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Journal of Bacteriology, October 2001, p. 5709-5717, Vol. 183, No. 19
0021-9193/01/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JB.183.19.5709-5717.2001
Copyright © 2001, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Genome of the Bacterium Streptococcus
pneumoniae Strain R6
JoAnn
Hoskins,1
William E.
Alborn Jr.,1
Jeffrey
Arnold,2
Larry C.
Blaszczak,1
Stanley
Burgett,2
Bradley S.
DeHoff,2
Shawn T.
Estrem,1
Lori
Fritz,2
Dong-Jing
Fu,2
Wendy
Fuller,2
Chad
Geringer,2
Raymond
Gilmour,1
Jennifer S.
Glass,1
Hamid
Khoja,1
Angelika R.
Kraft,1
Robert E.
Lagace,3
Donald J.
LeBlanc,1
Linda N.
Lee,1
Elliot J.
Lefkowitz,4
Jin
Lu,1
Patti
Matsushima,1
Scott M.
McAhren,2
Margaret
McHenney,2
Kevin
McLeaster,2
Christopher W.
Mundy,2
Thalia I.
Nicas,1
Franklin H.
Norris,2
MaryJeanne
O'Gara,1
Robert B.
Peery,1
Gregory T.
Robertson,1
Pamela
Rockey,2
Pei-Ming
Sun,1
Malcolm E.
Winkler,1
Yong
Yang,1
Michelle
Young-Bellido,1
Genshi
Zhao,1
Christopher A.
Zook,1
Richard H.
Baltz,1
S. Richard
Jaskunas,1
Paul R.
Rosteck Jr.,2
Paul L.
Skatrud,1 and
John I.
Glass1,*
Infectious Diseases Research and Clinical
Investigation1 and Biological Research
Technologies and Proteins,2 Eli Lilly and
Company, Indianapolis, Indiana 46285; Incyte Genomics, Palo
Alto, California, 943043; and Department
of Microbiology, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham,
Alabama 352944
Received 20 June 2001/Accepted 13 July 2001
 |
ABSTRACT |
Streptococcus pneumoniae is among the most
significant causes of bacterial disease in humans. Here we report the
2,038,615-bp genomic sequence of the gram-positive bacterium S.
pneumoniae R6. Because the R6 strain is avirulent and, more
importantly, because it is readily transformed with DNA from homologous
species and many heterologous species, it is the principal platform for investigation of the biology of this important pathogen. It is also
used as a primary vehicle for genomics-based development of antibiotics
for gram-positive bacteria. In our analysis of the genome, we
identified a large number of new uncharacterized genes predicted to
encode proteins that either reside on the surface of the cell or are
secreted. Among those proteins there may be new targets for vaccine and
antibiotic development.
 |
INTRODUCTION |
Worldwide, approximately 1.1 million
deaths annually are attributed to Streptococcus pneumoniae
infection (22), accounting for 9% of all deaths in
underdeveloped countries (37). S. pneumoniae disease is not limited to the developing world. Despite the
availability of a broad arsenal of antibiotics and a vaccine, S. pneumoniae remains one of the top 10 causes of death in the United
States (22). Furthermore, nearly one-third of the S. pneumoniae isolates obtained from patients in the United States
are resistant to penicillin (11, 45) and the incidence of
strains resistant to multiple antibiotics is increasing, making
infections caused by this organism more difficult to treat.
S. pneumoniae is a gram-positive coccus and a member of the
lactic acid bacteria, so named for their primary metabolic byproduct. The lactic acid bacteria include the lactococci, a group important in
food and dairy industries, and the genera Enterococcus and Streptococcus. Bacteria belonging to the genus
Streptococcus live in association with animal hosts, as
either pathogenic or commensal organisms. Human pathogens include the
beta-hemolytic species, such as Streptococcus pyogenes
(Lancefield group A) and Streptococcus agalactiae (group B),
as well as the human cariogenic species Streptococcus
mutans. A number of commensal species of streptococci can
occasionally cause opportunistic infections. S. pneumoniae (also known as pneumococcus or Diplococcus pneumoniae) is
the major cause of acute bacterial pneumonia and otitis media.
