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Journal of Bacteriology, May 2004, p. 3249-3253, Vol. 186, No. 10
0021-9193/04/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JB.186.10.3249-3253.2004
Copyright © 2004, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Department of Microbiology, University of Virginia School of Medicine, Charlottesville, Virginia 22908-0734
Received 7 October 2003/ Accepted 29 January 2004
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Various models for HilC/D action at the hilA promoter have been proposed from analysis of hilA-lacZ reporters. The expression of 5' truncations of the hilA upstream region suggested that negative elements acted upstream of the promoter and that their repressive effect might be overcome by the HilC/D proteins (22, 23). In contrast, Boddicker et al. (5) found that the HilD protein was required to activate hilA-lacZ transcription even when several negative regulators, Hha, Ams, HilE, and/or Pag, were deleted in combination. Because activation by AraC family members often requires interaction with the C-terminal domain of the
subunit (
-CTD) of RNA polymerase (RNAP) (examples in references 7, 12, and 15), they also showed that the
-CTD L289F variant resulted in greatly decreased hilA-lacZ expression in vivo. Thus, these different studies suggested that HilD could act at the hilA promoter either as a direct activator or indirectly by relieving the action of repressors.
Investigation of the effect of HilC/D on in vitro transcription at the hilA promoter might help resolve these apparently conflicting models by testing whether these proteins affect promoter activity in the absence of other regulatory proteins. We show here that the hilA promoter is active in the absence of repressive proteins, but both HilC/D proteins can further stimulate this activity. The importance of the HilC/D-binding sites in the promoter is determined. The effect of alanine substitutions in
-CTD confirms a role of this domain in activation of hilA during in vivo and in vitro expression, but dependence on this domain was found only under certain inducing conditions.
In vitro transcription of the hilA promoter. The in vitro transcription of the hilA promoter by Escherichia coli RNA polymerase and purified His-tagged versions of HilC and HilD was carried out as described previously (18). Plasmids philA-242+90txn, philA-100+90txn, and philA-55+90txn were used as DNA templates. These plasmids carry hilA promoter sequences in which the upstream ends are at positions 242, 100, and 55, respectively, and the downstream ends are at +90. These fragments were amplified by PCR using pINO3 plasmid DNA (18) as template and Vent polymerase, as specified by the manufacturer (New England Biolabs). Sequences of the PCR primers are available upon request; they introduce EcoRI and HindIII sites at the upstream and downstream ends, respectively. Each fragment was ligated into EcoRI-HindIII-digested plasmid pSR (17), in which the strong Rho-independent rrnB transcription terminator is downstream of the HindIII site. The sequences of all DNA inserts were verified by automated sequencing at the University of Virginia Biomolecular Research Facility.
The effect of the order of addition of the transcription factors HilC/D and RNAP in single-round transcription of the hilA promoter was examined (Fig. 1). Supercoiled philA-242+90txn plasmid DNA was incubated first with saturating levels of either HilC/D or RNAP for 6 min prior to addition of the other components, RNAP or HilC/D, respectively. After another 6 min, nucleoside triphosphates (NTPs) were added together with heparin to final concentrations of 1 nM DNA template; 50 nM HilC or HilD; 0.25 U of E. coli RNAP (U.S. Biochemicals [USB]); 50 µg of heparin (Sigma)/ml; ATP, CTP, and GTP at 200 µM; and 40 µM [
-32P]UTP (2.5 Ci/nmol) in a final volume of 25 µl. After 15 min, the reaction was terminated and the products were resolved and quantified by PhosphorImager and ImageQuant analysis (Molecular Dynamics) as previously described (18). The amount of the hilA transcript of the expected size (22) was expressed relative to the level of the RNA I transcript produced from the plasmid vector in each transcription reaction. Each experiment was repeated at least three times and representative results are shown.
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FIG. 1. Effect of order of addition of transcription factors on in vitro transcription of the hilA promoter. Plasmid philA-242+90txn DNA (1 nM) was first incubated with purified His-tagged HilC or HilD protein (50 nM) or with E. coli RNAP (0.25 U; USB) for 6 min, as indicated. RNAP, HilC/D, or buffer, respectively, was then added. After another 6 min, NTPs were added together with heparin and single-round runoff transcription was allowed to proceed for 15 min. Amounts of the hilA and RNA I transcripts were determined by PhosphorImager quantitation, and their ratios are given at the bottom of each lane.
