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Journal of Bacteriology, June 2004, p. 3531-3538, Vol. 186, No. 11
0021-9193/04/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JB.186.11.3531-3538.2004
Copyright © 2004, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
and Didier Lereclus1,2*
Groupe Génétique et Physiologie des Bacillus pathogènes,1 Unité Toxines et Pathogénie bactériennes, Institut Pasteur, 75015 Paris,3 Unité Génétique microbienne et Environnement, INRA, La Minière, 78285 Guyancourt cedex, France2
Received 12 December 2003/ Accepted 11 February 2004
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plcR mutant strain (13). Opp, an oligopeptide permease, is necessary for plcR expression, suggesting that uptake of a small peptide is required to activate PlcR-regulated gene expression (14). PlcR activation requires a small peptide, designated PapR, which acts as a cell-cell signaling peptide. Agaisse and collaborators (1) showed that papR is a PlcR-regulated gene located 70 bp downstream from plcR and encoding a 48-amino-acid peptide. This peptide is secreted by the cell and then reimported via Opp, presumably as a pentapeptide. Intracellular PapR is required for binding of PlcR to its DNA targets and thus is required to trigger expression of the PlcR regulon (46). The importance of the PlcR regulon in the B. cereus group was recently emphasized by the publication of the genome sequences of B. cereus ATCC 14579 and B. anthracis Ames (21, 42). More than 100 genes putatively belong to the PlcR regulon on the basis of the presence of a PlcR DNA-binding sequence upstream from these genes in B. cereus ATCC 14579. Most of these genes are also present in B. anthracis. However, B. anthracis does not produce the PlcR-regulated extracellular proteins even though the corresponding genes are present. Most B. cereus and B. thuringiensis strains are hemolytic on sheep blood agar plates, whereas B. anthracis is not hemolytic. This characteristic is commonly used to distinguish between B. anthracis and B. cereus or B. thuringiensis, although it is not considered to be a decisive criterion (29). B. anthracis Sterne does not produce PlcR-regulated proteins due to a nonsense mutation in the plcR gene (1). Mignot and collaborators (33) showed that this mutation in the plcR gene of B. anthracis might result from incompatibility between the PlcR and AtxA regulons. Indeed, B. anthracis is unable to sporulate when it is complemented with a functional plcR gene that restores expression of the PlcR regulon. Point mutations in regulators or in major virulence genes could be one of the mechanisms responsible for the genetic shaping and divergence of closely related populations (5). For example, there is genetic variability among different Clostridium difficile clinical isolates due to deletions in the tcdC gene, which is the putative transcriptional repressor of the A and B toxins and thus affects the toxicity of strains (47). Thus, a point mutation in a key regulator gene, in association with acquisition of mobile genetic elements harboring virulence factors (transposons, plasmids, bacteriophages), may result in distinctive differences between closely related species that may lead to a specialization, like multiplication in mammals for B. anthracis (for a review see reference 18, 19).
In this study, we first aimed to determine whether, because of their monomorphism, distinct B. anthracis strains had the same plcR mutation. We then sought B. thuringiensis and B. cereus strains that had lost phenotypic characteristics like hemolysis and lecithinase activity. We wanted to find out whether inactivation of a pleiotropic regulator, such as PlcR, was restricted to B. anthracis or if it was widespread in other species belonging to the B. cereus group.
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The antibiotic concentrations used for bacterial selection were as follows: 100 µg of ampicillin ml1 for E. coli; and 10 µg of erythromycin ml1 and 200 µg of kanamycin ml1 for B. thuringiensis. Bacteria with the Lac+ phenotype were identified on LB plates containing X-Gal (5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indolyl-D-galactoside) (80 µg ml1).
Plasmid construction.
pHT304
plcR-papR was constructed by inserting a fragment containing the plcR and papR genes under control of their own promoter between the XbaI and HindIII sites of pHT304 (4). This fragment was amplified from chromosomal DNA of the B. thuringiensis 407 Cry strain with primers S1X and S2H (Table 1).
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TABLE 1. Sequences of the primers used in this study
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plcR26wt.
