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Journal of Bacteriology, August 2004, p. 5480-5485, Vol. 186, No. 16
0021-9193/04/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JB.186.16.5480-5485.2004
Copyright © 2004, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Program in Molecular, Cell and Developmental Biology, Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma 73104
Received 20 February 2004/ Accepted 13 May 2004
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TFSSs typically mediate DNA transfer (conjugation) (5, 14, 21). This activity has been broadly divided into two experimentally separable stages. The first is the establishment of secure cell-cell contacts, and the second is DNA transfer per se. These two stages are linked by coupling proteins, which are membrane or membrane-associated complexes responsible for substrate recognition and presentation to a channel or pore complex that spans the cell envelope (4, 27, 35). Individual functions associated with the first stage are designated Mpf (mating pair formation) functions and the corresponding proteins are Mpf proteins; proteins and functions associated with the second stage are designated Dtr (donor transfer replication). Most TFSS genes fall into the Mpf class (14, 17). However, these functional assignments are often based on mutant phenotypes. For proteins that function at more than one stage, null mutations would identify only the earliest stage. For this reason, the Mpf designation does not preclude a function at later stages of conjugal DNA transfer.
One feature common to all conjugal DNA transfer systems of gram-negative bacteria is the presence of conjugative pili (21, 32). These surface filaments function in the earliest stages of conjugation, when donor and recipient cells make initial contacts that eventually lead to DNA transfer. Insofar as they have been examined, conjugative pili are repeats of one quantitatively predominant subunit (12, 32). These subunits and the corresponding filaments are designated according to the conjugal DNA transfer system of which they are a part, e.g., F pili(n), RP4 pili(n), T pili(n), etc. Notwithstanding their apparent structural simplicity, the formation of conjugative pili requires numerous Mpf proteins. For the 25-gene tra system borne by the F plasmid, a mutation in any of 16 genes abolishes the formation of extended F pili or alters F-pilus length or number distribution (14).
After initial contacts, F pili retract (8, 29), such that DNA transfer occurs primarily, if not exclusively, between cells that are firmly joined at their surfaces (11, 25, 33). Retraction also occurs when filamentous DNA bacteriophages bind to the F-pilus tip (22). It is unclear how widely distributed retraction is among TFSSs other than the F-like group.
Type IV Mpf systems typically include core components that are recognizable by sequence similarities among classes (3, 26). Other components, however, appear to be class specific (26). The TFSSs encoded by F and the F-like R factors include several such components. Five of the 16 F-plasmid-encoded Tra proteins required for the formation of F pili or for normal F-pilus number and length distributions appear not to have homologues in TFSSs outside of the F and F-like families (26). These are TraF, TraH, TraW, TrbC, and TraU. There are no data regarding physical interactions among these proteins, but genetic data suggest that they have a common function(s). A mutation in traF, traH, traW, or trbC abolished the ability of F+ cells to form extended F pili that were visible by electron microscopy (14). However, TraF, TraH, and TraW mutants retained significant sensitivity to filamentous bacteriophages that bind to the F-pilus tip (1), suggesting that these Tra proteins are required for F-pilus extension. (The trbC mutant could not be tested.) Mutations in traU also reduced the number of F pili per cell and the mean F-pilus length, but not as drastically as mutations in the other genes (31). (Such mutations reduced DNA donor activity more than expected from the reduction in F-pili, suggesting that TraU affects multiple stages of conjugation [31].)
Here we show by yeast two-hybrid analyses that TraH, TraF, TraW, TraU, and TrbB are components of the same Tra protein interaction group. An additional member of this group is TrbI. While trbB mutations had no effect on F-pilus functions in otherwise tra+ cells (24), trbI mutants were reported to elaborate unusually long F pili (28). The properties of mutants with mutations in individual components of this interaction group suggest a role for the group in regulating F-pilus retraction and extension.
