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Journal of Bacteriology, July 2002, p. 3785-3793, Vol. 184, No. 14
0021-9193/02/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JB.184.14.3785-3793.2002
Copyright © 2002, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Departamento de Biotecnología Microbiana, Centro Nacional de Biotecnología, CSIC, Campus de la Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, Cantoblanco, 28049 Madrid, Spain
Received 22 March 2002/ Accepted 24 April 2002
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S-RNA polymerase (7, 8). Therefore, during exponential growth with a carbon source other than alkanes, the gene for the AlkS regulator is essentially silent. Upon entry into the stationary phase, when
S-RNA polymerase becomes available, transcription of alkS from this promoter increases. AlkS acts as a repressor of PalkS1, allowing for low expression of the alkST genes. When alkanes are present, the AlkS protein bound to PalkS1 activates the expression of promoter PalkS2, located 38 nucleotides (nt) downstream from PalkS1, and provides for high expression of the alkST genes (7). Therefore, the pathway is controlled by a positive feedback mechanism governed by AlkS (Fig. 1). The amount of AlkS protein in induced cells is, however, low since this protein seems to be very unstable (56, 57). The pathway is regulated by an additional control system, since the levels of the alkane degradation enzymes are modulated by catabolic repression depending on the carbon source being used (24, 47). This superimposed control occurs through a poorly characterized mechanism that ultimately regulates transcription from promoters PalkB and PalkS2 (7, 56, 57). Activation of these promoters by AlkS and the alkane inducer is very efficient when cells are grown in a minimal salts medium containing citrate as carbon source but shows a three- to fourfold reduction when organic acids such as lactate, pyruvate, or succinate are used as the carbon source. Repression is much stronger (ca. 50-fold repression) when cells grow exponentially in a rich medium such as Luria-Bertani (LB) medium or in minimal salts medium supplemented with Casamino Acids. Repression in rich medium abruptly disappears as cells enter the stationary phase of growth, which suggests the existence of elements that assure low-level expression of promoters PalkB and PalkS2 during exponential growth. The P. putida Crc protein plays an important role in the catabolic repression observed in rich medium, although not the one observed when cells grow in minimal salts medium containing lactate or succinate as a carbon source (57). Inactivation of the crc gene reduces catabolic repression in rich medium by about sixfold, although a fivefold repression still occurs in conditions of no catabolic repression, indicating that other elements besides Crc participate in this control (57). To identify additional factors involved in the modulation of this pathway, a screening method was developed to obtain mutants showing a reduced catabolic repression in rich medium. Nine mutants were isolated. In all cases, mutations mapped to genes encoding the cytochrome o ubiquinol oxidase, the main terminal oxidase of the electron transport chain under highly aerobic conditions. The aerobic respiratory chains of both Escherichia coli and P. putida include a number of membrane-bound dehydrogenases that transfer electrons to ubiquinone, reducing it to ubiquinol. This can then be oxidized by either of two respiratory ubiquinol oxidases: the cytochrome o complex or the cytochrome d complex (22). When cells grow exponentially with an ample supply of oxygen, cytochrome o oxidase (cyo) accommodates most of the electron flow. As the oxygen supply becomes limiting, cytochrome d oxidase (cyd) is synthesized as an alternative terminal oxidase (15, 16, 49). Strains that lack either cyo or cyd are fully capable of aerobic growth under normal laboratory conditions, since the function of the missing oxidase seems to be taken over by the one remaining (1). An analysis was made of the influence of cytochrome o ubiquinol oxidase in the AlkS-mediated activation of the PalkB and PalkS2 promoters. The results suggest that catabolic repression of the P. putida GPo1 alkane degradation pathway is linked to the activity of the electron transport chain and/or to the redox state of the cell.
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FIG. 1. P. putida GPo1 alkane degradation pathway. The genes are grouped into two clusters, alkBFGHJKL and alkST, both of which are regulated by the AlkS protein. In the absence of alkanes, AlkS is expressed from promoter PalkS1; AlkS acts as a repressor of this promoter, allowing for low expression levels. This promoter is recognized by S-RNA polymerase, being active only in the stationary phase of growth. In the presence of alkanes, AlkS activates expression from the PalkB and PalkS2 promoters, generating a positive amplification loop on alkS expression. Activation of these two promoters by alkanes is strongly repressed by catabolic repression when cells grow exponentially in rich LB medium. Growth in a minimal medium containing some organic acids (lactate or succinate) as a carbon source generates a milder catabolic repression effect.