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Requirement for HilC/D-binding sites. To examine the extent of the promoter region that is required for activation by HilC/D, the in vitro expression from templates carrying different lengths of the upstream region were compared. The basal level of transcription and the degree of stimulation by HilC or HilD were not significantly different for promoter regions which begin at 242, possessing HilC/D-binding sites A1 and A2; at 186 (data not shown); and at 100, possessing only site A2 (Fig. 2). The 55 to +90 template, which lacks site A2, showed a moderate decrease in basal activity and no stimulation by HilC/D. Thus, the presence of site A2 was sufficient for stimulation by HilC/D of in vitro transcription.
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FIG. 2. Effect of upstream DNA on stimulation of hilA transcription by HilC and HilD proteins. Plasmid philA-242+90txn, philA-100+90txn, or philA-55+90txn (1 nM) was first incubated with purified HilC or HilD protein (50 nm) for 6 min, as indicated, before addition of E. coli RNAP (0.25 U; USB). After another 6 min, NTPs were added together with heparin and single-round runoff transcription was allowed to proceed for 15 min. Amounts of the hilA and RNA I transcripts were determined by PhosphorImager quantitation, and their ratios are given.
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SPI-1 derivative, SD11. Levels of ß-galactosidase were determined after cells were grown under inducing conditions of static culture in Luria-Bertani medium (LB) plus 1% NaCl. Expression of the full-length promoter fragment (242 to +505) was stimulated roughly 24-fold by the presence of SPI-1, presumably reflecting the action of HilC and HilD (Table 1). A similar, 14-fold SPI-1-dependent stimulation was seen with the fragment truncated to 100. The roughly twofold difference in SPI-1-independent activity when comparing these two promoter fragments might suggest that some negative factors might bind in the upstream region between 242 and 100. Consistent with the in vitro expression, stimulation was almost absent in the fragment truncated to 55. The low activity remaining in the strains with SPI-1 deleted could reflect stimulation by RtsA (9) or the residual activity of the silenced promoter. The degree of stimulation by the presence of SPI-1-encoded factors seen in vivo was much greater than the two- to threefold stimulation by the HilC/D protein in vitro. These results are consistent with the action of HilC/D both as direct activators and as derepressors when the negative factors are present.
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TABLE 1. Effect of HilC/D binding sites A1 and A2 on ß-galactosidase expression from hilA-lac fusion strains grown under inducing conditionsa
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-CTD on hilA expression.
The
-CTD domain of RNAP is involved in the response to AraC family and other transcription activators (15). Presence of the
-CTD L289F variant decreased hilA expression in vivo (5). To extend these findings on the role of this domain, we tested the response to expression of a series of alanine substitutions in
-CTD. Elevated expression of an RpoA variant allows it to compete with wild-type RpoA for assembly into RNAP holoenzyme. If the variant is altered at a residue important for the response to an activator, this expression results in diminished transcription of the target promoter (14). In preliminary experiments (data not shown), we tested the effect of overexpression of RpoA with the entire CTD beyond residue 256 deleted on hilA-lacZ activity under a variety of growth-inducing conditions. These conditions included combinations of different pHs and levels of NaCl, sodium acetate, or bile salts. The only condition under which we found that overexpression of rpoA
265 impaired hilA-lacZ expression was LB, pH 7.2, containing 1.5% bile salts (Sigma). A plasmid library of 69 E. coli rpoA mutants expressing alanine substitutions between residues 255 and 329 under lac control (provided by T. Gaal and R. Gourse) was screened in serovar Typhimurium strain TF79 hha::Km hilA::Tn5lacZY (provided by B. Jones) grown overnight in static capped tubes at 37°C in that medium with ampicillin at 100 µg/ml and 1 mM isopropyl-ß-D-thiogalactopyranoside. This strain lacks the potent negative factor Hha and exhibits elevated hilA expression (5). Although the rpoA variants are from E. coli, the sequences of wild-type rpoA of E. coli and Salmonella are identical, and we are not aware of cases where the behavior of RNAP from these species differs.
