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Journal of Bacteriology, November 2004, p. 7378-7389, Vol. 186, No. 21
0021-9193/04/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JB.186.21.7378-7389.2004
Copyright © 2004, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
and
John W. Foster1*
Department of Microbiology and Immunology, University of South Alabama College of Medicine, Mobile, Alabama,1 Department of Genetics, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts2
Received 3 July 2004/ Accepted 6 August 2004
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-aminobutyric acid, in exchange for fresh glutamate. A microarray study using overexpressed regulators uncovered evgAS and ydeO as potential regulators of gadE, now known to encode the essential activator of the gadA and gadBC genes. Examination of evgA and ydeO under normal expression conditions revealed that their products do activate gadE expression but only under specific conditions. They were important during exponential growth in acidified minimal medium containing glucose but were unnecessary for gadE expression in stationary-phase cells grown in complex medium. The response regulator EvgA activates gadE directly and indirectly via induction of the AraC-like regulator ydeO. Evidence obtained using gadE-lacZ operon fusions also revealed that GadE was autoinduced. Electrophoretic mobility shift assays indicated that EvgA, YdeO, and GadE bind to different regions upstream of gadE, indicating they all act directly at the gadE promoter. Since GadE controls the expression of numerous genes besides gadA and gadBC, the relevance of these regulatory circuits extends beyond acid resistance. |
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E. coli possesses four phenotypically distinct systems of AR. AR system 1 is repressed by glucose, is evident in stationary-phase cells, and protects cells in minimal medium (pH 2.5). The other systems are not repressed by glucose and require the addition of glutamic acid (AR system 2), arginine (AR system 3), or lysine (AR system 4) in the pH 2.5 acid challenge medium (4, 11, 12). These amino acid-dependent systems utilize matched decarboxylases and antiporters to protect the cell. The decarboxylases involved are the glutamic acid decarboxylase isozymes GadA and GadB for system 2, the arginine decarboxylase AdiA for system 3, and presumably, the inducible lysine decarboxylase CadA for system 4 (4, 6, 9, 11). These enzymes all contain pyridoxyl phosphate and work by replacing the
-carboxyl groups of their amino acid substrates with a proton recruited from the cytoplasm. The end products are CO2 and
-amino butyric acid, agmatine, and cadaverine, the end products of glutamate decarboxylase, arginine decarboxylase, and lysine decarboxylase, respectively. The cognate antiporters, GadC for glutamate, AdiC for arginine, and CadC for lysine, expel the decarboxylation product in exchange for new amino acid substrate. AR systems 2 and 3 increase intracellular pH and create a positive electrical potential inside the cell (22). AR system 4, a weaker system, has not been examined.
The most effective of these systems is the glutamate-dependent system. For a seemingly simple mechanism, glutamate-dependent AR is subject to extraordinary control. There are at least 10 regulatory proteins known to control the core gadA and gadBC loci. The gadA and gadBC genes are induced by growth under acidic conditions or by entry into stationary phase. GadE (formerly yhiE), a LuxR-family activator, is the central activator of gadA and gadBC expression (10, 13). GadE binds to a 20-bp sequence called the GAD box centered 63 bp from the transcriptional start sites of gadA and gadBC (3, 13). The other regulators form iterative control circuits designed to activate gadE expression under different growth conditions. The requirements and roles of these other regulators change with growth phase, aeration, and medium.
One circuit involves cyclic AMP receptor protein (CRP), RpoS, and two AraC-like regulators, GadX and GadW. This circuit plays a prominent role in cells grown in complex medium but also influences expression during growth in minimal medium. The two AraC-like regulators, GadX and GadW, reside downstream of gadA but are transcribed, for the most part, by independent promoters (15). GadX and GadW initially appeared to activate and repress the core gad genes, depending on the situation (13, 25). However, we now have evidence that these regulators activate gadE, and thus gadA and gadBC, during growth in complex medium but can also directly repress gadA and gadBC (S. Gong, Z. Ma, A. Sayed, and J. Foster, submitted for publication). GadX, GadW, and RpoS, the stress response alternative sigma factor, also form a regulatory loop that is influenced by cyclic AMP and CRP (14, 15, 27, 28).
