Next Article 
Journal of Bacteriology, September 2001, p. 5213-5222, Vol. 183, No. 18
0021-9193/01/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JB.183.18.5213-5222.2001
Copyright © 2001, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Overexpression of the MexEF-OprN Multidrug Efflux
System Affects Cell-to-Cell Signaling in Pseudomonas
aeruginosa
Thilo
Köhler,*
Christian
van Delden,
Lasta
Kocjancic
Curty,
Mehri Michea
Hamzehpour, and
Jean-Claude
Pechere
Department of Genetics and Microbiology,
Centre Médical Universitaire, CH-1211 Geneva 4, Switzerland
Received 2 April 2001/Accepted 12 June 2001
 |
ABSTRACT |
Intrinsic and acquired antibiotic resistance of the nosocomial
pathogen Pseudomonas aeruginosa is mediated mainly by
the expression of several efflux pumps of broad substrate specificity.
Here we report that nfxC type mutants, overexpressing
the MexEF-OprN efflux system, produce lower levels of
extracellular virulence factors than the susceptible wild type. These
include pyocyanin, elastase, and rhamnolipids, three factors controlled
by the las and rhl quorum-sensing systems
of P. aeruginosa. In agreement with these observations
are the decreased transcription of the elastase gene lasB and the rhamnosyltransferase genes
rhlAB measured in nfxC type mutants.
Expression of the lasR and rhlR regulator
genes was not affected in the nfxC type mutant. In
contrast, transcription of the C4-homoserine lactone (C4-HSL)
autoinducer synthase gene rhlI was reduced by 50% in
the nfxC type mutant relative to that in the wild type.
This correlates with a similar decrease in C4-HSL levels detected in
supernatants of the nfxC type mutant. Transcription of
an rhlAB-lacZ fusion could be partially
restored by the addition of synthetic C4-HSL and
Pseudomonas quinolone signal (PQS). It is proposed that
the MexEF-OprN efflux pump affects intracellular PQS levels.
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INTRODUCTION |
Pseudomonas aeruginosa is
an opportunistic pathogen which may cause pneumonia and bacteremia in
immunocompromised hosts and is responsible for chronic destructive lung
disease in patients suffering from cystic fibrosis. The pathogenicity
of P. aeruginosa is attributable to an arsenal of virulence
factors, some of which are cell associated (pili, nonpilus adhesins,
lipopolysaccharide, and alginate) while others are secreted
(proteases, rhamnolipids, exotoxin A, exoenzyme S, and
pyocyanin). The production of many of these extracellular virulence
factors is controlled by two cell-to-cell signaling systems, called
las and rhl, which are both composed of a
transcriptional regulator (LasR and RhlR, respectively) and an
autoinducer synthase (LasI and RhlI, respectively). LasI and RhlI
catalyze the last step in the synthesis of the cell-to-cell signaling
molecules 3-oxo-C12-homoserine lactone (3-oxo-C12-HSL) and
C4-HSL, respectively; each of these molecules binds to, and activates, its corresponding transcriptional regulator. The
systems are connected via a hierarchical cascade
(19) and allow coordinated production of extracellular
virulence factors, which occurs only when the bacterial cell density
has reached a threshold (quorum). Recently, a novel signaling molecule,
called PQS, for Pseudomonas quinolone signal
(39), has been identified. Furthermore, the published
genome sequence of PAO1 (53) has revealed a new modulator of cell-to-cell signaling, termed QscR (4). This protein
is homologous to both LasR and RhlR and seems to prevent premature transcription of quorum-sensing regulated genes.
Besides its pathogenic capabilities, P. aeruginosa is well
known for its intrinsic resistance to a wide range of antimicrobial agents and its ability to develop multidrug resistance following antibiotic therapy. Recent investigations in several laboratories have
demonstrated that both intrinsic and acquired resistance is caused
mainly by active efflux systems which efficiently expel antimicrobial
compounds without any apparent structural similarity. So far, four
genetically distinct efflux systems have been characterized for
P. aeruginosa. They are similar in genetic and structural organization but differ in substrate specificity and regulation. The
MexAB-OprM system (22, 42) has the broadest substrate spectrum of all bacterial efflux pumps described so far, including quinolones, tetracycline, chloramphenicol (20),
trimethoprim (17),
-lactam antibiotics
(21),
-lactamase inhibitors (24), and
detergents and solvent molecules (23). The transcriptional repressor MexR (43) keeps expression of the
mexAB-oprM operon at a low constitutive level,
but one sufficient to contribute significantly to the elevated
intrinsic antibiotic resistance of this organism. A second efflux
system, MexCD-OprJ (41), is responsible for efflux of
quinolones, erythromycin (29), and cephalosporins
(12, 27). Its expression is totally repressed by the
transcriptional regulator NfxB (35, 49). The third efflux
pump, MexEF-OprN, transports chloramphenicol as well as quinolones, is
overexpressed in nfxC type mutants (18), and is
positively regulated by the transcriptional activator MexT (16). Recently, a fourth efflux system of P. aeruginosa, called MexXY, has been cloned into Escherichia
coli, on which it conferred resistance to quinolones and
erythromycin (31). This efflux system was subsequently
shown to be involved in the intrinsic resistance of P. aeruginosa to aminoglycosides and erythromycin (45).
