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Journal of Bacteriology, April 2004, p. 2006-2018, Vol. 186, No. 7
0021-9193/04/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JB.186.7.2006-2018.2004
Copyright © 2004, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Transcriptional Analysis of Butanol Stress and Tolerance in Clostridium acetobutylicum
Christopher A. Tomas, Jeffrey Beamish, and Eleftherios T. Papoutsakis*
Department of Chemical Engineering, Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois 60208
Received 16 October 2003/
Accepted 23 December 2003

ABSTRACT
The effects of challenges with low (0.25%, vol/vol) and high
(0.75%) concentrations of butanol on the growth, glucose metabolism,
product formation, and transcriptional program of the solvent-tolerant
Clostridium acetobutylicum strain 824(pGROE1) and the plasmid
control strain 824(pSOS95del) were used to study solvent tolerance
and stress response. Strain 824(pGROE1) was generated by
groESL overexpression. The growth of 824(pGROE1) was less inhibited
than that of 824(pSOS95del), and 824(pGROE1) was able to metabolize
glucose over the entire course of the culture (60 h postchallenge)
while glucose metabolism in 824(pSOS95del) lasted 24 h. A comparison
of their respective DNA array-based transcriptional profiles
identified genes with similar expression patterns (these genes
are likely to be part of a general butanol stress response)
and genes with opposite expression patterns (these genes are
likely to be associated with increased tolerance to butanol).
Both strains exhibited a butanol dose-dependent increase in
expression of all major stress protein genes, including
groES,
dnaKJ,
hsp18, and
hsp90; all major solvent formation genes,
including
aad,
ctfA and -
B,
adc, and
bdhA and -
B (an unexpected
and counterintuitive finding); the butyrate formation genes
(
ptb and
buk); the butyryl coenzyme A biosynthesis operon genes;
fructose bisphosphate aldolase; and a gene with homology to
Bacillus subtilis kinA. A dose-dependent decrease in expression
was observed for the genes of the major fatty acid synthesis
operon (also an unexpected and counterintuitive finding), several
glycolytic genes, and a few sporulation genes. Genes with opposite
expression kinetics included
rlpA,
artP, and a gene encoding
a hemin permease. Taken together, these data suggest that stress,
even when it derives from the solvent product itself, triggers
the induction of the solvent formation genes.

INTRODUCTION
Metabolically engineered solventogenic clostridia may potentially
lead to industrial processes for the production of solvents
(such as butanol and acetone), other oxychemicals, and enzymes
(
30,
35,
41) or for biotransformation (
57). In addition, clostridia
can degrade a number of toxic chemicals and have great potential
for bioremediation applications (
15,
16,
25,
46,
54). In all
such applications, the ability of cells to withstand "stressful"
conditions such as high concentrations of substrates and the
accumulation of toxic products without loss of productivity
is a most significant goal. The difficultybut also the
intellectual and biotechnological challengeis that the
desirable phenotypic trait may be determined by several genes
or a complex regulatory network. Solvents are inherently toxic
to bacteria. Solvent tolerance, particularly ethanol tolerance,
has been extensively examined in gram-negative organisms (
38)
but rarely, if at all, in gram-positive organisms. Gram-negative
bacteria are generally much more resistant to increasingly polar
solvents that gram-positive prokaryotes (
27,
28,
51). The initial
effect is disruption of membrane fluidity, and cells may attempt
to adjust lipid composition to maintain fluidity, a process
known as homeoviscous adaptation (
45). Growth has been shown
to be the most sensitive cellular activity, while glycolysis
is more resistant to the effects of solvents (
26). As for other
solvents, the toxicity of butanol in solventogenic clostridia
is attributed to its chaotropic effect on the cell membrane
(
5,
52). Butanol inhibits active nutrient transport, the membrane-bound
ATPase, and glucose uptake (
5); partially or completely abolishes
the membrane

pH (
5,
18,
48) and


(
48); and lowers the intracellular
pH (
5,
23,
48) and ATP concentration (
5). Lipids from exponential-phase
cultures (where low levels of butanol are present) contain approximately
58% saturated acyl chains, while stationary-phase lipids (where
high levels of butanol are present) contain approximately 77%
saturated chains. This alteration occurs in an attempt to maintain
membrane fluidity. Exponential-growth static flask cultures
grown in 0.5 or 1.0% (vol/vol) butanol had saturated chain contents
of 65 or 73%, respectively, but cultures with 1.5% butanol did
not grow at all (
37,
52). Finally, moderate increases in butanol
concentration, similar to heat shock, have been shown to induce
known stress proteins (heat shock proteins [HSPs]) (
48).
