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Journal of Bacteriology, July 2002, p. 3426-3432, Vol. 184, No. 13
0021-9193/02/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JB.184.13.3426-3432.2002
Copyright © 2002, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Department of Chemistry and Biotechnology, Agricultural University of Norway, N-1432 Ås,1 Institute of Microbiology, National Hospital, N-0027 Oslo, Norway,2 Department of Medical Microbiology and Immunology, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Aarhus, DK-8000 Aarhus C, Denmark3
Received 19 December 2001/ Accepted 2 April 2002
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Homologs of the late genes have been found in all streptococcal species examined thus far, but DNA uptake by natural competence has never been detected in many of these species (3, 8, 18). Interestingly, species that have been demonstrated to be naturally competent, such as the members of the mitis and anginosus phylogenetic groups (19), possess the ComABCDE quorum-sensing mechanism in addition to the late genes (17). These findings suggest that natural competence is widespread among streptococci but is difficult to detect under laboratory conditions except in species in which competence is regulated by the ComABCDE cell density monitoring mechanism. Sequencing of the genes encoding CSP (comC) from different species and strains belonging to the mitis phylogenetic group have revealed that a large number of CSPs with different primary structures are produced (17, 37). The largest CSP diversity is found among members of the species Streptococcus mitis (unpublished results). Numerous studies have shown that induction of the competent state is inhibited by any mutation, change in growth condition, or biochemical treatment that prevent CSP accumulation in the medium, demonstrating that competence development cannot take place without the CSP pheromone (34, 33, 4, 28, 18). Recently, however, some laboratory made gain-of-function mutations in comD and comE have been described that make the mutant strains partially or completely CSP independent (7, 23, 26). We describe in the present study the first natural isolate (Atu-4) that possess CSP-independent competence.
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DNA purification, PCR, and DNA sequencing. Isolation of streptococcal genomic DNA used for transformation studies, Southern blots, and as a template in PCRs was carried out by using Qiagen Genomic-Tip 100. The procedure was essentially as described by the manufacturer, with some modifications in the lysis step: 40 to 80 ml of an overnight culture was harvested at an optical density at 550 nm (OD550) of 0.5, and the pellet was resuspended in 3.5 ml of lysis buffer B1 (Qiagen) containing 1.4 mg of RNase A (Sigma), 2.3 mg of lysozyme (Sigma), 0.5 mg of protease (Qiagen), and 115 U of mutanolysin (Sigma)/ml. After the cells were lysed at 37°C for 30 to 60 min, the remaining steps of the DNA purification protocol were carried out as described for the standard procedure supplied by Qiagen.
PCR amplification of DNA fragments corresponding to the comCDE and comDE operons of the SK348 and Atu-4 strains was performed as previously described (16) with the primers tArg2 (5'-CATAGCTCAGCTGGATAGAGCATTCGCCTTC-3') and tGlu (5'-GGCGGTGTCTTAACCCCTTGACCAACGGACC-3'). The resulting PCR fragments were sequenced in a stepwise manner on a Perkin-Elmer/ABI Prism 377 sequencer by using the BigDye terminator cycle sequencing kit (Applied Biosystems). In the first step, the original amplification primers, tArg2 and tGlu, were used as sequencing primers. Sequence information obtained in this step was then used to synthesize new primers, etc., until sequencing of both strands of the fragments had been completed. To determine 16S rRNA sequences, a DNA fragment corresponding to the16S rRNA gene was first amplified by PCR. The PCR was performed with primers 1F (5'-GAGTTTGATCCTGG-CTCAG-3') and 6R (5'-AGAAAGGAGGTGATCCAGCC-3') with genomic DNA as a template. Sequencing of the fragment was carried out as described above with the following sequencing primers: 1F, 6R, and 3R (5'-CCCGTCAATTCATTTGAGTT-3'), 4R (5'-GACGGGCGGTGTGTA-3'), and 9R (5'-CGTATTACCGCGGCT-3').
