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Journal of Bacteriology, January 2002, p. 126-133, Vol. 184, No. 1
0021-9193/01/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JB.184.1.126-133.2002
Copyright © 2002, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Department of Oral Biology, College of Dentistry, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida 32610
Received 11 June 2001/ Accepted 28 September 2001
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-fructose, commonly known as fructans. The ability of this cariogenic bacterium to produce and degrade fructans enhances the survival of the organism during periods of nutrient starvation, results in prolonged production of organic acids through glycolysis, and has been shown to contribute directly to caries formation (4). Fructanase (FruA) is apparently the sole enzyme involved in utilization of ß(2,1)- and ß(2,6)-linked extracellular fructose polymers by S. mutans (5, 6). FruA is enzymatically similar to the levanase of Bacillus subtilis (11), attacking levans and inulins to liberate fructose as the only end product and cleaving sucrose into glucose and fructose (6). In S. mutans, fruA is cotranscribed with fruB, which lies immediately downstream of fruA and is predicted to encode a protein with strong similarity to bacterial ß-fructosidases, although no function has yet been assigned to FruB (7). Previously, we reported that expression of fruA was inducible by growth on the homopolymers of fructose, levan, and inulin and was also exquisitely sensitive to carbon catabolite repression (CCR) (7; Z. T. Wen and R. A. Burne, Abstr. 100th Gen. Meet. Am. Soc. Microbiol., abstr. H66, p. 362, 2000). In most cases, the genes for catabolism of nonpreferred carbohydrates and most polysaccharides are inducible by growth on the cognate substrate(s), and induction is frequently controlled by transcriptional activation or antitermination (35). For example, the levanase gene of B. subtilis requires the action of a sigma 54-like regulator that activates transcription when cells are growing with levans or low levels of fructose (22) Similarly, a variety of transcriptional antiterminator proteins with homology to BglG, the transcriptional antiterminator of the Escherichia coli bglGFB operon, are present in Bacillus (SacY, SacT, LicT, and GlcT), Lactobacillus casei (LacT), Staphylococcus aureus, Lactococcus lactis, and S. mutans (BglG) (9, 10, 12, 14, 17, 19, 31, 32, 37), where they have been shown to control the expression of carbohydrate catabolism by allowing transcription of various operons. The binding site of antiterminator proteins, a ribonucleic antiterminator (RAT) sequence, has been well characterized in B. subtilis (2, 20). In many cases, the activity of these antiterminators is modified by both the general and sugar-specific components of the phosphotransferase system (PTS) (36).
CCR of genes for catabolism of secondary carbohydrate sources in Bacillus and other gram-positive bacteria is mediated primarily through catabolite control protein A (CcpA), a member of the LacI-GalR family of bacterial transcriptional regulators (15). A palindromic sequence, the carbon catabolite response element (CRE), located in the promoter regions or coding sequences, is the target site for repression of genes exerted through CcpA (41). The histidine-containing phosphocarrier protein (HPr) of the phosphoenolpyruvate-dependent sugar:PTS, when phosphorylated by a fructose-1,6-bisphosphate-activated HPr kinase at serine residue 46, allosterically stimulates the binding of CcpA to CREs (25). Recently, CcpA-independent mechanisms for CCR that involve PTS-dependent phosphorylation of transcriptional activators and antiterminators have been reported for the levanase and licBCAH operons of B. subtilis and the lac operon of L. casei (14, 22, 38). For example, regulation of the lev operon of B. subtilis by CcpA was evident only when LevR was truncated (22). The carboxyl terminus of LevR was found to be homologous to the BglG-SacY-SacT family of antiterminator proteins, containing a PTS regulatory domain (PRD), and CCR was exerted by phosphorylation through enzyme I (EI) and HPr of the PTS.
