Journal of Bacteriology, December 2004, p. 7829-7835, Vol. 186, No. 23
0021-9193/04/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JB.186.23.7829-7835.2004
Copyright © 2004, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Maria Marco,1,2
Sally M. Hoffer,1,2,
Esther Van Mullekom,1,2
Willem M. de Vos,1 and
Michiel Kleerebezem1,2*
Wageningen Centre for Food Sciences,1 NIZO Food Research, Ede, The Netherlands2
Received 18 May 2004/ Accepted 18 August 2004
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Studies of gram-positive, food-associated bacteria and their tolerance to digestive stress have focused mainly on physiological aspects, such as determination of the levels of acid and bile salt tolerance (6, 18), as well as the development of complex media in order to selectively enrich the bacteria that are digestive stress tolerant (30). Additionally, in several studies workers have described defense mechanisms of gram-negative bacteria against bile acids, which include the synthesis of porins, transport proteins, efflux pumps, and lipopolysaccharides (15). A few genome-wide approaches with gram-positive bacteria aimed at identification of proteins important for bile salt resistance have been described. In Propionibacterium freudenreichii, Listeria monocytogenes, and Enterococcus faecalis two-dimensional gel electrophoresis led to identification of several proteins that were expressed more highly in the presence of bile salts than under control conditions (12, 20, 26). In P. freudenreichii these induced proteins were characterized further, which led to the identification of 11 proteins that are induced by bile stress. These proteins include general stress proteins, such as ClpB and the chaperones DnaK and Hsp20 (20). Analogously, a subset of the proteins identified in E. faecalis appeared to be inducible by multiple sublethal stresses, including heat, ethanol, and alkaline pH (27). The fact that general stress proteins are induced by bile is in agreement with the cross-protection against bile after thermal or detergent pretreatment that has been observed in several bacteria, including E. faecalis, L. monocytogenes, and Bifidobacterium adolescentis (2, 12, 29). Furthermore, random gene disruption strategies with L. monocytogenes and E. faecalis resulted in strains that were more susceptible to bile salts than the wild-type strains. Subsequent genetic analysis of the mutants revealed that the disrupted genes encode diverse functions, including an efflux pump homologue (2), and genes that may be involved in the biosynthesis of cell walls and fatty acids (3).
Lactic acid bacteria (LAB) are used extensively in the production of fermented food products. Because of the frequent consumption of dairy, vegetable, meat, and other fermented food products, large amounts of LAB are ingested. Moreover, LAB have the potential to serve as delivery vehicles for health-promoting or therapeutic compounds to the gastrointestinal tract (GI tract) (13, 31). One of the LAB, Lactobacillus plantarum, is encountered in many environmental niches, including dairy fermentations, meat fermentations, and a variety of vegetable fermentations (9, 11, 28). The complete 3.3-Mbp genome sequence of L. plantarum WCFS1 was recently determined (19). This strain is a single-colony isolate of strain NCIMB8826, which effectively survives passage through the stomach in an active form, reaches the ileum in high numbers compared to other strains, and is detectable in the colon (35). The availability of its genome sequence allows effective investigation of the genes and regulation mechanisms underlying the observed persistence of L. plantarum in the GI tract. In the research described here we focused on the genetic response of L. plantarum after exposure to a toxic concentration of bile acid molecules. Previously, utilization of alanine racemase as a promoter probe for the genome-wide identification of L. plantarum genes whose expression is induced by high salt conditions was described (5). Here the same system was utilized, which led to the identification of 31 genes induced by bile salts. Strikingly, two of the genes identified have previously been demonstrated to be induced in vivo in L. plantarum during passage through the mouse GI tract (4). In a quantitative reverse transcription-PCR analysis we focused on these two genes, demonstrating both their in vitro chromosomal induction by porcine bile and their in vivo expression in the duodenum in a mouse model.