Members of the second circuit were initially discovered when Masuda and Church found that overexpressing the EvgA response regulator at pH 7 resulted in highly acid-resistant cells (16). A series of gene array studies using strains that overexpressed these regulators suggested a regulatory circuit in which the EvgSA two-component regulatory system activates expression of the AraC-like regulator ydeO. YdeO then activates AR. We predicted that this activation occurs by inducing expression of the essential activator gadE and tested the proposed linear EvgA-YdeO-GadE regulatory scheme under physiological conditions. The data revealed that an EvgA regulatory circuit does activate gadE, but the circuit is used only in exponential-phase cultures growing at low pH (pH 5.5) in a minimal medium containing salts and glucose. It is not needed to activate gadE in stationary phase or during growth in a rich medium, such as Luria-Bertani medium (LB). Chromosomal knockout mutations indicate the system is a branched control circuit (diagrammatically summarized in the Discussion) where EvgA activates gadE expression directly and indirectly through a ydeO feed-forward loop and where gadE autoregulates its own expression. Consequently, the EvgA regulatory pathway is more complex than originally thought. The significance of this control extends beyond AR, since GadE, as well as EvgA and YdeO, affect multiple aspects of cell physiology (10, 17).
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TABLE 1. Bacterial strains and plasmids used in this study
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TABLE 2. Oligonucleotide primers used in this study
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Northern blot analysis.
Total RNA was extracted by using the RNeasy Mini kit (Qiagen) from log-phase cell cultures (OD600 of 0.4) grown under both alkaline and acidic conditions in minimal medium containing glucose. RNA (5 µg) was separated through a denaturing formaldehyde-agarose gel (1.2% formaldehyde-agarose) and subjected to Northern blot analysis as described previously (13, 23). Membranes were probed with a 0.534-kb gadE or 0.762-kb ydeO probe generated by PCR using oligonucleotide 540 or 541 and oligonucleotide 544 or 545, respectively. Probes were labeled with [
-32P]dCTP (ICN) using DECA prime II random-priming DNA labeling kit (Ambion). Both ydeO and gadE probes correspond to the entire open reading frames (ORFs) of ydeO and gadE, respectively. For a control, the membranes were also hybridized with a 23S rRNA probe (oligonucleotide 379) end labeled with [
-32P]ATP. Northern blot quantitations were determined by densitometry using Scion Image software.
Primer extension.
To determine the gadE transcriptional start site, six primers (oligonucleotides 599, 624, 625, 662, 626, and 663) that span the hdeD-gadE intergenic region were used for primer extension analysis. One picomole each of the primers was 5' end labeled with [
-32P]ATP T4 using polynucleotide kinase (Promega). Reverse transcription of gadE mRNA, isolated from pH 5.5 log-phase cells (EG medium), was performed using the Promega primer extension system. RNA (5 µg) and end-labeled primers were annealed for 20 min at 58°C, and then 10 U of avian myeloblastosis virus reverse transcriptase was added to the 20-µl reaction mixture and incubated at 42°C for 1 h. The reaction was halted by adding 20 µl of kit loading dye. Sequencing reactions were performed using the thermal Sequenase cycle sequencing kit (U.S. Biochemicals) and run in parallel with the cDNA primer extension transcripts to map the 5' end of gadE mRNA. A PCR product produced by oligonucleotide 700 or 704, which contains the entire hdeD-gadE intergenic region and part of the gadE ORF were used as templates in the sequencing reactions.