Our previous analysis of the fruA promoter revealed the presence of a 165-base 5' untranslated region (5'UTR) and two elements that may function as CcpA binding sites that flank or overlap the promoter (7). Additionally, we identified two potential transcription terminators, designated SL1 and SL2, in the 5'UTR mRNA, as well as a sequence with roughly 50% identity to RAT sequences that was correctly positioned with respect to the terminator-like sequences (Fig. 1). The purpose of this study was to assess the role of the putative regulatory elements and to begin to identify the trans-acting factors that are involved in catabolite repression and substrate induction of fruA.
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FIG. 1. Relevant nucleotide sequences and features of the 5' region of fruA (positions -80 to 152 relative to the TIS). In boldface is the extended -10-like promoter that directs transcription of fruA. Boxed and labeled are two CREs, CRE-S (positions 2 to 15 relative to the TIS) and CRE-W (-26 to -14). Two inverted repeats, SL1 (positions 80 to 106) and SL2 (94 to 116), with potential to function as Rho-independent transcriptional terminators, are indicated with dashed arrows. Overlapping SL1 and SL2 and underlined is a sequence with 50% similarity to a RAT sequence (positions 76 to 104). A dyadic sequence (DS) located at -72 to -59 relative to the TIS is a putative binding site of a positive regulatory protein. The start codon of fruA is indicated with an arrow.
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CAT assay.
For assay of chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT) activity, S. mutans strains were grown in TV medium with the indicated carbohydrates, and early-log-phase cells (optical density at 600 nm
0.2 to 0.35) were harvested by centrifugation at 3,800 x g at 4°C for 10 min. The cells were then washed once with 10 mM Tris buffer (pH 7.8), and cell pellets either were quickly frozen in an ethanol-dry ice bath and stored at -86°C until assays were to be performed or were immediately homogenized as described previously (7). The cell lysates were assayed for CAT activity using the method of Shaw (33). CAT activity was expressed as nanomoles minute-1 milligram of protein-1.
DNA manipulations.
Unless otherwise stated, standard recombinant DNA techniques were performed as described previously (7, 30). All restriction and modifying enzymes and reagents were purchased from Gibco BRL Life Technologies, Inc. (Rockville, Md.), New England Biolabs (Beverly, Mass.), or MBI Fermentas (Amherst, N.Y.) and used as recommended by the supplier. For Southern hybridization analysis, 12 µg of genomic DNA was digested with enzymes and transferred to NewBond nylon membranes (NEN Life Science Products, Inc., Boston, Mass.). Probes were labeled with [
-32P]dATP using the Random Primers DNA Labeling System of Gibco BRL.
Strategy for dissecting cis-acting elements. Mutations or deletions were generated by using regular PCR and recombinant PCR (16). All primers (Table 1) were designed in such a way as to introduce a BamHI site at the 5' ends and a PstI site at the 3' ends of the PCR products for subsequent cloning purpose. The fruA promoter (PfruA), obtained as a 232-bp fragment upstream of the fruA start codon, or its derivatives generated by site-directed mutagenesis and/or deletions were directly fused with a promoterless CAT gene (cat) in plasmid pU1 (7). The correct nucleotide sequences of all PCR products were confirmed by sequencing. The transcriptional fusions were then released by partial SmaI and HindIII digestions and inserted into EcoRV- and HindIII-digested pBluescript KS(+). The resulting plasmids were then digested with SmaI and HincII, and the DNA fragments with the gene fusions were gel purified and ligated into the integration vector pBGK (42) at the unique SmaI site. Plasmid pBGK is an insertion vector constructed from the S. mutans gtfA gene and allows insertion of foreign DNA immediately downstream, with respect to the direction of transcription of gtfA, of a kanamycin marker flanked by strong transcriptional terminators. Clones carrying the fusions were selected on kanamycin- and chloramphenicol-containing medium and analyzed by BamHI and EcoRI digestions to determine the orientations of the transcriptional fusions with respect to that of the gtfA gene on the vector. Although we have previously shown that orientation of the fusion had little effect on measured transcriptional activity, only those clones with orientations opposite to that of gtfA were selected for further study to ensure that readthrough from gtfA would not affect the results (42). The constructs were then used to transform S. mutans UA159 using procedures described previously (7). Transformants of S. mutans were selected on brain heart infusion containing kanamycin, and integration of the individual fusions into the chromosome as a result of double-crossover recombination was confirmed by PCRs (Table 1).
