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Journal of Bacteriology, November 2003, p. 6562-6574, Vol. 185, No. 22
0021-9193/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JB.185.22.6562-6574.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Bacterial Physiology and Genetics, BioCentrum-DTU, Technical University of Denmark, DK-2800 Kgs. Lyngby, Denmark
Received 16 May 2003/ Accepted 26 August 2003
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FIG. 1. Pathways for the synthesis of CTP and the salvage of cytidine in L. lactis. UR, uridine; CR, cytidine; carAB, carbamoylphosphate synthase gene; pyrB, aspartate transcarbamylase gene; pyrC, dihydroorotase gene; pyrD, dihydroorotate dehydrogenase gene; pyrE, orotate phosphoribosyltransferase gene; pyrF, OMP decarboxylase gene; pyrH, UMP kinase gene; pyrG, CTP synthase gene; udk, uridine kinase gene; cdd, cytidine deaminase gene; nup, cytidine/purine nucleoside transporter gene.
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In this study, regulation of the pyrG gene from L. lactis, including a correlation between pyrG expression and the CTP pool, was investigated. Expression from a pyrG::lacLM fusion during CTP limitation was determined, and it was found that a decreased CTP pool size results in increased pyrG expression. To gain insight into the mechanism behind pyrG regulation, the rate of synthesis from the pyrG gene after a sudden drop in the CTP pool was studied, and it was found that pyrG expression is not linear during the first almost 2.5 h of CTP limitation. Profound alterations in macromolecular biosynthesis affecting both RNA and protein synthesis were observed during CTP limitation. A model for the regulation of pyrG is presented, in which a terminator-antiterminator mechanism independent of additional protein factors is responsible for the regulation. A similar mechanism can be proposed for pyrG regulation in a number of gram-positive organisms.
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Bacterial strains and plasmids. The bacterial strains and plasmids used in this work are described in Table 1. Plasmid pCJ24 carries an internal fragment of pyrG and was constructed by digesting pSH105 (35) with HindIII and BamHI and subsequently transferring a 1.1-kb fragment to the integration vector pSMA500 (19) cleaved with HindIII and BamHI. The ligated plasmid was transformed to competent ABLE K cells (Stratagene, La Jolla, Calif.) and plated on Luria-Bertani plates containing 150 µg of erythromycin per ml.
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TABLE 1. Bacterial strains and plasmids used in this study
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Plasmids containing parts of the pyrG leader were cloned in the TOPO TA cloning kit from Invitrogen. The cloned fragments were made by PCR with primers pyrGupF2 and either pyrGdel_1 (5'-TCTCGGATCCAAAGAAATAACTGGGAAA-3'), pyrGdel_2 (5'-CCTCGGATCCAAAAACAAAAACAGCTCCCC-3'), or pyrGdel_3 (5'-TCTCGGATCCGGGGAGCCTACCGTTACTG-3'). HindIII-BamHI fragments were transferred to the vector pAK80, resulting in pCJ34, pCJ35, and pCJ36, respectively.
DNA isolation. Chromosomal DNA from L. lactis was isolated as previously described (13). Plasmid DNA from E. coli cells was purified by using the Qiagen plasmid midi kit.
Transformation. E. coli cells were made competent with CaCl2 and transformed as described previously (30). L. lactis cells were transformed by electroporation as described previously (10).
