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Journal of Bacteriology, March 2002, p. 1607-1616, Vol. 184, No. 6
0021-9193/02/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JB.184.6.1607-1616.2002
Copyright © 2002, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Osmoregulation of Dimer Resolution at the Plasmid pJHCMW1 mwr Locus by Escherichia coli XerCD Recombination
Huong Pham,1,2 Ken J. Dery,1,2,
David J. Sherratt,1 and Marcelo E. Tolmasky1,2*
Division of Molecular Genetics, Department of Biochemistry, University of Oxford, Oxford OX1 3QU, United Kingdom ,1
Institute of Molecular Biology and Nutrition, Department of Biological Science, College of Natural Science and Mathematics, California State University Fullerton, Fullerton, California 92834-68502
Received 21 August 2001/
Accepted 21 December 2001

ABSTRACT
Xer-mediated dimer resolution at the
mwr site of plasmid pJHCMW1
is osmoregulated in
Escherichia coli. Whereas under low-salt
conditions, the site-specific recombination reaction is efficient,
under high-salt conditions, it proceeds inefficiently. Regulation
of dimer resolution is independent of H-NS and is mediated by
changes in osmolarity rather than ionic effects. The low level
of recombination at high salt concentrations can be overcome
by high levels of PepA or by mutating the ARG box to a sequence
closer to the
E. coli ARG box consensus. The central region
of the
mwr core recombination site plays a role in regulation
of site-specific recombination by the osmotic pressure of the
medium.

INTRODUCTION
Plasmids tend to form dimers by homologous recombination, a
process that leads to multimer formation, which reduces the
number of molecules in the cell and leads to plasmid loss (
39,
40). The Xer site-specific recombination system ensures that
dimeric plasmids are converted to monomers prior to cell division
(
4). Xer recombination was first identified through its role
in the resolution of ColEl plasmid multimers (
40) and has subsequently
been demonstrated to mediate resolution in other related plasmids
and pSC101 as well as the
Escherichia coli chromosome (
6,
16,
33). The tyrosine family recombinases XerC and XerD act at specific
recombination sites present in plasmids and chromosomes to mediate
a recombination reaction that proceeds via a Holliday junction
intermediate (
6,
7,
9,
12,
16,
17,
22,
37,
40). XerCD-mediated
recombination at the chromosomal
dif site requires a 28-bp core
site, which includes two 11-bp binding sites for the recombinases
XerC and XerD and a 6-bp central region (
23,
42). In contrast,
recombination at sites present in plasmids, e.g.,
psi (pSC101)
and
cer (ColE1), requires a core site plus about 180-bp additional
accessory sequences, which are bound by accessory proteins,
PepA and ArgR (
cer) or PepA and ArcA (
psi), and ensure that
the reaction is exclusively intramolecular (
14,
15,
17,
35,
36,
38). The recombination reaction at
psi occurs by sequential
strand exchanges mediated by XerC and then XerD, while for
cer,
only one pair of strand exchanges mediated by XerC to form a
Holliday junction has been observed (
15). The recombination
reaction at
cer seems to be completed by still unidentified
XerD-independent cellular processes (
2).
The multiresistance plasmid pJHCMW1, originally isolated from Klebsiella pneumoniae (18, 44, 45), contains the recombination site mwr. Like cer and psi, this site contains a core site and accessory sequences, which appear to be related to those of cer and which interact with PepA and ArgR. As is the case for cer, a reporter plasmid harboring two directly repeated mwr sites formed Holliday junctions in vitro in the presence of ArgR and PepA, but did not complete the recombination reaction under the assay conditions (43). On the other hand, resolution of dimers of a recombinant clone consisting of pUC18 and the pJHCMW1 mwr site in vivo when E. coli cells were growing in L broth (which contains 0.5% NaCl) was inefficient. Stability experiments showed that this low level of resolution efficiency was not enough to prevent loss of the recombinant clone in E. coli JC8679 (43). In this work, we show that Xer recombination in E. coli between direct repeats of mwr is osmoregulated. Resolution of dimers was inefficient in regular L broth, which contains 0.5% NaCl, while it was efficient in cells cultured in L broth lacking NaCl. The low level of recombination observed at high salt concentrations could be overcome by high levels of PepA or by mutating the ARG box to a sequence closer to the E. coli ARG box consensus. Mutagenesis experiments showed that the mwr central region of the recombination core site plays a role in regulation of site-specific recombination by the osmotic pressure of the medium.

