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Journal of Bacteriology, September 2004, p. 5614-5620, Vol. 186, No. 17
0021-9193/04/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JB.186.17.5614-5620.2004
Copyright © 2004, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
School of Molecular and Microbial Biosciences G08, The University of Sydney, Sydney, Australia,1 Nippon Institute for Biological Science, Ome, Tokyo, Japan2
Received 30 March 2004/ Accepted 18 May 2004
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D, or
70 and RpoS or
S) that affect transcription initiated by RNA polymerase. Both laboratory E. coli K-12 lineages and nondomesticated isolates exhibit strain-specific endogenous levels of RpoS protein. We demonstrate that variation in genome usage underpins intraspecific variability in transcription patterns, resistance to external stresses, and the choice of beneficial mutations under nutrient limitation. Most unexpectedly, RpoS also controlled strain variation with respect to the metabolic capability of bacteria with more than a dozen carbon sources. Strains with higher
S levels were more resistant to external stress but metabolized fewer substrates and poorly competed for low concentrations of nutrients. On the other hand, strains with lower
S levels had broader nutritional capabilities and better competitive ability with low nutrient concentrations but low resistance to external stress. In other words, RpoS influenced both r and K strategist functions of bacteria simultaneously. The evolutionary principle driving strain variation is proposed to be a conceptually novel trade-off that we term SPANC (for "self-preservation and nutritional competence"). The availability of multiple SPANC settings potentially broadens the niche occupied by a species consisting of individuals with narrow specialization and reveals an evolutionary advantage offered by polymorphic regulation. Regulatory diversity is likely to be a significant contributor to complexity in a bacterial world in which multiple sigma factors are a universal feature. |
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Our starting point for examining this question arose from recent studies of the polymorphism of the RpoS sigma factor in isolates of E. coli and Salmonella (11, 31). If a central regulator of stress resistance genes (RpoS or
S [24, 40]) is not conserved, then how constant is gene usage on a global scale? It is evident from both laboratory studies and the occurrence of rpoS mutations in natural populations that regulatory divergence can arise and flourish in particular environments (11). In this study, we found that natural regulatory settings are far from uniform within a species and include a wide range of possibilities.
A significant level of control over expression of multiple genes in bacteria involves RNA polymerase sigma factors, which partition transcription to different bacterial promoters (13, 17). The concentration of a sigma factor, such as
S, controls general stress resistance, starvation survival (16), and gene expression under nutrient limitation (10). In addition, because
S competes for a fixed amount of RNA polymerase, the level of
S also inversely influences the expression of other
factor-controlled genes, including housekeeping genes (8, 26). Within this expanding model of cellular control through
factor competition (20, 21), we investigated whether RpoS protein levels also influenced additional phenotypic and nutritional abilities of various E. coli strains. As shown below, an unexpected inverse relationship between stress resistance and nutritional capabilities was found in different strains. Furthermore, a molecular explanation of strain variation can now be offered on the basis of the equally unexpected variation in the endogenous concentration of sigma factors within a species. The numerous implications of these findings for understanding bacterial diversity and evolution are discussed below.
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TABLE 1. Strains used in this study
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Growth medium and culture conditions. The medium used in chemostat cultures was minimal medium A (29). The carbon source in all cases was glucose, which was present at a concentration of 0.02 or 0.04% (wt/vol) in the feed medium in glucose-limiting experiments. For batch cultures and agar plates, glucose or acetate was included at a concentration of 0.2% (wt/vol). Eighty-milliliter chemostat cultures were set up as described previously (31). The dilution rates were set to 0.1 h1 (doubling time, 6.9 h). The culture densities were between 1.9 x 108 and 2.1 x 108 bacteria ml1.
To assess the metabolism of 95 substrates by the strains in a Biolog GN2 MicroPlate (Oxoid Ltd., Sydney, Australia) (3), the manufacturer's instructions were followed. Positive readings were defined as optical densities at 600 nm of >0.2 after 24 h of incubation.
Detection of rpoS status. rpoS mutants were distinguished from wild-type strains by staining glycogen in colonies on Luria agar plates. The plates were incubated overnight at 37°C and then left at 4°C for 24 h before they were flooded with concentrated iodine as previously described (31).
rpoS amplification and DNA sequencing. A 1,302-bp fragment containing the rpoS gene was amplified from chemostat isolates by PCR by using two external primers, RpoSF1 (5'-CGGACCTTTTATTGTGCACA-3') and RpoSR1 (5'-TGATTACCTGAGTGCCTACG-3'), and an internal primer, RpoSI (5'-CTGTTAACGGCCGAAGAAGA-3'), as previously described (31).