S. pneumoniae is also a transient commensal, colonizing
the throat and upper respiratory tract of 40% of humans. S. pneumoniae isolates vary in their polysaccharide capsule, and at
least 90 different capsule types have been identified. Specific capsule
types are associated with the capacity to cause severe disease.
To aid the search for new therapies, we determined the entire genomic
DNA sequence of S. pneumoniae strain R6. S. pneumoniae R6 is a descendant of the type 2 capsule S (smooth or
encapsulated) clinical isolate used by Avery and coworkers to
demonstrate the genetic function of DNA (2), and it is
used worldwide as a standard laboratory strain. The lack of a
polysaccharide capsule in R6 renders it avirulent and a safe strain
with which to work. The essential utility of the strain is its genetic malleability.
 |
MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Bacterial strain.
The S. pneumoniae R6 isolate
was obtained from Alexander Tomasz (Rockefeller Institute, New York,
N.Y.). The strain is hex+, not a
hex mutant as had been reported previously (3).
The parental S. pneumoniae strain for R6 is R36A, which is a
nonencapsulated strain derived from the capsular type 2 clinical
isolate strain D39. R36A has multiple interruptions in the type 2 capsular locus inherited from D39 (21). Rollin Hotchkiss
assayed single R36A colonies for competence in transformation. S. pneumoniae R6 was selected based on a high capacity to be
transformed to penicillin resistant by using DNA from a
laboratory-constructed isolate of penicillin-resistant S. pneumoniae. The sequenced isolate of S. pneumoniae R6
is available from the American Type Culture Collection (ATCC BAA-255).
Genome sequencing.
Genomic DNA was isolated from bacteria
grown in brain heart infusion medium (Becton Dickinson, Franklin
Lakes, N.J.). The purification process included multiple phenol
extractions, ethanol precipitations, and spoolings. DNA was sheared,
size fractionated, and used to create plasmid and fosmid libraries.
Clones from those libraries were end sequenced using both dye-primer
and dye-terminator DNA sequencing methods. In the random shotgun phase
of the project,
44,000 sequences were obtained. Gaps were closed
either by sequencing spanning PCR products or by directly sequencing
from the ends of contigs using custom primers and genomic DNA as a
template (18). DNA sequences were analyzed and assembled
using PHRED, PHRAP, and CONSED (http://www.phrap.org/) (13,
17). Insertion sequences and rRNA operons present in multiple
copies created sequence assembly problems because no single DNA
sequence covered the entire repetitive element. We developed a
high-scoring-pairs algorithm to correctly assemble contigs flanked by
these large repetitive elements (unpublished data). The sequence
assembly was confirmed by a combination of Southern blotting, PCR, and comparison of the electrophoretically measured insert sizes to map
locations of the end sequences from fosmid and plasmid inserts.
One open reading frame (ORF), encoding a hypothetical surface protein
(spr0075), was predicted by this assembly to contain five copies of a
456-bp nearly perfect repeat. Southern blot analysis of this region of
the genome suggested that there were seven copies of this repeat
present within this gene (data not shown). We predicted that this gene
should be approximately 912 bp larger than indicated; however, the
reported sequence for the complete genome did not include the
additional predicted but unsequenced 912 bp.
Sequence analysis and annotation.
Annotation of the S. pneumoniae genome was performed by utilizing a combination of
programs for gene prediction, similarity searching, and functional
assignment. The information from these analyses was imported into a
relational database based upon Microsoft SQL Server. The user interface
for this database was a series of web pages that accessed the SQL
Server database and allowed us to query available analysis data.
Additional pages allowed us to directly hand-annotate the individual
gene records, thus allowing us to refine start sites and add functional
descriptions and notes. This web-based client interface was developed
using Microsoft Active Server Pages technology to directly query and update the database records. Basic sequence analysis tools were provided by the Genetics Computer Group (GCG) package of programs (Wisconsin Package version 10.0; GCG, Madison, Wis.).
ORF identification.
Determination of potential
protein-encoding sequences utilized Glimmer
(http://www.tigr.org/softlab/glimmer/glimmer.html) (9) to
create organism-specific ORF models that could then be used to search
the entire genome for ORFs matching the predictive models. The genome
was first arranged such that the initial base of the ATG start codon of
the putatively identified dnaA gene was base number 1 of the
forward strand. Each predicted ORF was then assigned an S. pneumoniae identification number. ORF spr0001 was assigned to the
putative dnaA gene, and each subsequent ORF was then
numbered consecutively according to its left-most base (the start codon
for ORFs on the forward strand, and the stop codon for genes on the
reverse strand).
