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Journal of Bacteriology, December 2003, p. 7176-7183, Vol. 185, No. 24
0021-9193/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JB.185.24.7176-7183.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Department of Chemistry and Biotechnology, Agricultural University of Norway, N-1432 Ås, Norway
Received 20 June 2003/ Accepted 22 September 2003
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Although much has been learned about natural transformation in streptococci over the past decade, some important questions remain to be answered. One such question concerns the origin of the naked DNA taken up by competent cells, the so-called donor DNA. Traditionally it has been believed that DNA released from dead bacteria constitutes the only source of donor DNA and that donor DNA will always be present in the natural habitats of competent streptococci. In contrast to this view, evidence has recently been presented indicating that a DNA release mechanism is operating during competence to ensure that donor DNA is available at the appropriate time (25). When a population of S. pneumoniae is induced to competence, a subfraction of the cell population will lyse and release its contents to the surroundings. DNA release and DNA uptake reach their maxima at about the same time, demonstrating that release of DNA from the donor cells is coordinated in time and space with uptake by the recipients (25). So far, the DNA release mechanism has not been fully elucidated, but it is known to be influenced by cell density and to be under control of the same quorum-sensing system that regulates competence development (ComCDE) (25). In addition, evidence has been obtained indicating that LytA and maybe additional choline-binding proteins (CBPs) are involved (25). In the present work, experiments were carried out to discern between autolysis and heterolysis (we define heterolysis as the lysis of one bacterium brought about by another). Our results show that competent pneumococci are capable of lysing noncompetent pneumococci of the same strain during cocultivation. These results suggest that heterolysis rather than autolysis is the mechanism of DNA release in a competent population of S. pneumoniae. However, it cannot be ruled out that both mechanisms operate simultaneously.
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View this table: [in a new window] |
TABLE 1. Bacterial
strains and plasmids
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350-bp internal
region of the lytA gene. Purified genomic DNA from strain
CP1415 was used as a template. The resulting PCR fragment was cloned
into the pCR2.1-TOPO vector (Invitrogen) according to the
manufacturer's recommendations. The DNA fragment was excised by
SpeI and ApaI and ligated into multiple cloning site
II (MCS-II) of the vector pFW13
(20), precleaved with the
same enzymes. The ligation reaction was used to transform chemically
competent TOP10 cells (Invitrogen), and positive clones were selected
on agar plates containing 50 µg of kanamycin/ml. The
insertion-duplication mutant was made by natural transformation of
EK4166 by using purified pFW13 containing the amplified 350-bp
fragment. To verify that the correct mutant had been made, a PCR was
performed using primer LYTA.3
(5'-GAACAGATTTGCCTCAAGTCGGCG-3'),
located upstream of primer LYTA.1, and primer PFW13.4
(5'-TAACCGTATTACCGCCTTTG-3'),
located downstream of MCS-II in pFW13. A PCR product of the
expected size was obtained, demonstrating that the pFW13 plasmid had
integrated into the lytA gene. The H4 mutant also had the
expected phenotype. It did not autolyze in the stationary phase even in
the presence of 0.1% Triton X-100.
The H5 mutant was
constructed in the same way as the H4 mutant. PCR was performed with
the primers LytC.1
(5'-TTAAGCATGCGAATGTCGGCTGGGTTCACAGAGATGG-3')
and LytC.2
(5'-TTAAGGATCCCTCAACATCATAATAGATAGGGTAAGACAGG-3')
containing SphI and BamHI sites at their
5' ends, respectively. The resulting
380-bp internal
fragment of the lytC gene was then cloned into the pCR2.1-TOPO
vector. The cloned PCR fragment was excised from the pCR2.1-TOPO vector
with SphI and BamHI and ligated into the pEVP3 vector
(4), predigested with the
same restriction enzymes. Finally, the H5 mutant was constructed by
transforming competent EK100 cells with approximately 1 µg of
purified pEVP3 containing the 380-bp lytC fragment.
Insertion-duplication mutants were selected on agar plates containing
2.5 µg of chloramphenicol/ml. To confirm that the correct
LytC- mutant had been made, control PCRs were
carried out using genomic DNA from selected transformants as templates.