Construction of gadE-lacZ and evgA-lacZ transcriptional fusions. Chromosomal gadE-lacZ operon fusions were constructed by the method of Elliott (8). An 804-bp fragment containing the hdeD-gadE intergenic region plus part of the gadE ORF (positions 804 to +28 relative to the gadE start codon) was amplified using oligonucleotides 609 and 610 engineered to include EcoRI and BamHI restriction sites, respectively. The fragments were then digested and cloned into EcoRI/BamHI-digested pRS551 (Kmr Ampr), which is a lacZ operon fusion vector (26). The resulting plasmid, pMF537, was linearized by XhoI digestion and transformed into the E. coli recD strain EK298 (Cmr Kms) containing a Kms-lacZ cassette inserted into a putPA operon that was itself inserted into the trp locus of E. coli. Recombination between the plasmid and chromosome produced an Amps Cms Kmr merodiploid strain containing an intact gadE gene and a gadE-lacZ transcriptional fusion located at the putPA operon. Correct insertion of the gadE-lacZ fusion was confirmed by PCR with oligonucleotide 609 to the gadE promoter and oligonucleotide 194 for lacZ. The gadE-lacZ fusion was transduced to wild-type E. coli strains by P1 phage transduction. Additional fusions between lacZ and various fragments of the hdeD-gadE intergenic region were prepared using oligonucleotide 700 or 704 (positions 804 to +331 relative to start codon ATG), oligonucleotide 702 or 704 (positions 360 to +331), and oligonucleotide 701 or 704 (positions 195 to +331). The PCR fragments from these oligonucleotides were cloned into pRS551, resulting in plasmids pMF555, pMF556, and pMF567, respectively, which were linearized and transformed into strain EK298 as described above.
An evgA-lacZ operon fusion was also constructed. A 570-bp DNA fragment containing the evgA promoter region was generated by PCR using oligonucleotide 633 or 634 containing engineered EcoRI and BamHI restriction sites, respectively. This fragment was cloned into pRS551, creating plasmid pMF546. A chromosomal merodiploid evgA-lacZ transcriptional fusion strain was constructed as described above. ß-Galactosidase activities were measured as described previously (18).
Expression and purification of MBP-GadE, MBP-YdeO, and His6-EvgA fusion proteins. Maltose binding protein (MBP)-GadE fusion protein was purified previously (13). An MBP-YdeO fusion protein was constructed by excising ydeO from pQEydeO (17) using BamHI and HindIII and religating the fragment downstream of MalE in plasmid pMALc2E (New England Biolabs). The resulting plasmid, pMF539, was transformed into strain TB1 (New England Biolabs). MBP-YdeO fusion protein was expressed and purified as described previously for MBP-GadE (13). The protein was purified to homogeneity as determined by Coomassie blue-stained SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE) (data not shown).
To purify EvgA, a His6-EvgA fusion vector, pQEevgA, was constructed and transformed into an evgAS mutant background as described previously (17). A culture grown overnight was diluted (1:10) into 500 ml of fresh LB medium with 100 µg of carbenicillin per ml and incubated at 37°C with shaking until reaching an OD600 of 0.5. The fusion was induced with 1.5 mM IPTG and incubated for an additional 3 h. The culture was centrifuged for 15 min at 10,000 x g, resuspended in 30 ml of lysis buffer (50 mM NaH2PO4, 300 mM NaCl,10 mM imidazole [pH 8.0]), and passed three times through a French pressure cell at 20,000 lb/in2. Cell lysates were cleared by centrifugation as described above and passed through a 0.45-µm-pore-size filter. The cleared extract was mixed with 4.5 ml of Ni-nitrilotriacetic acid agarose (Invitrogen) and gently shaken at 4°C for 1 h. The supernatant-agarose mixture was loaded into a column, washed with 65 ml of wash buffer (50 mM NaH2PO4, 300 mM NaCl, 20 mM imidazole [pH 8.0]). His6-EvgA protein was eluted with 15 ml of elution buffer (50 mM NaH2PO4, 300 mM NaCl, 250 mM imidazole [pH 8.0]) and collected in 1.0-ml fractions. Samples (about 3 ml) of the three highest protein content fractions were combined and desalted through a PD-10 Sephadex column (Amersham Pharmacia). The purity of the purified His6-EvgA was checked by 10% HCl SDS-PAGE (data not shown).
EMSA.