Southern blots. Genomic DNA (5 to 10 µg) from strain Atu-4 was digested with three different restriction enzymes (ScaI, NdeI, and HindIII), loaded onto a 0.8% agarose gel, and run for 3 h at 4 to 6 V/cm. Prior to blotting, the gel was treated with depurination solution (0.25 M HCl) for 20 min, denaturation solution (0.5 M NaOH, 1.5 M NaCl) for 30 min, and neutralization buffer (0.5 M Tris-Cl [pH 7.4], 1.5 M NaCl) for 30 min. DNA was transferred from the agarose gel to a positively charged nylon membrane (Biodyne B; Pall) by capillary blotting for 12 to 16 h in 10x SSC (1x SSC is 0.15 M NaCl plus 0.015 M sodium citrate) and fixed to the membrane by baking at 80°C for 30 min. Prehybridization was performed at 68°C for 30 to 60 min in a buffer containing 5x SSC, 0.1% sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS), 100 µg of nonhomologous DNA/ml, and 1x Denhardt solution. A digoxigenin (DIG)-labeled DNA probe was added directly to the prehybridization solution and incubated overnight at 68°C in a roller bottle. The 1,245-bp DNA probe was made by PCR amplification with the primers Atu5 (5'-CTACTAATCTTCTTTGCAATGA-ATGCC-3') and Atu6 (5'-CCAATAATCCTTAACTTATGAGATACTCC-3') and with chromosomal DNA from strain Atu-4 as a template. The probe was labeled by using the DIG High Prime Labeling and Detection Starter Kit I (Boehringer Mannheim) according to the manufacturer's instructions. After hybridization, the membrane was washed twice with gentle agitation for 5 min (each time) in 2x SSC-0.1% SDS at room temperature and then twice for 15 min (each time) in 0.1x SSC-0.1% SDS at 68°C. DIG-labeled nucleic acids were detected by an enzyme-linked immunoassay with a highly specific anti-DIG-alkaline phosphatase antibody conjugate and the color substrates nitroblue tetrazolium and BCIP (5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indolylphosphate).
Transformation assays. Overnight cultures of Atu-4 and SK348 were diluted in preheated TH broth (37°C) to an OD550 of 0.05 and then further diluted 10,000-fold in preheated TH broth to a final volume of 100 ml and placed in a water bath at 37°C for 30 min to restore vigorous growth. At this point (0 h in Table 1) 0.5-ml samples were removed, and 5 µg of DNA/ml from Smr mutants of Atu-4 and SK348 was added to wild-type Atu-4 and SK348 cultures, respectively. After the addition of Smr DNA, the 0.5-ml samples were incubated in a water bath at 37°C for 2 h before serial dilutions were made and plated on agar plates with or without streptomycin (100 µg/ml). These steps were repeated every hour for a period of 10 h (i.e., 10 times). After overnight incubation at 37°C the total number of CFU/ml and the number of CFU/ml growing on agar plates containing streptomycin were determined for each time point.
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TABLE 1. Competence for natural transformation in strains Atu-4 and SK348 at different population densities
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To determine whether Atu-4E, a comE mutant of strain Atu-4 (see below), is still competent for natural transformation, an overnight culture of this mutant was diluted to an OD550 of 0.05 and then incubated at 37°C for 30 min to allow reconstitution of growth. Then, 0.5 ml of the bacterial culture was transferred to an Eppendorf tube, and 5 µg of Smr DNA/ml was added. After incubation at 37°C for 2 h, serial dilutions of the bacteria were plated on TH agar containing 100 µg of streptomycin/ml. The Atu-4 strain was run in parallel as a positive control. All of the transformation assays described above were repeated at least three times to verify results and reproducibility.
Construction of a comE knockout mutant.
PCR was performed with the primers atu4.kpn (5'-ATTATGGTACCGCACAGT TTATTCGTCGCCACAATCCC-3') and atu4.bam (5'-ATTATGGATCCATCATGGTAGGGAATTTTCAAATCATTTCCC-3') containing a KpnI and a BamHI site at their 5' ends, respectively, and chromosomal DNA from strain Atu-4 as a template. The 257-bp PCR product, an internal fragment of the comE gene, was cleaved with KpnI and BamHI and ligated into the corresponding sites in the pEVP3 polylinker (6). The resulting plasmid, pST1, was transformed into Escherichia coli DH5
(Gibco-BRL) for plasmid propagation and finally into the Atu-4 strain by natural transformation. The plasmid pST1, which contains a chloramphenicol marker, does not replicate in streptococci. Therefore, only bacteria with the plasmid integrated into their genomes will grow in the presence of chloramphenicol. Such mutants (comE::pST1) were selected for by plating Atu-4 cells, transformed with purified pST1 plasmid on TH agar plates containing 2 µg of chloramphenicol/ml. After overnight incubation at 37°C, several colonies were observed growing on the plates, one of which was picked for further analysis. The presence of the insert in this mutant was confirmed by PCR with combinations of primers flanking the pST1 polylinker and primers complementary to sequences upstream and downstream of the comE gene. Analyses of the resulting PCR products by agarose gel electrophoresis showed that the pST1 plasmid had been intergrated into the comE gene as expected.
Computer-aided analyses. Database searches were performed by using the programs BLASTN and BLASTP (2) on the NCBI server (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/blast/). DNA sequence alignments were performed by using CLUSTAL W (32) with the BLOSUM62 (12) comparison matrix and with the following parameters: open gap cost, 10; and gap extension cost, 0.2. Dot plot analysis was performed by using the OMIGA 2.0 package (Oxford Molecular).
Nucleotide sequence accession number. The nucleotide sequences have been deposited in the GenBank database under accession no. AF498313 and AF498314.