LytC.3 (5'-CAGATGGTCGTTACTCGCA-GAATG-3'),
corresponding to a sequence in the lytC gene
upstream of the site of integration, was used in combination with
pEVP3.3 (5'-GTAACTTCCACAGTAGTTCACCACC-3')
or PEVP3.4
(5'-CCCGGTCGACCCGTAATCTTACGTC-3').
These primers are complementary to sequences in the pEVP3
vector. The resulting PCR fragments were of the expected sizes,
demonstrating that the lytC gene had been disrupted and that
pEVP3 had been inserted in the correct orientation, placing the
promoterless lacZ gene of the pEVP3 vector under control of
the lytC promoter.
Rimini et al.
(23) have shown that the
rate of transcription of two small open reading frames termed
orf62 and orf51 increases about 12-fold upon
competence development. There is also a cin-box located immediately
upstream of the start codon of orf62, showing that
orf62 and orf51 belong to the ComX regulon. To be
able to monitor expression of the late genes under various growth
conditions, we wanted to construct a mutant containing a
ß-galactosidase reporter system controlled by the
orf62-orf51 promoter. This was carried out by amplifying a
270-bp DNA fragment corresponding to about half of
orf62 and the complete orf51 by PCR using the primers
orf62.1 (5'-CTCGCTCCCTTGGTTATCTTTGGAG-3')
and orf51.2
(5'-CTAGCATGACTTACCAAACTTTTTACGAAGG-3').
The DNA fragment was first cloned into the pCR2.1-TOPO
vector, then excised using the pCR2.1-TOPO polylinker restriction
enzymes BamHI and NsiI, and finally ligated into the
pEVP3 vector, precleaved with BamHI and NsiI.
Purified pEVP3 vector harboring the 270-bp fragment was then used to
transform the EK100 strain by natural transformation. Colonies growing
on agar plates containing 2.5 µg of chloramphenicol/ml were
isolated and tested for ß-galactosidase activity in the
presence and absence of CSP-1. A mutant termed S1 that had the expected
phenotype was isolated. It produced no ß-galactosidase in the
absence of CSP-1, but the addition of 250 ng of this peptide
pheromone/ml induced strong expression of the ß-galactosidase
enzyme.
The EH1 strain is identical to EK4166, except that its
comE gene is replaced by a Kanr
cassette via double-crossover recombinations. To make the
EH1 strain, we took advantage of the pFW13 vector, which contains a
kanamycin resistance gene flanked by two MCSs, MCS-I and
MCS-II. An
880-bp DNA fragment, corresponding to
the region immediately upstream of the comE gene, was
amplified by PCR using the primers ComE.56
(5'-TTAAGCTAGCATCTTTCGTTTCAGATATGGTAAGTACG-3')
and ComE.57
(5'-TTAAGACGTCCATCCAATATTCTCTCTAGTCTCACTTGATG-3')
and ligated into the pCR2.1-TOPO vector as described above.
The DNA fragment was excised by AatII and NheI and
cloned into MCS-I of pFW13. Next, a
750-bp DNA fragment,
corresponding to the region immediately downstream of the comE
gene, was amplified by PCR using the primers comE.53
(5'-ATTACCATGGTCTCAAAAGTGATTGACAATTAGCAAG-3')
and comE.55
(5'-ATTACATATGGCTATGGTACAATTACTGATGGAACAGCC-3')
and cloned into the pCR2.1-TOPO vector. The fragment was
excised from the pCR2.1-TOPO vector with NcoI and
NdeI and ligated into MCS-II of the pFW13 vector harboring the
880-bp fragment in MCS-I. Using this construct as a template and
comE.55 and comE.56 as primers, we amplified a
3,500-bp
fragment consisting of the Kanr gene flanked with the two
cloned fragments described above. This linear DNA fragment was then
used to transform the EK4166 strain by natural transformation. A
transformant growing on agar plates containing 150 µg of
kanamycin/ml was isolated and assayed for transformability by using
genomic DNA from the novobiocin-resistant strain CP1500. The
transformant, termed EH1, turned out to be completely noncompetent,
demonstrating that the Kanr cassette most likely had
replaced the comE gene. To further verify that this was the
case, the site of integration of the Kanr cassette was
examined by PCR. The reaction was carried out with genomic DNA from
EH1, the primer tArg2
(5'-CATAGCTCAGCTGGATAGAGCATTCGCCTTC-3)
that is complementary to the Arg-tRNA gene upstream of the
comCDE operon, and the primer pFW13.6
(CATTTATTTACCTCCTTTT-GGTTACCTCAC-3) that is
complementary to the promoter region of the Kanr gene.