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TABLE 1. Primers used to amplify tra sequences of bait plasmids
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-32P]CTP. DNA was obtained by PCR amplification from JCFL0 with the forward primer 5' GCAAGAATGATGCCACG (tra nucleotides [nt] 18024 to 18040) and the reverse primer 3' TCATTCACAGCGTGCTG (tra nt 19410 to 19374). (Numbering of the tra nucleotides was from reference 15.) The pAS1CYH2tra library was plated at 60,000 CFU/plate. Of 360,000 colonies screened, 85 potential positive colonies were isolated and sequenced. Several of these were selected based on the extent of the deletions and, where necessary, were frame shifted to correspond to the GAL4 sequence of pAS1CYH2 by a fill-in reaction catalyzed by the Klenow fragment of DNA polymerase I or by mung bean nuclease. In all cases, a polypeptide of the appropriate size could be detected in yeast extracts analyzed by Western blotting with antibodies against the hemagglutinin (HA) epitope included in the GAL4 segment of pAS1CYH2 (18). Media and growth conditions. Yeast extract-peptone-dextrose and synthetic complete dropout media were described previously (23). Yeast strains were routinely grown at 30°C with aeration, and growth was monitored by total cell counts in a hemocytometer or by measuring the optical density at 600 nm. For interaction screens, yeast colonies appearing within 5 days at 30°C on Leu His plates containing 40 mM 3-aminotriazole (added to reduce HIS3 [imidazole glycerol phosphate dehydratase] activity) were considered to be His+, and those yielding a blue color upon colony lifting within 18 h at 41°C were considered to be LacZ+.
Escherichia coli was routinely cultured in Luria-Bertani medium at 37°C with aeration. Growth was monitored by measuring the optical density at 600 nm. Ampicillin was added, when necessary, at 100 µg/ml.
Methods. Yeast transformations were carried out by the lithium acetate-polyethylene glycol method, as described previously (23); transformation frequencies with the pACTtra library were generally 104 to 105 Leu+ Trp+ colonies/µg of DNA. Plasmid DNAs were prepared from Zymolyase-treated yeast cells (23) and introduced into E. coli by electroporation. Otherwise, E. coli cells were transformed by the CaCl2 method.
Beta-galactosidase activities in yeast were measured with chlorophenyl-red-ß-D-galactopyranoside (CPRG; Boehringer-Mannheim) essentially as described previously (10). Cells in 5 ml of culture at an optical density at 600 nm of 0.6 to 0.8 were collected by sedimentation, suspended in 1 ml of H buffer (10), permeabilized with sodium dodecyl sulfate and CHCl3, and assayed. Chlorophenyl-red released by hydrolysis was measured as the absorbance at 574 nm.
Western blot analyses of yeast proteins were performed as described previously (18).
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TABLE 2. TraH-TraF interaction by yeast two-hybrid screen
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We next used a traF bait, comprising traF codons 19 to 247, to screen the tra fragment library. We performed two separate screens, which combined yielded His+ LacZ+ transformants at a frequency of 5.5 x 103, or 30-fold higher than that in the traH screen (Table 2). Only two tra genes were identified in both screens, among 40 total sequences. Twelve contained traH segments, all in frame, and four contained traC sequences, with three in frame. Several other tra genes were identified in one screen or the other, but not both, along with reverse tra and unidentified, possibly vector, sequences (Table 2).
The high fraction of questionable positive results in the screen TraF is unusual in our experience. While we have no definitive explanation, we observed unusually variable levels of transcriptional activation in yeast cells containing both the traF bait and random prey plasmids. In our screens, we selected those with higher levels, estimated from the intensity of the blue color in colony lifts for ß-galactosidase activity, but we could easily have chosen a significant number of false-positive transformants. For this reason, we are inclined for the time being to credit only the traH isolates, both because they still constituted nearly a third of the total sequences and because the traH screen identified exclusively traF preys. Also note that TraC is a cytoplasmic, peripheral membrane protein in tra+ cells (34), whereas TraF is periplasmic (38). These different cellular locations make it improbable, though certainly not impossible, that the TraC interaction is functionally significant.