MATERIALS AND METHODS
E. coli strains and plasmids.
The
E. coli strains and plasmids are described in Table
1. Plasmids
pMET
cm and pMET
pm are pUC18 carrying hybrid sites consisting
of the accessory sequences from
cer or
psi, respectively, and
the
mwr core recombination site. To generate pMET
cm and pMET
pm, the plasmids pLN9 (which contains the
cer site) and pLN10
(which contains the
psi site) (
15) were treated with
MluI and
EcoRI fragments to delete the core recombination sites. This
treatment resulted in plasmids carrying DNA fragments consisting
of the
cer or
psi accessory sequences, respectively, ending
in an
MluI site. These plasmids were treated with
MluI and
EcoRI
and ligated to a synthetic fragment containing the
mwr core
region flanked by
MluI and
EcoRI sites. The pMET
mc plasmid
was generated by site-directed mutagenesis of pES to replace
the appropriate nucleotides (
43) and transform the
mwr core
into the
cer core region. Plasmid pHP2.3 was generated by site-directed
mutagenesis of pMET
mc to modify the central region of the
cer core recombination site. Throughout the paper, the sites are
described according to the following general nomenclature: A,
accessory sequence; C, core recombination site (e.g., A
mwr-C
cer describes a hybrid site with the accessory sequences from
mwr and the core recombination region from
cer) (Fig.
1). When
necessary, further clarification is provided. The wild-type
sites are mostly identified by the single mention of the name,
but when considered helpful for clarity, the A and C names have
been detailed (e.g., A
mwr-C
mwr).
Bacterial growth media and general DNA procedures.
Growth of bacteria was in Lennox L broth (
32) (1% tryptone,
0.5% yeast extract, 0.5% NaCl [called "high osmolarity" throughout
the text]) or medium containing the same concentrations of tryptone
and yeast extract with either no NaCl added or with other NaCl
concentrations indicated in the text. In the case of solid medium,
2% agar was added. Transformations were carried out as described
by Cohen et al. (
13). Restriction endonuclease and ligase treatments
were carried out as recommended by the suppliers. Plasmid DNA
preparations and DNA gel extractions were performed with the
QIAspin miniprep kit and QIAquick gel extraction kit, respectively
(Qiagen). Nucleotide sequencing was performed at the DNA sequencing
facility, Department of Biochemistry, University of Oxford.
Site-directed mutagenesis was carried out with the Quikchange
site-directed mutagenesis kit (Stratagene). Osmolality values
were determined in a vapor pressure osmometer (Wescor 5500).
In vivo resolution assay.
To prepare dimers, E. coli JC8679 was transformed with plasmid DNA. The transformed strains were cultured in L broth medium in the presence of 100 µg of ampicillin per ml for 20 generations, and plasmid DNA was purified and electrophoresed in a 0.7% agarose gel. DNA of the correct size to be a plasmid dimer was purified from agarose gels with the QIAquick gel extraction kit (Qiagen). Since dimers run close to the position of open circular monomer DNA, the isolated samples were used to transform the XerC-deficient E. coli DS981. In this strain, dimers will not be resolved by Xer recombination allowing the isolation of transformants that had obtained a plasmid dimer. Purified plasmid dimers were transformed into E. coli DS941 to determine the efficiency of Xer-mediated dimer resolution.
DNA binding assays.
Gel mobility shift assays were performed as described by Blakely et al. (7). The oligonucleotides used had the following structure (the putative binding regions are underlined): cer, 5'GATCCGCGGTGCGTACAATTAAGGGATTATGGTAAATACG and 5'AATTCGTATTTACCATAATCCCTTAATTGTACGCACCGCG; and mwr, 5'GATCCGGCGGTGCACGCAACAGATGTTATGGTAAATACG and 5'AATTCGTATTTACCATAACATCTGTTGCGTGCACCGCCG.