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TABLE 1. Primers used in this studya
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0.2 to 0.4) in TV medium supplemented with the carbohydrate(s) of interest at a concentration of 0.5% (wt/vol). Total RNAs were denatured and transferred to nylon membranes (GeneScreen Plus; NEN Life Science Products, Inc.) by using standard procedures (30). RNAs were UV cross-linked to the membranes, and the membranes were then hybridized with radioactively labeled probes. |
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FIG. 2. The fruA promoter (PfruA) and its derivatives (left panel) and CAT activities expressed from the respective fusions after integration into the chromosome and growth of cells with the indicated carbohydrates(s) (right panel). Bar PfruA shows the intact fruA promoter and the putative cis elements SL1 (positions 80 to 106 relative to the TIS), SL2 (94 to 116), CRE-S (2 to 15), CRE-W (-26 to -14), extended -10-like promoter, and DS (-72 to -59) (see Fig. 1 for more detail). All constructs, PfruA and its derivatives generated from deletions and/or site-directed mutagenesis, were fused with a promoterless cat gene, which had its own ribosome binding site. The transcriptional fusions were then integrated into the S. mutans UA159 chromosome. PfruA-I, intact fruA promoter (-80 to 152) fusion integrated in the chromosome; DC-I, PfruA with deletions of CRE-S and the UTR 3' to the promoter; DT-I, PfruA with deletions of SL1 and SL2 and their 3'UTR; MP-I, PfruA with base substitutions of SL1; MM-I, PfruA with mutations of both CRE-S and SL1; DP-I, PfruA with internal deletions of SL1 and SL2 (positions 78 to 116); UP1-I, PfruA with deletions of DS and its 5' region; UP2-I, PfruA with deletions of both DS and CRE-S and its 3'UTR; and 18-I, base substitutions of DS. Nucleotides (in boldface) underneath each element indicate the substitutions made. Expression of the fusions were examined by CAT assays of cells grown on TV medium with the indicated sugar(s) as the sole carbohydrate source (see text for more details). CAT activity is expressed as nanomoles minute-1 milligram of protein-1, and the values presented here represent means ± standard deviations from no fewer than four separate experiments. n.d., not detectable.
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A dyadic sequence upstream of the fruA promoter is required for fruA expression. Expression of fruA is inducible by substrate (7) (Fig. 2), with the highest activities measured when levans or inulins are the carbohydrate sources for growth. However, the 152-base 5'UTR of the fruA transcript does not seem to have any major role in induction of fruA in response to growth on inulins or levans, as demonstrated by use of deletions and/or base substitutions of the putative transcriptional terminators and RAT-like sequence (Fig. 1). Consequently, we examined the region 5' to the promoter and identified an inverted repeat, ATGACA(TC)TGTCAT, designated DS (for dyadic sequence) and located at positions -72 to -59 relative to the initiation site of transcription. Deletion of this region (from -80 to -55) resulted in complete loss of expression of cat from the fruA promoter regardless of the sugar on which cells were grown (UP1-I and UP2-I [Fig. 2]). To verify the functionality of the dyadic sequence in fruA expression, DS was mutated to gatcgA(TC)TGTCAT by recombinant PCR. For that purpose, the intact fruA promoter, PfruA, was used as the template and oligonucleotide primers mDS and fruA3', or the primers mDS and dCS, were used in PCRs to generate two constructs: one with the full-length fruA promoter and a mutated DS and the other with a mutated DS and deletion of CRE-S and regions 3' to CRE-S (Fig. 1 and 2). These constructs were then fused with the promoterless cat gene and examined for CAT activity. No CAT activity could be measured with strains that carried the reporter gene fused with either one of the promoters containing mutations of DS (18-I [Fig. 2]), indicating that the dyadic sequence is required, probably as a binding site of a positive regulatory protein, for the transcription of fruA. Preliminary gel shift experiments with cell-free protein preparations from S. mutans UA159 showed some mobility shift of a radioactively labeled oligonucleotide containing the dyadic region (DS), indicating the presence of a factor(s) that interacts with the dyadic sequence (Z. T. Wen and R. A. Burne, unpublished data).