Isolation of pyrG mutants. An L. lactis strain with a transposon inserted in the pyrG gene was isolated in a cdd derivative of MG1363 (MB109). The mutant was isolated from a transposon library by using pGh9:ISS1 as previously described (15). The library was isolated on GSA defined medium containing 20 µg of cytidine per ml. From this library, 5 ml of GSA medium containing 20 µg of uracil per ml was inoculated to an optical density at 436 nm (OD436) of 0.1 and grown for 5 h at 37°C. Ampicillin was added to 100 µg/ml, and the culture was incubated overnight at 37°C. Cells were harvested and washed with 0.9% NaCl, and 100 µl from this cell suspension as well as 100 µl from a 10x dilution was plated on GSA plates with 50 µg of cytidine per ml and incubated for 3 days at 37°C. Colonies were screened for growth on plates with and without cytidine or uracil. Fifteen colonies with a specific cytidine requirement were restreaked twice at 28°C to select for excision of the plasmid and twice at 37°C to cure the plasmid from the strain. An isolated strain with a cytidine requirement and an erythromycin-sensitive phenotype was kept as CJ295. The ISS1 element was inserted in the pyrG open reading frame as verified by PCR on chromosomal DNA from CJ295. To isolate mutants with the reporter genes lacLM under control of the pyrG promoter, competent L. lactis cells carrying a cdd mutation (MB109) were transformed with plasmid pCJ24 or pCJ30, resulting in CJ217 and CJ240A, respectively. After transformation, erythromycin-resistant colonies were isolated and purified on GSA plates with erythromycin and cytidine. The presence of the integrated plasmid in the pyrG region was verified by the cytidine requirement of strain CJ217 as well as by PCR analysis of chromosomal DNA from CJ217 and CJ240A. The genetic organizations of the pyrG region in CJ217, CJ240A, and CJ295 are shown in Fig. 2.
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FIG. 2. (A) Nucleotide sequence of the noncoding region in front of pyrG. The numbers refer to the sequence found in the EMBL data library (accession number AJ010153). The -10 and -35 sequences of the putative promoter are shown. (B) Genetic maps of the pyrG regions in the strains used in this study. Grey boxes indicate plasmids with the reporter genes lacLM integrated in the chromosome. Arrows indicate the position of the putative pyrG promoter. The maps are not drawn to scale.
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ß-Galactosidase activity was determined at 30°C as previously described (30) except that the cell density was measured at 436 nm and the specific activity was determined as OD420/(OD436 per minute per milliliter of culture).
RNA extraction. L. lactis RNA was harvested from strain MG1363 grown exponentially in SA glucose medium to an OD450 of approximately 0.8. Total RNA from 200 ml of culture was isolated by using the Fast Prep system (BIO101) with the protocols of the manufacturer.
RT-PCR. L. lactis RNA was used as the template in the Titan one-tube reverse transcription-PCR (RT-PCR) system from Boehringer Mannheim (product number 1 888 382) in accordance with the protocols of the manufacturer. As a control, conventional PCR was conducted on both chromosomal DNA and the RNA. The following primer pairs were used: A, SLLH17 (5'-GGCAAATTGATATTGCACTTG-3') and SLLH18 (5'-AAAAAGAATGTTGTCTACGGCTTGG-3'); B, SLLH19 (5'-CAACTAAGTATATTTTCGTCACTGG-3') and pyrG9b (5'-TCAGTAACAAAAACTTCCCC-3'); C, SLLH17 and pyrGb9; and D, pyrG8a (5'-GGCAAAAAATTCTTCGTT-3') and SLLH7 (5'-TACAAAAGATTTTGGGC-3').
Determination of intracellular nucleoside triphosphate concentrations. Nucleotides were extracted from [33P]orthophosphate-labeled cell cultures and separated by thin-layer chromatography as previously described (23).
Determination of RNA and protein synthesis. For pulse-labeling of RNA, 600 µl of culture was mixed with 1 µl of [14C]adenine (50 µCi/ml) and 3 µl of 10 mM adenine to a final adenine concentration of 55 µM. Pulse-labeling of proteins was done by adding 2.6 µl of [14C]leucine (50 µCi/ml) to 220 µl of culture (the concentration of leucine in SA medium is 0.8 mM [12]). After 10 min of labeling with either [14C]adenine or [14C]leucine, 200 µl of culture was transferred to a tube with 3 ml of cold 5% trichloroacetic acid (TCA) and put on ice for 0.5 to 1.5 h. The precipitated macromolecules were collected on a membrane filter (0.45-µm pore size; Schleicher & Schuell, Dassel/Reliehausen, Germany), washed twice with cold 5% TCA and once with boiling water, and left to air dry (5). The radioactivity on the filters was counted in an Instant Imager.