Gene assignments.
BLAST searches were performed on all
predicted ORFs using a blastp search of amino acid similarities to
sequences in the GenBank nonredundant protein database. The BLAST data
were parsed using the blast modules of the BioPerl tool kit
(http://www.bioperl.org) and then imported into SQL server tables for
analysis. In addition to BLAST similarity searching, we also
tentatively identified functional domains within the S. pneumoniae ORFs by searching for similarities to the Prosite motif
library (20) and the Blocks database of protein families
(19). Programs from the GCG package provided composition
and hydrophobicity analyses along with scanning for potential signal
peptide domains. The results of these additional analyses allowed us to
refine the gene assignments initially made with BLAST. Furthermore,
alignments with known proteins provided assistance with start-codon prediction.
The results of all of these searches were used to provide putative
identification of each S. pneumoniae ORF when a significant hit between an S. pneumoniae sequence and GenBank sequence
was found. A combination of computer-aided gene prediction along with human inspection of each gene record was then used to finalize gene
assignments for each S. pneumoniae ORF.
RNA identification.
To identify genomic sequences that code
for tRNAs, the set of programs that encompass the software package
tRNAscan-SE (24) was used. rRNAs were identified by their
similarity to the corresponding genes in the Ribosome Database Project
sequence database (25). The sequences for tmRNA
(51), the 4.5S signal recognition particle (53), and RNase P (28) were also identified
based upon sequence similarities with known representatives of these
RNA genes.
Nucleotide sequence accession number.
The genomic sequence
was assigned accession number AE007317 in the GenBank data base. The
annotated genome and supplementary data are available on the World Wide
Web at http://www.lilly.com/s.pneumoniae.
 |
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION |
The S. pneumoniae single circular chromosome of
2,038,615 bp (40% G+C content) contains 2,043 predicted protein coding
regions and 73 noncoding RNA genes, which include four rRNA operons.
The genomic origin of replication has not been experimentally
identified in S. pneumoniae; however, based on the presence
of clusters of DnaA boxes and other genomic features, we hypothesize
that the S. pneumoniae origin of DNA replication is upstream
of dnaA, which is gene spr0001 in our nomenclature system
(16).
As anticipated from the work of Iannelli and colleagues
(21), relative to strain D39, the encapsulated strain from
which R6 was ultimately derived, we noted a 7,504-bp deletion within the
18-kbp region that encodes the capsule biosynthesis genes. This
deletion results in the absence of seven complete genes as well as the
3' end of cps2A and the 5' end of cps2H.
Other than genes associated with capsule synthesis, the genes encoding
several putative virulence functions are present in the R6 genome
(Table 1). These include the genes for
previously described S. pneumoniae surface proteins,
secreted proteins and bacteriocins, and all previously reported
two-component response regulator systems (13 potential histidine
protein kinases and response regulator pairs plus an unpaired 14th
response regulator) (46).
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TABLE 1.
Genes found in R6-encoded proteins that have been studied
for a role in S. pneumoniae virulence or as protective
antigens to S. pneumoniaea
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Drug resistance via efflux pumps is an important contributor to
virulence in Staphylococcus aureus and other gram-positive pathogens. Although S. pneumoniae contains 14 genes that are
possible antibiotic efflux pumps (Table
2), these efflux pump genes may not be
significant contributors to S. pneumoniae virulence.
Antibiotic extrusion is not as common a source of resistance in
S. pneumoniae as it is in S. aureus (e.g.,
quinolones). S. pneumoniae is not intrinsically resistant to
most classes of agents, and among the exceptions (e.g., aminoglycosides
and quinolones) resistance is not the result of drug efflux pumps.
Surface proteins.
Surface proteins are of special interest
because of their potential role in virulence and their possible utility
in vaccine development and also because of their potential
accessibility to antimicrobial agents. The R6 genome includes single
copies of the previously described virulence-associated genes,
including four that encode proteins that are under study as vaccine
candidates (PspA, PsaA, CbpA, and pneumolysin) (5).