Analysis of the PCR by agarose gel electrophoresis revealed a single
band of the expected size, demonstrating that the Kanr
cassette had integrated at the correct
location.
ß-galactosidase release assay. An overnight culture of the bacterial strain was diluted to an optical density at 550 nm (OD550) of 0.1 in prewarmed (37°C) CAT medium and incubated until it reached an OD of 0.3. To ensure vigorous growth, it was rediluted to an OD550 of 0.05 and incubated further. When the culture reached an OD of 0.1, two 10-ml samples were withdrawn and induced to competence by addition of 250 ng of CSP-1 (NH2-EMRLSKFFRDFILQRKK-COOH)/ml, incubated for 30 min, and placed on ice. The cells in the first sample were immediately removed by centrifugation at 2,500 x g for 10 min at 4°C. Then the supernatant was sterile filtered using a 0.2-µm-pore-size filter and stored on ice until assayed. In order to measure the total ß-galactosidase activity in the culture, the cells in the second sample were lysed by incubating the culture for 10 min at 37°C with 0.1% Triton X-100. Following lysis, the culture was kept on ice until assayed. Samples were collected at regular intervals during logarithmic growth (OD550s of 0.1 and 0.2, etc.). Uninduced samples were always run in parallel as negative controls. All samples were assayed for ß-galactosidase activity as described previously (25). Cocultivation experiments were performed in the same way, except that 5 ml of each strain was mixed when the OD550 of each culture reached 0.1 and 0.2, etc. In the experiment in which the effect of temperature on ß-galactosidase release was examined, the cultures were placed at their respective temperatures 30 min before competence was induced by the addition of 250 ng of CSP-1/ml. At this stage, the OD550s of the cultures had reached approximately 0.35. Apart from this, the assay was carried out as described above.
Cocultivation transformation assay. To measure the efficiency of gene exchange between two strains growing in liquid medium, a cocultivation assay was developed. Overnight cultures of the two strains H2 (ComA- ComE- Novr) and A1 (ComA- Rifr) were diluted to OD550s of 0.05 and incubated at 37°C until they reached OD550s of 0.2. To ensure vigorous growth, both cultures were diluted once more to OD550s of 0.05 and incubated further at 37°C. When they reached OD550s of 0.1, 0.2, and 0.4, 0.5 ml from each culture (H2 and A1) was withdrawn and mixed in a 15-ml plastic tube containing 250 ng of CSP-1. The mixed strains were incubated at 37°C for 30 min, diluted four times with prewarmed CAT medium, and then further incubated at 37°C for 60 min before being plating onto CAT agar plates containing 2 µg of rifampin/ml and 5 µg of novobiocin/ml. After incubation of the plates at 37°C for 24 to 48 h, the number of transformants resistant to both antibiotics was determined. Uninduced samples were run in parallel as negative controls. Identical gene exchange assays were carried out by cocultivating strains H3 and H6 and strains A1 and H1.