Involvement of the fructose-specific PTS in fruA regulation. The PTS is not only central to uptake and phosphorylation of various sugars but also mediates transcriptional regulation of numerous genes (24, 29, 36). A class of transcriptional regulators contains two conserved homologous PRDs that function as the targets of PTS-mediated phosphorylation (36, 40). The activator proteins LevR of the lev operon, LicR of the licBCAH operon of B. subtilis, and members of BglG-SacY-SacT family of antiterminator proteins belong to the family of PRD-containing regulators (36). The activity of such regulators is HPr and EI dependent but is negatively regulated by EII proteins of the PTS. As a result of mutations affecting EIIA or EIIB, the PRD-containing regulators become active and the respective catabolic operons are then constitutively expressed.
We have previously characterized two fructose permease gene clusters containing the fruCD and fruI genes. The fruI gene codes for an IIABCFru that is inducible by fructose, and the fruCD genes code for IIBCFru and IIAFru proteins that are constitutively expressed (Z. T. Wen et al., submitted for publication). To examine the functionality of these two enzymes in regulation of fruA expression, strains that had fruI, fruCD, or fruI and fruCD inactivated by deletion of an internal portion of the genes and insertion of a selectable marker were introduced with the PfruA-'cat transcriptional fusion. The resulting transformants were grown on TV medium with glucose, inulin, or glucose plus inulin as the carbohydrate source(s) and analyzed for CAT activity. As shown in Table 2, inactivation of fruI resulted in a twofold increase of CAT activity when inulin was used as the sole carbohydrate source. CAT activity in the fruI wild-type background was barely detectable when the cells were grown on glucose-containing medium. However, CAT activity in the fruI mutant was 6.87 ± 1.41 and 4.71 ± 0.68 nmol min-1 mg of protein-1 when the cells were grown on glucose plus inulin or glucose alone, respectively. The CAT activity in the fruCD mutant background was elevated by 50% when inulin was used as the sole carbohydrate source, but no significant differences were observed between the wild type and the fruCD mutant when the cells were grown on glucose or glucose plus inulin. Clearly, the sensitivity of the operon to repression by glucose exerted through CRE-S makes it difficult to distinguish between induction and alleviation of CCR. Therefore, to exclude the impact of catabolite repression exerted through CRE-S, the fruI, fruCD, and fruI fruCD mutations were introduced into a strain carrying the PfruA
CRE-'cat fusion, which had CRE-S and the 5'UTR deleted (DC-I) (Fig. 2). Similar to what was seen with the wild type (Fig. 2) following inactivation of fruI or fruCD, expression of the PfruA
CRE-'cat fusion was increased by as much as fourfold when the cells were grown on inulin, compared to the PfruA-'cat fusion in the wild-type background (Table 2). Furthermore, cat expression under the direction of PfruA
CRE-'cat in the fruI and fruCD mutants was increased by 7- and 25-fold, respectively, when the cells were grown on glucose plus inulin and glucose alone, compared to CAT expressed from the same promoter in a wild-type background. In the fruCD fruI mutant background, CAT activity expressed from PfruA
CRE-'cat was further increased by 30 and 10% when the cells were grown on inulin-containing medium and glucose alone, respectively. Therefore, we can conclude that IIFru proteins act as negative regulators of fruA expression and likely control, at least in part, the induction of fruA by its substrates.