Electrophoretic mobility shift assays (EMSA) were used to test whether His-tagged EvgA, MBP-YdeO, and MBP-GadE proteins bound to different regions within the hdeD-gadE intergenic sequence. The entire intergenic region and three subfragments were amplified with oligonucleotide 597 or 599 (spanning nucleotides [nt] 804 to +28 relative to the translational start codon), oligonucleotide 627 or 599 (designated F1, spanning nt 195 to +28), oligonucleotide 661 or 662 (designated fragment F2, spanning nt 360 to 190), and oligonucleotide 598 or 601 (designated fragment F3, spanning nt 682 to 355). These fragments were used in binding reactions with purified regulator fusion proteins. All DNA fragments were end labeled with [
-32P]ATP by T4 polynucleotide kinase. Radiolabeled DNA probes (5 ng) were incubated with different concentrations of His6-EvgA, MBP-YdeO, and MBP-GadE fusion proteins at room temperature for 30 min in 20 µl of binding buffer [20 mM HEPES (pH 8.0), 5 mM MgCl2, 50 mM potassium glutamate, 0.01 mM EDTA, 1 mM NaH2PO4, 20 mM NaCl, 1 mM dithiothreitol, 30 µg of bovine serum albumin per ml, 50 µg of poly(dI-dC) per ml]. Where indicated, an excess (100 ng) of specific, unlabeled DNA was added for competitive binding. Samples were loaded onto a 5% Tris-borate-EDTA (TBE) nondenaturing ready gel (Bio-Rad) and electrophoresed at room temperature in 0.5x TBE buffer with 1.2% glycerol. The gels were dried and exposed to X-Omat Kodak film at 70°C for 3 h. Each EMSA experiment was repeated in triplicate.
AR assays. AR was tested using stationary-phase cultures (OD600 of >2.0) and exponential-phase cultures (OD600 of 0.4). Stationary-phase cells were prepared for AR system 1 by growth in LB with MES (pH 5.5) and LB with MOPS (pH 8.0) for 22 h. EG minimal medium was used to prepare cells to test AR system 2 (glutamate dependent), while cells grown in BHIG were used to test AR system 3 (arginine dependent). Extracellular glutamate is not needed to induce the glutamate-dependent system. Stationary-phase cultures were diluted 1:1,000 into prewarmed EG medium at pH 2.5 to test AR (final concentration of 2 x 106 cells/ml). Dilutions were made in unsupplemented EG medium (pH 2.5) for AR system 1, EG medium (pH 2.0) supplemented with 1.5 mM glutamate for AR system 2, and EG medium (pH 2.5) containing 1.0 mM arginine for AR system 3.
To test AR in log-phase cells, cultures (108 CFU/ml) were diluted 1:10 into prewarmed EG medium (pH 2.0), yielding a final pH of 2.5 and a final cell density of 107 CFU/ml. Viable counts were determined at time zero, 1, 2, and 4 h after acid challenge. A previous report suggesting that log-phase cells grown in minimal medium were sensitive to acid did not use a sufficiently high cell density to detect resistance (4). A more recent report has shown that log-phase cells grown at pH 5.5 can survive pH 2.5 acid challenge (2). Results are presented as the averages ± standard errors of the means for three experiments.
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Strains containing the overexpressing plasmids pQEevgA, pQEydeO, or pQEgadE(yhiE) were grown to log phase in minimal medium (pH 7.7) containing glucose, rich LB, or BHIG medium and then tested for the three AR systems. Table 3 presents the results from cells grown on minimal medium containing glucose. In each case, overexpression of the regulatory gene induced only the glutamate-dependent AR system. Similar results were found using BHIG, a medium containing cofactors needed to optimally induce arginine-dependent AR (data not shown). Thus, EvgA, YdeO, and GadE appear to affect only induction of glutamate-dependent AR.
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TABLE 3. Effects of EvgA, YdeO, and GadE overexpression on AR mechanisms
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FIG. 1. Induction of GadA or GadB by overexpressing EvgA and YdeO is dependent on GadE. Cells were grown to log phase in minimal EG medium with 1.5 mM IPTG at the pH values indicated. IPTG was added (+) to induce expression of cloned genes evgA (A) and ydeO (B). Five micrograms of protein from each extract was separated on an SDS-10% polyacrylamide gel and probed with anti-Gad antibody. (C) RNA was extracted from log-phase cells grown in minimal medium at pH 7.7. RNA (5 µg) was loaded onto 1.2% agarose-formaldehyde denaturing gels and probed for gadE mRNA. The smaller, cross-reacting band seen in these figures is not related to either GadA or GadB. The band is still observed in a gadA gadB double mutant. 23S rRNA was used as the loading standard in the lower blot.