Approximately 10 pmol of oligonucleotide was end labeled with 50 µCi of [
-32P]ATP and phage T4 polynucleotide kinase (5 U) in kinase buffer (50 mM Tris HCl [pH 7.5], 10 mM MgCl2, 5 mM dithiothreitol [DTT], 0.1 mM spermidine) in a final volume of 20 µl. The labeled oligonucleotide was purified with a Nuctrap Probe Purification column (Stratagene) followed by ethanol precipitation. The radiolabeled oligonucleotide was dissolved in 15 µl of H2O and then made double stranded by annealing with 50 pmol of the complementary oligonucleotide. The mixture was heated to 75°C for a few minutes and then allowed to cool to room temperature overnight. The annealed double-stranded radiolabeled oligonucleotides were purified by electrophoresis on an 8% polyacrylamide gel in Tris borate buffer (100 mM Tris [pH 8], 100 mM boric acid, 2 mM EDTA) as described before (7). The radiolabeled oligonucleotides were mixed with 0.1 mg of poly(dI-dC) per ml and the appropriate protein(s). The binding reaction was carried out for 10 min at 37°C and immediately transferred to ice. The samples were analyzed by electrophoresis in a polyacrylamide gel as described above. The radioactive complexes were detected by exposure to X-ray film. To determine the dissociation constant (Kd), we followed the procedure described by Robinson and Sligar (31). Purified XerD at different concentrations (ranging from 5 µM to 0.25 nM) was incubated with radiolabeled DNA under the conditions described above and the bands corresponding to bound and unbound DNA were quantified. The values were utilized to calculate the fraction of bound DNA (
), which can be expressed as
1/(1 + Kd/Pt), where Pt is the amount of XerD and Kd is the equilibrium dissociation constant: Kd = [P][DNA]/[P - DNA]. The calculated fraction of bound DNA values was fitted to the equation by nonlinear least-square analysis by using Excel (Microsoft).
In vitro aminopeptidase assays.
The enzymatic determinations were carried out basically as described by McCulloch et al. (26). Cells were harvested from overnight cultures; washed with a solution containing 10 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.5), 10 mM MgCl2, and 10 mM ß-mercaptoethanol; resuspended in a mixture containing 50 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.2), 1 M NaCl, 10 mM MgCl2, 0.1 mM EDTA, and 0.1 mM DTT; and lysed by sonication. The soluble fraction was separated by centrifugation and heated at 75°C for 10 min. This fraction was used to determine aminopeptidase A activity. The reactions were performed in a buffer containing 20 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.2), 100 mM KCl, 1 mM MnCl2, 0.1 mM EDTA, 1 mM L-leucine-p-nitroanilide, and 5 µg of protein at 37°C. Generation of p-nitroanilide was determined by measuring the A400.

RESULTS
Dimer resolution at mwr is osmoregulated.
The efficiency of resolution of pES dimers, which contain directly
repeated
mwr sites, was strongly dependent on the NaCl concentration
in the bacterial growth medium. Figure
2a shows the plasmid
content of
E. coli DS941 transformed with pES dimers and cultured
at increasing NaCl concentrations (osmolality range, 87 to 371
mmol/kg). While resolution was almost complete in the absence
of NaCl, it became more inefficient as the concentration of
salt in the medium was increased. Increasing the osmolality
of the medium by addition of other salts also resulted in the
same inhibition of resolution of dimers carrying
mwr (Fig.
2b).
Therefore, this is a general effect of the concentration of
the salts in the medium and not a specific inhibition by sodium
or chloride ions. Resolution of dimers of pES in medium supplemented
with 0.5 M sucrose or mannitol also led to a decrease in dimer
resolution (Fig.
2c), suggesting that Xer site-specific recombination
at
mwr is inhibited by an increase in the external osmolarity
and not by an ionic effect.