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TABLE 1. Strains and plasmids
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To generate the
cyoB P. putida strain PBS4B1, a 1,200-bp DNA fragment containing the cyoB gene was PCR amplified from P. putida KT2442 with the primers 5'-CGGGATCCACGAAGAAGCAGGCAGCA-3' and 5'-CGGGATCCAGAACCAGAAGGCAG-3', which contain BamHI sites at their 5' ends. The product was digested with BamHI and cloned at the BamHI site of plasmid pUC18, yielding plasmid pCYOB. A 2-kbp EcoRI fragment containing a tetracycline resistance (Tcr) determinant was obtained from plasmid pUT-mini-Tn5Tc and inserted at the EcoRI site of pCYOB, located inside the cyoB gene. The plasmid generated was named pCYOBTc. Finally, a 3.2-kb BamHI fragment from pCYOBTc containing the cyoB::tet allele was cloned into plasmid pKNG101, yielding pKCYOBTc. Plasmid pKNG101 is designed for marker exchange mutagenesis; it replicates in E. coli but not in P. putida and carries a streptomycin resistance (Smr) determinant and the sacB gene, which mediates sucrose sensitivity (29). Plasmid pKCYOBTc was transferred to P. putida PBS4 in triparental matings with plasmid pRK600 as donor of transfer functions, and Smr Tcr sucrose-sensitive (8% [wt/vol]) exconjugants were selected. These cells were expected to contain plasmid pKCYOBTc integrated into the chromosome by a single recombination event at the cyoB gene, which generates a mutant and a wild-type cyoB gene. Cells having undergone a second recombination event leading to loss of the wild-type cyoB allele were selected by screening for Tcr, streptomycin-sensitive (Sms), and sucrose-resistant colonies. The absence of the wild-type cyoB gene and the presence of the cyoB::tet allele were confirmed by PCR.
Inactivation of the crc gene in strain PBS4B1 was performed by marker exchange mutagenesis. The promoterless xylE reporter gene was excised from plasmid pXYLE10 with endonuclease SmaI and inserted at the NruI site of the crc gene present in plasmid pCRC5. The plasmid obtained was named pCRC5A. The crc::xylE allele was excised from pCRC5A by partial restriction with BamHI and cloned at the BamHI site of plasmid pKNG101, yielding plasmid pCRC20. This plasmid was transferred to strain PBS4B1 and exconjugants in which the wild-type crc gene had been substituted by the crc::xylE allele were isolated as described above. A representative isolate was selected and named PBS4BC1.
Generation of mutant P. putida strains showing reduced catabolic repression in LB medium.
P. putida RC12S8 (KT2442 with a PalkB::kan fusion and alkS in the chromosome) was mutagenized with minitransposon mini-Tn5Sm. This was delivered to the recipient cells in triparental matings as previously described (18) by using E. coli CC118
pir containing the plasmid pUT-mini-Tn5Sm as a donor and E. coli HB101 containing the plasmid pRK600 as a helper for transfer functions. The exconjugants were plated on LB plates containing streptomycin, kanamycin, and 0.05% (vol/vol) DCPK and then incubated at 30°C for 24 to 48 h. Kmr colonies were streaked onto LB plates with kanamycin in the absence or presence of DCPK. Colonies resistant to kanamycin in the absence of DCPK were discarded (ca. 20%). Those selected were further tested for DCPK-dependent resistnace to kanamycin in LB broth. To identify the insertion point of the minitransposon, two approaches were used. For the mutant strains RCM4, RCM18, RCM2A, RCM3A, and RCM137A, chromosomal DNA was purified and digested with either KpnI (strains RCM4 and RCM18), SacI (strains RCM2A and RCM3A), or KpnI+PstI (strain RCM137A), none of which cut inside the minitransposon. The digested fragments were ligated to pUC18 excised with the same endonucleases and transformed into E. coli TG1. Plasmid DNA was extracted from Smr ampicillin-resistant (Apr) colonies, and the DNA insert was sequenced in both strands. In all other mutant strains analyzed, the point of insertion was identified by arbitrary PCR (6, 41) and was later verified by PCR with specific primers.