ß-Galactosidase and catalase assays. Five-milliliter samples were removed from chemostat cultures, and ß-galactosidase activity was measured as described by Miller (29) by using sodium dodecyl sulfate and chloroform-treated cells. KatE/hydroperoxidase II catalase activity was assayed as described by Visick and Clarke (42).
Quantitation of RNA polymerase subunits. Bacteria were harvested from 1-day-old chemostats, extracted, and analyzed by using the standard quantitative immunoblot system (19). Probing was performed with antibodies against purified RpoA, RpoD, or RpoS in parallel with known amounts of purified RNA polymerase subunits. The data presented below are means from three blots of each of two independent samples.
Tolerance to external stress. Assays were conducted with 1-day-old chemostat cultures (31) of each strain. To test acid resistance in rich media, the percentage of survivors was measured after 30 min of exposure to Luria broth acidified to pH 1 with HCl. Bacteria were plated directly onto nutrient agar plates, and dilutions were counted after overnight incubation at 37°C. Survival of bacteria in water was assessed after 15 h of incubation at 25°C.
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S in metabolism, rpoS-defective derivatives of the strains were also assayed. Strikingly, the number of substrates metabolized by M534 and BW2952 greatly increased upon introduction of an rpoS mutation (Fig. 1A). The nutritional profiles of the rpoS disruption mutants were generally similar. Some individual metabolic differences were found and were probably due to structural gene differences between strains (35), but the results in Fig. 1 suggest that RpoS has a pleiotropic effect on the metabolic capability of certain bacteria. The substrates that were poorly utilized by both BW2952 and M534, whose metabolism was stimulated by an rpoS disruption, included D-melibiose, ß-methyl-D-glucoside, L-rhamnose, D-sorbitol, acetic acid, D-galacturonic acid, succinic acid, bromosuccinic acid, L-alanine, L-alanyl-glycine, L-asparagine, L-aspartic acid, and DL-
-glycerol phosphate. The complete Biolog results are shown in Table S2 in the supplemental material.
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FIG. 1. Strain variation in substrate utilization and the role of RpoS. (A) Numbers of carbon sources metabolized by the strains. A total of 95 substrates were examined with a Biolog GN2 MicroPlate (Oxoid Ltd.) (3). (B) Resistance to exposure to pH 1 for 30 min. (C) Starvation survival after 15 h of incubation in water at 25°C. Assays were conducted with 1-day-old chemostat (31) samples of each strain, and survival was measured by determining viable counts. The error bars indicate the standard deviations based on two replicate experiments. The rpoS status of each strain is indicated by a plus sign or a minus sign. The designations of the rpoS derivatives of the parental strains are as follows: BW3737 (M534), BW3709 (BW2952), ZK1171 (ZK126), BW3736 (EcoR38), and BW3708 (MG1655).
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Acetate was one of the substrates whose metabolism was stimulated by an rpoS disruption. A further indication of the role of
S in nutrition came from prolonged incubation of the E. coli K-12 isolates on acetate plates (Fig. 2). BW2952 showed much poorer growth than MG1655, which is consistent with the Biolog data. Growth of ZK126 was partially impaired on acetate plates. However, after 5 days, individual colonies that grew faster appeared in the BW2952 streak lines on acetate medium. All of these colonies proved to be rpoS mutants (data not shown). Growth of a defined rpoS derivative of the BW2952 strain, as well as ZK126 (Fig. 2), on acetate was much faster, so the suppression of metabolic capacity by RpoS could be overcome by rpoS mutations.
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FIG. 2. Strain variation in the growth of E. coli K-12 with acetate as the sole carbon source. The rpoS status of each E. coli K-12 strain is indicated by a plus sign or a minus sign. The designations of the rpoS derivatives of the parental strains are as follows: BW3709 (BW2952), ZK1171 (ZK126), and BW3708 (MG1655). The RpoS/RpoD protein ratio in acetate-grown bacteria is indicated for each of the rpoS+ strains; the ratios for the rpoS strains were less 0.03. For quantitation of RpoS and RpoD levels in acetate cultures we used the standard quantitative immunoblot system (19).