mRNA half-life determinations. Determination of mRNA half-life was based on a method described previously (36). A 1.65-ml portion of culture was mixed with 11 µl of [14C]adenine (50 µCi/ml) and 8 µl of 10 mM adenine and pulse-labeled for 4 min. At time zero, actinomycin D was added to a final concentration of 4 µg/ml and nalidixic acid was added to a final concentration of 20 µg/ml in order to stop transcription. At different time intervals between 0 and 10 min and at 60 min, 200 µl of labeled culture was mixed with 3 ml of cold 5% TCA and left on ice for 30 to 60 min. Precipitated RNA was collected on a membrane and treated as described above. The mean of the values obtained at 8, 10, and 60 min after inhibition of transcription was taken to represent stable RNA, a value which was subtracted from the values obtained at 0, 1, 2, 4, and 6 min.
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TABLE 2. Regulation of pyrG::lacLM fusion in L. lactis
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FIG. 3. RT-PCR analysis of transcription of yeiG, pyrG, and orf in L. lactis. (A) Physical map of the pyrG region from L. lactis. Numbering refers to the DNA sequence submitted to the EMBL data library and assigned accession number AJ010153. The theoretical PCR products are shown. a, PCR fragment obtainable with oligonucleotides SLLH17 and SLLH18; b, PCR fragment obtainable with oligonucleotides SLLH19 and pyrG9b; c, PCR fragment obtainable with oligonucleotides SLLH17 and pyrG9b; d, PCR fragment obtainable with oligonucleotides pyrG8a and SLLH7. (B) Agarose gel electrophoresis of the RT-PCR products. Lanes PCR/DNA, ordinary PCR with DNA as the template; lanes RT-PCR, RT-PCR with RNA as the template; PCR/RNA, PCR with RNA as the template. a, b, c, and d refer to the theoretical PCR fragments shown in panel A. Lanes M, 1-kb Plus DNA ladder from GibcoBRL.
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The expression of pyrG is repressed by cytidine. To investigate whether pyrG expression is affected by addition of cytidine, strain CJ238, containing the plasmid with the pyrG promoter controlling expression of lacLM, was grown in the presence of cytidine (Table 2). Expression from the reporter genes was reduced by 40% compared to growth in the absence of cytidine. Uridine does not repress pyrG expression. These results suggest that expression of pyrG is regulated at the level of transcription by the availability of cytidine compounds, as proposed for B. subtilis (25).
Limitation of cytidine availability results in increased pyrG expression. In order to test whether pyrG expression in L. lactis is subject to changes during CTP depletion, a chromosomal fusion which carries the lacLM reporter genes under control of the pyrG promoter was constructed. Strain CJ217 (Fig. 2) was constructed by a chromosomal integration of plasmid pCJ24, which carries an internal fragment of pyrG in front of the reporter genes. This strain contains a truncated pyrG gene and has a cytidine requirement for growth. Moreover, cytidine degradation is prevented, since the strain has no cytidine deaminase activity due to an inactive cdd gene. As shown previously, an L. lactis cdd pyrG mutant grown with cytidine has a growth rate and intracellular nucleotide concentrations similar to those of the wild-type strain (23). The pyrG::lacLM fusion strain was grown with a limited concentration of cytidine in the growth medium, resulting in a decline in growth rate when the supplied cytidine had been utilized (Fig. 4A). Determination of the intracellular concentrations of nucleoside triphosphates revealed that the cells were indeed starved for CTP, since the concentration of CTP was below the level of detection at the onset of the growth arrest (Fig. 4B). The ß-galactosidase activity encoded by the lacLM reporter genes was assayed in order to monitor expression of the pyrG gene. No increase in expression was detected, even after 24 h of CTP starvation (specific activity, 1.3 U/OD unit), compared to cells grown without cytidine limitation (specific activity, 3.7 U/OD unit), showing that expression from the pyrG gene is not induced when the cell is completely starved for cytidine.