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FIG. 1. Organization of the comCDE competence regulation operon in strain SK348 (A) and the corresponding operon in strain Atu-4 (B). Both operons are flanked by genes encoding Arg-tRNA and Glu-tRNA. The nucleotide sequences shown in detail below the arrows representing open reading frames in panels A and B represent the binding site of ComE. The direct repeat motif is underlined. The amino acid sequence of the CSP precursor (ComC) is shown above the diagram of open reading frames in panel A. The amino acid sequence of the mature secreted competence pheromone (CSP) is underlined.
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FIG. 2. Sequence alignment of the ComD histidine kinase receptors from Atu-4 and SK348. Amino acid substitutions are shown in a black background.
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FIG. 3. Comparison of the nucleic acid sequences of the comD genes from the Atu-4 and SK348 strains. Each comD gene consists of 1,320 bp. The comparison is visualized graphically as a dot plot.
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Regulation of competence development in the Atu-4 and SK 348 strains. In vigorously growing pneumococcal cultures, autoinduction of competence has been shown to take place when the culture reaches a critical cell density (34). Various laboratories have reported critical cell densities varying between 2 x 106 and 2 x 108 cells/ml (5). The critical cell density for autoinduction is reproducible from one experiment to another but varies somewhat with medium composition, bacterial strain, and other unknown variables. To determine whether competence development in the Atu-4 strain is cell density dependent, transformation experiments with this strain were carried out at different population densities. The SK348 strain was run in parallel as a positive control. The results of these experiments, given in Table 1, show that the Atu-4 and SK348 strains behave very differently. A high transformation efficiency (9%) was obtained with the Atu-4 strain even in very dilute cultures containing as little as 1,000 CFU/ml. As the Atu-4 and SK348 strains grow in long chains containing ca. 50 cells each, 1,000 CFU/ml corresponds to about 5 x 104 cells/ml. A population density of ca. 7.9 x 106 CFU/ml (i.e., 4 x 108 cells/ml) is needed to get a similar level of transformation efficiency with the SK348 strain, even though a low number of transformants are observed at a population density of 1.3 x 107 cells/ml (Table 1). Competence development in the SK348 strain follows the normal pattern where the ability to take up naked DNA from the environment is induced at a cell density of 1.3 x 107 to 4 x 108 cells/ml and is then turned off again a few hours later. In contrast, the competent state in the Atu-4 strain seems to be constitutive and not induced by cell density. The transformation efficiency is more or less at the same level between 5 x 104 and 2.3 x 109 cells/ml. Above this cell density, competence in the Atu-4 strain is shut off. The unusually high transformation efficiency obtained with Atu-4 and SK348 compared to S. pneumoniae is probably due to the presence of long chains, which interferes with the calculation of transformation efficiency.
Is the Atu-4 strain competent without a competence pheromone? It is possible that an additional copy of the comDE operon, containing an intact comC gene, exists at a separate locus in the Atu-4 genome. To examine this possibility, Southern blots were conducted with a 1,245-bp DNA probe covering the C-terminal half of ComD and most of ComE. Genomic DNA from stain Atu-4 was digested with three different restriction enzymes, followed by separation on agarose gel and transfer to a nylon membrane. The results did not indicate that additional comDE genes are present in the Atu-4 genome, since only one band was detected on the nylon filter for each restriction enzyme used (data not shown).
In contrast to streptococci from the mitis and anginosus groups, the comC gene of S. mutans is not cotranscribed with the comDE genes but is situated on a separate operon (25). To exclude the possibility that a comC gene encoding a functional competence pheromone (CSP) could be located elsewhere on the Atu-4 genome, we decided to investigate whether competence development in this strain is inhibited by the presence of trypsin. Trypsin cleaves a polypeptide chain behind the basic amino acids arginine and lysine. Since CSPs of streptococci from the mitis and anginosus phylogenetic groups contain an essential arginine residue at position number three from the N-terminal end and additional important arginine residues at the C-terminal end, these pheromones are very susceptible to inactivation by trypsin (34, 22). This susceptibility to trypsin is demonstrated in the results presented in Fig. 4, which show that competence development in a growing culture of SK348 is completely abolished by the presence of 0.02 mg of the protease/ml in the medium. In contrast, transformation of the Atu-4 strain is not significantly affected by the presence of trypsin, strongly indicating that competence development in this strain is not induced by CSP.
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FIG. 4. Effect of trypsin on competence development in strains Atu-4 and SK348. When no trypsin was added to cultures of Atu-4 () and SK348 ( ), the number of Smr CFU obtained varied with growth phase as expected. However, when trypsin was added to the SK348 culture ( ) (see Materials and Methods) competence was completely abolished. In contrast, competence development in the Atu-4 strain is unaffected by trypsin ( ).