In order to test the hypothesis that overexpression of HSPs will result in increased cellular resistance to toxic solvents, Tomas et al. constructed (50) a recombinant Clostridium acetobutylicum strain [824(pGROE1)] carrying plasmid pGROE1 for overexpressing the groESL operon genes under the control of the clostridial thiolase promoter. By using this strain, it was shown that GroESL overexpression results in prolonged metabolism and increased butanol production and tolerance. That was the first report to show that HSP overexpression imparts solvent tolerance. In 24-h butanol challenge experiments with exponential-growth-phase cultures of 824(pGROE1), 824(pGROE1) was initially inhibited less than 5% at 0.25 and 0.50% (vol/vol) butanol and was inhibited 7% at 0.75% butanol (t, <8 h), but within 24 h, growth inhibition reached 25% at 0.75% butanol while it remained below 5% with the 0.25% butanol challenge. The plasmid control strain [824(pSOS95del)] was inhibited by as much as 30% initially and more than 37% at 24 h. The objective of this study is to examine the long-term (>24-h) growth characteristics, product formation, and large-scale DNA array-based transcriptional program of these strains when they are subjected to low- and high-dose butanol challenges. We hypothesized that these studies would elucidate standing hypotheses regarding solvent tolerance, sporulation, and solvent production. For example, despite the widely held view that sporulation, solvent formation, and the heat shock response are linked in solvent-producing clostridia, the molecular natures of the common and separate control mechanisms remain unclear (3, 29, 34, 41, 42). The major signal transduction event for the initiation of sporulation in Bacillus subtilis is a phosphorelay mechanism which responds to environmental and metabolic signals by phosphorylating Spo0A (the master regulator of differentiation), thereby activating its function. While an exactly analogous phosphorelay system has not been identified in C. acetobutylicum, Spo0A has been shown to play a major role in differentiation. An activated Spo0A has been recently shown to induce all key solvent formation genes (21, 40), thereby mediating many, if not all, possible triggers of solventogenesis.

MATERIALS AND METHODS
Bacterial strains.
C. acetobutylicum ATCC 824 (American Type Culture Collection,
Manassas, Va.) is the wild-type strain. Strain 824(pGROE1) overexpresses
the
groESL operon and has been described previously (
50). Strain
824(pSOS95del) serves as the plasmid control strain (
50).
Analytical methods.
Cell growth was measured by using the absorbance at 600 nm (A600) on a Thermo Spectronic (Rochester, N.Y.) BioMate3 spectrophotometer. A mass extinction coefficient of 51 (g of cells)-1 cm-1 was used to convert optical density measurements (A600) into cell concentrations (dry weight), expressed in grams of cells per liter (20). Absorbance readings were kept below 0.40 by diluting samples with the appropriate media. Product (acetate, butyrate, acetone, butanol, ethanol, and acetoin) and glucose concentrations were analyzed by using a Waters (Milford, Mass.) high-performance liquid chromatography system (50). Acetoin concentrations were determined to be less than 2 mM in all cultures.
Growth conditions and maintenance.
C. acetobutylicum strains were grown in an anaerobic chamber (Forma Scientific, Marietta, Ohio) at 37°C. Clostridial growth medium (CGM) was used in liquid cultures (55). Colonies used to inoculate liquid cultures were obtained from agar-solidified 2x YTG plates (55). Colonies were picked from plates at least 4 days old and were heat shocked at 70 to 80°C for 8 min before being used to inoculate cultures. Recombinant strains were grown on 100 µg of erythromycin/ml, except for static flask cultures, where 75 µg of clarithromycin/ml was used.
Butanol challenge experiments.
Static flask cultures containing 650 ml of CGM were grown with strains 824(pSOS95del) and 824(pGROE1). The flasks were inoculated with 6.5 ml of preculture (1/100) at an A600 of 0.60. The large flask was grown to an A600 of 0.8 ± 0.05 and then split into three smaller, 200-ml flasks (with closed lids). Two of the flasks were challenged with 0.25 or 0.75% (vol/vol) butanol, and one flask was left unchallenged. Relative growth was calculated as the ratio of the growth of the butanol-challenged culture to that of the unchallenged culture multiplied by 100 to yield a percentage. Six RNA samples were taken for use in DNA array analysis at 0.25, 1, 3, 6, 12, and 24 h after butanol addition.
Western blot analysis.
Crude cell extracts were prepared, and Western blot analysis was performed, as previously described (50).
RNA sampling, isolation, and purification.
RNA sampling and isolation were performed as previously described (50), with the following modifications. Cell pellets from 2 to 5 ml of culture were used. For isolation, thawed samples were diluted twofold (versus fivefold) in ice-cold TRIzol (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, Calif.).
cDNA labeling and hybridization.