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FIG. 4. Growth curves (A and C) and nucleotide pool size changes (B and D) during starvation or limitation for cytidine. A cdd pyrG::lacLM mutant was grown in GSA defined medium. (A and B) Cytidine starvation. Cells were grown either with 20 µg of cytidine per ml () or with a limited amount of cytidine ( ). Time zero indicates the point of reduced growth rate at an OD436 of 0.4. (C and D) Cytidine limitation. Cells were grown with cytidine ( ) or with cytidine plus uridine (). Uridine (500 µg/ml) was added at time zero at an OD436 of 0.2.
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The effect on pyrG expression in a L. lactis pyrG mutant during CTP limitation was also investigated in liquid medium with cytidine. As shown in Table 2, the addition of uridine, deoxycytidine, or adenosine to strain CJ217 resulted in a decrease in growth rate and increased expression from the pyrG-lacLM chromosomal fusion when measured after two generations of growth with CTP limitation. Uridine and deoxycytidine resulted in a 15-fold induction, whereas adenosine increased expression only sixfold. In order to test whether all regulatory signals needed for pyrG regulation are present on the sequence immediately in front of the pyrG open reading frame, a pyrG mutant with an ISS1 element inserted in the gene (CJ295) (Fig. 2) was transformed with the promoter fusion clone pCJ29. The cloned promoter fragment is responsible for the observed regulation of pyrG, since CTP limitation by uridine, adenosine, or deoxycytidine addition resulted in induction ratios of 18-, 5-, and 16-fold, respectively. These ratios are identical to those observed for the chromosomal pyrG::lacLM fusion in CJ217. These results show that all required regulatory elements are present immediately upstream of pyrG and furthermore that the regulatory mechanism is fully functional even when multiple copies of the elements are present in the cell.
Determination of nucleotide pool sizes and pyrG transcriptional rate during CTP limitation. Expression from the pyrG-lacLM chromosomal fusion during growth inhibition by uridine was analyzed in detail. Ribonucleoside triphosphate pool sizes during growth inhibition by uridine were determined, and the results clearly show that addition of uridine results in an instantaneous lowering of the CTP pool by more than one order of magnitude (Fig. 4C and D). Simultaneously, a threefold increase in UTP concentration and a twofold increase in GTP concentration were observed. No significant change in the ATP pool size was observed.
Figure 5A shows the rate of synthesis from the reporter genes lacLM under control of the pyrG promoter during CTP limitation. The slope of the curve for uninduced cells is 3.1, which, as expected, is similar to the specific activity found in Table 2 for CJ217 (3.7 ± 1.4 U/OD unit). After uridine was added and the CTP concentration was lowered, pyrG expression immediately increased ninefold to 28 U/OD unit. Expression from the pyrG-lacLM gene fusion did not, however, attain a new steady-state level but gradually increased until 140 min of CTP limitation, when a final induction of 37-fold was reached. Growth of the pyrG mutant for more than two generations after this point resulted in no further increase in expression; i.e., full induction of the pyrG-lacLM fusion is first observed after more than 1.5 generations of growth during CTP limitation.
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FIG. 5. Synthesis of pyrG, RNA, and protein during CTP limitation. (A) Rate of synthesis from a pyrG::lacLM chromosomal fusion mutant (CJ217) grown in GSA defined medium with cytidine ( ) or with cytidine and uridine (). (B and C) Synthesis of RNA (squares) and protein (triangles), respectively, either during growth with cytidine (open symbols) or during growth with cytidine and uridine (CTP limitation) (closed symbols). Uridine (500 µg/ml) was added at an OD436 of 0.2. The amount of incorporated labeled adenine or leucine in a 10-min pulse-labeling is set to 100 for the first determination for cells grown only with cytidine in the medium and is plotted against the OD value after 5 min of labeling.
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TABLE 3. Effects of varying nucleotide pool sizes on expression from a pyrG::lacLM fusion.