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Under natural inducing conditions, evgA and ydeO contribute to glutamate-dependent AR additively. The overexpression results suggested a linear control circuit proceeding from EvgA to YdeO to GadE, which would then activate the gadA or gadBC genes (13, 17). However, as powerful as overexpression strategies are at revealing regulatory circuits, abnormally high levels of a regulatory protein could lead to inadvertent, and perhaps physiologically irrelevant, cross talk between regulatory systems (31, 33). Consequently, we tested the relevance of the proposed EvgA-YdeO-GadE circuit under conditions that do not involve overexpression. Mutants defective in these regulators were grown under log-phase and stationary-phase growth conditions that naturally lead to AR. Neither single nor double mutations in evgA and ydeO affected stationary-phase-induced glutamate-dependent AR (data not shown), but when cells were grown to log phase in minimal medium, evgA and ydeO mutants exhibited reduced AR (Fig. 2). However, in contrast to what one would predict from a linear regulatory pathway, the evgA mutation had a greater effect on AR than the ydeO mutation, suggesting that EvgA and YdeO have separable effects on AR (Fig. 2, compare EK592 to EK593 to EK595).
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FIG. 2. Effects of evgA, ydeO, and gadE mutations on glutamate-dependent AR. The effects of the individual mutations on AR are shown. Cells were grown to exponential phase in minimal EG medium at pH 5.5 and tested for AR at pH 2.5 as described in Table 3, footnote a. All cultures grown at pH 7.7 were acid sensitive (data not shown). Cells were diluted 1:10 as described in Materials and Methods. The final pH was pH 2.5. The medium either contained no additives () or contained glutamate as indicated (+). Asterisks indicate that the result was below the limit of detection indicated by the bar. Viable counts were determined 1, 2, and 4 h after acid challenge (t1, t2, and t4, respectively). WT, wild type.
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FIG. 3. Effects of evgA and ydeO on gadA and gadB expression (A), gadE expression (B), and complementation of the evgA ydeO AR phenotype by GadE (C). Cells were grown to exponential phase (OD600 of 0.4) in minimal EG medium and analyzed for GadA and GadB protein levels by Western blotting (A) as noted in the legend to Fig. 2 and for gadE mRNA by Northern blotting (B). Northern blots were performed on 5 µg of total RNA that was electrophoresed through 1.2% agarose-formaldehyde denaturing gels and probed with a 0.534-kb gadE probe. C. Complementation of the evgA ydeO acid-sensitive phenotype by GadE expression. Cells (EF1348) were grown as in panel A but with (+) or without () IPTG to induce the pQEgadE plasmid. The slight increase in resistance seen without glutamate is thought to be due to the effects of GadE overexpression on target genes other than gadABC that aid AR. Viable counts were determined 1, 2, and 4 h after acid challenge (t1, t2, and t4, respectively). WT, wild type.
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EvgA and YdeO affect transcription of gadE. Next we tested whether EvgA and YdeO affected gadE expression under physiological conditions. The results of Northern blot analysis shown in Fig. 3B revealed that EvgA (compare lanes 1 and 2) had a greater effect on gadE transcription than YdeO (compare lanes 1 and 3). This finding was consistent with the decarboxylase Western blot (Fig. 3A) and AR (Fig. 2) results. These results also confirm that EvgA affects gadE expression in YdeO-dependent and -independent pathways.
We have, to this point, been assuming that the acid-sensitive phenotypes of evgA and ydeO mutants were due to the loss of glutamate decarboxylase. However, evgA and/or ydeO mutants might be acid sensitive because of decreased expression of other genes under their control. Since GadE is the essential activator of gadA and gadBC, we tested whether overexpression of GadE could suppress the acid-sensitive phenotype of an evgA ydeO mutant. Figure 3C illustrates that the acid-sensitive phenotype of an evgA ydeO mutant was completely reversed by overexpressing GadE. This would not happen if YdeO or EvgA activated other genes necessary for AR. Thus, the acid-sensitive phenotype of evgA and ydeO mutants appears to be directly and solely due to the loss of gadE expression and the subsequent loss of glutamate decarboxylase.