In contrast to the results with traF preys isolated with the traH bait, the 5' end points of the 12 traH preys were distributed throughout the central half of the coding region, from F135 to T326. These results suggest that a segment of TraH between T326 and the C terminus of the molecule, L458, is sufficient for TraF binding in yeast (Fig. 1). In a reciprocal experiment, we found that yeast cells with a bait plasmid containing traH encoding amino acids 259 to 458 (traH259-458 and a prey plasmid containing traF75-247 were His+ and LacZ+ (data not shown), again suggesting that a C-terminal segment of TraH contains a TraF binding site.
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FIG. 1. Interaction map of TraH. Segments required for two-hybrid interactions between TraH (458 amino acids) and other Tra proteins were derived from sequence analyses of prey plasmids and ß-galactosidase assays. The TraH leader peptide (LP; amino acids 1 to 24) is also shown. TrbIi, segment required for inhibition of interaction with TrbI in yeast.
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TABLE 3. TrbI-TraH interaction by yeast two-hybrid screen
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FIG. 2. TrbI interaction domain and inhibitory segment of TraH. Transcriptional activation (LacZ activity) in cells containing a trbI5-128 prey and the indicated traH bait plasmids shows the inhibitory effect of the N-terminal segment D24-L137 and the requirement for the segment G193-A225. The figure also indicates the five traH preys isolated with a trbI bait and the predicted amino acid sequence of the hydrophilic segment containing the TrbI binding site. LP, leader peptide.
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Five of the 31 preys contained traH (Table 3). Three of these contained the same segment, encompassing codons 74 through 233. One encompassed codons 76 to 225 and one encompassed codons 74 to 230. Two features of these segments are consistent with previous results. First, all five lacked N-terminal codons. Given that codons 1 to 24 encode the TraH signal peptide, the data suggest that TraH amino acids 25 to 75 are sufficient to inhibit TraH binding to TrbI in yeast (Fig. 1). Second, all five traH isolates included the region encoding G193 to A225, which is suggested to contain the binding site for TrbI (Fig. 1). We were unable to detect any ß-galactosidase activity at all (<0.05 U) in yeast cells containing the trbI5-128 prey and a bait plasmid with a 3'-terminal traH deletion that still encoded an intact N-terminal domain (traH15-330) (Fig. 2). In a LacZ colony lift assay, this segment as well as that comprising TraH amino acids 253 to 458 still interacted with TraF (data not shown), suggesting that these segments were not merely misfolded in yeast.
The differences in activity with different traH bait constructs cannot be attributed to different GAL4-TraH fusion protein levels. As measured by Western blotting against the HA epitope common to all of the fusion proteins, the levels of inactive fusion proteins (TraH225-458 and TraH15-330) (Fig. 2) were no less than those of active fusion proteins (TraH193-458 and TraH199-458) (Fig. 3). Moreover, it seems unlikely that the different transcriptional activation levels of cells with GAL4-TraH199-458, which was active in TrbI binding (Table 3), and cells with GAL4-TraH225-458, which was inactive (Fig. 2), can be explained by effects of the 26-amino-acid difference between the two fusion proteins on folding, nuclear transport, or other factors that are not directly related to transcriptional activation.
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FIG. 3. Levels of GAL4-TraH fusion proteins in yeast. Yeast cells with segments of traH fused to the GAL4 domain of pAS1CYH2 were assayed for fusion protein levels by Western blotting with antibodies against the HA epitope of the GAL4 polypeptide segment (18). The range of numbers under each lane denotes the TraH amino acids contained in the corresponding fusion. Full-length TraH is 458 amino acids long (13).
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TABLE 4. TraU and TraW interactions by yeast two-hybrid screen
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The two-hybrid data identify TraH as the most highly connected member of the group, with two-hybrid links to TrbI, TraF, and TraU (Fig. 4). At 434 amino acids, periplasmic TraH is also the largest protein in this interaction group. These data suggest a central role for TraH in the groups function(s).