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valine (Atu-4) and asparagine-130 (SK348)
serine (Atu-4)are probably not responsible for the constitutive phenotype of Atu-4, since valine and serine are commonly found in these positions in ComE alleles from closely related streptococci. In contrast, searches in sequence databases did not identify any ComE alleles that have an arginine in position 77, suggesting that the histidine (SK348)
arginine (Atu-4) substitution is unique and therefore might be responsible for the constitutive phenotype of the Atu-4 strain. The comparison of the ComD alleles from Atu-4 and SK348 depicted in Fig. 2 shows that the two proteins differ in 90 of 439 amino acid positions. Most of these substitutions (i.e., 77 of them) are located in the membrane domain, which is often referred to as the input domain. Previous studies of the CSP receptor of S. gordonii have shown that the first 80 to 100 amino acids at the N-terminal end of ComD determines pheromone specificity and consequently must be important for CSP binding. The alignment in Fig. 2 shows that the highest density of amino acid substitutions is located among the 100 N-terminal residues. We therefore suspect that changes in this important region somehow mimic ligand binding and switch ComD to a constant on-mode, causing the constitutive phenotype observed in the Atu-4 strain. Further research is needed, however, to clarify these matters and to identify the exact mutations involved. Even though induction of competence is no longer regulated by cell density, the competence shutoff mechanism is intact in the Atu-4 strain. In S. pneumoniae, the most studied species of naturally transformable streptococci, the competent state lasts for only 40 to 60 min after induction (15). Apparently, pneumococci are a special case; as in other strains and species of streptococci from the mitis group, e.g., SK348, the competent state can last for several hours (10). The mechanism that shuts down the competent state in streptococci is not understood, but Lee and Morrison (24) obtained data suggesting that one of the genes upregulated by the alternative sigma factor ComX, i.e., one of the late genes, effects shutdown of competence by some kind of feedback mechanism. In contrast to pneumococci, the Atu-4 strain is continuously competent for a period of at least 8 h. If the feedback mechanism proposed by Lee and Morrison effects shutdown in the Atu-4 strain, it must act extremely slowly. To us it seems more plausible that competence in the Atu-4 strain is shut down by an independent mechanism that senses some signal in the environmental that will trigger shutdown of the competent state. This signal could be population density monitored by a system different from ComABCDE or by monitoring the concentration of particular nutrients or metabolites in the growth medium.
The Atu-4 strain was isolated in 1999 from the tongue of a young healthy adult. After isolation and characterization of the Atu-4 strain, a nearly identical strain, lacking comC and having the same competence phenotype as Atu-4, was discovered. This strain, designated E20, was isolated from a child with bacteremia in 1995. Partial sequencing of the comDE operon of this strain revealed that, except for a few base substitutions, the sequence was identical to the corresponding sequence from Atu-4. These findings indicate that the constitutive competence phenotype observed in these strains is not strongly selected against in nature. In most naturally transformable bacteria, the competent state is transient. The exceptions are Neisseria gonorrhoeae and N. meningitidis, which both are unusual in maintaining competence throughout the growth cycle (31). However, in contrast to streptococci, which will take up DNA from any source, the two Neisseria species show preferential uptake of homologous DNA. Their DNA uptake apparatus recognizes a 10-bp uptake signal sequence distributed throughout the genomes of the Neisseria spp. and will not efficiently take up DNA lacking these conserved sequence motifs (11, 30). It is widely believed that indiscriminate uptake of foreign DNA by a bacterium could have negative consequences. It could, for instance, increase the risk of recombination events resulting in gene disruption or genes encoding nonfunctional gene products. As described above, a quorum-sensing mechanism controlled by a strain-specific peptide pheromone (CSP) regulates competence development in streptococci. Most likely, the purpose of CSP specificity and quorum sensing in this context is to monitor the concentration of potential gene donors in the immediate neighborhood. Thus, the CSP-controlled cell density monitoring mechanism regulating competence development in streptococci most likely serves the same function as DNA uptake signal sequences in Neisseria spp., namely, to increase the likelihood that the DNA taken up during competence comes from closely related bacteria. It was therefore unexpected to find that strains with CSP-independent constitutive DNA uptake could survive in competition with CSP-dependent "wild-type" strains in nature. It is possible that these strains have evolved compensatory mechanisms, for example, a more efficient mismatch repair system (13), to reduce the potentially harmful effects of taking up large amounts of foreign DNA. On the other hand, from a nutritional point of view it could be an advantage for the Atu-4 and E20 strains to take up all available DNA in the environment. It could support bacterial growth by being used as a source of nucleotides and maybe even as a source of carbon and energy (9). In sum, our findings suggest that any negative effects of indiscriminate DNA uptake must be more than compensated for by the advantages of being able to take up naked DNA from the environment. Otherwise, natural competence would not have been maintained in the Atu-4 and E20 strains.
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