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factors (40) were measured in the strains, as shown in Fig. 2 and 3. In quantitating the concentration of the
S factor relative to the concentration of a core subunit (RpoA) or the housekeeping-metabolic
factor (RpoD), it was clear that the RpoD/RpoA ratio was relatively constant (Fig. 3). In contrast, the amount of
S varied, and the organisms with a low RpoS/RpoD ratio were more proficient in acetate utilization and metabolism generally. Unexpectedly, the three K-12 strains shown in Fig. 2 differed in the proportion of the sigma factor over a sixfold range during growth on acetate despite having identical rpoS sequences (results not shown). The difference in RpoS levels was also not confined to acetate medium, and the concentrations of RpoS protein were markedly different in isolates at identical steady-state growth rates in a glucose-limited chemostat (Fig. 3). Especially interesting was the relationship among stress sensitivity, metabolic capacity, and the endogenous level of RpoS.
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FIG. 3. Strain variation in levels of sigma factors. (A) Quantitation of RpoD relative to core subunit RpoA. (B and C) RpoS/RpoA (B) and RpoS/RpoD (C) ratios of 1-day chemostat samples determined as described by Jishage and Ishihama (19) by using antibodies against purified RpoA, RpoD, or RpoS in parallel with known amounts of purified RNA polymerase subunits. Error bars represent the standard deviations from three blots of each of two independent samples.
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D or
70) with the expression of genes expressed through RpoS or
S (Fig. 4). Consistent with the
S/
D ratios in Fig. 3, quantitation of expression of a
D-dependent gene, lacZ, showed that there was a trend towards increasing lacZ expression with decreasing
S in strains, and the highest levels of LacZ were in rpoS mutants (Fig. 4A). Conversely, when katE, an rpoS-dependent gene (30), was examined, the levels of expression were highest in the high RpoS strains (Fig. 4B) (EcoR38 was anomalous in not having KatE activity). There was a good correlation between the expression patterns and the stress and metabolism capabilities of the six strains.
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FIG. 4. Strain variation in gene expression. (A) Expression of lacZ as determined by quantitating ß-galactosidase activity. (B) Specific activity of KatE/hydroperoxidase II (42) of chemostat samples of each strain. The rpoS status of each strain is indicated by a plus sign or a minus sign. The designations of the rpoS derivatives of the parental strains are as follows: BW3737 (M534), BW3709 (BW2952), ZK1171 (ZK126), BW3736 (EcoR38), and BW3708 (MG1655). The error bars indicate the standard deviations based on two replicates.
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S-dependent transcriptional patterns and the rate of mutation accumulation; the strains with high
S levels were under stronger pressure to lose RpoS in a nutrient-stressed situation. These results parallel the acetate mutation selection results shown in Fig. 2.
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FIG. 5. Selection for loss of RpoS in glucose-limited populations: appearance of rpoS mutations in chemostat populations provided with 0.02% glucose at a dilution rate of 0.1 h1. The proportion of mutants was measured as described by Notley-McRobb et al. (31). The error bars indicate standard deviations based on counts from two or three replicate populations.
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S was initially outcompeted in a glucose-limited environment compared to MG1655 (Fig. 6A), so not only was the BW2952 strain more restricted in terms of nutritional range, but it also had a lower fitness for glucose. After further growth, the appearance of rpoS derivatives in the BW2952 subpopulation increased the competitiveness of the clone, whereas no rpoS mutants of the MG1655 bacteria appeared. The proportion of the BW2952 clone continued to increase due to the accumulation of further mutations described elsewhere (32). When competition experiments were started with rpoS derivatives of BW2952 and MG1655, there was no initial difference in fitness, suggesting that the two strains had similar metabolic potentials once the constraint imposed by RpoS was removed (Fig. 6).
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FIG. 6. Role of RpoS in competition for low nutrient concentrations. (A) Chemostat cultures operating at a dilution rate of 0.1 h1 with 0.04% glucose in the feed medium were inoculated with equal proportions of 1-day chemostat-grown cultures of either MG1655 (rpoS+) ( ) and BW2952 (rpoS+) () or MG1655 (rpoS) ( ) and BW2952 (rpoS) ( ). The proportion of each strain in the population was determined by plating the appropriate dilution onto Luria agar and selective media. (B) Appearance of rpoS mutations in BW2952 in the experiment whose results are shown in panel A. The proportion of RpoS+ cells in the population was determined by staining with iodine. The error bars indicate the standard deviations for three replicate counts.
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Another unexpected conclusion from this study is that a regulatory setting affects both the competitiveness of a bacterium for specific substrates and also its range of substrates. Strains such as EcoR10 and MG1655 are the best specialists for using glucose and also have the broadest nutritional profile. This finding is novel in ecological terms, as generalist and specialist strategies are considered mutually exclusive in ecology (22).