nfxC type mutants were originally isolated from P. aeruginosa strain PAO4009 after exposure to the quinolone
norfloxacin (9). These mutants displayed cross-resistance
to other quinolones but also to nonquinolone antibiotics such as
imipenem and chloramphenicol. The nfxC locus was mapped to
46 min on the PAO1 chromosome (9), near the
catA gene, which is located within 15 kb of the
mexEF-oprN operon (18). Mutations
which lead to overexpression of the MexEF-OprN pump have recently been
shown to result from variations in the transcriptional activator gene
mexT (26). NfxC is therefore to be considered a
phenotype, since overexpression of the MexEF-OprN pump might result
from mutations which are not necessarily linked to mexT
(26) (T. Köhler and J. L. Dumas, unpublished data).
We previously showed that an nfxC type mutant which
overexpressed the MexEF-OprN efflux operon produces about 20 times less pyocyanin than the isogenic wild-type strain (18). Since
pyocyanin is a typical secondary metabolite whose production is
controlled by the rhl cell-to-cell signaling system
(2), we decided to investigate the production of other
virulence factors in nfxC type mutants. Our results show
that overexpression of the MexEF-OprN efflux pump is correlated with a
decrease in production of extracellular virulence factors, particularly
those controlled by the rhl system. Evidence is presented
that the PQS (39) is involved in this response.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Bacteria, media, and growth conditions.
Bacterial strains
and plasmids are listed in Table 1.
E. coli and P. aeruginosa were routinely grown in
Luria-Bertani (LB) broth supplemented when necessary with antibiotics
at the following concentrations, in milligrams per liter: gentamicin,
15; ampicillin (for E. coli), 100; carbenicillin, 250 (for
P. aeruginosa); tetracycline, 10 (for E. coli) or
50 (for P. aeruginosa); mercury chloride, 12.5. For analysis
of exoproducts and autoinducers in culture supernatants and for
lacZ fusion experiments, P. aeruginosa strains were grown as follows. Strains to be tested were streaked from
80°C
glycerol stocks on selective LB agar plates. Single colonies were
inoculated into 5 ml of PB (2% Bacto Peptone [select peptone 140;
Gibco-BRL], 1.4 g of MgCl2/liter, 10 g
of K2SO4/liter)
(6) supplemented with antibiotics where appropriate.
Cultures were grown overnight at 37°C with agitation in 50-ml flasks.
One milliliter of this overnight culture was centrifuged and
resuspended in 1 ml of fresh PB. From this suspension, 25 ml of
prewarmed PB without antibiotics was inoculated 1:100 and grown in
250-ml flasks with agitation. Defined media were based on M9 salts
(25) supplemented with 2 mM MgSO4
and 0.4% glucose. For phage transductions, donor strains were grown in
LB broth and recipient strains were resuspended in TNM medium (10 mM
Tris-HCl [pH 7.4], 150 mM NaCl, 10 mM MgSO4).
Strain and plasmid constructions.
Mutations in the
cell-to-cell signaling regulator genes were transferred into the PAO1
wild-type strain PT5 and the nfxC mutant PT149 using the
transducing phage E79tv2 (32). The genotype of
the strains was verified by Southern hybridization as described previously (15). The mexE gene was inactivated
in strain PT149 by using bacteriophage E79tv2
(32) to transduce the mexE::
Hg mutation from strain PT121 (called PAOmexE in reference
18). In all of the 12 transductants analyzed, wild-type
antibiotic susceptibility to the efflux pump substrates was restored.
However, 4 of the 12 transductants remained imipenem resistant. One of these strains, called PT637, was shown by sequencing to contain a
full-length mexT open reading frame (ORF) (see Results). The mexE-lacZ fusion pEZ5 was constructed by ligating
a 1.8-kbp BglII-EcoRV fragment from plasmid pNFZ4
(16) into BamHI-EcoRV-cleaved pSW205 (11).