Expression of some rpoA variants affected hilA-lacZ expression. Alanine substitutions at positions 258, 264 to 268, and 296 (group 1) decreased hilA expression by 20 to 30% (Fig. 3). Less-pronounced reduction (10 to 19%) occurred with other substitutions (group 2), including those at residues 257, 259, 261, 263, 271, 286, 287, and 299. A few substitutions resulted in elevated expression. The decrease in hilA expression upon expression of rpoA variants was much less prominent than was seen with other
-CTD-dependent activators, such as CAP, UhpA, and MetR (13, 19, 21). This modest decrease is consistent with the high level of HilC/D-independent transcription that was seen in the in vitro assays.
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FIG. 3. Effect of alanine substitutions at positions 259 to 329 in -CTD on hilA-lacZ expression in vivo. Values of ß-galactosidase activity are averages from three independent experiments and are graphed as percentages of the wild-type (WT) RpoA value (96 U). Error bars represent standard deviations. For clarity, the positions where Ala is the native residue were removed and the odd-numbered residue coordinates were deleted from the axis legend.
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-CTD, in vitro transcription was carried out with three reconstituted RNAP holoenzymes carrying alanine substitutions at RpoA positions 265 and 296 (group 1) and at 299 (group 2). Purification of these reconstituted RNAPs was described previously (19). The level of transcripts from the
-CTD-independent lacUV5 and RNA I promoters provided a measure of RNAP function. Under conditions where HilC/D stimulated hilA transcription by wild-type RNAP, the RNAP holoenzyme carrying the RpoA R265A and G296A substitutions showed a somewhat decreased basal activity and no stimulation by HilC/D (Fig. 4). These results were consistent with the modest decrease in hilA transcription upon overexpression of the RpoA variants in vivo. The S299A substitution, which was moderately impaired in vivo, allowed stimulation by HilC/D to a comparable degree as the wild-type enzyme. Positions 265 and 296 of RpoA contribute to the DNA-binding surface of
-CTD (14, 16). These results show that
-CTD is involved in activation by HilC/D, probably from their binding site centered at position 73, but is not required for HilC/D-independent expression. It was noteworthy that the only inducing condition where we found a dependence on
-CTD included bile salts as inducer, consistent with the complex control of this promoter and its response to many signals and regulatory proteins.
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FIG. 4. Transcription in vitro of the hilA and lacUV5 promoters by wild-type (W.T.) E. coli RNAP and reconstituted RNAPs carrying the indicated alanine substitutions in RpoA. DNA of plasmid philA-242+90txn (1 nM) was incubated with purified HilC or HilD protein (50 nm) for 6 min. E. coli wild-type or mutant RNAP was then added. After another 6 min, NTPs were added together with heparin and single-round runoff transcription was allowed to proceed for 15 min. Amounts of the hilA and RNA I transcripts were determined by PhosphorImager quantitation. The control promoters lacUV5 and RNA I are independent of -CTD.
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-CTD is important for HilC/D stimulation, but the overall effect of overexpression of
-CTD on hilA-lacZ expression was low, consistent with the model that there are multiple modes of regulation and that activation may be less important a contributor than relief of repression. The repressive proteins and the HilC/D and RtsA activators may respond to different environmental signals (2, 9, 23). The reduction in hilA-lac expression by overexpression of the RpoA variant with the CTD deleted was seen only in cells grown in the absence of the repressive Hha protein and in the presence of the inducer bile salts. We cannot conclude how HilC/D proteins participate in hilA derepression, which will require analysis of the effect on transcription of both the positive- and negative-acting proteins. We have found that the hilA promoter has a more complex structure than previously recognized, with additional sites for regulatory intervention (unpublished data). In summary, stimulation of hilA transcription by the AraC/XylS family members HilC and HilD does exhibit the expected dependence on residues in
-CTD, but activation of transcription involves other
-CTD-independent processes as well. The very strong decrease in hilA-lacZ expression in the presence of the RpoA L289F variant is much different from that seen with the alanine substitutions used here and could reflect multiple effects on other regulatory factors.
This work was supported by research grant GM38681 from the National Institute of General Medical Sciences.
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