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Journal of Bacteriology, January 2003, p. 683-687, Vol. 185, No. 2
0021-9193/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JB.185.2.683-687.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Unité de Biochimie Microbienne, Institut Pasteur, URA 2172 du Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, 75724 Paris Cedex 15, France
Received 18 July 2002/ Accepted 18 October 2002
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Stress resistance genes play an important role in the virulence of several pathogens. clpP, clpC, and clpE of Listeria monocytogenes were shown to participate in intracellular parasitism (6), cell adhesion (20), and virulence (19); clpX of Staphylococcus aureus (16) and clpE of Streptococcus pneumoniae (24) were identified by signature-tagged mutagenesis; and the synthesis of DnaK and GroESL in S. aureus was shown to be induced during infection of human epithelial cells (25).
Stress-induced proteins are mainly molecular chaperones or proteases acting to refold or degrade misfolded or denatured proteins (9). Among these, the Clp ATP-dependent protease is composed of Clp ATPase subunits, which confer substrate specificity to the proteolytic subunit ClpP. ClpP has been shown to play a central role in stationary-phase adaptive responses of Bacillus subtilis (18), in the degradation of SsrA-tagged proteins in Escherichia coli (8) and B. subtilis (28), in the modulation of virulence gene expression in Yersinia enterocolitica (23), and in the biofilm formation of Pseudomonas fluorescens (22).
In gram-positive bacteria, stress genes have been grouped into four regulatory classes (4, 26). Class I genes, encoding classical chaperones (DnaK, GroES, and GroEL), are controlled by the HrcA repressor, which recognizes the controlling inverted-repeat chaperone expression (CIRCE) operator sequence. This highly conserved element is composed of a well-conserved 9-bp inverted repeat sequence separated by 9 bp (TTAGCACTCX9GAGTGCTAA) and is always found in association with dnaK or groEL genes (21). Class II genes encode general stress proteins, and their expression requires the
B stress sigma factor. Class III heat shock genes are controlled by the CtsR repressor, a DNA-binding protein which recognizes a tandemly repeated heptad operator sequence (GGTCAAAXAXGGTCAAA) (4). Class IV genes are defined as those devoid of the CIRCE or CtsR operator sequences and whose induction by heat shock or general stress conditions is
B independent.
Sequencing of the upstream and downstream regions of the ftf gene of S. salivarius ATCC 25975 (GenBank accession number LO7793) revealed a gene whose product is highly similar to ClpP of E. coli (7). In this work, we report an analysis of the clpP promoter of S. salivarius, showing evidence for a direct control at the transcriptional level of this gene by a putative ortholog of CtsR. We also demonstrate that HrcA negatively controls clpP expression as well, which is the first example of a clp gene under dual heat shock repression.
Expression of the S. salivarius clpP gene is controlled by CtsR. Analysis of the S. salivarius clpP promoter region revealed a potential CtsR binding site (4). In order to demonstrate regulation by CtsR, we used B. subtilis as a heterologous host, since the S. salivarius genome sequence is not available. A transcriptional fusion between the S. salivarius ATCC 9758 clpP promoter region and the Bacillus stearothermophilus bgaB gene, which encodes a thermostable ß-galactosidase (11), was first constructed by cloning a PCR-generated fragment (positions -295 to -12 with respect to the position of the translation initiation codon) into plasmid pDK (2) and then introduced into B. subtilis.
Derivatives of strain QB8068, in which the endogenous ctsR gene was deleted (2), were then constructed in several steps. The final strain, QB8081 [trpC2
ctsR amyE::(clpP'-bgaB aphA3)
hrcA::cat thrC::(PxylA-B. subtilis ctsR spec)], carries the S. salivarius clpP'-bgaB transcriptional fusion integrated as a single copy at the amyE locus, a deletion-replacement of the endogenous hrcA gene (17), and a copy of the B. subtilis ctsR gene integrated at the thrC locus under the control of the PxylA xylose-inducible promoter.
Strain QB8081 was grown in Luria-Bertani medium until an optical density at 600 nm (OD600) of 0.3 was achieved, and ß-galactosidase activities were assayed during growth at 37°C in the presence or absence of 20 mM xylose and expressed as nanomoles of o-nitrophenyl per minute per milligram of protein.