DNA-manipulations.
Plasmids were introduced into P. aeruginosa by electroporation or by triparental mating using
pRK2013 as a helper plasmid (8). Genomic DNA was isolated
as described previously (1). PCR amplification was
performed by using 100 ng of genomic DNA as a template. PCR mixtures
contained primers at 0.1 µmol, 2.5 mM deoxynucleoside triphosphates,
and 2 U of Taq polymerase (Appligene, Illkirch,
France) in a total volume of 50 µl. Reaction mixtures were subjected
to an initial 1-min denaturation step at 95°C, followed by 25 cycles
of 30 s at 95°C, 30 s at 55°C, and 2 min at 72°C, with
a final 5-min elongation at 72°C. Amplification of rhlI
with primers RhlI-P30 (5'-CCATCATCCTGAGCATCTCCAGAGAGC-3') and RhlI-M6 (5'-GGAATGACTTCGGCATGGCGACTCC-3') yielded a
1,074-bp fragment, and amplification of rhlR with primers
RhlR-P4 (5'-CGGCGTTTCAATGGAATTGTCACAACC-3') and RhlR-M5
(5'-GGCGGCATCCCTACCCTGATACTCCC-3') yielded a 1,109-bp fragment. PCR products were run on Tris-acetate-EDTA gels (1.2% agarose) and then purified using a Qiagen gel extraction kit. The
mexT DNA region was amplified using primers nfxC-P1
(5'-TCTCGCACGCAAGGCTTGACG-3') and nfxC-M2
(5'-TCCCACTCGTTCAGCGGTTGTTC-3'). PCR conditions were as
follows: 1 min at 95°C, followed by 25 cycles of 30 s at 95°C, 20 s at 52°C, and 2 min at 72°C, with a final 5-min elongation at 72°C. DNA sequences were determined from double-stranded templates according to the dideoxy chain termination method (47)
using an automatic sequencer (model 377A; Applied Biosystems).
Qualitative plate assays.
Rhamnolipid production was
estimated by inoculating strains on M9-based agar plates supplemented
with 0.2% glucose (vol/vol), 2 mM MgSO4, trace
elements, 0.05% (vol/vol) glutamate (unless otherwise stated) instead
of NH4Cl as an N source, 0.0005% (vol/vol) methylene blue, and 0.02% (vol/vol) cetyltrimethylammonium bromide (50). Plates were incubated first at 37°C for 24 h
and then for at least 48 h at room temperature until a blue halo
appeared around the colony. Swarm plates were prepared and inoculated
as described previously (15). Incubation was carried out
for 18 h at 37°C.
Quantitative exoproduct assays on culture supernatants.
Samples of 0.5 ml were taken at various time points during growth in
PB, centrifuged (at 8,000 × g for 5 min), and filtered (pore size, 0.22 µm). Filtrates were immediately frozen and kept at
80°C. Elastolytic activity was determined by the elastin Congo red
(ECR) method (56). Five milligrams of ECR (Elastin
Products Company, Owensville, Mo.) was used per assay. Triplicate
samples were analyzed for each time point. Pyocyanin was determined in culture supernatants as described previously (6).
-Galactosidase assays.
Cultures were grown at 37°C with
agitation as described above. Triplicate 100-µl samples were taken to
determine the optical density at 600 nm (OD600)
and
-galactosidase activity (30). For complementation
assays with autoinducers, strains were grown overnight in PB medium.
Cells were resuspended in M9-based medium supplemented with 0.2%
glucose (vol/vol), 2 mM MgSO4, trace elements, and 0.05% (vol/vol) tryptophan instead of NH4Cl
as an N source. C4-HSL was added from a dimethyl sulfoxide stock
solution. PQS was synthesized as described previously
(39)and dissolved in dimethyl sulfoxide.
Autoinducer bioassays.
Aliquots (3 ml) were taken at
different time points during growth in PB medium and centrifuged, and
the supernatants were filtered (pore size, 0.22 µm). Aliquots (2 ml)
were extracted twice with 2 ml of ethyl acetate (containing 0.01%
acetic acid). The extracts were kept at
20°C. Aliquots of the ethyl
acetate extract were evaporated, and the dried residue was resuspended directly in 1 ml of the bioassay strain culture. The E. coli
bioassay strain was grown in M9 glucose medium supplemented with
0.001% thiamine, 1% LB medium, 50 µg of ampicillin/ml, and 1 mM isopropyl-
-D-thiogalactopyranoside (IPTG)
when required. The P. aeruginosa bioassay strain JP2
(pECP61.5) was grown in LB medium. Incubation and
-galactosidase
determinations were performed as described above.
 |
RESULTS |
Production of extracellular virulence factors is affected in
nfxC type mutants.