Resolution of pES dimers in an hns mutant is osmoregulated.
Since the H-NS protein has been implicated in regulation of
osmotically controlled genes (
25,
27,
28), we determined the
efficiency of resolution of pES dimers in
E. coli DS9012, an
E. coli DS941
hns mutant derivative (
21). Figure
3 shows that
resolution was efficient in the mutant in the absence of NaCl
while very poor in the presence of 0.5% NaCl. From these results,
we concluded that H-NS is not directly involved in the osmoregulation
of resolution of pES dimers.
Recombination at sites other than mwr is not highly osmoregulated.
To find out if recombination at other sites was also osmoregulated,
we performed studies on other derivatives. Since resolution
of dimers harboring the sites A
psi-C
psi (
psi accessory sequences-
psi core recombination site) and A
cer-C
cer was highly efficient,
irrespective of the presence or absence of NaCl, we studied
osmoregulation of recombination at derivatives of these Xer
recombination sites that were not as efficient.
E. coli DS941was
transformed with several plasmids carrying two directly repeated
derivative sites described in Table
1. The transformed strains
were cultured in medium with 0 or 0.5% NaCl, and plasmid DNA
was extracted and analyzed by agarose gel electrophoresis. A
plasmid carrying two directly repeated copies of
dif, pSDC124,
showed a small apparent difference in efficiency of resolution
between the two conditions. A slightly larger percentage of
resolved products was present when no NaCl was added to the
growth medium (data not shown). However, the effect was much
less than that seen when a dimer with two direct repeats of
mwr was analyzed. Plasmids pMIG104 and pMIG107 have directly
repeated modified
psi sites and show a lower Xer site-specific
recombination efficiency than that of the wild-type
psi site.
Plasmid pMIG104 contains two directly repeated
psi site derivatives
with a modified core site consisting of an inversion of the
location of the XerC and XerD binding regions with respect to
the accessory sequences [A
psi-C
psi(DC)]. Plasmid pMIG107 carries
two directly repeated core
psi sites and no accessory sequences
(C
psi). Figure
4 shows that the levels of resolution for both
plasmids are identical in the presence or absence of NaCl in
the medium. Plasmid pLN9, which has two directly repeated hybrid
regions consisting of the
cer accessory sequences and the
psi core region, shows marginally better efficiency of recombination
in the absence of NaCl (A
cer-C
psi, Fig.
4). Resolution assays
using plasmids with directly repeated
cer sites that have a
modified central region (pSDC164), directly repeated
psi sites
with modified central regions (pSDC165, pSDC167, and pSDC169),
or a directly repeated hybrid site consisting of
psi accessory
sequences and the
cer core region (pLN10, A
psi-C
cer) showed
a marginal difference in efficiency of resolution in the case
of pSDC167 and no differences in all other plasmids. These results
indicate that, under the assay conditions used, the efficiencies
of Xer site-specific recombination at
dif and derivatives of
cer and
psi were not substantially modified by the osmolarity
of the external medium. This could reflect the fact that either
recombination at wild-type
cer or
psi does not respond to a
change in osmolarity or recombination at the impaired derivatives
tested had lost the ability to be regulated by changes in the
osmolarity of the growth medium.
The accessory sequences of mwr are responsible for its low dimer resolution efficiency in high-osmolarity medium.
To identify the region of
mwr responsible for the low dimer
resolution efficiency under conditions of high osmolarity, we
generated hybrid sites containing the accessory sequences of
mwr and the core region of
cer (A
mwr-C
cer) and the accessory
sequences of
cer and the core region of
mwr (A
cer-C
mwr) (Fig.
5a). Plasmids pMET
mc and pMET
cm contain the sites A
mwr-C
cer and A
cer-C
mwr, respectively. Plasmids pES and pKS492 include
an intact copy of
mwr (A
mwr-C
mwr) and
cer (A
cer-C
cer), respectively
(Fig.