As shown in Fig. 1A, induction by xylose of the B. subtilis ctsR gene led to an up to 16-fold repression of clpP'-bgaB expression. In order to test whether repression by CtsR was relieved during heat shock, strains were grown at 48°C in the presence of xylose. Expression levels of clpP'-bgaB were found to be fully derepressed in the presence of CtsR during growth at 48°C (Fig. 1B). These results strongly suggest that the S. salivarius clpP gene is subjected to negative regulation by an ortholog of CtsR and that this repression no longer occurs during growth at high temperature, leading to heat shock induction of clpP.
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FIG. 1. (A) Expression of S. salivarius clpP is repressed by CtsR. Levels of expression of clpP'-bgaB (strain QB8081) in the presence ( , ) or absence ( , ) of xylose are shown. Cultures were grown in Luria-Bertani medium at 37°C until the OD600 was 0.3, and xylose was added to one-half of the culture at a final concentration of 20 mM. (B) Repression of S. salivarius clpP expression by CtsR is abolished by heat shock. The expression of clpP'-bgaB (QB8081) was measured in cells expressing ctsR during growth at 37°C ( , ) or 48°C ( , ). Cells were grown in Luria-Bertani medium at 37°C until the OD600 was 0.3, 20 mM xylose was added, and one-half of the culture was shifted to 48°C. Open symbols indicate OD600s. Solid symbols indicate ß-galactosidase specific activities expressed as nanomoles of o-nitrophenyl per minute per milligram of protein, and values are the means ± standard deviations of results from two independent assays. ONP, o-nitrophenyl.
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FIG. 2. (A) CtsR binds specifically to the S. salivarius clpP promoter region. In gel mobility shift experiments, a radiolabeled DNA fragment (10,000 cpm) corresponding to the S. salivarius clpP promoter region (positions -142 to +44 with respect to the translation initiation codon) was incubated with increasing amounts of purified B. subtilis CtsR protein. Lanes 1 to 4, 0, 20, 40, and 80 ng of CtsR, respectively. (B) CtsR protects the directly repeated heptad sequence. In DNase I footprinting analyses of CtsR binding, a radiolabeled DNA fragment (50,000 cpm) corresponding to the S. salivarius clpP promoter region (positions -142 to +44 with respect to the translation initiation codon) was incubated with increasing amounts of purified CtsR. Lanes 1 to 5, 0, 100, 200, 400, and 800 ng of CtsR, respectively; lane 6, G+A Maxam and Gilbert reaction of the corresponding DNA fragment. The region protected by CtsR is shown by the bracket. (C) Nucleotide sequence of the S. salivarius ATCC 9758 clpP promoter region. Potential -35 and -10 promoter sequences are overlined; the CtsR heptad direct-repeat operator sequences are indicated by arrows; the CIRCE operator sequence is indicated by facing arrows; the region protected by CtsR in DNase I footprint experiments is indicated by a bracket; lowercase letters indicate differences in the nucleotidic sequence from that of the ATCC 25975 strain. Positions are numbered relative to the translation initiation codon.
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Analysis of the S. salivarius clpP promoter region reveals a potential CIRCE sequence. During the analysis of the published S. salivarius clpP nucleotide sequence (7), we noted the existence of a 9-bp palindromic sequence upstream from the CtsR binding site, sharing 100% identity with the CIRCE consensus sequence. Surprisingly, the two repeats were separated by 8 bp, whereas in a compilation of 70 CIRCE sequences, the spacer region was invariably 9 nucleotides (10). Since all CIRCE sequences described to date are exclusively associated with the dnaK or groEL operon, it was therefore tempting to consider this noncanonical CIRCE sequence as a cryptic sequence.
In order to test whether HrcA does indeed play a role in controlling expression of the clpP gene, we first sequenced the clpP promoter region of S. salivarius ATCC 9758. As described above, a DNA fragment generated by PCR with chromosomal DNA from the reference strain of S. salivarius ATCC 9758 was cloned into plasmid pDK. The nucleotide sequence of two DNA fragments resulting from independent PCRs was determined (GenBank accession number AY137346), revealing numerous differences with the nucleotide sequence of strain ATCC 25975 (indicated in Fig. 2C). Interestingly, in strain ATCC 9758, the inverted repeat sequences of the CIRCE motif are separated by the consensus 9-bp spacer instead of 8 bp. This reinforced the hypothesis of a potential role for HrcA in the regulation of clpP and suggests that the reported 8-nucleotide spacer sequence from strain ATCC 25975 (7) may be due to a sequencing error.
clpP of S. salivarius is controlled by HrcA. To evaluate the role of HrcA and this potential CIRCE sequence in S. salivarius clpP regulation, we used B. subtilis as a heterologous host as detailed above.