Labeled cDNA was synthesized by random hexamer-primed reverse transcription reactions in the presence of Cy3-dUTP or Cy5-dUTP by using SuperScript II (Invitrogen) reverse transcriptase as previously described (49). Labeled cDNA was hybridized on a targeted cDNA array containing spots representing 1,019 open reading frames (ORFs), approximately one-fourth of the C. acetobutylicum genome (49). Genes included in this generation of arrays include, among others, 169 of 178 pSOL1 ORFs (corrected from a previous publication [49]), 123 DNA replication and repair genes (90% of the total of such genes as identified by the genome annotation [36]), 97 cell division- and sporulation-related genes (92%), 85 carbohydrate and primary metabolism genes (31%), 67 energy production genes (52%), 63 outer membrane and cell envelope genes (36%), 48 lipid metabolism genes (80%), 42 motility and chemotaxis genes (39%), and all previously identified stress response genes. A complete list can be found at http://www.chem-eng.northwestern.edu/Faculty/papou.html.
Microarray data analysis.
The data were normalized, and genes that showed significant differences in expression level were determined by using the methods of Yang et al. (56). All array data were subjected to a prefilter criterion as previously described (49). Average linkage hierarchical clustering was performed using Cluster, and gene clusters were visualized in TreeView (13). Data generated using these targeted cDNA arrays and these data analysis methods have been shown to be highly reliable. Analysis of a degenerate C. acetobutylicum strain (M5 [9]) missing 178 genes properly classified genes with an accuracy of 99.4% (49). Comparison to Northern blot (49) and quantitative reverse transcription-PCR (50, 56) analyses has also shown this method to be accurate in identifying genes as differentially expressed and to be conservative in estimating relative gene expression levels.

RESULTS
824(pGROE1) growth and metabolism displays prolonged tolerance to butanol addition.
Cultures of 824(pGROE1) and 824(pSOS95del) were subjected to
butanol challenges [0.25 and 0.75% (vol/vol) for 824(pGROE1);
0.75% (vol/vol) for 824(pSOS95del)] during mid-exponential growth
(
A600, 0.8), and the degree of growth inhibition was determined
relative to the growth of the unchallenged cultures (Fig.
1).
824(pGROE1) subjected to 0.25% butanol was initially uninhibited
(
t, <10 h). After 10 h, growth inhibition increased slowly,
reaching 15% at 78 h post-butanol challenge. 824(pGROE1) with
0.75% butanol was also initially uninhibited (
t, <6 h), but
then growth inhibition increased more rapidly (relative to that
with 0.25% butanol), finally leveling off at approximately 33%.
In contrast to that of 824(pGROE1), the growth of 824(pSOS95del)
with 0.75% butanol was inhibited within 1 h and reached
A600 levels equal to half those in the unchallenged culture within
24 h, after which no net growth was observed. Glucose utilization
was also inhibited by addition of butanol (Fig.
1). In order
to assess the effects of butanol on glucose metabolism while
accounting for differences in cell densities, the ratio of the
specific glucose uptake rate (
qglu; expressed in grams of glucose
per gram [dry weight] of cells) of the challenged culture to
that of the unchallenged culture (multiplied by 100 to yield
a percentage) was calculated, and the ratios were plotted (Fig.
1). Specific glucose metabolism was initially higher (
t, <15
h) in the 824(pGROE1) culture challenged with a low dose of
butanol (glucose utilization, >100%) than in the unchallenged
culture, while glucose metabolism was approximately 10% lower
in the high-dose butanol-challenged 824(pGROE1) culture. The
specific glucose metabolism of 824(pSOS95del) was also initially
higher but fell much more rapidly than that of the 824(pGROE1)
cultures. Specific glucose metabolism in both of the 824(pGROE1)
butanol-challenged cultures fell to less than 40% that of unchallenged
cultures by 40 h after butanol challenge, after which all cultures
exhibited slow glucose metabolism. Specific glucose metabolism
in the 824(pSOS95del) control strain fell to less than 30% within
12 h and to near zero within 24 h.
Significant differences in product formation were also observed
(Fig.
2). Production and reassimilation of acids, particularly
butyrate, were altered in the butanol-challenged cultures. Reductions
in peak acetate and butyrate levels in the two strains were
very similar (17 and 21% reductions, respectively) after addition
of 0.75% butanol. However, butyrate uptake in the butanol-challenged
824(pSOS95del) culture was reduced by 89% by addition of 0.75%
butanol, whereas butyrate uptake in 824(pGROE1) was reduced
by only 17%. Reassimilation of acids is required for the production
of acetone. It is therefore not surprising that acetone production
in the butanol-challenged 824(pSOS95del) culture was less than
1 mM (Fig.
2), while the
groESL-overexpressing strain was able
to produce 20 mM acetone (35% less than the unchallenged culture).