5a). Dimers of all four plasmids were introduced in
E. coli DS941 to determine their efficiency of resolution by Xer
recombination. Figure
5b shows that efficient recombination
was observed in the case of pKS492 (A
cer-C
cer) and pMET
cm (A
cer-C
mwr). Conversely, the dimers were poorly resolved in
both derivatives carrying the
mwr accessory sequences (A
mwr-C
mwr and A
mwr-C
cer [see Fig.
5a]). These results indicate that
the accessory sequences of
mwr are responsible for the low efficiency
of Xer recombination at this site in high-osmolarity medium.
Furthermore, a comparison of the XerC and XerD binding capabilities
of the core sites of
cer and
mwr showed that there are no substantial
differences in their affinities for
E. coli XerC and XerD (Fig.
5d). The
Kd for XerD binding to
mwr was 10.6 nM, a value similar
to that of the
Kd for XerD binding to
cer (
8). Addition of 0.28
µg of partially purified XerC to a reaction mixture containing
radiolabeled
mwr or
cer DNA and XerD resulted in binding of

90% of the label in both cases. These results confirmed that
the recombinases have similar affinities for the
mwr and
cer sites.
A substitution of 1 nucleotide in the mwr ARG box results in a target site that recombines at high efficiency in high-osmolarity medium.
Unlike operator regions of ArgR-regulated genes, which have
two adjacent ARG boxes (
20), the
cer and
mwr accessory regions
contain only one ARG box. In the synaptic complex formed between
two recombination sites, one ArgR hexamer is believed to bind
to both ARG boxes (
1). To test if the apparent impairment of
the
mwr accessory sequences is due to its ARG box, we generated
a mutation to create an ArgR binding site more similar to the
E. coli consensus sequence as defined by Glansdorff (
20). Plasmid
pKD3 contains a substitution, C to T, at the third nucleotide
of the
mwr ARG box (
mwrT). This is one of 8 nucleotides that
are highly conserved in all ARG boxes (boldface in Fig.
6a).
Figure
6b shows that dimers of pKD3, which contain two direct
repeats of
mwrT, were resolved more efficiently than dimers
of pES in
E. coli DS941. This result indicates that a nonoptimal
ARG box may be responsible for the low efficiency of recombination
at
mwr in
E. coli growing in high-osmolarity medium. It is possible
that the
mwr ARG box has evolved to efficiently bind the ArgR
protein from
K. pneumoniae. However, the
E. coli ArgR protein
shares 94% identity and 98% similarity with the ArgR from
K. pneumoniae MGH78578, the strain for which the complete genome
is being sequenced (
http://genome.wustl.edu/gsc/Projects/K.pneumoniae/).
Cloning of
K. pneumoniae ArgR and complementation assays will
permit us to determine if this is the case.
Increased levels of PepA suppress the poor recombination phenotype at high osmolarity.
To determine if higher levels of ArgR or PepA can overcome the
low efficiency of recombination at high osmolarity, pES dimers
were introduced into ArgR
- and PepA
- mutants of
E. coli already
harboring pCS349 and pSC119. These plasmids overexpress ArgR
and PepA from
plac, respectively. Figure
7a shows that in
E. coli DS956(pCS349), which has a higher concentration of ArgR
in the cell, the dimers were efficiently resolved in the absence
of NaCl, while the efficiency was lower in the presence of 0.5%
NaCl, as is the case with resolution in
E. coli DS941. In contrast,
in the PepA overproducer
E. coli DS957(pCS119), the pES dimers
were very efficiently resolved when the cells were cultured
in medium containing either 0.5% or no NaCl (Fig.
7a). Control
assays without the complementing plasmids pCS349 or pCS119 did
not show any resolution (Fig.
7a). These experiments show that
an excess of PepA can overcome the low efficiency of pES dimer
resolution at high osmolarity in the growth medium. It has been
shown before that at a high concentration of PepA, the in vitro
recombination reaction at
cer could occur in the absence of
ArgR (
15). In a control experiment, dimers of pKS492 were efficiently
resolved in
E. coli DS957(pCS119) in the presence or absence
of NaCl (Fig.