We previously observed that the
nfxC type mutant PT149 produced 20-fold less pyocyanin than
the wild-type strain PT5 (18). We therefore tested the
production of other extracellular virulence factors in these strains
and compared their levels to those of isogenic lasR,
lasI, rhlR, and rhlI mutants. As
expected, the nfxC type mutant and the two rhl
mutants showed drastically reduced production of pyocyanin, while the
lasR and lasI mutants still secreted substantial
amounts of pyocyanin (Table 2). Elastase activity was reduced by more than 50% in the nfxC mutant,
while the rhlR and lasR mutants showed only
marginal activity in culture supernatants after 10 h of growth in
PB medium (Table 2).
We then compared the production of rhamnolipids using a standard plate
assay. As a reference, we included the PAO1 wild-type
strain (PAO-BI)
(
10) and its
lasR derivative, PAO-R1
(
10).
The
nfxC mutant PT149 showed strongly
reduced rhamnolipid production
(Fig.
1).
Surprisingly the wild-type strain PAO-BI also showed
reduced
rhamnolipid production. Unlike PAO-R1, the
lasR mutant
PT498
constructed in the PT5 background was still able to produce
rhamnolipids. As expected, the
rhlR mutant PT462 (Fig.
1)
was
completely deficient in rhamnolipid production as shown previously
in other wild-type backgrounds (
2,
33). We therefore
verified
the resistance profiles of PAO-BI and PAO-R1. Indeed, both
strains
were resistant to chloramphenicol, ciprofloxacin, and imipenem,
a phenotype reminiscent of our
nfxC mutant PT149 (Table
2).
Furthermore

-galactosidase levels expressed from a
mexE-
lacZ fusion were
similar in PAO-BI
and the
nfxC mutant PT149 (data available upon
request).
This strongly suggests that strains PAO-BI and PAO-R1
are
nfxC mutants (see also below).

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FIG. 1.
Rhamnolipid plate assay. Strains to be tested were grown
for 8 h in LB medium, and 2 µl was spotted on the plate.
Tyrosine at a final concentration of 0.05% was used as the nitrogen
source. Incubation was carried out for 24 h at 37°C and then for
72 h at room temperature. The presence of a dark halo around the
colony indicates production of rhamnolipids.
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As expected, the
rhlR lasR double mutant PT531
was completely deficient in production of all exoproducts tested (Table
2).
To rule out the possibility that a particular mutation in the
nfxC mutant strain PT149, which had been selected
previously
on ciprofloxacin (strain PAO-7H in reference
18), was responsible
for the decrease in virulence factor
production, new
nfxC type
mutants were selected by plating
the wild-type strain PT5 on LB
agar plates containing chloramphenicol
at 600 µg/ml, a condition
which exclusively selects
nfxC
type mutants (T. Köhler, unpublished
data). Fifty spontaneous
independent Cm
r colonies were analyzed. All of
them were cross-resistant to quinolones
and imipenem, as expected for
nfxC type mutants. All 50 colonies
showed drastically
decreased production of rhamnolipids in the
plate assay, demonstrating
the link between the
nfxC phenotype
and exoproduct
synthesis.
nfxC mutants are deficient in swarming.
We
(15) and others (46) recently demonstrated
the swarming motility of P. aeruginosa on semisolid agar
plates. Swarming was shown to depend on rhamnolipids as biosurfactants
(15). We therefore tested the nfxC mutant PT149
on swarm plates. While the wild type showed normal swarming behavior,
both the nfxC mutant and strain PAO-BI were unable to swarm
(Fig. 2). This is in agreement with the
finding that rhamnolipid production was decreased in these strains.

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FIG. 2.
Swarming was tested on M8-based minimal medium
(M9 medium without NH4Cl), supplemented with 0.2% glucose
and 0.05% glutamate as the sole nitrogen source and solidified with
agar to a final concentration of 0.6%. Strains were inoculated by
using a toothpick, and plates were incubated at 37°C for 18 h.
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Efflux pump overexpression is responsible for decreased virulence
factor production.
MexEF-OprN is positively regulated by the
transcriptional activator MexT (16), located upstream of
the efflux operon. In agreement with the findings of Maseda et al.
(26), we recently found that the nfxC mutant
PT149 contains a full-length mexT ORF, while in the
wild-type strain PT5, the mexT ORF is interrupted by an 8-bp
insert (CGGCCAGC), resulting in a truncated MexT protein (Fig.