Butanol challenge (0.75%) reduced ethanol production (data not
shown) by 15% (from 21.7 to 18.5 mM) in 824(pGROE1) compared
to 45% (from 15.3 to 8.4 mM) in 824(pSOS95del). Butanol production
was reduced in both strains, but to a lesser extent in 824(pGROE1)
than in 824(pSOS95del) (a 50 versus an 81% reduction, respectively).
Butanol and acetone concentrations were still increasing at
the end of the 824(pGROE1) cultures, while butanol production
lasted only 9 h in the butanol-stressed 824(pSOS95del) culture.
These results suggest that 824(pGROE1) exhibits a prolonged
tolerance to butanol addition spanning the entire course of
the culture (at least 40 to 60 h after butanol addition).
Transcriptional analysis of butanol-stressed 824(pGROE1) cultures.
DNA array-based transcriptional analysis of the butanol-challenged
824(pGROE1) and 824(pSOS95del) cultures relative to their respective
unchallenged cultures was performed in order to better understand
the transcriptional responses of butanol tolerance and butanol
stress. Samples for array analysis were taken from each culture
at 0.25, 1, 3, 6, 12, and 24 h after butanol addition and were
analyzed on duplicate DNA arrays. All duplicate arrays were
hybridized with reverse-labeled samples (e.g., challenged-Cy3/unchallenged-Cy5
and challenged-Cy5/unchallenged-Cy3). The resulting array data
were normalized, and genes differentially expressed at the 95%
confidence level (
56) were identified: 152 genes for 824(pGROE1)
plus 0.25% butanol, 104 genes for 824(pGROE1) plus 0.75% butanol,
and 154 genes for 824(pSOS95del) plus 0.75% butanol. In order
to compare the similarities and differences in gene expression
for the two butanol challenge levels and the two strains, the
three lists of differentially expressed genes were combined
into a single list of 199 genes. The complete lists with expression
profile data can be found at
http://www.chem-eng.northwestern.edu/Faculty/papou.html.
The combined gene list was analyzed by average linkage hierarchical
clustering (Fig.
3A) (
13).
Comparison of the expression profiles (Fig.
3A) for the two
824(pGROE1) butanol challenge experiments (0.25 and 0.75% butanol)
reveals that the vast majority of genes identified as differentially
expressed showed the same direction (up or down) of differential
expression. Several notable exceptions include the thiolase
gene (
thlA; CAC2873), an acetyl coenzyme A (acetyl-CoA) carboxylase
(
accD [CAC3569]) belonging to a fatty acid biosynthesis operon,
the phosphotransacetylase gene (
pta [CAC1742]) involved in acetate
production, a phosphotransferase (CAP0066), phosphodiesterase
(CAP0015), and a predicted dehydrogenase (CAC1480). Although
the direction of differential expression for most genes identified
is the same at the two 824(pGROE1) butanol challenge levels
for most genes, the fold differences for the 0.75% butanol challenge
experiment are generally higher than those for the 0.25% butanol
challenge (more-intense red and green in Fig.
3A), suggesting
that the transcriptional response to butanol is dose dependent.
Comparison of all three experiments reveals several areas with very similar gene expression patterns (Fig. 3B and C) and several areas with different expression patterns (Fig. 3D and E). Genes with the same expression patterns for all three experiments are likely to be part of a general butanol stress response. Genes whose expression patterns are opposite for 824(pSOS95del) and 824(pGROE1) are likely to represent candidate genes that have a role in the increased tolerance of 824(pGROE1) to butanol. Among the genes with generally elevated gene expression in all the butanol-challenged cultures (Fig. 3C) are two distinct groups: stress response genes and solvent formation genes. Three major stress response protein families (the dnaKJ operon, hsp18, and hsp90) are highly overexpressed (>2-fold [Fig. 4A]) in all three experiments. All three gene families are overexpressed earlier and more strongly in the 824(pGROE1) high-dose butanol challenge experiment than in the low-dose 824(pGROE1) challenge. The dnaKJ operon is highly overexpressed early in both the 824(pGROE1) and 824(pSOS95del) high-dose experiments. dnaKJ overexpression was less pronounced at 3 and 6 h in both cultures, but it increased back to the initial overexpression level in 824(pSOS95del) but not in 824(pGROE1). Both hsp18 and hsp90 were highly overexpressed throughout the entire course of culture. Expression of groESL was initially (t, 15 min) lower in both butanol-stressed 824(pGROE1) cultures, with slightly higher expression (a <1.5-fold increase) through the remainder of the culture. The lower fold increases in groESL expression relative to those of the other major stress response genes are likely due to overexpression of groESL from the pGROE1 plasmid. Expression of groESL from pGROE1 is driven by the thiolase promoter (50) rather than by its natural promoter, which is negatively regulated by HrcA through a CIRCE element (43). Therefore, expression from the plasmid likely masks differences in expression from the naturally occurring groESL operon. For 824(pSOS95del), groESL expression was initially (t, <1 h) higher in the stressed cultures but had fold ratios near 1 thereafter. This suggests that groESL plays a larger role in the initial response to butanol stress. The proteases of the clp and lon families are another key element of the stress response, responsible for the degradation of misfolded proteins. Differential expression was observed in all three butanol-challenged cultures for several members of the clp family (clpA [CAC1824], clpC [CAC3189], clpP [CAC2640], and clpX [CAC2639]) and for lonA (CAC 2637) (Fig. 4A). Higher expression of clpC was observed in all three experiments. Expression of lonA was lower in the 824(pGROE1) cultures, while it was initially higher in the 824(pSOS95del) butanol-stressed culture.