7a). Figure
7b shows that the concentration of
PepA in
E. coli DS957(pCS119) is substantially higher than that
in
E. coli DS941. Conversely, the PepA concentration in
E. coli DS957(pCS118), in which
pepA was cloned in the orientation so
that it could not be expressed from the
lac promoter, was only
slightly higher than that in
E. coli DS941 (Fig.
7b). (In plasmid
pCS118,
pepA carries its natural promoter.) This result indicates
that the high PepA expression from pCS119 is due to transcription
from
plac. Figure
7b also shows that PepA activity in the plasmidless
E. coli strain DS957 is negligible.
Since a higher concentration of PepA compensates for the lower
efficiency of dimer resolution when the cells are cultured in
the presence of 0.5% NaCl, we determined if the osmoregulation
of pES dimer resolution is mediated by a higher expression of
PepA. We measured aminopeptidase A activities in cells growing
in L broth containing 0.5% or no NaCl. Figure
7b shows that
the aminopeptidase A activity at low osmolarity is slightly
lower than at high osmolarity, indicating that a higher concentration
of PepA is not responsible for a higher-resolution efficiency
at low osmolarity. Therefore, the effect of PepA observed in
the experiments described in this section may be due to an ability
of high levels of PepA to make the recombination reaction less
dependent on ArgR.
The central region of the mwr core recombination site is involved in osmoregulation.
The results described so far indicate that the mwr accessory sequences are responsible for the poor Xer recombination in high osmolarity. A high PepA concentration, a nucleotide substitution in the ARG box that improves ArgR binding, or low osmolarity in the growth medium can overcome this deficiency. To identify features of mwr involved in osmoregulation of Xer recombination, the efficiencies of resolution of dimers of plasmids containing intact cer, mwr, or the hybrid sites A cer-C mwr and A mwr-C cer were analyzed in the presence or absence of NaCl in the medium. Figure 5b and c show that while resolution of dimers of pES was substantially enhanced when the NaCl concentration in the medium was reduced, the level of resolution of dimers containing A mwr-C cer remained constant. Since the only difference between the derivatives A mwr-C mwr and A mwr-C cer is their core recombination sites and recombination at the latter is not regulated by the osmolarity of the medium, we generated a substitution in the hybrid A mwr-C cer derivative, A mwr-C hp23, in which the central region of the core recombination site has been modified to that of mwr (Fig. 8a). The efficiency of resolution of pHP2.3 dimers was increased in the absence of NaCl, although the effect was less than that observed for the wild-type A mwr-C mwr (Fig. 8b). This result strongly suggests that the core recombination site of mwr plays a role in osmoregulation through its central region. To determine if the presence of the mwr core recombination site was sufficient to confer the property of being osmoregulated, a site was constructed with the psi accessory sequences (A psi-C mwr, Fig. 8c). A dimer carrying this hybrid site had a low recombination frequency at high osmolarity (Fig. 8d), and only a small improvement in dimer resolution in the absence of NaCl was observed (Fig. 8d), suggesting that the presence of the mwr core recombination site is not sufficient for osmoregulation.

DISCUSSION
In this report, we demonstrate that Xer recombination between
the directly repeated
mwr sites in a dimer is osmoregulated.
