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Journal of Bacteriology, April 2002, p. 2310-2313, Vol. 184, No. 8
0021-9193/02/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JB.184.8.2310-2313.2002
Copyright © 2002, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
A MecA Paralog, YpbH, Binds ClpC, Affecting both Competence and Sporulation
Marjan Persuh,1,2 Ines Mandic-Mulec,2 and David Dubnau1*
Public Health Research Institute, New York, New York 10016,1
University of Ljubljana, 1000 Ljubljana, Slovenia2
Received 14 November 2001/
Accepted 26 January 2002

ABSTRACT
ComK, the master regulator of competence, is degraded by the
general stress-related protease ClpCP but must be targeted to
this protease by binding to the adapter protein MecA. The genome
of
Bacillus subtilis contains a paralog of
mecA,
ypbH. We show
in the present study that YpbH, like MecA, binds ClpC and that
its elimination or overproduction affects competence and sporulation.

TEXT
The development of genetic competence, the ability to bind and
internalize free DNA from the environment, is tightly regulated
in
Bacillus subtilis. The competence transcription factor ComK
is necessary and sufficient to activate the transcription of
late competence genes, which encode components of the DNA uptake
machinery, as well as many other operons (
6,
25). It has been
suggested that this massive reorganization of the transcriptional
program defines a unique physiological condition, the K state
(
3). ComK is regulated both transcriptionally and posttranscriptionally.
Five transcription factors, including ComK itself, control the
level of
comK transcription (
6-
8,
19,
21). ComK acts as a positive
autoregulator, thus imposing a switch-like behavior on K-state
development. These mechanisms ensure a low level of
comK transcription
during exponential growth and a postexponential burst of ComK
synthesis.
Another layer of control, regulated proteolysis, also keeps the concentration of active ComK at the basal level during exponential growth. Two key players in this process are MecA and ClpC. MecA binds and targets ComK for degradation by the ClpCP protease (22, 23). ClpCP is composed of two heat shock proteins, the protease subunit ClpP and ClpC. ClpC, an ATPase belonging to the family of Clp/HSP100 proteins (18), is widespread among bacteria. The role of ClpC is complex: cells deficient in clpC are affected in sporulation, competence, and growth at high temperatures (4, 10, 11, 14). ClpC probably forms a hexameric structure (M. Persuh and D. Dubnau, unpublished data) and together with ClpP presumably forms a higher order hetero-oligomer similar to ClpAP or ClpXP in Escherichia coli (5). By binding to both ComK and ClpC, MecA adapts the general stress-related proteolytic machine for the degradation of the competence transcription factor ComK. Upon entry into the stationary phase, the small protein ComS is synthesized in response to the quorum-sensing pheromones ComX and CSF (12, 13, 20). ComS binds to MecA, causing the release of ComK and protecting it from degradation. MecA consists of two domains: its N-terminal domain recognizes ComK and ComS while its C-terminal domain binds ClpC (16). There are other phenotypes associated with mecA knockout or overexpression in Bacillus. For instance, MecA-overproducing cells are sporulation deficient (9), and the inactivation of mecA causes a rough colony shape (Persuh and Dubnau, unpublished). These phenotypes are not dependent on ComK, and MecA probably targets proteins other than ComK for degradation by ClpCP.
YpbH is a paralog of MecA.
The search of sequence databases with mecA as a query revealed the presence of a gene, ypbH, the product of which shows high similarity to MecA. The B. subtilis MecA paralog shares 26% sequence identity and 52% sequence similarity with the B. subtilis MecA on the amino acid level. MecA consists of two domains, the N- and C-terminal domains, with a linker region between them (16). The similarity of YpbH to MecA extends over both domains, but YpbH is 24 amino acids shorter than MecA and lacks the linker region. ypbH is present in two other sequenced Bacillus species: Bacillus anthracis and Bacillus halodurans. It seems that ypbH is present only in the genus Bacillus while MecA, with a much broader distribution, is found in essentially all low-GC gram-positive bacteria (Bacillus, Listeria, Staphylococcus, Streptococcus, Lactococcus, and Enterococcus) (16).
YpbH binds to ClpC.