Overexpression of the solvent formation genes in the butanol-challenged
cultures is unexpected and counterintuitive but certainly profound
(Fig.
4B). Overexpression of the solvent genes was, again, butanol
dose dependent. Genes of the
sol locus (CAP0161 to CAP0165)
exhibited an immediate and high fold increase (>3-fold) in
expression at the 0.75% butanol stress level, particularly in
the 824(pGROE1) culture. Expression remained highly elevated
up to 12 h after butanol addition and showed a slight decrease
thereafter. At the lower (0.25%) butanol level, overexpression
in 824(pGROE1) was relatively lower (approximately 1.8- to 2.0-fold)
over the entire 24 h of analysis. Two genes encoding butanol
dehydrogenases (CAC3298 and CAC3299) exhibited a pattern of
expression similar to that of
adc (CAP0165). The solvent formation
genes were highly overexpressed in the butanol-stressed cultures
despite the fact that they produced lower levels of solvents.
To test whether transcriptional differences in the solvent formation
genes result in differences at the protein level, Western blot
analyses (
n = 2) for the two acetyl-CoA transferase protein
units (CtfA and CtfB) were performed on challenged (0.75% butanol)
and unchallenged 824(pGROE1) samples at 0.5, 1, and 3 h after
butanol addition. Results from the Western blot analysis (Fig.
5) revealed increased levels of CoAT, as predicted by the DNA
array transcriptional data. At 30 min post-butanol challenge,
a significant band (>29 times background) was present in
the butanol-challenged culture, while no detectable band was
present in the unchallenged culture. These findings reveal that
butanol stress results in increased expression of solvent formation
genes and proteins.
Regulation of the solvent formation genes has been strongly
linked to expression and subsequent activation (by phosphorylation)
of
spo0A (
21,
40). The expression pattern of
spo0A (Fig.
4C)
in the 824(pGROE1) cultures was very similar to that of the
solvent formation genes. However, the expression pattern of
spo0A in 824(pSOS95del) was lower during the early (
t, <1
h) and later (
t, 24 h) stages of analysis, with higher expression
6 h after butanol challenge. This is different from the expression
pattern of the solvent formation genes. However, the sporulation-specific
sigma factor F (
sigF [CAC2306]), whose transcription is directed
by
spo0A, had a gene expression pattern in all three experiments
that was very similar to that of
spo0A (Fig.
4C). In addition,
the expression of
abrB (negatively regulated by Spo0A in
B. subtilis [
14]) was opposite that of
spo0A. This further corroborates
the
spo0A expression data. CAC3319 (annotated as a histidine
kinase [
36]), which bears a high similarity to
B. subtilis kinA (
49), was expressed at a significantly higher level (>2-fold)
in all three butanol-stressed cultures (Fig.
4C). The KinA protein
is a phosphorelay protein that helps initiate sporulation by
triggering the cascade which results in increased levels of
active Spo0A-P. The expression of other sporulation-related
genes was also altered (generally lower expression in all butanol-challenged
cultures), including that of
spo0J (CAC3729 [Fig.
3D]),
spoVR (CAC0581),
spoIIP (CAC1276),
cotS (CAC2909), and a gene containing
a
spo0T-type domain (CAC3340).