Resolution experiments in vivo at various osmolarities obtained
with several osmolites showed an inverse relationship between
osmolarity and efficiency of resolution. To the best of our
knowledge, osmoregulation of Xer site-specific recombination
has not been previously observed. Experiments with hybrid sites
showed that the
mwr accessory sequences are responsible for
the low efficiency of recombination in
E. coli at high osmolarity,
apparently because the ARG box in this site interacts poorly
with ArgR. A substitution in the
mwr ARG box that generates
a more efficient
E. coli ArgR binding region resulted in a site
that recombines efficiently at high osmotic pressure. The
mwr ARG box may have evolved to bind the
K. pneumoniae ArgR more
efficiently, thereby increasing the pJHCMW1 stability in this
bacterium. However the amino acid sequences of ArgR in both
E. coli and
K. pneumoniae MGH78578 (
http://genome.wustl.edu/gsc/Projects/K.pneumoniae/)
are highly related (94% identity and 98% similarity), and experiments
in the presence of the
K. pneumoniae ArgR will have to be performed
to determine if this is the case. The impairment in the pJHCMW1
ARG box could be overcome by increasing the levels of PepA in
E. coli. Similarly, in vitro recombination assays showed that
high levels of PepA can overcome the requirements for ArgR to
form Holliday junctions (
43). As a consequence of these observations,
we considered the possibility that the levels of PepA in a wild-type
E. coli strain increase at low osmolarity, thereby overcoming
the defective interaction of the
mwr accessory sequences with
ArgR. However, our results indicated that this is not the case:
the levels of PepA, as determined by aminopeptidase A activity,
did not significantly change at high or low osmolarity. On the
other hand, these results do not rule out the possibility that
at lower osmotic pressure, there is an improvement in the interactions
of the accessory proteins with the accessory sequences leading
to a more efficient formation of the synaptic complex. Several
DNA-binding proteins have been shown to change their interaction
properties at different osmotic pressures (
30,
31). In other
cases, such as some transcriptional regulators, the binding
affinity is not highly dependent on the intracellular ion concentration
(
11).
To cope with osmotic variations, bacteria respond by inducing several adaptation mechanisms. For some of them, such as the osmoprotectant proU uptake system, expression is kept at elevated levels as long as the osmotic stimulus persists (24), while for others, like the kdp operon, induction is transient (19). Since the higher efficiency of dimer resolution has been observed in several generations of cultures, it is most probable that the elements involved in Xer recombination at mwr undergo modifications that last for as long as the osmotic situation persists as is the case for induction of proU. Searches for regulators of proU failed to identify classical regulators. Instead, DNA-binding proteins such as H-NS, IHF, HU, TopA, or GyrAB were found to be associated with control of transcription of proU (10, 21, 29, 46). The involvement of these proteins together with the fact that the degree of DNA supercoiling is lower in cells cultured in low-osmolarity medium suggests that DNA structure may play a role in proU expression. Although our results indicate that H-NS seems not to be involved in the higher efficiency of recombination at mwr in low-osmolarity-grown cells, it is possible that one or more of these proteins can contribute to osmoregulation. Further analysis of the nature of the mwr DNA structure and the role of DNA-binding proteins will help to find out if changes in supercoiling and interactions with any of these DNA-binding proteins play a role in osmoregulation of recombination at mwr. Although we do not know at this time if Xer site-specific recombination at mwr is osmoregulated in K. pneumoniae, comparisons of the amino acid sequences of the recombinases and accessory proteins with those from E. coli showed that they are very closely related. Dimer resolution experiments with plasmids carrying mwr in K. pneumoniae will permit us to determine if the recombination reaction is osmoregulated and, if it is, what the significance of this property is.
Replacement of the cer accessory sequences for those of mwr (hybrid site A mwr-C cer) resulted in a low efficiency of recombination comparable to that of the wild-type mwr at high osmolarity. However, unlike A mwr-C mwr, A mwr-C cer is not osmoregulated. Therefore, all or a portion of the core recombination site and its interaction with the recombinases may be responsible for this property. Replacement of the central region of the cer core recombination site (TTAAGGGA) for that from mwr (CAGATG) in the hybrid A mwr-C cer resulted in a site, A mwr-C hp23, with an intermediate level of osmoregulation compared to that of A mwr-C mwr (high osmoregulation) and A mwr-C cer (no osmoregulation). Therefore, we conclude that the mwr core recombination site and in particular the central region are involved in the regulation of recombination by osmotic pressure. The core central region plays an important role in determining the recombination properties of