The plasmid carrying the modified plcR gene from strain 26 (pHT304
plcR26mt) was constructed as follows. Chromosomal DNA from strain 26 was used as a template for PCR amplification with the S1X-26C200Y.2 and 26C200Y.3-phind26 primer pairs (Table 1). The two resulting fragments were mixed and PCR amplified with primers S1X and phind26. The fragment generated was inserted between the XbaI and HindIII sites of pHT304. In all the cases, the nucleotide sequences of the cloned DNA fragments were verified by sequencing.
DNA manipulations. Plasmid DNA was extracted from E. coli by a standard alkaline lysis procedure by using Qiagen kits. Chromosomal DNA was extracted from B. thuringiensis and B. cereus cells grown to the mid-exponential phase in LB or BHI medium and was purified as previously described (37). Restriction enzymes and T4 DNA ligase were used as recommended by the manufacturers. The oligonucleotide primers used for PCR amplification were synthesized by Proligo (Paris, France). Primers S1 and S2 were used to amplify the plcR-papR region, and this region was sequenced by using the primers listed in Table 2. Primer sequences are shown in Table 1. PCR were carried out in 100-µl reaction mixtures containing each deoxynucleoside triphosphate at a concentration of 200 µM, 3.5 mM MgSO4, 50 pmol of each primer, 0.5 µg of chromosomal DNA, and 0.5 U of Pwo DNA polymerase (Roche Boehringer) in 1x reaction buffer. The PCR were performed with a GeneAmp PCR system 2400 thermal cycler (Perkin-Elmer). The reaction conditions were as follows: incubation for 5 min at 94°C, followed by 30 cycles of 30 s at 48 or 50°C for annealing, 1 min at 72°C for extension, and 30 s at 94°C for denaturation and then incubation at 72°C for 10 min. Nucleotide sequences were determined by Genome Express (Montreuil, France).
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TABLE 2. Primers used for sequencing the plcR-papR regions of various B. anthracis, B. cereus, and B. thuringiensis strains
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The lecithinase activity was assayed on BHI agar plates containing 5% egg yolk (Difco). The plates were checked after 24 and 48 h, and the assays were repeated at least twice.
2D-PAGE. For preparation of samples for 2D polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (2D-PAGE) cells were grown in 50 ml of LB at 30°C in 500-ml flasks with rotation at 175 rpm, harvested 2 h after they entered the stationary phase, and centrifuged at 5,000 x g for 10 min at 4°C. The supernatant was rapidly filtered through a membrane (pore size, 0.2 µm). Proteins were precipitated twice by using the deoxycholate-tetrachloroacetic acid method (41). The pellet was washed twice with ethanol-ether (1:1), dried, and stored at 80°C until it was used. The protein content of the pellet was quantified by the Bradford method (7).
2D-PAGE was performed as described previously (13). For gel analysis gels were scanned at 300 dpi and 8-bit depth by using a SHARP JX-330 scanner equipped with a film-scanning unit and were analyzed with the ImageMaster 2D program from Amersham BioScience. The spots were identified on the basis of mobility and by comparison with a reference gel as described previously (13).
Nucleotide sequence accession numbers. plcR nucleotide sequences have been deposited in the EMBL database under the following accession numbers: serotypes 1 to 14, AJ582632 to AJ582638 and AJ582669 to AJ582675; serotypes 17 and 26, AJ583460 and AJ583461; isolates Bt13, Bt32, and LM112.3, serotype 45, and isolate Bt1, AJ583463 to AJ583467; and B. anthracis RA3R, AJ585425.
The accession numbers of the papR sequences of the nonhemolytic strains are AJ586123 to AJ586131. The accession numbers of the papR sequences of B. cereus ATCC 14579 and B. thuringiensis 407 Cry (serotype 1) have been given previously (46).
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FIG. 1. Comparison of the PlcR (A) and PapR (B) sequences of various B. anthracis, B. cereus, and B. thuringiensis strains. Ba, B. anthracis (a superscript asterisk, no superscript, and a superscript number sign indicate the Sterne, Ames, and RA3R strains, respectively); Bc, B. cereus ATCC 14579; LM112.3, B. cereus LM112.3; Bt1, Bt13, and Bt32, B. thuringiensis Bt1, Bt13, and Bt32, respectively; 26, 17, 5, and 45, B. thuringiensis strains 26, 17, 5, and 45, respectively; 1, B. thuringiensis 407 Cry strain. Bt1, Bt13, and Bt32 were isolated from the environment for this study and have not been serotyped yet. Sequences corresponding to the sequences of the hemolytic strains are enclosed in boxes. The sequences were aligned by using Megalign (DNASTAR). In panel A, the nonsense mutations in PlcR are indicated by stars. The other mutations thought to be responsible for the loss of hemolytic and lecithinase activities are circled. The nucleotide sequences of plcR of B. thuringiensis 407 Cry, B. cereus ATCC 14579, B. anthracis Sterne, and B. anthracis Ames have been described previously (1, 30, 42).