Eleven genes belonging to a fatty acid biosynthesis (fab) operon (CAC3579 to CAC3568 [Fig. 6A]) were identified as having significantly lower expression in the high-dose butanol-stressed cultures. The response to butanol stress in the low-dose 824(pGROE1) culture was initially higher expression for most of the fab genes (up to 3 h) with lower expression thereafter, except for accD (CAC3569). The response was immediate and sustained in both high-dose cultures, with the lowest level of expression in the butanol-challenged 824(pSOS95del) culture. Included in the fatty acid biosynthesis operon are the genes encoding two subunits of an acetyl-CoA carboxylase (CAC3568 and CAC3569). Acetyl-CoA carboxylase plays a critical role in controlling fatty acid metabolism. Expression of the fabH gene, encoding a ß-ketoacyl-acyl carrier protein synthase III gene which catalyzes the condensation of malonyl-acyl carrier protein and an acyl-CoA substrate (32), was increased in the less-tolerant 824(pSOS95del) strain and lower in the more-tolerant 824(pGROE1) strain. FabH has been shown to be an important determinant of branched-chain fatty acid synthesis (8) in B. subtilis. In addition, a gene for pyruvate carboxylase (CAC2660 [Fig. 3B]) and two genes encoding a malic enzyme (CAC1589 and CAC1596) had gene expression patterns similar to those of the genes of the fatty acid biosynthesis operon (Fig. 6A). Pyruvate carboxylase and malic enzymes are closely linked to fatty acid biosynthesis through their role in generating NADPH, which is required for fatty acid synthesis. Expression of the malic enzymes in the butanol-challenged 824(pSOS95del) culture was lower than that in the unchallenged culture 6 to 12 h after butanol challenge, the same time at which the dramatic decrease in glucose metabolism occurred and just before cessation of butanol production in 824(pSOS95del). The highly differentially regulated gene expression patterns for the entire fatty acid biosynthesis operon and several related genes provide clear evidence that butanol stress alters the regulation of the fatty acid biosynthesis machinery. Increased expression of the cyclopropane fatty acid synthase gene (cfa [CAC0877]) in C. acetobutylicum has been shown to result in butanol resistance (58). Elevated expression of cfa was observed early in the high-dose 824(pSOS95del) culture, while cfa was <1.7 times higher in the high-dose 824(pGROE1) culture (Fig. 6A). Cfa appears to play a lesser role in response to butanol stress in 824(pGROE1) than in 824(pSOS95del).
A gene for rare lipoprotein A (CAP0058) is overexpressed in
both of the 824(pGROE1) cultures but shows the opposite direction
of expression in 824(pSOS95del) (Fig.
3E). Several lipoproteins
have been shown to act as membrane chaperones, preventing unproductive
interactions with the cell wall (
53), and have been shown to
be overexpressed in the cyanobacterium
Synechocystis sp. after
hyperosmotic stress (
31). A truncated
rlpA gene in
Escherichia coli (
4) was able to rescue a conditionally lethal mutation
in the
prc gene (involved in C-terminal processing of penicillin-binding
protein-3).
prc mutants are sensitive to heat and osmotic stress
(
19). A conserved membrane protein (CAC2582) is in this same
cluster of oppositely regulated genes (Fig.
3E), while two additional
conserved membrane proteins (Fig.
3D) had significantly higher
expression immediately following butanol addition in 824(pSOS95del)
but had slightly lower expression in both 824(pGROE1) experiments.
Many genes related to transport system functions displayed this
pattern of opposite expression as well. These included an amino
acid binding protein (CAC0880), a hemin permease (CAC2442),
and several other ABC type transporters (CAC1982, -2714, -2932,
-3102, and -3269). The amino acid binding protein (CAC0880)
has high homology to
artP (formerly
yqiX) of
B. subtilis, a
member of a tricistronic arginine transport operon, which has
been shown to be induced during heat shock (
22). A BLAST search
found two genes with a high degree of homology to the other
two members of the
B. subtilis arginine transport operon, and
these, together with CAC0880, form a predicted operon in
C. acetobutylicum (
49). The operon has sequences in the promoter
region for
A and
F, as well as a Spo0A binding sequence. Hemin
permease has been associated with the cellular response of strict
anaerobes to oxygen stresses (
6). Two genes encoding putative
pseudouridine synthase (CAC1805 and CAC1414) also belong to
this cluster (Fig.
3D). YceC in
E. coli has been shown to modify
uridine residues of both 23S rRNA and 16S rRNA (
24). Finally,
a
yicC stress-induced protein (Fig.
3D) required for survival
at high temperatures in
E. coli (
39) also showed an opposite
pattern of expression, with higher expression in 824(pSOS95del).