3). This means that wild-type strains
which do not express the MexEF-OprN efflux pump may encode an inactive
mexT gene, while nfxC type mutants express a
functional mexT gene. As expected from the phenotype, we
found that strain PAO-BI encodes a functional mexT gene,
whose complete sequence is identical to that of the mexT
gene in our nfxC mutant PT149 (data available on
request).

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FIG. 3.
Alignment of a partial DNA sequence of
mexT from the wild-type strain PT5, the
nfxC mutant PT149, and strain PAO-BI. The 8-bp insert
inactivating the mexT ORF is boldfaced. The entire
mexT gene was sequenced for all strains, and no other
mutation was found.
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To determine whether possible pleiotropic effects of the functional
MexT protein or overexpression of the MexEF-OprN efflux
pump per se was
responsible for the decrease in virulence factor
production, the
MexEF-OprN pump was inactivated in the
nfxC type
mutant
PT149 by insertion of an

Hg cassette into the
mexE gene.
The resulting strain, called PT637, expressed a full-length
mexT ORF and was susceptible to the pump substrates
chloramphenicol
and ciprofloxacin but remained resistant to imipenem.
This is
in agreement with previous observations demonstrating that
imipenem
resistance is independent of MexEF-OprN overexpression (see
the
last row of Table 1 in reference
18) but results from
decreased
expression of the porin OprD. Strain PT637 was used in
subsequent
experiments as a means of distinguishing between phenotypes
related
to MexEF-OprN pump overexpression and those related to other
MexT-mediated
effects. Indeed, LasB activities, as measured by elastase
production
(Fig.
4A), were restored to
wild-type levels in strain PT637,
and both rhamnolipid production and
swarming ability were comparable
to those of the wild type (Fig.
1 and
2). We therefore concluded
that overexpression of the MexEF-OprN efflux
pump is solely responsible
for the decrease in virulence factor
production in the
nfxC type
mutant PT149.

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FIG. 4.
(A) ECR assay. Elastase production was determined on
filtered culture supernatants of strains grown in PB. Determinations
were performed on three different occasions. Results from one
typical experiment are shown. (B) Expression of the lasB
gene was monitored during growth in PB using a
lasB::lacZ fusion carried on
plasmid pTS400. Growth, expressed as theOD600, was
monitored (inset).
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Mutations in the cell-to-cell signaling regulators do not affect
expression of the MexEF-OprN efflux system in the nfxC
type mutant.
Since virulence factor production is affected in
nfxC mutants, we asked whether the cell-to-cell signaling
regulators were required for expression of the MexEF-OprN efflux system
in the nfxC mutant PT149. For this purpose lasI,
lasR, rhlI, and rhlR knockout
mutations were transduced into PT149. The resistance profiles of the
resultant mutants PT469 (nfxC lasI), PT509
(nfxC lasR), PT456 (nfxC
rhlI), PT464 (nfxC rhlR), and PT500
(nfxC rhlR lasR) were compared with
those of PT5 and PT149 on antibiotic gradient plates. All of the
cell-to-cell signaling mutants showed the same susceptibilities to
pefloxacin, chloramphenicol, and imipenem as the parental strain PT149
(data not shown). We further introduced plasmid pEZ5, carrying a
mexE-lacZ fusion, into the nfxC type
mutants PT149, PT464, PT500, and PT509 and measured
-galactosidase
activities during exponential growth. In all four strains similar
-galactosidase activities (170 ± 25 Miller units) were
obtained. This clearly establishes the quorum-sensing-independent regulation of the mexEF-oprN operon.
Expression of the elastase (lasB) and
rhamnosyltransferase (rhlAB) genes is affected in
nfxC type mutants.
To further analyze the mechanism
of extracellular virulence factor production of the nfxC
type mutant PT149, LasB elastase activity was recorded over time and
compared to the expression of a plasmid-encoded
lasB-lacZ fusion. In both the wild type
and the nfxC type mutant, LasB activity and
lasB expression started to appear at an
OD600 of 2. However, LasB activity and lasB
expression continued to increase at a lower rate in the
nfxC type mutant, although growth was comparable to that
of the wild type (Fig. 4). Hence, the reduced elastase production in
strain PT149 results from decreased expression of the
lasB gene.
Expression of the
rhlAB operon encoding rhamnosyltransferase
was assayed using the translational
rhlAB-
lacZ
fusion carried
by plasmid pECP60.
rhlAB expression was
determined after 18 h
of incubation in M8 medium supplemented with
0.2% glucose and
0.05% glutamate as the sole nitrogen source. While
the wild-type
PT5 yielded 1,976 ± 10 Miller units, the
nfxC type mutant PT149
and the
rhlR mutant PT462
yielded 269 ± 11 and 59 ± 2 Miller units,
respectively.