GadE is autoregulated. A variety of gadE-lacZ operon fusion strains were constructed to confirm the Northern blot results and begin detailed studies of the gadE control region (Fig. 4). The control strain, EF1244, clearly showed that gadE expression is induced by acid (10-fold). When gadE-lacZ expression was tested in the presence of various mutations, evgA had a greater effect on expression than did ydeO (Fig. 4, compare EF1245 and EF1246). These results correlate with those of the gadE Northern and GAD Western blots shown above and indicate the fusion acts appropriately.
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FIG. 4. Effects of evgAS, ydeO, and gadE on gadE-lacZ expression. Strains containing a gadE-lacZ operon fusion (positions 804 to +28 relative to the gadE translational start) inserted at the trp operon were grown to exponential phase (OD600 of 0.4) in minimal EG medium (containing 0.3 mM tryptophan) at different pH values and assayed for ß-galactosidase activity. Values are means ± standard errors of the means (error bars) for four experiments.
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The data in Fig. 4 also indicate that the three regulators have independent effects on gadE-lacZ expression. For example, the ydeO, ydeO evgA, and ydeO evgA gadE mutants demonstrate a stepwise decrease in gadE-lacZ expression relative to the wild type. The decreases were 2-, 5-, and 12-fold, respectively (12,000 ± 300 Miller units for the wild type, 5,960 ± 150 Miller units for the ydeO mutant, 2,100 ± 190 Miller units for the ydeO evgA mutant, and 1,100 ± 70 Miller units for the ydeO evgA gadE mutant). The accumulated results indicate that each regulator affects gadE expression individually and in an additive manner.
Location of the gadE promoter. Primer extension analysis was then used to identify the gadE transcriptional start site. The results indicate that the start site is an A positioned 21 bp upstream of the translational start codon (Fig. 5). Figure 1C and 3B revealed two gadE transcripts, one approximately 0.680 kb and the other around 1.06 kb in size. Attempts to find a second, upstream promoter failed. Six other oligonucleotides spanning the 777-bp region upstream of the identified start site failed to hybridize to either transcript. We have also demonstrated that the second transcript does not represent cross hybridization, since both transcripts disappeared in a gadE deletion mutant (13). The second, smaller transcript seen in Fig. 1C and 3B is likely the result of alternative termination or processing sites downstream of gadE (see below).
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FIG. 5. Primer extension analysis of gadE transcription. RNA was extracted from log-phase cells grown in minimal medium at pH 5.5 (OD600 of 0.4). The RNA was subjected to primer extension analysis as described in Materials and Methods. Dideoxy sequencing ladder of the fragment used for primer extension is shown in lanes 1 to 4. Primer extensions were performed on RNA extracts using labeled oligonucleotide 624. The DNA sequence using the same oligonucleotide is shown to the left. However, the sequence autoradiograph was reversed to show the sequence of the coding strand.
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If the two gadE transcripts shown in Fig. 3B initiate from the same promoter but reflect different termination sites downstream of gadE, then mutations in evgA or ydeO should reduce both transcripts similarly. Figure 3B illustrates that mutations in either regulator caused parallel decreases of both gadE transcripts, although evgA had a greater effect on these transcripts than ydeO did. We also demonstrated that the larger gadE transcript disappears when the yhiUV genes, located 338 bp downstream of gadE, were deleted (EK619 [Fig. 3B]). The gadE ORF itself is 528 bp long. This suggests that termination of the larger transcript occurs within the yhiU ORF region.
EvgA, GadE, and YdeO directly bind the gadE promoter. Initial EMSA experiments revealed that all three regulators bound to a 748-bp fragment representing most of the 798-bp intergenic region between hdeD and gadE (data not shown). We then divided this large fragment into three smaller fragments of 223 bp (F1), 171 bp (F2), and 373 bp (F3) as illustrated in Fig. 6. Figure 7 indicates that GadE bound to fragments F1 and F2 (Fig. 7A), EvgA bound to F2 and F3 (Fig. 7B), while YdeO bound to F1 and F3 but not to F2 (Fig. 7C). The results are consistent with all three regulators binding directly at the gadE promoter region.