a site (2, 5). While in psi the central region favors a complete recombination reaction, in cer it favors only a strand exchange by XerC. These two central regions vary in length and purine content at the top strand: 6 nucleotides and 50% purine for psi and 8 nucleotides and 75% purine for cer. The central region of mwr is 6 nucleotides in length and has a 67% purine content. This intermediate purine content could be related to the ability to confer to a core recombination site the property of being osmoregulated. Figure 9 shows the steps for resolution of dimers harboring psi, cer, or mwr. While resolution of the Holliday junction at cer proceeds through a Xer-independent pathway, at psi, there is a change in conformation mediated by PepA followed by a XerD-mediated pair of strand exchanges. (It is possible that resolution at psi also proceeds through the Xer-independent pathway [2, 3, 15].) Although in vitro recombination at mwr yields Holliday junctions (43), we do not know whether they are resolved by Xer recombination (like psi), by a Xer-independent pathway (like cer), or both. The presence in a site of the accessory sequences of mwr results in an inefficient recombination site, probably by poor interaction with ArgR slowing the formation of the synaptic complex (Fig. 9). However, this reduction can be compensated for at low osmotic pressure by an increase in the efficiency of formation of the synaptic complex (by an increase in the rate of the forward reaction or a decrease in the rate of the backward reaction) or an increase in the efficiency of resolution of the Holliday junction (Fig. 9). We think it is likely that the osmoregulation is mediated through the XerCD-mwr core recombination site interaction. However, the stage at which this regulation acts is not known. It could act at the formation of the Xer-mediated synapsis (Fig. 9, arrow i) or at one of the catalytic steps (Fig. 9, arrows ii and iii). Alternatively, the osmoregulation might be mediated by unknown cellular processes, if resolution of the Holliday junction at mwr is Xer independent (Fig. 9, arrow iv). Experiments are being carried out to determine the step of the reaction that is regulated by the osmolarity of the growth medium. These possibilities do not rule out an additional contribution to osmoregulation mediated by a better interaction of PepA at a low salt concentration with the mwr accessory sequences. Another set of experiments suggests that the sole presence of the mwr core recombination site is not enough for osmoregulation of a site. The hybrid site A psi-C mwr, which recombines at low efficiency, was only barely osmoregulated (Fig. 8). Probably the interwrapping of the psi accessory sequences around the accessory proteins (ArcA and PepA) does not form the ideal topology for recombination at the mwr core recombination site. This deficiency is only minimally compensated for by osmoregulation mediated by the mwr core recombination site.
Bacterial cells may encounter different environments through
their life cycle. Upon entering a host, the pathogens' surroundings
change dramatically, and they must have systems that enable
them to grow or survive. Plasmids harbored by these bacterial
cells carry genetic elements to be stably maintained in the
various environments, and not all of them may be active under
the same conditions. The plasmid pJHCMW1 has two systems for
stability by multimer resolution:
tnpR/
res and
xer/
mwr (
43).
Although we do not know how by being osmotically regulated
mwr helps the stability of pJHCMW1 in
K. pneumoniae, one can envision
that the
mwr locus is not critical for stability under certain
environments in which resolution occurs via the resolvase at
res, but it is essential in others where the osmolarity must
be lower.
K. pneumoniae causes a substantial amount of hospital-acquired
urinary tract infections, pneumonia, septicemias, meningitis,
and soft tissue infections. One or more of the niches occupied
in these diverse infections may present changes in osmolarity
that influence the efficiency of Xer recombination at
mwr.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This work was supported by Public Health grants AI47115-01 (M.E.T.)
and LS Basin MIRT T37 TW00048-05 from the National Institutes
of Health and a grant from Wellcome Trust (D.J.S.). H.P. and
K.D. were supported by MSD grant R25 GM56820-03 and MIRT T37
TW00048-05 from the National Institutes of Health.
We thank Migena Bregu and Sean Colloms for generously providing plasmids and R. Allen for technical help.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Institute of Molecular Biology and Nutrition, Department of Biological Science, School of Natural Science and Mathematics, California State University Fullerton, Fullerton, CA 92834-6850. Phone: (714) 278-5263. Fax: (714) 278-3426. E-mail:
mtolmasky{at}fullerton.edu.

Present address: Department of Molecular Biology. Beckman Research Institute of the City of Hope, Duarte, CA 91010-3011. 

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Journal of Bacteriology, March 2002, p. 1607-1616, Vol. 184, No. 6
0021-9193/02/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JB.184.6.1607-1616.2002
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