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Alignment of the predicted PapR polypeptide sequence of each nonhemolytic strain with the sequences of the hemolytic strains revealed no obvious mutations, except in B. thuringiensis serotype 17 (Fig. 1B). Indeed, the PapR pentapeptide, which is located at the carboxy terminus of the PapR protein and is required for PlcR activation, contains an isoleucine at position 1. When the first residue of the pentapeptide is an isoleucine, PlcR is not activated in B. thuringiensis 407 Cry (46). However, addition of synthetic pentapeptides (with a leucine, a valine, or an isoleucine at position 1 of the pentapeptide) on sheep blood agar plates did not restore the hemolytic activity in strain 17 (data not shown). The absence of hemolysis and lecithinase activity might be due to the absence of the genes conferring these phenotypes or to the absence of a functional PlcR protein. This is discussed below.
Together, our results indicate that the possible causes for PlcR inactivity can be summarized as follows: (i) a nonsense mutation leading to a truncated protein (B. cereus LM112.3 and B. anthracis), (ii) deletions (Bt32) or additions (Bt1), (iii) divergence throughout the sequence (B. thuringiensis serotype 45), (iv) point mutations (B. thuringiensis serotype 17 and serotype 26), and (v) mutations in genes required for PlcR expression or activity (e.g., papR, opp, gene coding for a protease responsible for PapR maturation).
Point mutation in PlcR restores activity in B. thuringiensis serotype 26.
We next tested the hypothesis that a point mutation could be sufficient to explain the loss of PlcR activity in nonhemolytic strains. This hypothesis was examined by using strain 26; we hypothesized that a cysteine at position 200 may have a drastic effect on PlcR activity in this strain. We constructed pHT304
plcR26mt, in which the cysteine codon was replaced by a tyrosine codon. This plasmid and pHT304
plcR26wt (carrying the wild-type plcR gene from strain 26) were introduced into strain 26, which had two potential mutations (Fig. 1A). We then assayed the enzymatic activities of the transformants (Fig. 2). Both the lecithinase and hemolytic activities were fully restored when strain 26 was complemented with pHT304
plcR26mt, whereas no lecithinase activity and only weak hemolysis were detected when it was complemented with pHT304
plcR26wt. Similarly, the protease activity of strain 26 on BHI milk agar plates was also restored when the strain was complemented with pHT304
plcR26mt (data not shown).
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FIG. 2. Complementation of B. thuringiensis serotype 26 with mutated plcR restored both hemolytic activity on sheep blood plates (A) and lecithinase activity on egg yolk plates (B). wt, B. thuringiensis serotype 26 wild type; plcR26mt, B. thuringiensis serotype 26(pHT304 plcR26mt); plcR26wt, B. thuringiensis serotype 26(pHT304 plcR26wt).