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TABLE 2. CAT activities of the S. mutans UA159 fructose-specific EII mutantsa
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CRE-'cat was cloned into the integration vector pBGK (42) and integrated into the S. mutans chromosome in single copy. As shown in Fig. 2, deletion of CRE-S and the 5'UTR (DC-I) resulted in about a 6-fold increase of CAT activity when the cells were grown on glucose, a 12-fold increase when they were grown on glucose plus inulin, and a 2.5-fold increase when they were grown on inulin, compared to the strain that carried the intact PfruA-'cat fusion grown under identical conditions, which further supports the notion that CRE-S is at least partially responsible for glucose-induced CCR of fruA. According to Weickert and Chambliss (41), a palindrome with the consensus sequence TGWNANCGNTNWCA is the target site for CCR of many genes in B. subtilis. Some bases are more important than others, but it is the dyad symmetry that determines the strength of this element. The nucleotide sequence of CRE-S, which differs from the consensus at a single base pair, was mutated from AGATAGCGCTTACA to AGATgGtaCcTAaA; base changes in the selected positions have been shown to give maximal derepression of amyE in B. subtilis (41). CAT activity of the strain that had the construct with mutations of both CRE-S and SL1 (MM-I) was increased by sevenfold when the strain was grown on glucose, eightfold when it was on glucose plus inulin, and twofold when it was grown on inulin, but mutations of SL1 alone (MP-I) had no major impact on cat expression (Fig. 2). These data further support the notion that CRE-S is a dominant element involved in CCR of fruA.
CRE-W, positioned at -26 to -13 relative to the TIS, differs from the CRE consensus sequence at positions 1, 13, and 14. Because it overlaps with the probable extended -10 promoter for fruA (7), the feasibility of assessing the functionality of this element without perturbing promoter recognition was uncertain. Notwithstanding this, specific primers were designed for recombinant PCR to introduce point mutations of the CRE-W element without altering key bases in the extended -10 promoter (28) (Fig. 1; Table 1). The resulting PCR product had the CRE-W sequence altered from AGATAGCGATTTGG to AGAcgatacTTTGG. Compared to that in the strain that carried the PfruA-'cat fusion, CAT activity in the strain carrying the mutated CRE-W was decreased by 50% when inulin was the sole carbohydrate source and was undetectable when the cells were grown on glucose-containing medium (data not shown). Although base substitutions were designed so as not to physically alter the putative promoter sequence, it seems that the imposed mutations did in fact interfere with transcription, resulting in a decrease in CAT activity. Importantly, though, no alleviation of CCR was observed, indicating that CRE-W has either a secondary role or no role in CCR of fruA.
Inactivation of ccpA and its impact on glucose repression of fruA.. In Bacillus, CcpA is found to bind CREs and to be primarily responsible for CCR (15, 41). We previously cloned a gene from S. mutans UA159 of 999 bp (Wen and Burne, Abstr. 100th Gen. Meet. Am. Soc. Microbiol.) and with a deduced amino acid sequence that had 52, 59, and 55% identity to the CcpA proteins of B. subtilis, Lactobacillus pentosus, and L. lactis, respectively (3, 15, 21). To assess the impact of the CcpA protein on expression of fruA, mutants were generated by using a spectinomycin resistance element to replace a large portion (nucleotides 56 to 687 relative to the TIS) of the ccpA coding sequences. Replacement of the wild-type ccpA gene was achieved by double-crossover integration of the interrupted ccpA gene, and successful inactivation of the wild-type copy of ccpA was confirmed by Southern blot and Western blot analyses using antibodies that were raised against a purified histidine-tagged CcpA protein from S. mutans GS-5 (E. F. Albone and R. A. Burne, Abstr. 97th Gen. Meet. Am. Soc. Microbiol., abstr. D-166, p. 237, 1997) (data not shown). Several mutant strains were isolated and selected for further experiments.