Cells overexpressing YpbH are very deficient in sporulation, and we have observed that colonies of the overexpressing strain lyse on plates within 48 h. The introduction of a clpC knockout in the YpbH-overproducing strain reversed this lysis phenotype. Although clpC knockout cells are themselves sporulation deficient, the expression of the spoII genes is not affected and rapid lysis does not occur (15). These results demonstrated that YpbH needs ClpC for its effect on sporulation. The strong similarity of YpbH to MecA further implied that YpbH, like MecA, might bind to ClpC. We used surface plasmon resonance to detect this interaction. The His-tagged YpbH protein was purified as described previously for MecA (23). A clpC-intein construct (a gift from M. Nakano) in pTYB2 (New England Biolabs) was used for expression, and ClpC was purified according to the manufacturer's instructions. Protein concentrations were determined by using the Bio-Rad reagents with bovine serum albumin as the protein standard. His-tagged YpbH (800 response units) was noncovalently immobilized to the surface of a nitrilotriacetic acid chip by the injection of a 150 nM solution of YpbH-His in eluent buffer (10 mM HEPES, pH 7.4, 150 mM NaCl, 50 µM EDTA, and 0.005% polysorbate 20) at flow rate of 10 µl/min. To follow the binding of ClpC, a 200 nM solution of ClpC in buffer A (20 mM Tris, pH 8, 150 mM KCl, 10 mM MgCl2) was passed over the chip. After each run, the chip was regenerated with 0.3 M EDTA and recharged with a 200 µM solution of NiCl2. This experiment demonstrated that ClpC was able to bind YpbH (Fig. 1). In the same experiment, a ComK fusion to the maltose binding protein was passed over the chip and no binding to YpbH was detected (data not shown), indicating the specificity of the YpbH-ClpC interaction. Like MecA, YpbH was able to stimulate the ATPase activity of ClpC in vitro (K. Turgay, personal communication), confirming its interaction with ClpC.
YpbH plays a role in sporulation and competence.
To explore the role of YpbH, we constructed a deletion-insertion
mutant of
ypbH as well as a
ypbH multicopy construct in the
vector pUB110 and examined the associated phenotypes. The phenotype
of the
ypbH knockout was not due to polarity since the downstream
gene,
gudB, codes for an inactive protein (
2). To make the
ypbH knockout, the regions 200 bp upstream and 500 bp downstream
from
ypbH were amplified with the primers
ypbH-
EcoRIF1 (5'-CGG
AAT TCT GTT GCG GCA GCG G-3') and
ypbH-
BamHIR1 (5'-CGG GAT CCA
CGT CTT TTG TCG GGC-3'). The resulting 2.1-kb fragment was cut
with
EcoRI and
BamHI and cloned into pUCCm18. The recombinant
plasmid was cut with
SpeI and
BglII, which removes nearly all
of
ypbH, and a spectinomycin cassette was cloned between the
sites. The resulting plasmid was transformed into
B. subtilis to make strain BD3349, and transformants were checked for chloramphenicol
sensitivity (the plasmid contained a chloramphenicol marker
which is lost upon the double crossover). The construct in the
chromosome was verified with a PCR. To make the overproducing
strain BD3350, the
ypbH gene was amplified with the primers
ypbH-
BamHIF1 (5'-GCG GAT CCT GCA TTG TGC TTG TCT TAC-3') and
ypbH-
EcoRIR1 (5'-CGG AAT TCG GCT GCC ATT TGA G-3'). The PCR
fragment was then cut with
BamHI and
EcoRI and cloned between
the corresponding sites in pUB110 to produce pMB1. The growth
of
B. subtilis strains in competence medium and transformation
were carried out as described previously (
1). The morphology
of colonies lacking or overexpressing
ypbH suggested the involvement
of
ypbH in sporulation. Measurements of sporulation frequency,
carried out as described previously (
17), confirmed this impression.
A
ypbH knockout formed 20-fold fewer spores than the wild type
while a strain overexpressing
ypbH on a multicopy plasmid completely
lacked the ability to sporulate (a sporulation frequency of
less than 10
-8). We tested the same mutant strains for the expression
of a
spoIIE-
lacZ reporter and found that the
ypbH strain showed
reduced
spoIIE-
lacZ activity while the overexpressing strain
was completely deficient in this activity (data not shown).