These results suggest that the drastically reduced
rhamnolipid
production in strain PT149 (Fig.
1) is caused by a
strong reduction in
rhlAB transcription.
Expression of cell-to-cell signaling regulator genes in the
nfxC mutant.
Both lasB and
rhlAB are controlled by the las and
rhl cell-to-cell signaling systems. We therefore introduced
lacZ fusions carried on plasmids to the lasR,
lasI, rhlR, and rhlI genes into PT5
and PT149 in order to determine whether their expression was altered,
which could account for the decreased elastase and rhamnolipid production in the nfxC mutant. Both
lasR(pPCS1001) and lasI(pPCS223) expression
reached similar levels in the wild type and the nfxC mutant
(Fig. 5). The expression of
lasR increased in both strains during early stationary
phase, as previously reported with the pPCS1001
lasR::lacZ fusion in strain PAO1
(40). In contrast, the expression of lasI was
constant and even decreased slightly in both strains when stationary
phase was reached (Fig. 5B). This surprising expression profile is very
likely due to the absence on pPCS223 of the rsaL gene,
encoding the recently described inhibitor of lasI expression
(5). In the absence of multiple copies of the RsaL
repressor, expression of lasI is already at a maximum during
the exponential-growth phase and therefore does not display an
induction profile typical of other genes regulated by the cell-to-cell signaling system. Importantly, the nfxC mutation did not
affect the expression of lasI compared to that in the wild
type strain.

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FIG. 5.
-Galactosidase activities expressed from
lasR::lacZ (A) and
lasI::lacZ (B) fusions were
determined during growth in PB. Growth, expressed as the
OD600, was monitored (inset). Experiments were repeated on
three different occasions. Error bars represent standard deviations of
triplicate LacZ determinations for one typical experiment. Where error
bars are not shown, the standard deviation was within the size of the
symbol. Arrows indicate the end of exponential growth. The antibiotic
phenotypes of the strains at the end of the experiment were determined
on pefloxacin-containing gradient plates. The LacZ activities of
control plasmids pSW205 and pLP170 were approximately 3 and 400 Miller
units, respectively, and remained fairly constant during growth.
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Expression of the regulator gene
rhlR(pPCS1002) also
increased after the exponential-growth phase in both the wild type and
the
nfxC mutant and remained comparable even during
stationary
phase (Fig.
6A). Surprisingly,
a significant difference was found
when expression of
rhlI(pMAL-I) was determined. Indeed, in the
nfxC
type mutant PT149,
rhlI transcription was drastically
decreased
and reached only 35% of wild-type levels in stationary phase
(Fig.
6B). We subsequently sequenced the
rhlR-rhlI region in
strains
PT5 and PT149. However, no differences were found between the
two strains, suggesting that the observed effect on
rhlI
expression
in the
nfxC type mutant PT149 does not result
from mutations in
the
rhlR-rhlI regulatory region.

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FIG. 6.
-Galactosidase activities expressed from
rhlR::lacZ (A) and
rhlI::lacZ (B) fusions were
determined during growth in PB. Growth, expressed as the
OD600, was monitored (inset). Error bars represent standard
deviations of triplicate LacZ determinations for one typical
experiment. Where error bars are not shown, the standard deviation was
within the size of the symbol. Arrows indicate the end of exponential
growth.
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Autoinducer production in culture supernatants.
Since the
transcription of the autoinducer synthase gene rhlI was
affected by the mexEF-oprN expression level,
production of the C4-HSL autoinducer was determined in culture
supernatants of PT5 and PT149 and compared to that in the
rhlI mutant PT454. While the wild-type supernatants reached
a C4-HSL concentration of 10 ± 0.6 µM, the PT149 supernatants
contained 3.5 ± 0.7 µM C4-HSL (Fig.
7A). As expected, no C4-HSL was
detectable in the rhlI mutant PT454 (data not shown). C4-HSL
levels determined in supernatants of strain PT637 (nfxC
mexE) were comparable to those for the wild type (data
available on request), suggesting again that MexEF-OprN overexpression
is solely responsible for the decreased amounts of C4-HSL in the
nfxC type mutants. When the concentrations of the
3-oxo-C12-HSL autoinducer were determined, we found increased concentrations in supernatants of strain PT149 at ODs above 4 (Fig.
7B). This suggests that MexEF-OprN may contribute to the secretion of
the hydrophobic 3-oxo-C12-HSL molecule, as was previously shown for the
MexAB-OprM pump (7, 38).