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A correlation between CTP concentration and pyrG expression in L. lactis. Distorted nucleotide pool sizes were also achieved by the use of decoyinine, an inhibitor of GMP synthase and hence of GTP synthesis. Addition of decoyinine to strain CJ238, which harbors plasmid pCJ29, reduced the growth rate threefold and not only reduced the GTP pool but also caused a general reduction in pool sizes (Table 3). These reduced pool sizes were followed by an increased pyrG expression from 76 to 126 U/OD unit. Next, the cells were inhibited with decoyinine in the presence of cytidine. Cells inhibited with decoyinine had a higher CTP pool when grown with cytidine and did not have increased pyrG expression, again suggesting a correlation between the CTP pool size and pyrG expression. The latter experiment also indicates that pyrG expression is not triggered by a reduced growth rate as such.
Figure 6 shows a plot of the activity from the pyrG promoter and the corresponding concentrations of the four nucleotides from the experiments with decoyinine and the pyrB mutant from Table 3. There is a clear correlation between the CTP pool size and expression of pyrG. The pyrG expression is elevated at low CTP concentrations and decreased at high CTP concentrations. No correlation between the ATP, GTP, and UTP pools and the expression of pyrG was found.
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FIG. 6. Correlation between the different nucleoside triphosphate concentrations and expression of pyrG in L. lactis. Plots of ß-galactosidase activity as a measure for pyrG expression and nucleoside triphosphate concentrations for CJ238 and CJ300 under different growth conditions (Table 3) are shown. The nucleoside triphosphate concentration is given in nanomoles per milligram (dry weight), and pyrG expression is presented as units/OD unit.
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Identification of a terminator structure in the pyrG promoter region. As in B. subtilis (25), a terminator structure can be predicted to form in the L. lactis pyrG leader sequence. The existence of this terminator in vivo was supported by deletion analysis of the pyrG leader and subsequent starvation for CTP in a pyrG background. The plasmids pCJ34 and pCJ35 contain the predicted terminator, and transcription is low in these promoter constructs when cytidine is present in the medium; CTP limitation increased expression about 20-fold (Fig. 7). The fragment in pCJ36 lacks half of the terminator stem-loop structure and has high expression from the reporter genes even when cells are grown in the presence of cytidine, suggesting that this structure is required for repression during high CTP concentrations. A threefold regulation, however, was still observed for this construct. This effect has also been reported for B. subtilis and may be a nonspecific effect of the pyrimidine starvation condition (25). Expression from pCJ29 is severalfold higher than expression from the three plasmids in Fig. 7. This is probably due to the presence of the pyrG open reading frame in pCJ29. There are very few base pairs between the stop codons and the ribosome binding site for the lacL gene in the pAK80 vector, which may cause an increase in expression from the reporter genes due to translational coupling to the upstream open reading frame. This is a common phenomenon with this vector (14).
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FIG. 7. Deletion analysis of the pyrG promoter region. The indicated pyrG promoter regions were cloned in the promoter-probe vector pAK80. The plasmids were transformed into a pyrG::ISS1 mutant and grown in defined medium either with cytidine or under CTP-limiting conditions (cytidine plus uridine) by the addition of uridine at a 25-fold excess at an OD436 of 0.2. Cells were harvested at an OD436 of 0.8, and the ß-galactosidase activity was determined. Arrows indicate the two stem-loop structures predicted to form in the leader sequence. The activity of the negative control harboring only the vector pAK80 was determined to be less than 0.02 U/OD unit.