Based on sequence analyses, we predict that a large number of proteins
either reside on the S. pneumoniae cell surface or are
secreted from the cell. These proteins include 471 with predicted signal peptide sequences, 109 possessing lipoprotein lipid attachment sites, and 10 that are recognized by choline-binding domains, an
unusual means of surface attachment found in S. pneumoniae (Fig. 1). We could predict no function
for
23% of these potential surface-located or secreted proteins,
which likely play roles in pneumococcal cell surface biology.

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FIG. 1.
S. pneumoniae substrate transport,
carbohydrate and glutamine metabolism, and selected categories of cell
surface proteins. Transporters are shown in the cell on the right and
are grouped by substrate specificity: multidrug and peptide exporters
(red), carbohydrates (yellow), cations (blue), anions and amino acids
(green), nucleosides, purines, and pyrimidines (purple), and other
substrates (white). Question marks indicate uncertainty in the identity
of the genes, direction of transport, or substrate. Permeases are drawn
as rectangles; porins are drawn as cylinders; ATPases are drawn as
ovals overlapping rectangles; other transporters are drawn as ovals;
and ABC transporter elements are depicted as circles for
nucleotide-binding proteins, diamonds for membrane-spanning permeases,
and rectangles for the substrate-binding proteins. The 21 hypothetical
ABC transporters for which no substrate could be predicted are not
shown in the figure. Glutaminase, an enzyme we expected to find but
could not identify, is listed in green italics. The glycolytic pathway
leading to lactate is shown along with the pathway for glutamine to
nitrogen-containing compounds. (Additional material on carbohydrate
metabolism is at http://www.lilly.com/s.pneumoniae.) The ATP
consumption and production values listed are for monosaccharides; ATP
values for disaccharide catabolism are in parentheses. The
choline-binding proteins are autolysin (LytA),
endo-beta-N-acetylglucosaminidase (LytB), a surface
protein involved in adherence and immunoglobulin A inactivation (CbpA),
a putative lactoferrin-binding protein (PspA), and several surface
proteins of unknown function (CbpD, PcpA, PcpC, PcpC1). Micrograph
reprinted from reference 47 with permission of the
publisher.
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In S. aureus, a transpeptidase called sortase anchors
exported proteins containing an LPXTG motif followed by a C-terminal hydrophobic domain and a charged tail to the cell wall peptidoglycan (29, 41). Although sortases are predicted to be present in all gram-positive bacteria, previously no sortase ortholog had been
identified in S. pneumoniae, nor could we identify one using BLAST searches. Using a Smith and Waterman algorithm (43),
we determined that a single S. pneumoniae R6 gene, spr1098,
likely coded for a sortase. Furthermore, we identified 13 genes that coded for proteins containing the LPXTG motif and other sortase substrate features. Six of these proteins are known to be present on
the cell surface, while seven are novel and currently categorized as
hypothetical with no known function (Fig. 1). Our observations about
sortase in strain R6 conflict with a report by Pallen and colleagues,
who identified four sortase-like protein genes and "many" potential
sortase substrates in the genome of a virulent S. pneumoniae
strain with a type 4 capsule (34).
Lipoteichoic acid (LTA) is another cell surface component that
contributes to the bacterium's interaction with the human host. Biochemical studies have not detected the presence of
D-alanine, a key component of LTA in many organisms, in
S. pneumoniae LTA (14). In conflict with the
apparent absence of D-alanine in S. pneumoniae LTA, we found an apparently complete dltABCD
operon that is homologous to those responsible for the addition of
D-alanine to LTA in Bacillus subtilis
and in Lactobacillus casei. Previously we suggested that
this operon may be silent or defective or that these genes may be
active under specific physiological conditions (3). Gene
expression studies (data not shown) revealed expression of mRNA from
each of these genes under normal laboratory growth conditions. The
precise role of the dltABCD operon in the biology of
S. pneumoniae remains unknown, although inactivation of this operon in S. mutans confers increased acid sensitivity
(4).
Competence.
S. pneumoniae competence, i.e., its
natural capacity to take up DNA, has been studied in detail and a
number of competence-specific operons have been identified
(23). S. pneumoniae R6 contains all of the
genes induced during competence as noted by Lee and Morrison
(23), including two identical copies of comX
(each adjacent to a ribosomal operon). Additional genes reported to be
induced during competence, but whose role in this process remains unknown, are also present (36, 40). These 49 putative
competence genes are grouped in 30 apparent operons and are found
mostly on the leading strands extending away from the putative origin of replication (as are
80% of all S. pneumoniae genes).