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plcR-papR were introduced into each Hly Lec strain except the B. anthracis strain. The transformants were then assayed on sheep blood agar plates, human blood agar plates, and egg yolk agar plates. In parallel, the extracellular proteomes of each wild-type strain and the corresponding complemented strain were analyzed by 2D-PAGE, and the presence of the potential virulence factors belonging to the PlcR regulon was determined for each strain (Table 3). An example of each assay for strain LM112.3 is shown in Fig. 3, and an example of 2D-PAGE of the extracellular proteome of strain LM112.3 is shown in Fig. 4. All the results are summarized in Table 3. Hemolysis, both of sheep blood and of human blood, and lecithinase activity were restored when strains 17, 26, Bt32, and LM112.3 were complemented with pHT304
plcR-papR. Bt13(pHT304
plcR-papR) exhibited hemolytic activity with human blood and lecithinase activity, whereas only the latter was observed in the case of Bt1(pHT304
plcR-papR). The phenotypes of strains 05 and 45, which were hemolytic on human blood agar plates, did not change on blood agar and egg yolk agar plates when the strains were complemented with papR and plcR. Similarly, 2D-PAGE analysis of these two strains revealed no difference between the extracellular proteomes of the wild-type strains and those of the corresponding complemented strains. The extracellular proteome of strain 05 with or without plcR and papR (data not shown) was considerably different from that of B. cereus ATCC 14579 described previously (13). The former lacked almost all the major proteins of the PlcR regulon except CytK, sphingomyelinase, and Tlo. Both wild-type and complemented strain 45 produced Sfp, NheA, NheB, NprP2, Tlo, HblL2, PI-PLC, and sphingomyelinase. Wild-type strain Bt1 produced Sfp, NheA, NprP2, NprB, and sphingomyelinase, and it produced ColB, NheB, Tlo, HblL2, and PC-PLC when it was complemented with plcR and papR. CytK, NheA, NheB, NprP2, NprB, and HblL2 were produced by both wild-type strain Bt13 and the complemented Bt13 strain, but Tlo was only weakly produced by the wild-type strain. The amount of Tlo was greater in Bt13(pHT304
plcR-papR) than in Bt13. ColB, Sfp, sphingomyelinase, and PC-PLC were found only in the extracellular proteome of Bt13(pHT304
plcR-papR). Wild-type Bt32 and Bt32(pHT304
plcR-papR) both expressed Sfp, but NprB, Tlo, HblB, L1, L2, PI-PLC, and PC-PLC were found only in Bt32(pHT304
plcR-papR). None of these proteins were present in wild-type strains 17, 26, and LM112.3, but all were present when these strains were complemented with plcR and papR. |
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TABLE 3. Complementation results
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FIG. 3. Complementation with plcR and papR restored PlcR-regulated enzyme activities of the LM112.3 strain. wt, B. cereus wild-type strain LM112.3; plcR-papR, B. cereus LM112.3(pHT304 plcR-papR); pHT304, B. cereus LM112.3(pHT304). The plates were incubated at 30°C for 24 h. (A) Lecithinase activity on egg yolk agar plates was restored when LM112.3 was complemented with plcR and papR. (B and C) Hemolytic activity on sheep blood agar plates (B) and on human blood agar plates (C). Hemolysis was observed only with the LM112.3(pHT304 plcR-papR) strain.
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FIG. 4. 2D-PAGE of the extracellular proteomes of two wild-type strains and the corresponding plcR-papR-complemented strains. Proteins of interest are indicated by arrowheads and were identified by comparison with 2D-PAGE results for the B. cereus ATCC 14579 strain. (A) B. cereus wild-type strain LM112.3. (B) B. cereus LM112.3(pHT304 plcR-papR). For abbreviations of the proteins see Table 3, footnote b.
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Analysis of the PlcR sequences of the eight Hly Lec strains revealed that the amino-terminal part of the protein, which is the putative helix-turn-helix DNA-binding domain, is very well conserved. In contrast, the region located downstream of the 75th residue, which contains the tetratricopeptide repeat domain region (40), is highly variable. These domains are involved in protein-protein interactions or protein-peptide interactions (6, 27). Thus, the loss of PlcR activity in these strains might be due to a failure to form multimers or to the lack of an interaction with the activating peptide PapR rather than to an inability to bind DNA.
