. Alkaline phosphatase was induced after
growth of the strain in LPi medium at 30°C,
induced only poorly at 37°C, and induced not at all at 44°C (Fig.
1A). Furthermore, the protein could be
demonstrated on Western blots (1) after growth of the
cells at 30°C but not at 44°C, whereas its detection was not
influenced by the growth temperature in the case of the parental strain
MC4100 (Fig. 1B). In contrast, induction of the synthesis of the
Pi-binding protein (encoded by the
pstS gene) (Fig. 1B) and of UgpC (results not shown) in
strain CE1477 was not affected at the higher growth temperature,
indicating that the temperature-sensitive mutation was located in the
phoA gene rather than in a regulatory gene. This supposition
was confirmed by PCR amplification of the phoA allele of
strain CE1477 using primers phoA1
(5'-AAGCTTTGGAGATTATCGTC-3') and phoA2
(5'-CCATGAGCGTATGCGCCC-3') and its subsequent cloning in the
HincII site of pUC18 (30). After introduction
of the recombinant plasmid in phoA mutant strain DH5
(19) and plating on LPi medium
containing XP, the colonies resulting after overnight growth at 30°C
were blue, whereas they were white after incubation at 42°C.
Sequencing of the phoA allele on two plasmids, obtained after independent PCRs, revealed a single mutation resulting in a
Gly258Ser substitution in alkaline phosphatase in both cases. Thus, we
have isolated a strain that will allow for the autoamplification of the
signal transduction components under Pi
limitation at 42°C without the concomitant increase of alkaline
phosphatase activity.

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FIG. 1.
Expression of alkaline phosphatase in strain MC4100 and
its phoA(Ts) derivative, CE1477, at various
temperatures. (A) Alkaline phosphatase activities. Cells were grown
overnight at 30, 37, or 44°C in LPi medium or at 30°C
in HPi medium before harvesting and determination of
alkaline phosphatase activity. Two independent measurements were
performed with essentially the same results, and the data from one of
these experiment are shown. (B) Western blot analysis of total cell
proteins. Expression of alkaline phosphatase (PhoA) and Pi-
binding protein (PiBP) was detected using polyclonal antisera. Cells
were grown at 30 or 44°C in LPi medium or at 30°C in
HPi medium. Equal amounts of cells based on cell density
were loaded on the gel. The positions of the molecular size
marker proteins are shown on the left.
Stability of the signal transduction components.
Regulatory
proteins are often proteolytically unstable, and their susceptibility
to proteolysis is presumed to play a key role in their regulatory
function (13). However, learning effects can only be
expected if the increased levels of the regulatory proteins PhoR and
PhoB can still be detected at a considerable time after
Pi limitation has been discontinued. To test the
accumulation of PhoR and PhoB, exponentially growing cells (in
HPi medium, which is LPi
medium supplemented with 660 µM
K2HPO4 to create Pi-replete conditions; the generation time in the
logarithmic phase was approximately 56 min) of strain CE1477 were
harvested and incubated for 45 min in LPi medium
at 42°C. Western blot analysis confirmed induction of the synthesis
of the PhoR protein (Fig. 2, lane 4) and
the PhoB protein (results not shown) in these cells in comparison with
control cells that were kept under Pi-replete conditions (Fig. 2, lane 3, and results not shown). When the cells were
subsequently incubated in HPi medium at 30°C
for 1 h, the increased amounts of PhoR protein (Fig. 2, lane 6)
and of PhoB protein (results not shown) were still detectable.
Apparently, PhoR and PhoB are rather stable proteins. Alternatively,
the mRNA of the phoBR operon is very stable, but this
explanation seems unlikely considering the short half-lives of mRNAs in
E. coli (9).
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Kinetics of the induction of alkaline phosphatase synthesis.
To test whether the accumulation of PhoB and PhoR during the period of
Pi limitation leads to a faster or more extensive
response when the cells encounter Pi limitation
again, exponentially growing cells of the phoA(Ts) mutant
strain CE1477 were first incubated for 45 min in
LPi at 42°C and then for 1 h in
HPi at 30°C as described above. Subsequently,
the cells were transferred to LPi medium and
incubated at 30°C, and the induction of alkaline phosphatase synthesis was measured as a function of time. The induction of alkaline
phosphatase synthesis was clearly faster in the cells that had
previously been limited for Pi than in the
control cells that were constantly kept on high
Pi during the preincubation procedure (Fig.
3A). The faster induction was still
detectable when the high-Pi period between the
two periods of Pi limitation was extended from 1 h to as much as 2 h (i.e., at early stationary phase), although
the difference from the induction in the control culture had clearly
diminished (results not shown). These results demonstrated that the
bacteria respond faster after exposure to an initial stimulus in
the recent past.
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FOOTNOTES |
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* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of Molecular Microbiology, Utrecht University, Padualaan 8, 3584 CH Utrecht, The Netherlands. Phone (31) 30 2532999. Fax (31) 30 2513655. E-mail: J.P.M.Tommassen{at}bio.uu.nl.
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