Several glycolytic genes are also included in the cluster containing genes with decreased expression in the butanol-challenged cultures. Included in this group of differentially expressed genes are 6-phosphofructokinase, glucose 6-phosphate isomerase, and pyruvate kinase. Also identified as differentially expressed were phosphoglycerate mutase, triosephosphate isomerase, glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase, and fructose bisphosphate aldolase. The glycolytic genes are shown together in Fig. 6B. All but fructose bisphosphate aldolase were generally expressed at lower levels in the stressed cultures than in the unstressed culture. Expression of fructose bisphosphate aldolase was elevated in the butanol-stressed 824(pGROE1) cultures between 1 and 12 h. The gene expression patterns correlate well with the observed relative decrease in glucose metabolism (Fig. 1). Although the glycolytic genes responsible for the formation of pyruvate had lower expression in the butanol challenge experiments, the expression of genes responsible for the conversion of pyruvate to butyryl-CoA (Fig. 6C) was significantly higher in the butanol-challenged 824(pGROE1) cultures. Expression of the thiolase gene in the low-dose 824(pGROE1) culture was initially higher, but it was lower than that in the unchallenged culture 3 h after butanol challenge. Butyryl-CoA serves as an intermediate in the production of either butanol or butyrate. The genes encoding the enzymes for production of butyrate (buk [CAC3075] and ptb [CAC3076]) have a pattern very similar to that of the butyryl-CoA pathway genes (Fig. 6C). Finally, several genes encoding ribosomal proteins (CAC3724 [two probes present on the array] and CAC3147 [Fig. 3B]) had lower expression in the butanol-stressed cultures. Two additional genes (CAC1265, a translation initiation inhibitor, and CAC1259 [rpl27]) encoding ribosomal proteins have opposite patterns of expression in 824(pGROE1) versus 824(pSOS95del) (Fig. 3D).

DISCUSSION
Overexpression of
groESL in
C. acetobutylicum results in long-term
(>10 h) butanol resistance compared to that in the plasmid
control strain. This finding expands and strengthens previously
reported data (
50). Experiments with the wild-type strain have
produced results similar to those with the plasmid control strain
(C. A. Tomas, J. A. Beamish, and E. T. Papoutsakis, unpublished
data). While growth is considered to be one of the cellular
functions most sensitive to alcohols, glucose metabolism can
also be negatively affected (
26). 824(pGROE1) was able to metabolize
glucose through the entire course of the culture, while glucose
metabolism in 824(pSOS95del) ceased 24 h after butanol addition
(Fig.
1). The increase in the specific glucose ratio seen in
824(pGROE1) cultures 30 h post-butanol challenge is due to the
fact that butanol levels in the unchallenged culture begin to
approach butanol levels in the challenged cultures (added plus
produced). The growth and glucose metabolism patterns of 824(pGROE1)
suggest that increased expression of the GroES and GroEL proteins
in 824(pGROE1) serves to stabilize the general biosynthetic
machinery. In 824(pGROE1), expression of
groESL has been shown
to remain elevated, relative to that in the wild type and the
plasmid control, throughout the entire course of culture (
50),
thereby providing extended protection against cellular stress.
Analysis of the transcriptional response of 824(pGROE1) to different levels of butanol challenge (0.25 and 0.75%) and comparison to the transcriptional response of the control strain allow for the identification of genes or groups of genes that are part of a general response to butanol stress, as well as those likely to play a role in the observed solvent tolerance of 824(pGROE1). The increased expression of the stress response genes, solvent formation genes, and many other genes appears to be butanol dose dependent. The strong dependence on the butanol level suggests that C. acetobutylicum has a mechanism for sensing varying levels of butanol and altering gene expression accordingly. Overexpression of the key solvent formation genes upon addition of butanol seems an unlikely response to such a stress. Furthermore, increased expression of the solvent formation genes is not associated with increased solvent production. When viewed in connection with the overexpression of nearly all the known major heat and stress response genes (groESL, dnaKJ, hsp18, hsp90, and several stress response proteases), this result suggests that solvent gene expression is a response to environmental stress (such as butanol addition). Other stresses known to induce solvent production (3, 12, 17) include low pH, high carboxylic acid concentrations, membrane potential uncouplers, and limitations in iron, nitrogen, and phosphate. The stress response in C. acetobutylicum has long been linked to solvent formation and sporulation (3, 42). However, the molecular natures of the common and different control mechanisms are still largely unknown (21). Differential expression of several key transition state regulators and factors responsible for control of many stationary-phase-associated processes upon butanol stress suggests a strong link among the three processes. spo0A, sigF, and abrB are all differentially expressed in butanol-challenged cultures (Fig. 4C). The sigF tricistronic operon, known to be positively regulated by Spo0A in B. subtilis (47), has an expression pattern similar to that of spo0A. Spo0A has also been shown to negatively regulate abrB expression in B. subtilis (47). AbrB is responsible for the regulation of genes involved in sporulation and gene regulation. The expression patterns of sigF and abrB in relation to spo0A suggest a relationship among the three genes identical to that known for B. subtilis (47). In B. subtilis, the sensory transduction kinase KinA activates Spo0A through phosphorylation. The increased expression (under butanol stress) of spo0A and the putative kinA throughout most of the 824(pGROE1) cultures correlates well with increased expression of the solvent formation genes. The level of spo0A expression in 824(pSOS95del) does not correlate as well with the increased expression of the solvent formation genes. However, expression of the putative kinA is higher in the butanol-stressed 824(pSOS95del) culture.