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FIG. 7.
Autoinducer concentrations determined in culture
supernatants. C4-HSL (A) and 3-oxo-C12-HSL (B) were determined using
the bioassay strains JP2(pECP61.5) and MG4 I14,
respectively.
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Complementation of the nfxC mutant with exogenous
autoinducers.
The results described above show an effect of
MexEF-OprN overexpression on rhlI transcription and hence on
the levels of C4-HSL produced. For full induction, the rhl
system requires the 3-oxo-C12-HSL autoinducer and a recently identified
novel regulator molecule, PQS (39). We therefore tested
the effects of 3-oxo-C12-HSL, C4-HSL, and PQS (kindly synthesized by
the group of U. Burger, Faculty of Chemistry, University of Geneva,
Geneva, Switzerland) on rhamnolipid production using the plate assay.
Addition of 3-oxo-C12-HSL alone or in combination with either PQS or
C4-HSL did not affect rhamnolipid production. In contrast, addition of
either C4-HSL alone or C4-HSL and PQS increased rhamnolipid production
(data not shown). Hence, we tested the effects of the three signaling molecules on expression of the rhlAB-lacZ fusion
in strain PT5, in the nfxC mutant PT149, and in the
rhl nfxC double mutant PT464. PQS alone at a final
concentration of 50 µM had no significant effect on the transcription
of the rhlAB fusion in any of the three strains (Table
3). In contrast, the presence of 10 µM
C4-HSL alone increased the transcription of rhlAB about
sixfold, but only in the nfxC mutant. Surprisingly, when
both molecules were present at these concentrations, the transcription
increased 15-fold in the nfxC mutant. When 3-oxo-C12-HSL
(final concentration, 5 µM) was added to the two other signaling
molecules, the expression of rhlAB did not increase further.
These results strongly suggest that the levels of both C4-HSL and PQS
are affected by mexEF-oprN overexpression. Since
rhlAB transcription in the rhlR nfxC
mutant was not influenced by the addition of autoinducers, it can be concluded that the partial complementation observed in the
nfxC mutant requires the presence of the RhlR regulator.
In conclusion, our work provides evidence that overexpression of the
MexEF-OprN multidrug efflux pump reduces the production
of virulence
factors controlled mainly by the
rhl cell-to-cell
signaling
system (pyocyanin and rhamnolipids) and that this reduction
results from decreased
rhlI transcription and decreased
C4-HSL
autoinducer
production.
 |
DISCUSSION |
P. aeruginosa is known for its ability to develop
resistance to a number of structurally unrelated antibiotics, a
phenomenon which can now be attributed predominantly to chromosomal
mutations leading to overexpression of multidrug efflux systems.
P. aeruginosa also produces a series of exoproducts, several
of which, such as elastase, alkaline protease, exotoxins, and
pyocyanin, have been shown to be virulence factors (3, 54,
55). In this study, we show a link between the active efflux
system MexEF-OprN and the production of virulence factors regulated by
the las (10, 11, 19) and rhl
(2, 33) cell-to-cell signaling systems. This important
finding suggests that P. aeruginosa strains becoming resistant to multiple antibiotics by overexpression of
MexEF-OprN are likely to be less virulent. Indeed, we recently found
that nfxC mutants exhibit significantly reduced virulence
both in a nonmammalian system and in a rat model of acute pneumonia (P. Cosson et al., submitted for publication).
The connection between multidrug resistance and virulence factor
production was previously suggested in a study comparing 18 multidrug-resistant P. aeruginosa clinical samples collected in a Japanese hospital. All multidrug-resistant strains were deficient in production of pyoverdine, pyocyanin, elastase, hemolysin, and casein
protease, while at least 8 out of 13 antibiotic-susceptible strains
from the same ward were positive for these virulence factors (34).
Furthermore, two recent reports established a link between the
expression of efflux pumps and the quorum-sensing system in P. aeruginosa. Evans et al. (7) showed that strains
overexpressing the MexAB-OprM system secrete less 3-oxo-C12-HSL.
Furthermore, these investigators found reduced production of pyocyanin,
elastase, and casein protease compared to that in the wild type.
However, several strains used by Evans et al. were derived from PAO-BI, which we show here to be an nfxC mutant. We sequenced the
mexT gene in these strains and confirmed that all express a
functional mexT gene and are therefore nfxC
mutants. Thus, it is not clear whether the effects on virulence factor
production observed by Evans et al. are due to indirect effects
of MexAB-OprM overexpression on the expression of MexEF-OprN. In
obvious contradiction of these results, Pearson et al.