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The results presented here clearly show that expression of the pyrG gene from L. lactis is regulated by the concentration of cytidine nucleotides within the cell, as illustrated in Fig. 6. The conclusion is based on a valid determination of intracellular nucleotide pools. The method is based on labeling of cultures with radioactive phosphate for two generations, immediate quenching and extraction of the nucleotides with 2 M formic acid, and separation of the nucleotides by thin-layer chromatography. The description of the method and the validation of the different steps in the method were presented in a recent paper (23). Reducing the CTP pool either by growth of a pyrG mutant with uridine at a concentration 25 times higher than that of cytidine or by growth with galactose or maltose as a carbon source results in increased pyrG expression. Under all of these growth conditions, the strains have lower growth rates than the uninduced control strain. However, reduction in growth rate is not the mechanism triggering pyrG induction, since decoyinine addition in the presence of cytidine inhibits growth but does not induce pyrG expression (Table 3). Growth inhibition is also observed when pyrimidine uptake in a pyrB mutant (CJ300) is inhibited by addition of inosine; however, this treatment does not reduce the CTP concentration in the cell and gives no pyrG induction (Table 3). The latter experiment also shows that pyrG expression is not induced by a decrease in the UTP pool; the regulation of pyrG is thus specific to cytidine nucleotides. Expression of pyrG in L. lactis is repressed by cytidine, as found in other bacteria (2, 25, 37). The CTP dependence of pyrG expression is similar to what has been proposed for pyrG from B. subtilis (25), but a correlation with CTP pool size was not demonstrated. In this work, nucleotide pool sizes during pyrimidine limitation have been determined and it has been shown directly that the concentration of CTP and pyrG expression are correlated in L. lactis. The fact that pyrG is not induced upon complete CTP starvation is most likely due to a general stop in transcription.
The rate of synthesis from pyrG during uridine-inhibited cytidine phosphorylation in a pyrG mutant was found not to be linear (Fig. 5A). Initially, pyrG is induced 9-fold, but the synthesis rate increases for 1.5 generations to a final induction ratio of 37-fold. This pattern of induction cannot be explained from altered macromolecular synthesis, since neither RNA nor protein synthesis changes with the same kinetics. The low CTP concentration during cytidine limitation is at the limit of detection, and the CTP concentration may therefore decrease further during the growth experiment after uridine addition, not reaching its final lower value until 1.5 generations of growth, where pyrG expression reaches a new steady-state level. It is important to emphasize that the concentration of CTP does not reflect the flow through the CTP pool. The small amount of cytidine phosphorylated to CTP during uridine inhibition is rapidly used for, e.g., RNA production, causing a high turnover of CTP.
When the kinetics of the effects on macromolecular synthesis of cytidine limitation by addition of uridine was monitored (Fig. 5B and C), it was found that the rate of RNA synthesis was immediately changed to 50% of that found in uninhibited cells. In contrast, the rate of protein synthesis was unchanged during the first 15 min of cytidine limitation. The unchanged protein synthesis was not due to an increased mRNA half-life under these growth conditions (data not shown), and therefore we must conclude that the amount of mRNA synthesized during the first 15 min is unaltered compared to that in the control cells without uridine. The 50% inhibition of RNA synthesis observed is thus proposed to be primarily inhibition of stable RNA synthesis. In the final steady state obtained after 1.5 generations of growth, the growth rate is half of the uninhibited growth rate and the number of ribosomes is expected to be reduced. The immediate stop in synthesis of rRNA after uridine addition would help the cells to a fast adjustment to the new growth conditions. The rate of total RNA synthesis during the period after uridine addition was 50% of the uninhibited rate. This is likely to reflect different proportions of stable RNA and mRNA rates during the experiment, as discussed above. In the final steady state, the protein synthesis rate is 75% of the uninhibited rate. These numbers also indicate that a major fraction of RNA made is mRNA and hence that cells with a lower growth rate contain fewer ribosomes and more protein per cell mass. The relationship between the growth rate of a bacterial cell and the content of stable RNA was identified for E. coli and S. enterica serovar Typhimurium by Maaløe and coworkers, and they found that synthesis of rRNA increased with the square of the growth rate (16, 31). Later this was shown to apply for many other bacteria, including L. lactis (4). On the other hand, there has been controversy in the literature as to whether nucleotide pools vary with the growth rate in the same way (7, 28). The different results obtained have been attributed to variations in the methods used for nucleotide pool determinations (32). The results obtained in this study for L. lactis suggest a correlation between growth rate and nucleoside triphosphate pools, as growth on galactose or maltose as a carbon source results in decreased pool sizes. The variance of nucleoside triphosphate pools in L. lactis, however, may not be due to the method used but rather may be a consequence of the relatively simple metabolism of this bacterium, in which sugar is fermented to lactate (homolactic growth, as seen with growth on glucose) or to other acids such as acetate and ethanol (mixed acid fermentation, as seen with growth on galactose or maltose). In E. coli, oxidative phosphorylation, a pathway not active in L. lactis, may have a large influence on the turnover rate of nucleoside triphosphate.