The effect of YpbH overproduction was not due to titration of
ClpC, since ClpC deficiency does not affect the expression of
spoIIE (
15). The sporulation deficiency of the YpbH overproducer
was not due to the titration of a regulatory molecule by the
ypbH promoter, since a multicopy plasmid with a partially deleted
YpbH coding region had no sporulation phenotype. Since active
Spo0A is required for
spoIIE transcription (
26), YpbH may affect
the transcription of
spo0A or the phosphorylation of its gene
product. We tested the competence phenotype of the
ypbH mutant
strain by measuring the expression of ComK-dependent genes.
ß-Galactosidase assays were carried out as described
previously (
16).
comG-
lacZ transcription was delayed in the
strain lacking
ypbH and increased in the overexpressing strain
(Fig.
2A and B). Similar results were obtained with other late
competence genes (
comF,
comE, and
comC) (data not shown). The
results shown in Fig.
2 demonstrate that in the YpbH-overproducing
strain, the mechanisms that regulate the timing of competence
gene expression are still functional. The effect of YpbH overproduction
is to increase competence gene expression at all time points
but particularly during exponential growth. In this respect,
the effect of YpbH overproduction is what would be expected
from a decrease in MecA. Western blot analysis suggests that
this is the case (data not shown). Since ComK is needed for
the transcription of late competence genes, we measured
comK-
lacZ expression and found it was elevated in a strain overproducing
YpbH, particularly before
T0 (0 h after the end of log-phase
growth) (Fig.
2C), suggesting that the effect of YpbH overproduction
on late competence gene expression is due to the increased synthesis
of ComK.
The transcription of ypbH is growth-stage regulated.
We constructed a transcriptional
ypbH-
lacZ fusion and measured
its activity in Luria-Bertani (LB), sporulation, and competence
media. The vector pMutin2 (
24) was used to make a transcriptional
fusion to
ypbH. pMB1 was cut with
SpeI, the ends were filled
in, and the fragment was cut with
BglII. This treatment generated
an N-terminal fragment of
ypbH. pMutin2 was cut with
HindIII,
the ends were filled in, and the fragment was cut with
BamHI.
The N-terminal
ypbH fragment was cloned into the vector fragment.
The resulting plasmid, pMB3, was used to transform
B. subtilis to make strain BD3351. Proper insertion in the chromosome was
checked by PCR. The results are shown in Fig.
3. The transcription
of
ypbH increased at the end of exponential growth in both LB
and competence medium and reached approximately the same level
in both. In contrast,
lacZ activity slowly decreased after
T0 in sporulation medium and was at least fourfold lower than in
LB or competence medium. These results are consistent with the
effects of YpbH on competence and sporulation and suggest that
this molecule may play a regulatory role in vivo
. In an additional
experiment we found that the overproduction of YpbH had no effect
on
ypbH-
lacZ expression (data not shown).
The effect of YpbH on late competence gene transcription can
be explained by the modulation of
comK transcription (Fig.
2C).
There is a striking parallel between MecA and YpbH regarding
their effects on sporulation. Both of these proteins eliminate
sporulation when overproduced, and in both cases this effect
is dependent on ClpC (
9,
16), indicating that YpbH-ClpC hetero-oligomers
are likely the functional regulatory complexes inside the cell.
These observations and the patterns of
ypbH transcription in
competence and sporulation media suggest that YpbH is a pleiotropic
regulator affecting both competence and sporulation.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We thank K. Turgay for the gift of pY8, T. Msadek for contributing
the
mecA-
lacZ transcriptional fusion, and M. Nakano for the
clpC-intein construct. We thank all the members of our lab for
valuable discussions.
This work was supported by NIH grant GM57720 and a fellowship from the Slovene Ministry of Science and Technology awarded to M.P.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Public Health Research Institute, 455 First Ave., New York, NY 10016. Phone and fax: (212) 578-0804. E-mail:
dubnau{at}phri.nyu.edu.


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Journal of Bacteriology, April 2002, p. 2310-2313, Vol. 184, No. 8
0021-9193/02/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JB.184.8.2310-2313.2002
Copyright © 2002, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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