B. cereus LM112.3 had a truncated, presumably inactive PlcR. In this strain, PlcR is 169 residues long, whereas the PlcR proteins of hemolytic strains are 285 residues long. Analysis of the extracellular proteome of strain LM112.3 showed that the PlcR-regulated proteins examined in this study were not produced in the wild-type strain and that production of these proteins was restored in the plcR-papR-complemented strain. Furthermore, the enzymatic activities tested were restored in the complemented strain. B. thuringiensis serotypes 17 and 26 responded in a similar manner to complementation. For these three strains, complementation with plcR and papR completely restored the enzymatic activities tested. This was not the case with strains Bt1, Bt13, and Bt32. The enzymatic activities of Bt32 were restored, but about one-half of the PlcR-regulated proteins were absent from the complemented secretome and Sfp seemed to be regulated independently of PlcR. The genes encoding the proteins that were not induced after PlcR complementation might be absent from the Bt32 strain, as is the case for a large number of B. cereus strains (17). However, mutations in the coding sequences of these genes or in the PlcR boxes upstream of these genes might also explain the absence of these proteins in the secretome. One-half of the PlcR-controlled proteins examined were present in wild-type strains Bt13 and Bt1, suggesting either that they are not under control of PlcR or that PlcR is not totally inactive in these strains. The latter hypothesis might be in agreement with the mutation found in the PlcR sequence of Bt1 (addition of 15 residues at the carboxy-terminal end) and with the apparent absence of mutations in the PlcR sequence of Bt13. Tlo, which confers the ability to lyse human blood (33), was present in wild-type strain Bt13. However, probably because of the small amount of Tlo, this strain was nonhemolytic on human blood agar plates. Strain Bt1(pHT304
plcR-papR) was also nonhemolytic on human erythrocytes even though expression of Tlo was induced, suggesting that Tlo was inactive. In this strain, only lecithinase activity, corresponding to PC-PLC activity, was restored. In B. cereus ATCC 14579 and B. thuringiensis 407 Cry, NheA, NheB, HblL1, hb1L2, and HblB are expressed from two operons (1, 38). These proteins were produced in strain Bt1(pHT304
plcR-papR) as they are independently regulated. The fact that the complemented strain displayed no hemolytic activity with sheep erythrocytes is compatible with the absence of two of the Hbl components as determined by 2D-PAGE. Neither the enzymatic activities nor the secretome profiles of B. thuringiensis strains 05 and 45 were changed by complementation (both strains were hemolytic on human blood). Various PlcR-regulated proteins were present in both B. thuringiensis serotype 05 and 45 wild-type strains and in these strains transformed with pHT304
plcR-papR. This strongly suggests that the plcR and papR genes are functional in these two strains. To verify this hypothesis, we transformed the 05 and 45 wild-type strains with the pHT304
plcA'-lacZ plasmid. This plasmid carries a transcriptional fusion between the promoter of the plcA gene (belonging to the PlcR regulon) and the reporter gene lacZ (30). This fusion has been shown to reflect plcR expression or PlcR activity. The plcA'-lacZ fusion was expressed when it was introduced into strains 05 and 45 (results not shown), confirming that PlcR is produced and functional in these two strains. The Hly phenotype on sheep blood agar plates and the Lec phenotype are likely due to the absence or inactivity of the genes encoding the Hbl components and PC-PLC.
In conclusion, the work described here showed that inactivation of the plcR gene is not restricted to B. anthracis, but none of the B. cereus and B. thuringiensis strains contained the nonsense mutation found in B. anthracis. Three strains contained mutations that could be predicted to affect PlcR activity (truncations, deletions, and insertions). The other strains either contained no mutations in PlcR or had sequence variations that may or may not have affected their activity. However, one point mutation was confirmed to be responsible for the loss of PlcR activity. Thus, about 1% (4 of 400) of the strains belonging to the B. cereus group were deficient for expression of the PlcR regulon due to mutations in PlcR. The causes of these mutations are unknown. It has been shown that in B. anthracis incompatibility with the AtxA regulon results in a drastic reduction in sporulation, and it was suggested previously that the mutation in plcR occurred after the acquisition of plasmid pXO1 carrying atxA (33). In the four strains with an inactive PlcR regulon which we identified, complementation with a functional plcR gene did not affect growth and sporulation (results not shown), suggesting that in these strains counterselection of PlcR did not result from an incompatibility event. The latter hypothesis might be true for B. anthracis, but we cannot exclude the possibility that the plcR mutation occurred prior to acquisition of the AtxA regulon. Inactivation of PlcR might have been caused by the biological cost of the useless PlcR regulon in some ecosystems and the resulting reduction in fitness of the bacterium.
This work was supported by the Institut Pasteur, by the Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique, by the Centre National de Recherche Scientifique, and by a grant from the Délégation Générale de l'Armement (contract 99.34.032). Leyla Slamti received a Ph.D. grant from the Ministère de la Recherche and a Pasteur-Weizmann fellowship from The Institut Pasteur, Paris, France.
Present address: Unité Microbiologie et Génétique Moléculaire, INRA, 78850 Thiverval-Grignon, France. ![]()
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-endotoxin gene in Bacillus thuringiensis. FEMS Microbiol. Lett. 60:211-218.[CrossRef]
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