To determine whether loss of CcpA affected the utilization of fructans, growth of the wild-type strain on glucose, fructose, glucose plus inulin, or fructose plus inulin (at 0.5%, wt/vol) was compared to that of the ccpA mutant. The ccpA mutant grew as well as the wild type on all sugars tested, with the exception that there was a very slight reduction of the growth rate on inulin as the sole carbohydrate source (data not shown). Both the wild type and the ccpA mutant displayed diauxic growth on medium containing 0.1% (wt/vol) glucose and 0.25% inulin, indicating that the utilization of inulin was still sensitive to CCR (data not shown). The ccpA mutation was introduced into the strains carrying PfruA-'cat (PfruA-I), PfruA
CRE-'cat (DC-I), and PfruA
SL1-2-'cat (DT-I) fusions, and the transformants were analyzed for CAT activity in response to growth on different carbohydrates. As can be seen in Table 3, there were no major differences between the wild type and the ccpA mutant strains in terms of CAT activities when the cells were grown on glucose, inulin, or glucose plus inulin (Table 3), suggesting that CcpA may not play a role in CCR of fruA under the conditions studied or that there is redundancy in control of CCR of fruA.
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TABLE 3. CAT activity of ccpA mutant strains of S. mutans UA159a
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Considering the fact that the 5'UTR does not have any role in regulation of fruA, it was logical to explore whether induction of fruA could be mediated through a target site located 5' to the promoter. The data presented in this communication clearly show that a dyadic sequence positioned at -72 to -59 relative to the TIS is required for fruA expression and is probably the target for a transcriptional activator. In some ways, then, the fruA operon of S. mutans is regulated similarly to the levanase (sacC) operon of B. subtilis (22), albeit with some important differences. First, sacC induction requires LevR, which is a sigma 54-like regulator that is genetically linked to sacC. No regulatory genes are linked to the fruA operon, nor is fruA transcribed from a -12/-24-like promoter. Also, there are no genes encoding PTS-like components in the fruA operon, as there are in the B. subtilis levanase operon, and there is no gene in S. mutans that appears to be homologous to levR by use of computer algorithms or Southern hybridization. Further, the target sequence for binding of LevR and the dyadic sequence required for fruA show no similarity. On the other hand, the transcriptional activator LicR of the B. subtilis licBCAH operon binds to an inverted repeat just upstream of the promoter (38), similar to fruA. However, there is no apparent homology between the binding site of LicR and the region upstream of the fruA promoter (data not shown).
Inactivation of the fruI and/or fruCD genes resulted in constitutive elevation of expression of the PfruA-'cat fusion. In some aspects, control of fruA expression via the fructose PTS makes it again similar to levanase expression in B. subtilis (22). Levanase induction in B. subtilis is controlled by a phosphorelay circuit involving four gene products encoded in the levanase operon that phosphorylate LevR when fructose is absent from the growth medium. When low levels of fructose are added, a preferential transfer of phosphate to the incoming fructose leaves the PRD domain of LevR in an unphosphorylated state, which renders the protein competent for activation of sacC transcription. Unlike for the B. subtilis levanase operon, there are no genes in the fruA operon for EII-like gene products that regulate transcription of the operon, yet an apparently similar phosphorelay circuit involving IIFru proteins exists for induction and repression of fructanase in S. mutans. Notably, growth with fructose alone does not induce fruA expression, but we believe that this is a technical anomaly and that the genetic evidence for fructose induction through fructose EIIs provides a more credible picture of the fruA regulatory pathway. Specifically, the reason that there is no apparent induction of fruA in cells grown on fructose is that for the cells to grow well, it is necessary to provide relatively high concentrations of the hexose, which results in catabolite repression of fruA. In contrast, cells growing on inulin or levan, which optimally induce fruA expression, are exposed to much lower steady-state levels of fructose because the hexose is liberated from the fructans at a rate lower than the optimal rate for fructose transport.