Alterations in cell membrane composition are the most established mechanism which cells utilize to adapt to high levels of solvents (58). The ability of cells to incorporate a higher percentage of transmembrane fatty acids (long-chain C30 fatty acids) in the cell membrane has been shown to increase alcohol tolerance in Thermoanaerobacter ethanolicus (7) from 1.5 to 8% (vol/vol) ethanol. It has been shown that clostridial cells increase the saturated chain content (1, 33, 52) and decrease the fluidity of their lipid membranes (2) in order to adapt to butanol stress. In C. acetobutylicum, butanol stress resulted in decreased expression of a large fatty acid biosynthesis (fab) operon in both 824(pGROE1) and 824(pSOS95del). The organization of the fatty acid biosynthesis genes in a single operon in C. acetobutylicum was similar to that of Streptococcus mutans, Streptococcus pneumoniae, and Streptococcus pyogenes but differed from that of B. subtilis, where the same genes are organized into four operons (10). While the expression patterns for most of the fab operon genes were similar to each other, there were a few notable exceptions. The expression pattern of fabH and marR in the 824(pSOS95del) culture and that of accD in the low-dose 824(pGROE1) culture were opposite that of the other fab operon genes (Fig. 6A) and may be due to an alternative transcriptional or posttranscriptional control mechanism that is not yet known. Despite the unexpected differences in gene expression patterns for these three genes, the degree to which the fab operon had lower relative expression correlates with the level of growth inhibition, i.e., cultures with the lowest average relative expression of fab operon genes had the highest level of growth inhibition (Fig. 7). Large changes in the expression level of a large fatty acid biosynthesis operon are likely to result in membrane composition changes that alter membrane fluidity. The addition of butanol results in changes to fab operon expression that are likely to be detrimental to cell viability in the presence of high levels of butanol.
Four classes of heat shock genes have been identified in
B. subtilis (
44). Expression of class I HSP genes, which include
the
dnaK and
groE operons, is HrcA dependent. Class I HSP genes
have been identified in
C. acetobutylicum; these include the
dnaK and
groE operons but also the
hsp90 gene (
50). Class II
HSP genes in
B. subtilis include a large number of general stress
response genes under the control of
B (
22), including a large
sigB operon (
rsbRSTUVW-
sigB-
rsbX). A search of the
C. acetobutylicum genome for a homologous operon resulted in no significant matches,
suggesting that a different general stress response mechanism
is utilized in
C. acetobutylicum. Furthermore, most genes known
to be regulated by
B in
B. subtilis (
22) also lack significant
homologies in
C. acetobutylicum. Expression of class III HSP
genes, which include
clpP,
clpE, and the four genes of the
clpC operon (
ctsR,
yacH,
yacI, and
clpC), in
B. subtilis is CtsR
dependent. A search of the
C. acetobutylicum genome (
11) for
the consensus CtsR operator sequence [(A/G)GTCAAA NAN (A/G)GTCAAA]
from
B. subtilis yielded an exact match in front of
hsp18 and
a predicted
clpC operon with the exact same arrangement as that
in
B. subtilis. No CtsR-binding sequence was found upstream
of
clpP and
clpE. The fourth class of heat shock genes includes
genes whose expression is responsive to heat shock but whose
induction is affected neither by the two repressor proteins
HrcA and CtsR nor by
B. Genes with generally higher expression,
such as those shown in Fig.
3C (excluding genes classified as
class I or III), represent possible class IV genes. In
B. subtilis,
class I and III genes are considered heat stress specific, while
class II and IV genes are considered part of the nonspecific
multiple-stress response (
44). This differs from what is reported
here for
C. acetobutylicum, where both class I and class III
genes were upregulated upon butanol stress. While an increasing
amount of information has recently become available on the stress
response in
C. acetobutylicum and its possible relation to differentiation
and solvent formation, additional studies will be necessary
to further elucidate the stress response and its control mechanisms.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This work was supported by grants BES-9911231 and BES-0331402
from the National Science Foundation and grant R828562 from
the Environmental Protection Agency.
We acknowledge use of the Keck Biophysics Facility and the Center for Genetic Medicine facilities at Northwestern University. We thank Abbott Laboratories for the donation of clarithromycin.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of Chemical Engineering, Northwestern University, Evanston, IL 60208. Phone: (847) 491-7455. Fax: (847) 491-3728. E-mail:
e-paps{at}northwestern.edu.


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Journal of Bacteriology, April 2004, p. 2006-2018, Vol. 186, No. 7
0021-9193/04/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JB.186.7.2006-2018.2004
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