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FIG. 4. Protein interactions of the TraV/TraK/TraB and TraH/TraF/TraW/TraU/TrbI/TrbB interaction groups. Arrows connect proteins that were shown to interact by yeast two-hybrid assays; arrowheads point to the prey. The interaction map was overlaid on the intracellular location of each protein in E. coli, as described previously (14). The TraV/TraK/TraB data are from reference 19; other data are from the present communication.
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A mutation in traH, traF, traW, traU, or trbI altered the F-pilus length or number distribution, suggesting that there are functional relationships among the corresponding Tra proteins. (The numbers of F pili per cell and F-pilus length distribution could amount to the same thing, since factors leading to shorter F pili might favor filaments that are too short to be visible by electron microscopy. This would be scored as a reduction in the number of F pili per cell [2, 9].) The effects of mutations in traH, traF, and traW were similar (reference 14 and references therein). Each abolished the formation of F pili that were visible by electron microscopy of negatively stained cells. None affected the amount of membrane F pilin (30). All reduced DNA donor activity by several orders of magnitude and all were resistant to donor-specific bacteriophages by a plaque assay (14). However, by a more sensitive transduction assay, traH, traF, and traW mutants retained significant levels (1 to 100%) of sensitivity to a filamentous DNA bacteriophage that binds to the F-pilus tip (1). In comparison, an amber mutation in traA or a mutation in any of several other tra genes reduced phage sensitivity by at least 6 orders of magnitude, to an undetectable level (1). The simplest interpretation of these data is that traH, traF, and traW mutants are defective in F-pilus extension, such that mutant cells have unusually short filaments that are still able to bind bacteriophage at their tips. Amber and insertion mutations in traU also had the effect of reducing both the number and length distributions of F pili, though not as drastically (31), whereas trbI mutants were reported to have unusually long F pili (28).
In addition to evolutionary and functional data, the data presented here add a third line of evidence linking TraH, TraF, TraW, and TraU: all four proteins are components of a yeast two-hybrid interaction group, along with TrbI. Three independent lines of evidence thus converge on the hypothesis that these proteins function together in F+ strains of E. coli and that the function of the group is either unique to F-like TFSSs, or if common to other TFSS classes, arose independently in F-like systems. One possibility for the main function of the TraH group arose from conclusions reached by Sowa et al. (36); to account for the difficulty they encountered in exhausting the pool of membrane F pilin, they proposed that F-pilus extension and retraction alternate stochastically. The Tra protein interaction group defined here could function as a switch to regulate F-pilus extension and retraction cycles. TraW, TraF, TraH, and to a lesser degree, TraU would be pro-extension components, since a mutation in any of these genes leads to the formation of unusually short F pili and/or fewer F pili per cell (14, 28, 31). (TrbB and TraF have been suggested to have overlapping functions [26], which might explain why trbB mutations had no effect in a traF+ background [24].) TrbI would be pro-retraction, insofar as trbI mutants have been reported to elaborate unusually long F pili (28). Given that two-hybrid data cannot reveal interaction dynamics, this model will have to be tested in E. coli, in which the complete F-pilus assembly system can be analyzed (16).
A summary of this and our previous work on Tra protein interactions related to F-pilus formation is shown in Fig. 4. The TraB/TraK/TraV interaction group (19) consists of proteins with homologues, or at least obvious functional equivalents, among other TFSSs (20, 26). The TraH interaction group described here consists of Tra proteins that are characteristic of F and F-like systems (1, 26). How these interaction groups function in F-pilus formation and perhaps other stages of conjugal DNA transfer and especially whether the TraH and TraV/TraK/TraB groups interact with each other are topics of immediate interest.
This work was supported by National Science Foundation grants MCB-9900533 and MCB-0212365 and by funds provided by the Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation. P.M.S. acknowledges support from the Marjorie Nichlos Chair in Medical Research.
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