These results also have an impact on our molecular understanding of trade-offs in evolution, which are characterized by the inability of an organism to optimize different traits simultaneously (7, 38). The inverse relationship between nutrition and stress resistance exhibited by bacteria with low and high levels of
S is not a nutrition-nutrition trade-off like that between R and k strategists (25) or a specialist-generalist balance (22), but it is a novel stress protection-nutrition SPANC ("self-preservation and nutritional competence") trade-off. Our results are also consistent with the conclusion that there is no expected trade-off in fitness between adapting to low concentrations of nutrients and adapting to high concentrations of nutrients (41). Transcriptional competition between
factors (8, 26) and the different RpoS/RpoD levels provide a molecular explanation for the set SPANC balance for different isolates.
Historically, it is important that in gene expression studies with E. coli K-12 workers have used numerous genetic backgrounds, including the MG1655, MC4100, and W3110 lineages used here, but our results suggest that RNA polymerase differences need to be considered before strains are interchanged or compared. Indeed, there was a previously noted discrepancy in sigma factor content even within the W3110 lineage (19). It is also relevant that recent results showed that underproduction of RpoD mimics a stringent response (27), which may also partially be the situation in the strains with high
S levels. In turn, this may be relevant to the finding that growth rate variation is due to differences in ribosomal function (28), which is in turn subject to stringent control (6). Even more intriguingly, the ratios of other sigma factors may also be subject to trade-offs, because the
54 content of some W3110 strains was also not constant (19).
From our survey, there is insufficient evidence to suggest that particular
S levels are associated with particular taxonomic groups or virotypes of E. coli. If anything, the evidence points the other way, with a wide range of settings found even within the taxonomic A subgroup (36), including EcoR10 and the three K-12 strains. Still, a more systematic study is needed to test this point. More speculatively, the variation in
factor levels is likely to be variation that can arise frequently, and it occurred independently in the three K-12 lineages, as can happen during prolonged laboratory storage (19, 39). Adaptation of the SPANC balance is therefore likely to be common in nature.
So far, no explanation for what fixes the discrete but distinct RpoS levels in the different strains is available. At least in the three K-12 strains with identical rpoS sequences, the influence on RpoS levels must be extragenic. Complicating matters is the finding that more than one regulatory element may differentiate the strains with low and high RpoS levels because there are numerous, complex inputs for controlling the level of this
factor in the cell (15). Several regulators control each stage of rpoS transcription and translation and
S protein stability (18). Detailed investigation of each input is needed to identify the causes of RpoS variation. Intracellular ppGpp was a potential source of variation in RpoS levels, particularly as BW2952 (an MC4100 derivative) has a known relA1 mutation. However, when ppGpp levels were compared by the method of Rudd et al. (37), there was no correlation between ppGpp levels and RpoS levels. BW2952 had low ppGpp levels but high RpoS levels, whereas M534 had high levels of both. Likewise, the ppGpp level in EcoR10 was lower than the ppGpp level in MG1655, but both strains had low RpoS levels (results not shown). Hence, ppGpp levels are nonuniform in different strains but do not solely explain the RpoS differences observed.
Nevertheless, it is also clear that intragenic changes in rpoS can influence all the properties discussed above. Leaky rpoS mutations that exhibit partial stress resistance are also known to be selected in particular environments (12, 31); these isolates also show altered transcription patterns and partial increases in metabolic versatility (results not shown). The rpoS isolates in population samples (11) also add to the SPANC diversity of bacteria, and rpoS mutants are the best-adapted organisms nutritionally (Fig. 1 and 2). Hence, the SPANC setting of members of E. coli can be adjusted by both extragenic and intragenic rpoS polymorphisms.
In summary, a
factor protein that is associated with RNA polymerase and central to global gene expression is present at various endogenous levels in a species. Given that multiple
factors are universal in bacteria, it is highly likely that such variations are common in the prokaryotic world and that variation in genome usage extends to bacteria, as well as to higher organisms (4). The regulatory variation resulting from set levels of RpoS provides a means of broadening the ecological and phenotypic properties of a species. These results suggest that polymorphic regulation is central to understanding the phenotypic properties of bacteria, bacterial strain variation, and the trade-offs between environmentally useful characteristics. Finally, the SPANC trade-off may be a more general kind of evolutionary adaptation that may be important for free-living organisms that encounter nonconstant environments. Speculatively, the availability of multiple SPANC settings can be a considerable advantage to a species by broadening its niche, so individuals with narrow SPANC specialization may fill environments with particular stress-nutrition combinations.
We also thank the Australian Research Council for funding support.
Supplemental material for this article may be found at http://jb.asm.org/. ![]()
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S (RpoS) subunit of RNA polymerase. Microbiol. Mol. Biol. Rev. 66:373-395.
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