With respect to the mechanism for the CTP-regulated expression of pyrG, it has been shown to be due to termination and antitermination in B. subtilis, and a terminator structure has been identified in the untranslated leader sequence of pyrG (25). In L. lactis, deletion analysis of the pyrG leader also demonstrates that the terminator structure is required for regulation (Fig. 7). pyrG leaders from gram-positive bacteria contain several conserved segments and all have the potential to fold into transcription terminator structures, suggesting similar regulatory mechanisms for pyrG in these bacteria (25). Mutational analysis of the pyrG leader in B. subtilis has identified several interesting points regarding the mechanism of pyrG regulation. The first four nucleotides (GGGC) in the pyrG leader of B. subtilis are required for normal regulation of pyrG, as mutagenesis of these nucleotides results in increased termination under all growth conditions (26). Additionally, it was shown that antitermination during CTP starvation requires the nucleotides GCUCCC in the stem of the terminator structure. Deletion of the nucleotides between these two conserved segments has no effect on regulation of pyrG. It was proposed that a regulatory protein senses the CTP availability and binds to the conserved segments in the pyrG leader during CTP starvation, thereby preventing termination (25). However, the work presented here has revealed that the cloning of the pyrG leader on a plasmid does not lead to titration of an effector, since the fold regulation is conserved despite the copy number. Consequently, another explanation is possible, which does not include a regulatory protein but rather involves the formation of an antiterminator structure. Such a structure is presented in Fig. 8, and the structure includes base pairing between the two identified conserved segments. The predicted terminator-antiterminator structure can be identified in several gram-positive bacteria, including L. lactis, B. subtilis, E. faecalis, Streptococcus pyogenes, Lactobacillus plantarum, and Listeria monocytogenes, suggesting the presence of the structures in these organisms. In Fig. 8 the putative terminator and antiterminator structures of L. lactis, B. subtilis, and E. faecalis are shown. It is interesting that a mutation in the B. subtilis pyrG leader removing base pairs between the two conserved segments (e.g., changing one of the first three Gs to an A) abolishes pyrG regulation whereas a mutation that strengthens the antiterminator (e.g., changing the U at position +5 to a G) increases pyrG expression (26). The region between the two conserved segments is not needed for formation of the antiterminator, explaining the lack of homology in this part of the leader between gram-positive bacteria and the fact that this part can be deleted without loss of regulation (26).
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FIG. 8. Predicted structures of terminators and antiterminators in the 5' pyrG leader sequences from L. lactis (accession number AJ010153) B. subtilis (accession number Z49782), and E. faecalis (accession number AE016950). The first nucleotide in the mRNA is marked +1. The +1 positions in E. faecalis and L. lactis are not supported by experimental evidence, whereas the +1 position of B. subtilis was determined by Meng and Switzer (25). The translational start codons are found further downstream. The stems in the terminator structure are marked by boxes in both the terminator and the antiterminator. +45 and +69 in the structure for L. lactis indicate the deletion points in plasmids pCJ35 and pCJ36 (Fig. 7).
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We appreciate the technical assistance of Jeannette Lundin, the valuable help of Lise Schack (University of Copenhagen) with preparing polyethyleneimine plates, and the help of Ufuk Sumer with construction of plasmids with pyrG leader deletions. We acknowledge Steen Wadskov-Hansen for performing the RT-PCR experiment. We thank Martin Willemoës for reading the manuscript.
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