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To further elucidate the mechanism behind competence-induced cell lysis, we asked ourselves whether transfer of DNA can take place between a competence-inducible strain and a competence-deficient strain of S. pneumoniae. In order to answer this question, a cocultivation experiment was carried out with the two S. pneumoniae strains A1 (ComA- Rifr) and H2 (ComA- ComE- Novr). Vigorously growing cultures of A1 and H2 were mixed in equal amounts at OD550s of 0.1, 0.2, and 0.4, subjected to 250 ng of CSP-1/ml, incubated for 1.5 h at 37°C, and spread onto agar plates containing 2 µg of rifampin/ml and 5 µg of novobiocin/ml (see Materials and Methods for details). The plates were incubated at 37°C, and the number of transformants resistant to both antibiotics was determined the next day. The results presented in Table 2 show that competence-induced A1 cells must have taken up DNA released from the competence-deficient H2 strain. In a negative control experiment run in parallel, CSP-1 was omitted. As expected, no transformant was obtained in this experiment. The Novr DNA taken up by the A1 cells may have originated from dead H2 cells and been present in the growth medium of the H2 cells before they were mixed with the A1 cells. Alternatively, release of Novr DNA may have been an active process mediated by the A1 cells after they had been induced to competence by addition of CSP-1. To discern between these two mechanisms, we set up a cocultivation experiment in which the competence-deficient (ComE-) strain EH1 expressing Escherichia coli ß-galactosidase from a constitutive promoter was mixed with an equal amount of the competence-inducible strain EK100 lacking this enzyme. When the EK100 strain was induced to competence by addition of CSP-1, cytoplasmic ß-galactosidase from the EH1 strain was released to the growth medium. However, very little ß-galactosidase activity was detected in the medium of the negative control, i.e., when no CSP-1 had been added to the mixed culture (Fig. 1). Furthermore, when CSP-1 was added to a culture consisting only of the EH1 strain, no release of ß-galactosidase was detected (results not shown). These results can only be explained by a release mechanism that involves heterolysis, i.e., lysis of the competence-deficient EH1 strain by the competent EK100 strain.
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TABLE 2. Cocultivation
of a competence-inducible strain (A1) and a competence-deficient strain
at different densities during logarithmic growth
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FIG. 1. Competence-induced
release of intracellular ß-galactosidase into the growth medium
during cocultivation of S. pneumoniae strains EH1 and EK100.
The EH1 strain is competence deficient and expresses
ß-galactosidase from a constitutive promoter. In contrast, the
EK100 strain is competence inducible but ß-galactosidase
deficient. Cultures of EH1 and EK100 growing in parallel were mixed at
a ratio of 1:1 when they reached OD550s of 0.1 and 0.2, etc.
After 30 min with or without CSP-1, samples were collected for analysis
of ß-galactosidase activity. Both cell-free growth medium
(supernatants) and cell lysates (supernatants and lysed cells) were
assayed. The amount of ß-galactosidase present in the
supernatants (estimated in Miller units) is given as a percentage of
the total activity present in the cell lysates. Black columns represent
cocultivation in the presence of 250 ng of CSP-1/ml. Grey columns
represent cocultivation in the absence of CSP-1. The results shown are
representative of results from three separate
experiments.
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FIG. 2. Release
of cytoplasmic ß-galactosidase from the competence-deficient
EH1 strain during cocultivation with strain EK100. The EK100 strain is
competence inducible when CSP-1 is added but is completely without
endogenous ß-galactosidase activity. When cultures of the two
strains both reached an OD550 of 0.4, they were mixed at
different ratios and 250 ng of CSP-1/ml was added immediately. After 30
min, samples were harvested and cell-free supernatants and cell lysates
(supernatants and lysed cells) were prepared and assayed for
ß-galactosidase activity. Uninduced samples were run in
parallel as negative controls. The amount of ß-galactosidase
present in the supernatants (estimated in Miller units) is given as a
percentage of the total activity present in the cell lysates. Closed
squares represent results for supernatants from CSP-1-induced cells,
and open squares represent results for supernatants from uninduced
cells. The experiment was repeated several times with similar
results.
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FIG. 3. Comparison
of strains EK4166 and H4 with respect to the level of
competence-induced release of cytoplasmic ß-galactosidase. The
lytA gene of strain H4 has been disrupted, but otherwise the
strain is identical to EK4166. At different cell densities
(OD550s of 0.1 to 0.7), samples were withdrawn and induced
to competence by adding 250 ng of synthetic CSP-1/ml. After 30 min at
37°C, cell-free supernatants were prepared and assayed for
ß-galactosidase activity. Corresponding uninduced samples were
run in parallel as negative controls. Closed squares, activity in
supernatants from CSP-1-induced EK4166 cells; open squares, activity in
supernatants from uninduced EK4166 cells; closed circles, activity in
supernatants from CSP-1-induced H4 cells; open circles, activity in
supernatants from uninduced H4 cells. The ß-galactosidase
activity is given in Miller units, and amounts shown are the means
± standard errors of results for triplicate
samples.