As might be predicted as a consequence of the capacity of S. pneumoniae to take up DNA, its genome is littered with genes that
are apparently derived from other bacteria. Horizontal gene transfer is
clearest for those genes that have been found only in gram-negative
bacterial genomes. There are 40 ORFs that are similar to genes in
gram-negative bacteria and that have not been found in other
gram-positive genome sequences. This is not surprising, because
S. pneumoniae occupies the same niche in the human
respiratory system as several gram-negative species. Additionally, at
least 2% of S. pneumoniae genes are significantly truncated
relative to orthologous genes characterized in other bacteria (Table
3). Many of the deletions are at the 5'
ends of the ORFs, which suggests that the ORFs may be nonfunctional
remnants of their parental genes. This incidence may also be a
consequence of competence. Coding regions may be missing from these
genes because only part of the ORFs were acquired during the
assimilation of foreign DNA, or because the genes were not essential to
the pneumococcus and mutations are of no consequence. Transporters are
the most frequently truncated genes. Among that set are five ORFs that
are similar to genes encoding drug efflux pumps.
Comparative genomics and metabolism.
In most respects, the
S. pneumoniae gene complement is very similar to that of the
prototypic gram-positive bacterium B. subtilis. More than
53% of the S. pneumoniae genes have highly similar
counterparts in the B. subtilis genome (Fig.
2). Systems for cell division, DNA
replication and repair, translation, cell wall biosynthesis, and some
central catabolic and biosynthetic pathways are basically the same as
in B. subtilis. Major cellular systems and features that are
notably different include energy metabolism, transport, amino acid
biosynthesis, transcription termination, intracellular proteases, and
the presence of three large sets of S. pneumoniae-specific repetitive elements in the genome.

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FIG. 2.
Comparison of the predicted S. pneumoniae
R6 ORFs with those of other completely sequenced genomes. All S.
pneumoniae R6 ORFs were searched against other genomes with
BLAST2. The percentage of S. pneumoniae R6 ORFs with
significant similarity (E 10 12) to predicted ORFs
in the other genomes is shown.
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As is characteristic of the lactic acid bacteria, S. pneumoniae is a nutritionally fastidious facultative anaerobe
requiring a complex medium for growth. This bacterium obtains energy
strictly via fermentation and is incapable of respiratory metabolism,
either aerobically or anaerobically, as is true of all streptococcal species (38). The only nutrients from which the
streptococci can obtain sufficient energy to support growth and cell
division are carbohydrates, which are oxidized to pyruvate via
glycolysis (with the exception of a few species that can ferment
arginine). We identified a large set of genes that encode enzymes
necessary for transport of at least 12 different carbohydrates into the cell and for their subsequent conversion to an intermediate in glycolysis.
S. pneumoniae R6, as expected, encodes all genes necessary
for the oxidation of carbohydrates to pyruvate via glycolysis and would
be expected to reoxidize most, if not all, of the NADH produced by the
reduction of pyruvic acid to lactic acid. R6 contains genes for the
synthesis of phosphotransacetylase, acetokinase, and NADH oxidase,
which would allow it to convert pyruvate to acetate with concomitant
production of an additional ATP, and the reoxidation of NADH (38).
Although fermentation is the least energy efficient of oxidative
processes, S. pneumoniae did not maximize this energy production by exclusively using the phosphoenolpyruvate-dependent phosphotransferase system to import carbohydrates. Five sugar species
are imported by using energetically less-efficient ABC transporters. We
found no genes that might encode cation antiporters of sugars, although
we identified several amino acid/cation symport systems (Fig. 1). All
genes necessary for synthesis of the major ATPase of lactic acid
bacteria, the F0F1-ATPase,
are present. This proton pump works at the expense of ATP, but it can
also serve as an ATP synthase, as well as serving as the major
regulator of intracellular pH among lactic acid bacteria. We did not
find the genes required for a complete electron transport chain that might be associated with either aerobic or anaerobic respiration.