Utilization of secondary carbon sources in B. subtilis and other gram-positive bacteria is governed primarily by CcpA, which binds to CREs (1, 15, 39), although CcpA-independent mechanisms have also been reported (14, 22, 38). As observed with other catabolite-repressible systems, deletion or mutation of a promoter-proximal CRE, in this case CRE-S, resulted in a dramatic decrease in CCR of fruA, indicative of the central role of this element in CCR of fruA. Interestingly, inactivation of ccpA in S. mutans had little impact on CCR of fruA (Table 3), consistent with other studies that explored the role of CcpA in CCR in streptococci. For example, in S. mutans GS-5, disruption of the ccpA homologue regM had no effect on diauxic growth when the strain was grown on a variety of nonpreferred carbohydrate sources and glucose. In fact, ccpA inactivation resulted in increased glucose repression of
-galactosidase, mannitol-1-phosphate dehydrogenase, and phospho-ß-galactosidase (34). Similarly, sucrose-mediated repression of
-galactosidase (aga) expression by Streptococcus pneumoniae was not affected by mutation of a gene that encodes an apparent CcpA homologue (26). Nevertheless, to our knowledge, this communication provides the first evidence that a putative CRE actually functions in CCR of an operon and yet a CcpA deficiency does not have an impact on expression of the operon containing that CRE. Thus, there is the distinct possibility that CcpA, which we have shown is in fact expressed in UA159, fulfills some other function in the cells and that some other repressor(s) acts at the CRE to exert CCR.
In attempting to reconcile the lack of involvement of CcpA in catabolite repression of an operon with a functional CRE, we identified an open reading frame corresponding to a product with a significant degree of similarity to the CcpB protein of B. subtilis (8). The B. subtilis CcpB protein has 30% identity to CcpA of the same organism and is responsible for CCR when cells are grown on solid medium or in liquid medium with little agitation (8). A homologue of CcpB was identified in S. mutans UA159, and the gene was inactivated using a strategy similar to that for ccpA, but mutation of ccpB alone, or of both ccpA and ccpB, had no effect on expression of the PfruA-'cat fusion (Wen and Burne, unpublished data). Yet another protein in B. subtilis, CcpC, is a member of the LysR family of transcriptional regulators that mediates repression of citB expression by glucose and sources of 2-ketoglutarate (18). However, we could not identify a CcpC paralogue in the genome database. Therefore, if there is another repressor controlling CCR of fruA, and possibly other catabolite-sensitive operons in S. mutans, it is probably not a CcpA, -B, or -C homologue.
We also believe that, like for lev, licBCAH, and some other catabolic operons, EI and HPr may modulate the transcription of the fruA operon by influencing the activity of the transcriptional activator, which could explain the residual CCR in strains carrying gene fusions to the fruA promoter with mutations or deletion of CRE-S (22, 38) (Fig. 2) or in the ccpA mutant of S. mutans. Such a phenomenon, called CcpA-independent CCR, occurs in regulation of licS, licBCAH, and lev operons of B. subtilis and the lac operon of L. casei (14, 31). Isolation of the fruA regulator of transcription will allow us to investigate this hypothesis in more detail.
In summary, expression of fruA in S. mutans UA159 is inducible by inulin and subject to catabolite repression. We present evidence here that expression of fruA requires a transcriptional activator that is probably negatively regulated by components of a fructose-specific PTS and that CCR of fruA occurs through a CRE, as well as through yet-undisclosed mechanisms. Thus, there are fundamental differences between substrate induction and catabolite repression of fruA of S. mutans and other genes encoding polysaccharide-degrading enzymes of eubacteria.
The Streptococcus mutans Genome Sequencing Project is supported by a grant from the National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research. This work was supported by NIDCR grant DE12236.
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-fructosidase of Streptococcus mutans. J. Bacteriol. 169:45074517.
-galactosidase activity in Streptococcus pneumoniae: characterization of the raffinose utilization system. Genome Res. 9:11891197.
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