Assay for ß-galactosidase. An overnight culture of the appropriate strain was diluted to a final turbidity (A 600) of ca. 0.04 in fresh LB medium, or in minimal salts M9 medium supplemented with the indicated carbon source. When turbidity reached to 0.08, the nonmetabolizable inducer DCPK (0.05% [vol/vol]) was added where indicated. Cultures were grown at 30°C. At different time points, aliquots were taken and ß-galactosidase activity measured as described by Miller (33). At least three independent assays were performed in each case.
S1 nuclease protection assays. Total RNA was isolated from bacterial cultures as previously described (34). S1 nuclease reactions were also performed as previously described (3) with 50 µg of total RNA and an excess of a 5'-end-labeled single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) hybridizing to the 5' region of the mRNA. This allows detection of the transcription start sites, as well as detection of the amounts of transcript generated. The ssDNA probe was obtained by linear PCR as described previously (56) by using either plasmid pTS1 linearized with HindIII (contains alkS and its promoter region) or plasmid pPB7 linearized with PstI (contains the PalkB promoter) as a substrate. The primers used hybridized 70 nt downstream of promoter PalkS2 or 73 nt downstream of promoter PalkB (the start sites were as described elsewhere [7]).
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The point of insertion of the mini-Tn5Sm in these strains was localized either by cloning and sequencing of the chromosomal DNA segment containing the Smr determinant or by arbitrary PCR (see Materials and Methods). In mutant strain RCM4, the minitransposon was found inserted at an open reading frame showing 88% amino acid similarity to the cyoC gene of P. putida IH-2000 (28), which codes for subunit III (also known as subunit C) of cytochrome o ubiquinol oxidase (Fig. 2). In mutant strains RCM18, RCM2A, and RCM117A, the minitransposon was found to interrupt an open reading frame showing 96% amino acid similarity to the cyoB gene of P. putida IH-2000 encoding subunit I (or subunit B) of the same cytochrome (28). These two genes form part of the cyoABCDE cluster, which encodes subunits II, I, III, and IV of the P. putida cytochrome o oxidase complex (also known as the cyo complex) and the heme o synthase (28, 36) (see Fig. 2). Cytochrome o ubiquinol oxidase is one of the two terminal ubiquinol oxidases in the P. putida respiratory chain (36). In the other mutant strains analyzed, the minitransposon was found to map to other genes of the cyo cluster (Fig. 2), namely, the cyoA gene (strains RCM6A and RCM137A), and the cyoE gene (strains RCM22A and RCM2B), or at ORF2 (strain RCM3A).
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FIG. 2. Insertion points of mini-Tn5Sm in the P. putida catabolic repression mutants isolated. The upper scheme shows the genes encoding the P. putida cyo complex (28) and the positions of the mini-Tn5Sm insertions found in mutant strains RCM4, RCM18, RCM2A, RCM2B, RCM3A, RCM6A, RCM22A, RCM117A, and RCM137A (indicated by arrows). The cyoA, cyoB, cyoC, and cyoD genes encode subunits II, I, III, and IV of the oxidase complex, respectively; cyoE encodes the heme o synthase. The bottom scheme represents the electron transport chain. NDH, NADH dehydrogenase; LDH, lactate dehydrogenase; SDH, succinate dehydrogenase; UQ, oxidized ubiquinone; UQH2, reduced ubiquinone; cyo, cytochrome o ubiquinol oxidase.
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3.4-fold at the mid-exponential phase and by 7.5-fold at the late exponential phase of growth (Table 2). Since repression in the wild type is in the range of 50- to 70-fold (Table 2), it is clear that inactivation of cytochrome o ubiquinol oxidase only provides partial relief of the catabolic repression observed in LB medium.
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FIG. 3. Effect of the cyoB mutation on induction of the PalkB promoter in cells growing with different carbon sources. P. putida strains PBS4 and PBS4B1 (PBS4 with a knockout mutation at the cyoB gene) were grown in duplicate flasks either in LB medium (B) or in minimal salts medium containing either citrate (Cit) (A), succinate (Scc) (C), or lactate (Lac) (D) as the carbon source. At an A600 of 0.08, the nonmetabolizable inducer DCPK was added to one of the flasks; the other was left as a noninduced control. Aliquots were taken at different times, and the ß-galactosidase activity was measured. The plots show the values observed for induced cultures (noninduced cultures had very low ß-galactosidase activities [30 to 100 Miller units] and are not represented). The values shown correspond to three to six independent assays, all of which are represented on the same plot.