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TABLE 1. Strains, plasmids, and primers used in this study and their relevant characteristics
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Identification of bile salt-inducible loci by using the alr complementation library. Construction and utilization of an L. plantarum promoter probe library for effective identification of conditionally active promoters were described previously (5). Here this library was exploited for identification of clones that contain bile salt-inducible L. plantarum chromosomal fragments. Appropriate dilutions of a 80°C stock of the library were immediately plated on MRS plates containing erythromycin and 0.1% porcine bile (B-8631; Sigma, Zwijndrecht, The Netherlands). After 2 days of growth approximately 4,000 individual colonies on these plates were used for replica plating on plates containing erythromycin, one with 0.1% porcine bile and one without porcine bile. Growth on the two plates was periodically compared, which led to the primary identification of 96 colonies that could grow only in the presence of porcine bile (Table 1). The colonies displaying bile-dependent growth were cultured overnight in a microtiter plate containing MRS with erythromycin and D-alanine. The full-grown cultures were used to reconfirm the initially observed conditional growth phenotype and to assess the conditional promoter strength by observing the conditional growth phenotype in the presence of different concentrations of the Alr inhibitor D-cycloserine (5). The microtiter plate was replica plated by using a 96-pin replicator and MRS plates containing erythromycin and 0, 2.5, 5.0, 10, 25, 50, 100, or 200 µg of D-cycloserine per ml, with or without 0.1% bile salts. The bile-dependent, differential growth phenotype in the presence of different concentrations of D-cycloserine was determined by periodically comparing the growth on the plates with bile salts and the growth on the plates without bile salts. For the clones for which bile-dependent growth could be confirmed in this experiment, the chromosomal L. plantarum inserts harbored by their pNZ7120 derivatives were amplified by PCR by using primers PB1 and PB2 (5). The resulting amplicons were used for partial DNA sequence analysis with primer PB3 (5), and the insert sequences determined were assigned to chromosomal loci by using BlastN (1) and the L. plantarum genome sequence as the database (19).
RNA isolation. Appropriate dilutions of an overnight culture of L. plantarum WCFS1 were plated on MRS with or without 0.1% porcine bile salts. After 3 days of growth approximately 100 colonies were rapidly collected from the plates in 3 ml of MRS, which was added to 12 ml of quench buffer (60% methanol, 66.7 mM HEPES; pH 6.5; 40°C) (B. Pieterse, unpublished data). Following quenching, the cells were immediately pelleted by centrifugation at 5,000 x g for 10 min, and the cell pellets were resuspended in 0.4 ml of ice-cold MRS. The cell suspensions were added to ice-cold tubes containing 1 g of zirconium glass beads, 0.4 ml of phenol, 100 µl of chloroform, 30 µl of 10% sodium dodecyl sulfate, and 30 µl of 3 M sodium acetate (pH 5.2). The cells were disrupted with two 40-s treatments in a Fastprep (Qbiogene Inc., Illkirch, France) separated by 1 min on ice. After centrifugation, 200 µl of the aqueous phase was used for RNA isolation with a High Pure kit, which included 1 h of treatment with DNase I (Roche Diagnostics, Mannheim, Germany).
For detection of in vivo mRNA levels in an animal model, a mouse experiment was performed in an accredited establishment (no. A59107) according to the N°86/609/CEE guidelines of the French government. Seven-week-old female BALB/c mice were purchased from Iffa Credo (St. Germain sur l'Arbresle, France) and had free access to tap water and standard mouse chow during the experiments. After overnight culturing, bacterial cells were pelleted by centrifugation and resuspended at a concentration of 1010 CFU per ml in MRS. A mouse received a 100-µl (109-CFU) dose of a freshly prepared bacterial suspension by intragastric administration, and the next day the mouse received a dose of 1010 CFU. Four hours later, the mouse was sacrificed, and a section of the mouse small intestine representing the duodenum (0.48 g) was quickly collected and frozen in liquid nitrogen until it was processed with a liquid N2-cooled BioPulverizer (BioSpec Products, Bartlesville, Okla.). The powdered sample was immediately used for cell disruption and RNA isolation essentially as described above for pure bacterial cell pellets.
cDNA synthesis and quantitative reverse transcription-PCR.