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FIG. 4. Influence
of LytA on efficiency of gene exchange in vitro. Two LytA-deficient
S. pneumoniae strains, H3 (Novr) and H6
(Rifr), were mixed at three different densities
(OD550s of 0.1, 0.2, and 0.4) and induced to competence by
adding 250 ng of CSP-1/ml. After cocultivation for 1.5 h,
cells were plated onto agar plates containing rifampin and novobiocin
and incubated at 37°C. Transformants were scored the next day.
The two strains H1 (Novr) and A1 (Rifr), both
containing intact lytA genes, were treated in the same way.
Black columns represent numbers of transformants obtained by
cocultivation of H1 and A1, while white columns represent numbers of
transformants obtained by cocultivation of the LytA-deficient strains
H3 and H6. Values shown are numbers of CFU of transformants per
milliliter and are the means ± standard errors of results for
triplicate samples. Uninduced samples, receiving no peptide pheromone,
were run in parallel as negative controls. The numbers of transformants
observed in uninduced samples ranged from 0 to 200
CFU/ml.
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FIG. 5. Effect
of temperature on competence-induced release of cytoplasmic
ß-galactosidase from S. pneumoniae. Strain EK4166 was
induced to competence at five different temperatures by addition of 250
ng of CSP-1/ml (black columns). Both cell-free supernatants and cell
lysates (supernatants and lysed cells) were assayed for
ß-galactosidase activity. The amount of ß-galactosidase
present in the supernatants (estimated in Miller units) is given as a
percentage of the total activity present in the cell lysates.
Corresponding uninduced samples were run in parallel as negative
controls (grey columns). This experiment has been repeated several
times with similar
results.
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FIG. 6. Competence-induced
release of ß-galactosidase from the LytC-deficient H5 strain
during logarithmic growth. Samples were collected at different cell
densities (OD550s of 0.1 to 0.7) and induced to competence
by adding 250 ng of CSP-1/ml (black columns). Both cell-free
supernatants and cell lysates (cells and supernatants) were assayed for
ß-galactosidase activity. The amount of ß-galactosidase
present in the supernatants (estimated in Miller units) is given as a
percentage of the total activity present in the cell lysates.
Corresponding uninduced samples were run in parallel as negative
controls (grey columns). The presented data are representative of
results from three independent
experiments.
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Unexpectedly, the lysis mechanism works very poorly, if at all, at 40°C (Fig. 5). Our results indicate that the temperature-sensitive step is downstream of comX, since transcriptional activation of the late genes functions normally at 40°C. Presumably, a late-gene product which constitutes a critical part of the lysis machinery does not function at this temperature. Another possibility is that Brownian movements, which are more intense at 40°C, disrupt stable cell-to-cell contact, preventing heterolysis.
Most likely, gene exchange under natural conditions takes place in complex multispecies biofilms, where there is close contact between individual cells. In oral streptococci such as S. mitis and S. gordonii, this contact is mediated by surface-exposed proteins called coaggregation adhesins (22). Presumably, pneumococci rely on similar surface proteins to make contact with one another and other species in the biofilm community. To better understand how gene exchange takes place under natural conditions, it is important to understand exactly how DNA is released from the donor cells and how this process is regulated. In a batch culture, competence is triggered when the concentration of CSP-1 reaches 1 to 10 ng/ml, corresponding to about 107 cells/ml. Within a biofilm community, diffusion of the CSP-1 peptide is probably much more restricted and competence most likely develops among small clusters of cells belonging to the same pherotype. Our results suggest that competent cells in such clusters can lyse neighboring cells by expressing cell wall-degrading enzymes such as LytA on their surfaces. We therefore postulate that competent streptococci actively acquire DNA by killing their neighbors. This contrasts with the traditional view in which it is assumed that DNA taken up by competent bacteria originates from donor bacteria that have died and fallen apart from natural causes.
This work was supported by a grant from the Research Council of Norway.
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