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TABLE 2. Catabolic repression of the PalkB promoter in strains PBS4 (wild type for cyoB) and PBS4B1 (cyoB::tet)
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It was previously shown that the promoters PalkB and PalkS2 are similarly regulated by the AlkS protein and are subject to the same catabolic repression effect (7, 57). To analyze whether inactivation of cytochrome o also eliminated catabolic repression of the PalkS2 promoter, the activity of this promoter in cells growing in LB medium in the presence of the inducer DCPK was analyzed by S1 nuclease protection assays. As a control, the activity of the PalkB promoter was analyzed in parallel. As shown in Fig. 4, the levels of the transcripts originated at the PalkS2 and PalkB promoters at the late exponential phase of growth were approximately sevenfold higher in strain PBS4B1 than in the wild-type strain PBS4. This is direct evidence that inactivation of cytochrome o ubiquinol oxidase diminishes catabolic repression at both the PalkS2 and the PalkB promoters in cells growing in LB medium. It should be noted that when cells grow exponentially in the presence of DCPK, promoter PalkS1 is inactive and is not influenced by catabolic repression (7).
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FIG. 4. Effect of the cyoB mutation on expression of the PalkB and PalkS2 promoters. Strains PBS4 and PBS4B1 were grown in LB medium supplemented with the inducer DCPK (0.05% [vol/vol]). At an A600 of 0.8, cells were collected and the total RNA was obtained. The levels of mRNA originated at the PalkB and PalkS2 promoters were measured by S1 nuclease protection assays in the presence of a large excess of the probe. Promoter PalkS1 is inactive under these conditions (7) and gave no signal (results not shown). The cDNA resistant to S1 nuclease was resolved in a denaturing polyacrylamide gel, in parallel with a DNA size ladder obtained by chemical sequencing of the ssDNA used as probe.
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FIG. 5. Effect of the simultaneous inactivation of the crc and cyo genes on catabolic repression of the PalkB promoter. P. putida strains PBS4, PBS4B1 (PBS4 with a knockout mutation at the cyoB gene), PBS4C1 (PBS4 with a knockout mutation at the crc gene), and PBS4BC1 (PBS4 with knockout mutations at the cyoB and crc genes) were grown in duplicate flasks in LB medium. At an A600 of 0.08, the nonmetabolizable inducer DCPK was added to one of the flasks, whereas the other flask was left as a noninduced control. Aliquots were taken at different times, and the ß-galactosidase activity was measured. The levels of ß-galactosidase are represented as a function of cell growth. The plot shows the values observed for induced cultures (noninduced cultures had very low ß-galactosidase activities [30 to 90 Miller units] and are not represented). The values shown correspond to several independent assays, all represented on the same plot.
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The observed link between a component of the electron transport chain and catabolic repression opens new ways to understand this global regulation process. There are some interesting examples of regulatory systems that monitor the flow of electrons through the electron transport chain and which use that information to regulate the activity of specific genes and integrate different metabolic activities. For example, in Rhodobacter sphaeroides the information obtained at two points of the electron transport chain is used to regulate the expression of photosynthesis genes (37, 38). A signal generated at the cbb3 branch of the electron transport chain is transduced to a two-component activation system which directly regulates gene expression. In addition, the redox state of the quinone pool (the ubiquinol/ubiquinone ratio) is monitored by a redox-active antirepressor protein, which determines the functional state of a transcriptional repressor. The redox state of quinones is also used to regulate the transition from aerobic to anaerobic metabolism in E. coli by means of the Arc two-component system (23). In this case, the oxidized form of the quinones serves as a specific signal for the ArcB sensor kinase, silencing it and impeding phosphorylation of the ArcA global transcriptional regulator. It has also been proposed that the Aer protein responds to the cellular redox state to regulate aerotaxis, which guides cells to oxygen-rich environments (44). Therefore, it is clear that bacterial cells can monitor the activity of the electron transport chain and use this information to regulate gene expression. The results presented in the present study suggest that the flow of electrons through the electron transport chain, the redox state of the cell, or the amounts of cyo ubiquinol oxidase (the levels of which are known to depend on the oxygen tension [15, 16, 49]) could be one of the signals that P. putida uses to modulate catabolic repression of the alkane degradation pathway. It cannot be ascertained at present whether the cyo terminal oxidase has a direct or indirect role in this signal transmission process.