The expression levels of L. plantarum WCFS1 genes derived from cells grown on MRS plates were compared to the expression levels of genes derived from cells grown on MRS plates containing 0.1% porcine bile and to the expression levels in the mouse duodenum. First, cDNA was synthesized by using Superscript III reverse transcriptase (Invitrogen, Breda, The Netherlands), 2 pmol of a gene-specific primer (Table 1), 40 U of RNaseOUT RNase inhibitor, each deoxynucleoside triphosphate at a concentration of 0.5 mM, and either 0.11 µg of total RNA from laboratory medium-grown L. plantarum WCFS1 or 2.1 µg of total RNA from a mouse GI tract sample. Reverse transcription was performed at 55°C for 60 min, and this was followed by inactivation of the reverse transcriptase by incubation at 70°C for 15 min. Primers were designed by using Primer 3 (www.genome.wi.mit.edu) and the software package Primer Express (PE Applied Biosystems, Nieuwekerk a/d Ijssel, The Netherlands). All primers were designed to have a melting temperature of 58 to 60°C, and the amplicon sizes ranged from 70 to 81 bp. Quantitative PCR was performed with the synthesized cDNAs by using an ABI Prism 7700 with SYBR Green technology (PE Applied Biosystems). Each 50-µl reaction mixture contained 1x SYBR Green master mixture (Applied Biosystems), each primer at a concentration of 400 nM (Table 1), and 0.1 or 200 ng of reverse-transcribed RNA from either plate-grown WCFS1 cells or a mouse GI tract sample. Amplification was initiated at 95°C for 10 min, and this was followed by 40 cycles of 95°C for 15 s and 55°C for 60 s. The identities of the amplicons resulting from the reactions with cDNA originating from culture- and mouse-derived templates were checked after amplification by melting curve analysis and amplicon DNA sequence analysis. Reaction mixtures containing no template and reaction mixtures containing DNase-treated RNA were included in each real-time PCR experiment to assess contamination and residual chromosomal DNA, respectively. Cycle threshold (Ct) values were obtained by manually setting the baseline and threshold values at which fluorescence was appreciably above the background fluorescence for each reaction in the exponential phase of amplification for all reactions. Relative transcript levels were calculated by using the comparative 
Ct method described by Pfaffl et al. (24, 25). By using this method, PCR efficiencies were calculated with the equation E = 10(1/slope), where the slope is calculated from a standard curve of Ct values obtained for a dilution range of template cDNA. The average Ct values observed for the target gene transcripts (lp_0237, lp_0775, lp_1027, and lp_1898) were normalized to the average Ct values obtained for the reference gene transcripts (16S rRNA) from the same RNA sample. Three or four replicates of all samples and primer pairs were included in each quantitative PCR experiment, and all experiments were performed in triplicate. Statistical analyses of the differences in expression between samples were performed by using group means for statistical significance by the pairwise fixed reallocation randomization test, which was performed with the relative expression software tool (REST) (24, 25).
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FIG. 1. Maximal growth rateS of L. plantarum in the presence of increasing concentrations of bile salts. A full-grown culture was diluted 50-fold in MRS containing no porcine bile ( ), 0.01% porcine bile ( ), 0.05% porcine bile ( ), 0.10% porcine bile ( ), or 0.15% porcine bile ( ), and growth was monitored by measuring the OD600. The resulting data were used to calculate the maximal logarithmic growth rateS (0.56, 0.54, 0.52, 0.44, and 0.14 h1, respectively). The arrow indicates the time at which the morphology of the cells was investigated (Fig. 2).
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FIG. 2. Morphological changes in L. plantarum during bile salt stress. After 4 h of exposure to no bile salts (A), 0.05% bile salts (B), 0.10% bile salts (C), or 0.15% bile salts (D) cells were investigated by scanning electron microscopy.