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FIG. 6. hdeD-gadE intergenic region. The primers used to generate fragments F1, F2, and F3 for EMSA are numbered. Nucleotide distances relative to the gadE translational start are noted in parentheses. The location of the gadE transcriptional start site is indicated by the bent arrow. Sequences in the gadE upstream region that exhibit homology to GAD boxes are identified in fragments 1 and 2 and are shown aligned with the 20-bp GAD box sequence; nonaligned bases are indicated by lowercase letters. EMSA results presented in Fig. 7 are summarized using ovals to represent the different purified regulators.
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FIG. 7. Electrophoretic mobility shifts of gadE promoter region fragments by EvgA, YdeO, and GadE. Fragments corresponding to those described in the legend to Fig. 6 were radiolabeled as described in Materials and Methods, and various concentrations of purified protein were added prior to electrophoresis through a 5% polyacrylamide gel. Some lanes also contained (+) unlabeled, specific competitor DNA (cold probe) as indicated. A. MBP-GadE. B. His6-EvgA. C. MBP-YdeO. Bands in the middle of lanes 5 to 8 in panels A and C were artifacts of PCR. oligos, oligonucleotides.
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We then examined whether purified GadE would bind to any of these putative GAD box sequences in vitro. Sequences of 32 to 36 bp containing the different GAD box sites were synthesized and used in EMSA experiments with purified GadE. The results, shown in Fig. 8, reveal that GadE will bind each of the GAD box sites, but not to a fragment lacking a GAD box (fragment F).
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FIG. 8. Binding of MBP-GadE to potential GAD box sequences in the gadE control region. Sequences (32 bp) containing GAD box site 1 (oligonucleotide 724 annealed to oligonucleotide 725) and GAD box site 2 (oligonucleotide 726 annealed to oligonucleotide 727) and a 36-bp sequence containing GAD box site 3 (oligonucleotide 728 annealed to oligonucleotide 729) were made and used in EMSA experiments as described in Materials and Methods and in the legend to Fig. 7. The negative-control fragment was a sequence from the gadA promoter region made using oligonucleotides 586 and 587 and does not contain a GAD box.
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TABLE 4. Contribution of upstream DNA sequences to gadE-lacZ operon fusions
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FIG. 9. Northern blot analysis of the effects of EvgA (A) and GadE (B) on ydeO expression. Cells were grown to exponential phase, and total RNA was extracted and processed for Northern blot analysis as described in the legend to Fig. 3B. Five milligrams of RNA was run per lane. 23S rRNA was used as the loading control.
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FIG. 10. EvgA-YdeO-GadE branched pathway regulating glutamate-dependent AR. See text for details.
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The EvgA-dependent GadE activation circuit functions in exponential-phase cells growing in minimal medium containing glucose. EvgA directly activates gadE without assistance from YdeO, and YdeO can activate gadE without EvgA. However, EvgA can also activate ydeO. The data further indicates that GadE activates itself and represses ydeO in a partial feedback loop. Thus, as GadE is produced, it will begin to shut down the YdeO activation pathway but stimulate its own synthesis. Our results verify an earlier gene array study suggesting that GadE might autoregulate expression (10).
EvgA, YdeO, and GadE proteins all demonstrated an ability to bind different fragments within the 798-bp intergenic region between hdeD and gadE. GadE binding sites were discovered in the upstream intergenic sequences shown to bind GadE (Fig. 6). However, no sites were found corresponding to a predicted EvgA binding consensus sequence, and nothing is known of potential YdeO binding sites. The EvgA consensus sequence was recently proposed on the basis of sequence comparisons between six EvgA-regulated genes (17). It is possible that the EvgA binding site is broader that expected. For example, another report found that EvgA could bind upstream of yhiU in a region that also lacks the proposed EvgA consensus site (20).