Inactivation of cytochrome o ubiquinol oxidase reduced, but did not eliminate, catabolic repression (except that generated by succinate). This suggests that catabolic repression depends on more factors than just the electron transport chain. It has recently been reported that the Crc protein has an important role in the catabolic repression of the alkane degradation pathway (57). Inactivation of the crc gene substantially reduced (although did not entirely eliminate) catabolic repression in rich medium but had no effect on the catabolic repression exerted by lactate or succinate in a defined medium. Crc appears to be an element of a signal transmission pathway connecting cell physiology to carbon metabolism, participating in catabolic repression of some sugar and amino acid pathways (14, 26, 27), as well as in cell adhesion (40). Simultaneous inactivation of the cyoB and crc genes generated a greater decrease in catabolic repression in rich medium than the individual inactivation of either crc or cyoB. This additive effect suggests that Crc and cyo form part of different signal transduction pathways, both of them contributing to catabolic repression. In both cases, the signal leads to a decrease in the AlkS-mediated induction of the PalkB and PalkS2 promoters (57; the present study). The final consequence would be a decrease in the levels of the AlkS regulator, which appears to be present in the cell in limiting amounts (57). Keeping AlkS levels below those required for full induction of the pathway allows the cell to downmodulate expression of the alkane degradation genes when cells grow exponentially in medium containing a preferred carbon source in addition to alkanes. In agreement with this idea, overexpression of the alkS gene from a strong heterologous promoter totally eliminates catabolic repression (57).
Many other pathways for the degradation of linear or aromatic hydrocarbons are subject to physiological control (global regulation) in Pseudomonas spp. (17, 19, 32, 35, 39, 51), and the mechanisms involved often differ. Comparison of the factors implicated in the physiological control of the pWW0 toluene degradation pathway and of the P. putida CF600 phenol degradation pathway provides a remarkable example of how similar regulatory outcomes can be achieved by using different strategies (50). Both pathways are controlled by
54-dependent regulator-promoter pairs that are mechanistically and functionally similar. In the two cases, activation of the corresponding promoters is modulated by a dominant physiological control that generates a similar final effect. The host factors responsible for this physiological control differ in the two pathways (9, 12, 13, 50, 51, 52). The effect of the cyo terminal oxidase on the regulation of these pathways has not been specifically addressed. However, it is worth noting that the catabolic repression generated by excess succinate on expression of the pWW0 toluene degradation pathway decreases considerably when O2 is limited (19, 20). In such conditions, the cyo terminal oxidase should decrease in favor of the cyd oxidase. This suggests the cyo terminal oxidase could also have some role in the repression of this pathway. Interestingly, the catabolic repression exerted by succinate on the expression of the phenol degradation pathway encoded in the P. putida H plasmid pPGH1 is reduced by inactivation of the cyo terminal oxidase (43). However, the effect of LB medium on the expression of this pathway has not been not reported. The role of the cyo terminal oxidase on the expression of other pathways has, to our knowledge, not been analyzed. The available data do not allow a unified picture of catabolic repression in Pseudomonas spp. to be drawn. However, the mechanisms used in each case seem to rely heavily on factors dictated by the promoters and regulators of the catabolic pathway (e.g., sigma factors involved in promoter recognition, regulator stability, etc.). It is likely that the physiological status of the cell is connected to gene expression in more than one way. Although certain mechanisms will probably be more suited to a particular pathway (or promoter-regulator pair) than to others, the evolutionary history of each pathway may be important in determining which factors participate in each case (10, 50). This could provide substantial diversity to physiological control mechanisms. However, more knowledge on the mechanisms mediating global control of the catabolic pathways of Pseudomonas sp. is required before final conclusions can be drawn.
This work was supported by grants BIO2000-0939 from the Comisión Interministerial de Ciencia y Tecnología and 07 M/0120/2000 from Comunidad Autónoma de Madrid. M.A.D. was the recipient of fellowships from the Instituto de Cooperación Iberoamericana and the Comisión Nacional de Investigación Científica y Tecnológica/Banco Interamericano de Desarrollo (Chile). A.R.-M. was the recipient of a fellowship from Gobierno Vasco.
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29: expression of the viral promoters throughout the infection cycle. Virology 207:23-31.[CrossRef][Medline]
54-dependent systems: a common phenotype by different mechanisms. J. Bacteriol. 184:760-770.
54-dependent Po promoter controlling the Pseudomonas-derived (methyl)phenol dmp operon of pVI150. J. Bacteriol. 178:3727-3735.
54-dependent Po promoter. Mol. Microbiol. 31:1217-1228.[CrossRef][Medline]
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