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TABLE 2. Identification of clones in the alr complementation library that display conditional growth only in the presence of 0.1% porcine bile
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-dehydratase of Eubacterium sp. strain VPI 12708 and Clostridium sp. strain TO-931 (30 and 28% identity at the protein level, respectively) (21, 36). In these intestinal organisms the baiE gene, encoding bile acid 7
-dehydratase, is localized in an operon. In Eubacterium the expression of this operon appeared to be induced in the presence of bile (21). A similar operon structure is not found in L. plantarum. Nevertheless, the fact that this baiE homologue was identified in the alr complementation screening analysis strongly suggests that the expression of this single gene is also regulated by bile in L. plantarum WCFS1. Clone BI87 harbors a 3'-truncated fragment of lp_1435, encoding an integral membrane protein, which was previously identified in an alr complementation screening analysis for high-salt-inducible promoters of L. plantarum (5). These findings suggest that there is a partial overlap in the responses of this organism to high NaCl concentrations and bile salts, possibly caused by the membrane stress induced under both these conditions. A very striking observation was the identification of lp_0237 and lp_0775, encoding an integral membrane protein and an argininosuccinate synthase, in clones BI19 and BI79, respectively (Table 2). Both of these genes were previously identified in our laboratory by a resolvase-based in vivo expression technology approach as being important for L. plantarum during passage through the GI tract of mice (4). Expression analysis of lp_0237 and lp_0775. The bile-inducible characteristics of lp_0237 and lp_0775 were investigated further by quantitative reverse transcription-PCR. RNA was isolated from L. plantarum cells grown on plates with and without bile. The isolated RNA samples were used for gene-specific synthesis of cDNA, which was used as a template for quantitative real-time PCR with specific primers for the bile-induced genes lp_0237 and lp_0775 and the 16S rRNA gene. The latter RNA was used to correct for the total amount of L. plantarum-specific RNA added to the different reaction mixtures. Negative control reaction mixtures containing the L. plantarum-specific16S rRNA primers and DNase-treated RNA were included in each PCR. These reactions never produced any detectable amplicon, indicating that there was no DNA contamination in the RNA samples. Moreover, the specificity of the PCRs was confirmed by a combination of melting curve analysis and DNA sequence analysis of the amplicons (data not shown). All signals were correlated to the 16S rRNA signal derived from the corresponding cDNA samples. The in vitro induction of lp_0237 and lp_0775 by the presence of porcine bile was investigated. This experiment showed that the expression levels of lp_0237 and lp_0775 were significantly induced (24- and 4-fold, respectively) in cells grown on plates containing 0.1% porcine bile compared to control plates lacking bile (Table 3). These data demonstrate that the bile-inducible regulatory characteristics obtained for these two genes by using the plasmid-based alr promoter probe can be extrapolated to the native, single-copy situation on the chromosome. Moreover, the observed induction by bile suggests that the previously observed in vivo induction (4) of lp_0237 and lp_0775 occurs in the duodenum, as this is the site of bile release in the host. Therefore, RNA was isolated from duodenum samples from a mouse fed L. plantarum, and a second quantitative reverse transcriptase PCR experiment was performed to assess the in vivo expression levels of lp_0237 and lp_0775 in the duodenum. This experiment revealed significantly higher expression levels (13- and 29-fold, respectively) for these genes during passage through the mouse duodenum than in L. plantarum grown on MRS, while in an identical experiment the expression levels of two L. plantarum household genes (lp_1027 [fusA2] encoding an elongation factor and lp_1898 [pfk] encoding 6-phosphofructokinase) were not significantly increased in vivo compared to the expression levels in MRS (Table 3). These data demonstrate that the in vitro regulatory characteristics observed for lp_0237 and lp_0775 can be translated to the in vivo situation in the mouse duodenum and strongly suggest that contact with bile is the inducing environmental factor in vivo.