An interesting question posed by these studies is how the three regulators might collaborate to mediate control of gadE. The EMSA results indicate that each regulator is capable of binding to different pairs of three regions within the gadE promoter region. This pattern could indicate complex DNA looping arrangements, although protein-protein interactions between regulators have not yet been demonstrated. The promoter region for gadE (Fig. 6) looks like a classical positively regulated promoter with negligible 35 motif conservation and a weak 10 motif strengthened by TG immediately 5' to the putative 10 motif (1). We predict that these three binding proteins function to facilitate RNA polymerase recruitment and/or binding to this promoter region.
It is also not apparent how the GadE activation circuit shuts off. Efficient activation likely requires interactions between the various regulators and small signal molecules that accumulate under different environmental conditions. There is evidence that, in the absence of signal, GadE protein might naturally degrade and not be replaced. For instance, in spite of what appears to be ample gadE mRNA, it has been impossible to observe native intracellular GadE levels by Western blotting. The anti-GadE antibody used easily reveals MBP-GadE in whole-cell extracts, but not native nor His6-tagged GadE, suggesting that the smaller proteins may be subject to rapid turnover (data not shown). Rapid turnover of GadE coupled with changes in coeffector concentrations as cells leave inducing environments could shut down expression.
The data also do not fully explain the acid induction of gadE. Induction is not due to pH effects on the production of EvgA on the basis of evgA-lacZ results (data not shown). It is tempting to propose that acid pH alters the phosphorylation status of EvgA, which in turn would influence the acid induction of ydeO and gadE. However, induction of gadE cannot be due solely to a potential change in EvgA activity, since gadE was induced by acid in an evgA mutant, although to a reduced level (Fig. 4). In fact, no one regulator could be linked to acid induction, although ydeO was itself induced by acid (Fig. 9A). The results suggest that these regulators either all contribute to acid induction or there is some other regulatory feature that dictates pH control. Hommais et al. suggest that the promoter regions of gadE and other genes within the proposed acid fitness island encompassing gadE have a high propensity for helix disruption that might make them easily transcribed (10). They proposed the presence of an efficient locking mechanism involving H-NS that prevents inadvertent expression during normal growth. If this is correct, the decrease in internal pH from 7.8 to around 7.4 during growth at pH 5.5 might be enough to destabilize the locking mechanism. The regulatory proteins noted here could either assist in destabilization to unlock the promoter or perform tasks subsequent to unlocking, such as communicating with RNA polymerase.
The results of the microarray study also suggested that AR caused by YdeO overexpression depended on the slp-yhiF, hdeA, and hdeD genes (17). However, under conditions commonly used to naturally induce AR, none of these genes were required (data not shown). This suggests that another pathway of AR might exist, but the actual inducing conditions remain obscure. A recent report has suggested the existence of one such pathway employing the asr product (24).
In addition to demonstrating an EvgA-dependent pathway, the results here suggest the existence of an EvgA-independent pathway that activates gadE in stationary-phase cells grown in complex medium. Clearly, the regulatory web governing glutamate-dependent AR is vast, now encompassing 10 regulators.
Why does AR require all this regulation? It is important to note that the induction of AR probably does not occur in the stomach, at least not to a great extent. We predict that induction occurs some time before ingestion (e.g., during stationary-phase growth in the intestine). Thus, one possible reason for this extensive control is that the system may be rigged to induce under many different environmental conditions that could presage an encounter with extreme acid stress, such as gastric acidity. Each growth condition might trigger a different metabolic signal recognized by different regulators within the system. This complexity must reflect the importance of surviving extreme acid stress.
The EvgA-YdeO-GadE circuit also appears to affect cell physiology beyond AR. Gene array studies examining the regulatory reach of the GadX, GadE, and EvgA regulators indicate that each regulator controls numerous genes (7, 10, 17, 19, 21, 30). Some are clearly connected to AR, others display characteristics hinting at a possible connection, while several lack any obvious relationship to acid stress survival. The broad impact these regulators have on gene expression suggests a metabolic importance that remains unexplored.
This work was supported by National Institutes of Health award R01-GM61147.
Present address: Biological Research Laboratories, Sankyo Co., Ltd., 1-2-58 Hiromachi, Shinagawa-ku, Tokyo 140-8710, Japan. ![]()
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70 subunit is responsible for the recognition of the 'extended 10' motif at promoters. EMBO J. 16:4034-4040.[CrossRef][Medline]
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