A DNA fragment corresponding to the coding sequence of B. subtilis hrcA was generated by PCR and cloned between the HindIII and EcoRI sites of plasmid pXT (3), placing hrcA under the control of the xylose-inducible promoter (PxylA). The construct was then integrated as a single copy at the thrC locus of B. subtilis. The resulting strain, QB8083 [trpC2
ctsR amyE::(clpP'-bgaB aphA3)
hrcA::cat thrC::(PxylA-B. subtilis hrcA spec)], carries the S. salivarius clpP'-bgaB transcriptional fusion integrated as a single copy at the amyE locus, as well as a deletion-replacement of the endogenous hrcA gene (17).
ß-Galactosidase assays were performed during growth at 37°C in the presence or absence of xylose. Expression of clpP'-bgaB was repressed twofold in the presence of HrcA (Fig. 3A), whereas expression in the same background was repressed up to 16-fold by CtsR (Fig. 1A). When strain QB8083 was grown at 48°C in the presence of xylose, expression levels of the bgaB fusion were fully derepressed (Fig. 3B). These results indicate that the S. salivarius clpP gene is also repressed by HrcA, albeit weakly but reproducibly, and that this repression is abolished during heat shock, leading to induction of this gene.
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FIG. 3. (A) The expression of clpP of S. salivarius is repressed by HrcA. Levels of expression of clpP'-bgaB (QB8083) in the presence ( , ) or absence ( , ) of xylose were monitored as indicated in the legend to Fig. 2A. (B) The repression of S. salivarius clpP expression by HrcA is abolished by heat shock. Levels of expression of clpP'-bgaB (QB8081) were measured in cells expressing hrcA during growth at 37°C ( , ) and 48°C ( , ) as indicated in the legend to Fig. 2B. ONP, o-nitrophenyl.
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clpP of S. salivarius is the first example of a clp gene controlled by both CtsR and HrcA. Using both in vivo and in vitro approaches, we have shown that the S. salivarius clpP gene is efficiently repressed by CtsR from B. subtilis, strongly suggesting the existence of a CtsR regulon in this bacterium. Furthermore, we have presented evidence indicating a likely repression of clpP expression by the transcriptional regulator HrcA as well. Although the genome of S. salivarius has not been sequenced, the incomplete genome sequence of the closely related bacterium Streptococcus thermophilus is available (http://www.biol.ucl.ac.be/gene/genome), and we were able to identify potential genes encoding orthologs of both HrcA and CtsR. Inspection of the nucleotide sequence preceding the S. thermophilus clpP gene revealed the same tandem arrangement of conserved CIRCE and CtsR binding sites, suggesting that dual regulation of clpP by both HrcA and CtsR also occurs in S. thermophilus. We recently reported the existence in S. aureus of a significant regulatory overlap between class I and class III stress response genes, since the entire HrcA regulon (consisting of the dnaK and groESL operons) is embedded within the CtsR regulon (Fig. 4), with both operons being preceded by tandemly arranged operator sites for the two repressors (1). Furthermore, comparative genome analysis allowed us to predict the existence in many gram-positive bacteria of a partial overlap between class I and class III genes, particularly in the streptococcal group (S. pneumoniae, S. pyogenes, S. mutans, S. agalactiae, and L. lactis) (Fig. 4), in which only the groESL operon presents both the highly conserved CIRCE-HrcA recognition sequence and the CtsR target site organized in tandem (2). This dual regulation is probably not redundant, since we have shown that in S. aureus, CtsR and HrcA act together synergistically to maintain low levels of expression of the dnaK and groESL operons in the absence of stress (1).
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FIG. 4. Dual regulation by CtsR and HrcA in different gram-positive bacteria. In bacilli the two regulons are distinct, whereas in streptococci they partially overlap, and the HrcA regulon is entirely embedded within the CtsR regulon in staphylococci. clpP of S. salivarius is the first example of a clp gene that is dually regulated by both HrcA and CtsR.
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This work was supported by research funds from the European Commission (grant QLRT-1999-01455); the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, Institut Pasteur, Université Paris 7; the Programme de Recherche Fondamentale en Microbiologie, Maladies Infectieuses et Parasitaires of the Ministère de la Recherche; and the Délégation Générale pour l'Armement. Arnaud Chastanet was the recipient of a Ph.D. thesis fellowship from the Ministère de la Recherche.
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A-like promoter and the roles of the inverted repeat sequence (CIRCE). J. Bacteriol. 177:5427-5433.
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