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TABLE 3. Levels of induction of L. plantarum genes in vitro by 0.1% bile and in situ in the duodenum of a mouse model compared to the level in MRS without bile
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The previously constructed alr complementation library (5) was exploited for identification of clones containing L. plantarum chromosomal fragments that harbor promoter elements conditionally activated by bile. This approach resulted in the identification of 30 unique loci harboring 31 putative genes whose expression is potentially induced by bile. The putative genes identified as bile inducible were organized in six functional categories (Table 2). Strikingly, 11 of these ORFs encode proteins involved in membrane- and cell wall-associated functions. The induction of this relatively high number of genes involved in cell envelope functions is in agreement with the observed morphological changes in L. plantarum in the presence of bile. Notably, genes encoding putative functions involved in fatty acid and cell wall biosynthesis have previously been identified as important for the bile resistance of E. faecalis (3). The group of genes encoding membrane-associated functions includes the genes encoding three possible exporter proteins, namely, lp_0085, lp_2564, and lp_3160. The latter gene is annotated as a multidrug transporter gene, suggesting a possible role in the export of bile or bile-derived compounds. Similarly, lp_2564, encoding a protein with significant homology to a permease in Bacillus cereus, could play a role in the export of bile. Finally, lp_0085, encoding a putative efflux protein, might be involved in maintenance of the electrochemical membrane potential under bile-induced stress conditions. Remarkably, the importance of efflux pumps in bile resistance was previously demonstrated in several bacteria, including Escherichia coli and L. monocytogenes (2, 15). The genes encoding three cell wall-associated functions identified here include a putative lysozyme gene and two genes annotated to encode fragments of a possible muramidase. Moreover, BlastP analysis of lp_3154 demonstrated that there was 35% identity with the gene encoding a choline binding protein from Streptococcus pneumoniae. The chemical structure of choline is similar to that of bile. Therefore, the protein encoded by lp_3154 could be important in the defense of L. plantarum against bile salts.
Five genes identified here as bile-inducible genes are annotated as having functions involved in redox reactions (namely, four oxidoreductases and a redox protein acting as a regulator of disulfide bond formation), suggesting that bile-induced redox balance disturbance and/or oxidative stress occurs. Notably, a gene encoding a function involved in a redox reaction was previously recognized as important during bile stress in E. faecalis (3). Another group of five genes encoding regulatory functions was identified as bile inducible in L. plantarum. Remarkably, two of these genes (lp_2484 and lp_3344) belong to the marR family of regulators. In several bacteria, including E. coli and Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium, the MarA and MarR proteins mediate the expression of a diverse set of genes involved in multidrug resistance, including genes encoding multidrug efflux proteins (14, 32). The lp_3344 gene product exhibits 28% identity with MarR from S. enterica serovar Typhimurium. Moreover, the conserved hypothetical protein encoded by lp_3415 exhibits 30% identity with MarA from S. enterica serovar Typhimurium. Therefore, lp_3344 and lp_3415 might be involved in the regulation of multidrug transporters in L. plantarum, possibly including the two transporters encoded by lp_2564 and lp_3160 mentioned above (Table 2). Next to lp_3415 four other conserved genes and one unique hypothetical protein gene were identified in the screening for bile-inducible L. plantarum ORFs. The role of these genes in bile resistance remains to be determined.
Bile induction could reflect the in situ conditions encountered by L. plantarum during passage through the gastrointestinal tract. Two striking findings in this context are lp_0237 and lp_0775, which we identified as bile-inducible genes in the in vitro alr complementation screening analysis described here; these genes have been identified previously in L. plantarum as genes that are induced in vivo during passage through the mouse GI tract (4). By using quantitative reverse transcription-PCR, the in vitro induction by bile and the in vivo induction in the duodenum of a mouse model system compared to laboratory conditions could be established for these genes. In conclusion, in this paper we provide valuable data on the in vitro genetic response of L. plantarum to bile. The experiments described here demonstrated that simplified in vitro mimicking of complex environmental niches can result in the identification of genes that are relevant in situ in these niches. Moreover, this approach potentially provides clues to the environmental trigger involved in the in situ regulation of specific genes, which should enable future unraveling of the genetic behavior of L. plantarum during passage through (specific parts of) the GI tract.
Part of this work was supported by EU project LABDEL (EU-QLRT-2000-00340).
Present address: RIVM, 3720 BA Bilthoven, The Netherlands. ![]()
Present address: APC (UCC), Cork, Ireland. ![]()
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-dehydroxylation operon in Clostridium sp. strain TO-931, a highly active 7
-dehydroxylating strain isolated from human feces. Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 66:1107-1113.
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