No lactic acid bacterial species encodes a complete tricarboxylic acid
(TCA) cycle, and the S. pneumoniae R6 genome contains none
of the 18 genes comprising this aerobic oxidative pathway. In other
organisms, including those without complete TCA cycles, some of the TCA
enzymes also have roles in the synthesis of certain amino acid
precursors. As a result, S. pneumoniae R6 is incapable of
synthesizing aspartate (and hence lysine, methionine, threonine, and
isoleucine) from oxaloacetate, nor can it synthesize glutamate (and
hence arginine) via
-ketoglutarate. A defined medium developed specifically for S. pneumoniae contains those amino acids,
so the incomplete biosynthetic pathways were expected. We were unable to identify complete pathways for the synthesis of glycine, histidine, and leucine, all of which are included in the S. pneumoniae
defined medium. Valine is also included in the S. pneumoniae
defined medium, so identification of an apparently complete pathway for
valine biosynthesis was unexpected (42).
The presence in S. pneumoniae of an ortholog to the
Cercospora nicotianae pdx1 gene suggests S. pneumoniae may have a pyridoxal biosynthetic pathway
(12). The biosynthesis pathways for other required
cofactors (biotin, choline, pantothenate) are either incomplete or
absent. Presence of partial pathways for the synthesis of many of these
amino acids and cofactors in S. pneumoniae is not
surprising. In many cases these enzymes make possible the conversion of
molecules imported into the cell into other necessary metabolic
components. Glutamine is an example of this type of metabolic
conversion. Although S. pneumoniae cannot make the starting material for glutamate,
-ketoglutarate, it does encode the enzymes needed to utilize glutamine as a nitrogen source. In S. mutans, glutamine has been shown to be a principal source of
nitrogen (8). There are 22 genes encoding the elements of
7 different ABC transporters predicted to transport glutamine. That
represents 10% of the transport genes in S. pneumoniae. The
allocation of the S. pneumoniae genome capacity to glutamine
transport suggests that glutamine is also needed for more than its role
as a component of proteins.
Hydrogen peroxide is produced by S. pneumoniae through the
action of pyruvate oxidase (SpxB) under conditions of aerobic growth. This may be a mechanism by which the pneumococcus inhibits the growth
of other common pathogens of the human upper respiratory tract such as
Haemophilus influenzae, Moraxella catarrhalis, and Neisseria meningitidis, which are infrequently cocultured
with S. pneumoniae from patient samples (35).
Unlike those gram-negative species, S. pneumoniae has the
capacity to resist oxidative stress caused by
H2O2. In Escherichia
coli, oxidative stress induces the expression of a set of
30
proteins under the transcriptional control of OxyR (6).
Based on their similarity to OxyR, either spr0593 or spr0828, which are
bacterial regulatory proteins of the LysR family, might possibly
regulate the S. pneumoniae enzymes synthesized in response
to H2O2. These include
superoxide dismutase, glutathione reductase, glutaredoxin, DNA-binding
stress protein, and two thioredoxin reductases. Although there are also
genes for several peroxidases that can be used to ameliorate oxidative stress, S. pneumoniae does not encode catalase.
Bacterial energy-dependent intracellular proteases perform a variety of
tasks, possibly including that of the proteasome, which degrades
aberrant and nonfunctional proteins in eukaryotes and archaea
(10). S. pneumoniae R6 possesses single copies
of the genes encoding the ClpP and FtsH proteases, but it is notably deficient of the genes encoding HslV and the ubiquitous Lon protease. While some bacteria with relatively large genomes, such as E. coli and B. subtilis, encode all four of these
energy-dependent proteases, most eubacteria encode only a subset
(10). The S. pneumoniae energy-dependent
protease gene set appears to be characteristic of the gram-positive
genera Enterococcus, Streptococcus, and
Staphylococcus, but not of the mycoplasmas.
Repetitive elements.
DNA sequences from three classes of
repetitive elements, BOX, RUP, and IS, comprise >3% of the S. pneumoniae genome. These kinds of repetitive elements make up more
of the S. pneumoniae genome than of any other bacterial
genome sequenced to date. Functions for some of these sequences are
controversial. The BOX elements are predicted to form stable secondary
structures that may serve as the binding site for a protein responsible
for modulating the expression of downstream genes (27).