(38) found that in a non-nfxC background, overexpression of the MexAB-OprM pump increased secretion of
3-oxo-C12-HSL, while deletion of mexAB-oprM resulted in
decreased release of this autoinducer, suggesting that this hydrophobic
molecule is actively secreted by the MexAB-OprM efflux pump.
Our finding that strain PAO-BI is an nfxC type mutant also
allows us to explain discrepancies between several laboratories working
in the field of quorum sensing. While it was observed that the
lasR mutant PAO-R1 was deficient in rhamnolipid production (37), several investigators showed substantial rhamnolipid
production in lasR mutants constructed in other strain
backgrounds (2, 33). Our findings suggest that the
las system has only a marginal effect on rhamnolipid
production. Therefore, the strongly reduced rhamnolipid production in
strain PAO-R1 is mainly due to its NfxC phenotype.
How can we explain the effect of MexEF-OprN overexpression on the
rhl quorum system? One possibility is that autoinducers are
substrates of the MexEF-OprN efflux pump, in which case the overexpression of this pump could lead to decreased intracellular autoinducer concentrations and hence diminished production of virulence
factors. In the nfxC type mutant, we observed increased amounts of 3-oxo-C12-HSL at OD600 values above 4, suggesting that 3-oxo-C12-HSL could also be a substrate for the
MexEF-OprN efflux pump, as suggested for MexAB-OprM (7,
38). On the other hand, supernatants of the nfxC type
mutant contained about 60% less of the second autoinducer, C4-HSL,
than those of the wild-type strain. Short-chain autoinducers like
3-oxo-C6-HSL of Photobacterium fischeri (14)
and C4-HSL of P. aeruginosa apparently (38) diffuse freely across the bacterial cell membrane. It is therefore unlikely that an efflux system, such as the MexEF-OprN pump, is involved in active export of C4-HSL. Our data support the conclusion that the reduced amounts of C4-HSL produced by the nfxC type
mutant are the result of altered rhlI expression. Indeed,
rhlI transcription levels in PT149 were reduced to 50% of
those in the wild type, while rhlR transcription levels were
unaffected. Since sequencing of the rhlR-rhlI DNA region
obtained from the nfxC type mutant did not reveal any
mutation, it seems likely that altered expression or activity of
another regulatory element required for rhlI expression might be involved in the nfxC type mutant. The
existence of such a regulator of the rhl operon has already
been suggested (19). Furthermore, a novel signaling
molecule, called PQS (39), has been identified and shown
to positively regulate the transcription of lasB and also of
rhlI (28). We propose that the MexEF-OprN pump
decreases intracellular PQS levels, which could result either from the
transport of PQS by the pump or from efflux of a precursor required for
PQS biosynthesis, like, for example, tryptophan (13).This would explain the observed decrease in rhlI transcription
and the concomitant decrease in C4-HSL levels. The combined decrease in
PQS and C4-HSL levels could therefore be responsible for the diminished
exoproduct synthesis in the nfxC type mutant. In agreement with this hypothesis is the observation that PQS in combination with
C4-HSL is able to partially restore rhlAB transcription in the nfxC type mutant. PQS has a quinolone structure to which
a 7-carbon-atom acyl side chain is attached. This confers a hydrophobic character on the molecule which probably prevents diffusion through the
membrane, as in the case of 3-oxo-C12-HSL. The results presented here,
together with our observation on the reduced virulence of the
nfxC mutant PT149 (Cosson et al., submitted), demonstrate that antibiotic resistance can have dramatic effects on the virulence properties of a strain without necessarily affecting its overall fitness.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
We are grateful to J. P. Pearson, B. Iglewski, D. Haas, and
M. Foglino for providing strains, phages, and plasmids. We thank R. Comte for excellent technical assistance and C. Rossier for performing
the sequencing. Many thanks to the members of the group of U. Burger,
Faculty of Chemistry, University of Geneva, for the synthesis of
C4-HSL, 3-oxo-C12-HSL, and PQS.
This work was supported by grants 31-55961.98 (to T.K.) and
3231-051940.97 and 3200-052189.97 (to C.V.D.) from the Swiss National Science Foundation.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of
Genetics and Microbiology, CMU, 9, av. de Champel, CH-1211 Geneva 4, Switzerland. Phone: 41-22-7025655. Fax: 41-22-7025702. E-mail: Thilo.Kohler{at}medecine.unige.ch.
 |
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Journal of Bacteriology, September 2001, p. 5213-5222, Vol. 183, No. 18
0021-9193/01/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JB.183.18.5213-5222.2001
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