Insertion of heterologous DNA into the BOX element upstream of the
comA gene produces S. pneumoniae incapable of
competence (27). Additionally, Weiser showed that
insertion of a BOX element upstream of a locus apparently involved in
phase variation increases expression of downstream genes encoding the
opacity phenotype (50). The 107-bp RUP elements, predicted
to form stable secondary structures, are proposed to be active
insertion elements transactivated by the transposase of
IS630-Spn1 (32).
Almost all BOX and RUP elements are entirely in intergenic spaces. We
hypothesized that analysis of the locations of the BOX and RUP elements
relative to the transcriptional orientation of the genes surrounding
them might offer clues about their potential regulatory roles. In
S. pneumoniae between adjacent genes in the same
transcriptional orientation, the boundaries of transcriptional units
are often unclear; accordingly, promoters and transcription termination
signals are difficult to identify. Between pairs of adjacent genes
oriented 5' end to 5' end on opposite strands of the chromosome, or at
least in the vicinity of those genes, there are likely to be pairs of
transcriptional promoters. Likewise, there must be a transcription
termination signal or signals between pairs of adjacent genes oriented
3' end to 3' end on opposite strands of the chromosome
(factor-independent transcription termination signals have been
identified in streptococci that can function bidirectionally
[44]). Almost 3 times as many BOX elements and 1.5-fold
more RUP elements are located between the genes oriented 3' to 3' than
between genes oriented 5' to 5', and the insertion of IS elements
flanking some of these elements may artificially deflate those ratios
(Table 4). This suggests a role for the RUP and BOX elements in transcription termination. Another possible function is suggested by the fact that secondary structures that RUP
and BOX elements would assume at the 3' ends of mRNAs are more complex
than those observed for other factor-independent transcription
termination signals (27, 32), and S. pneumoniae does not encode rho factor. These elements might enhance gene expression by either stabilizing mRNAs or serving as binding sites for
regulatory proteins.
Previous analyses indicate numerous IS elements were present in the DNA
of various strains of S. pneumoniae. The genome of R6
contains at least 60 complete or partial copies of 10 different IS
elements, representing the families ISL3, IS5,
IS630, IS3, IS30, and
IS605. We identified three novel IS elements. We did not
find an IS1202, which was previously identified in a
progenitor of the R6 strain, S. pneumoniae D39
(31). Most of the copies of the IS elements appear to be
only remnants, as only seven possess the expected full-length sequences
of putative transposase genes. The remaining copies all contain
frameshifts, stop codons, or both within the ORF, and many have
substantial amino acid substitutions, suggesting that they are no
longer active. It is possible that these inactive insertion elements
still play an important role in the evolution of this genome. For
example, they may provide regions of homology that are sites for
homologous recombination in the acquisition of genes from related
organisms carrying these same insertion sequences but different
flanking genes (7).
The capacity to identify all potential genes within this pathogen
should greatly facilitate the identification of novel targets for
antibiotic discovery as well as new candidates for vaccine development.
This process will be significantly enhanced by the comparison of the
S. pneumoniae R6 sequence to that of pathogenic strains of
S. pneumoniae (www.tigr.org and
http: //genome.microbio.uab.edu/strep/). These comparisons, in
concert with genetic and gene expression studies, should catalyze
expansion of S. pneumoniae biology.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
We thank Amy Hahn, Travis Bennett, Lara Braverman, Joanne Dyer,
Bruce Glover, Ken Holstein, Dennis Howell, Ivan Jenkins, Tammy Jones,
Rebecca Leonard, Melud Nabavi, Regine Porter, Patricia Solenberg, and
Angie Wu for their technical assistance, Ron Swanson for advice on the
sequencing project, and Janet Yother and Dalai Yan for their advice on
the manuscript.
Principal authors JoAnn Hoskins and John Glass contributed equally to
this project.
This work was supported by Eli Lilly and Company and the Incyte
Genomics, Inc. Pathoseq database program.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Infectious
Diseases Research, Lilly Research Labs, Eli Lilly and Company,
Indianapolis, IN 46285-0438. Phone: (317) 277-0143. Fax: (317)
276-1743. E-mail: glass_john_i{at}lilly.com.
 |
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Journal of Bacteriology, October 2001, p. 5709-5717, Vol. 183, No. 19
0021-9193/01/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JB.183.19.5709-5717.2001
Copyright © 2001, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
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