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Journal of Bacteriology, August 2005, p. 5614-5623, Vol. 187, No. 16
0021-9193/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JB.187.16.5614-5623.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
CtsR Is the Master Regulator of Stress Response Gene Expression in Oenococcus oeni
Cosette Grandvalet,*
Françoise Coucheney,
Charlotte Beltramo, and
Jean Guzzo
Laboratoire de Microbiologie, UMR UB/INRA 1232, ENSBANA, Université de Bourgogne, 1 Esplanade Erasme, F-21000 Dijon, France
Received 22 March 2005/
Accepted 16 May 2005

ABSTRACT
Although many stress response genes have been characterized
in
Oenococcus oeni, little is known about the regulation of
stress response in this malolactic bacterium. The expression
of eubacterial stress genes is controlled both positively and
negatively at the transcriptional level. Overall, negative regulation
of heat shock genes appears to be more widespread among gram-positive
bacteria. We recently identified an ortholog of the
ctsR gene
in
O. oeni. In
Bacillus subtilis, CtsR negatively regulates
expression of the
clp genes, which belong to the class III family
of heat shock genes. The
ctsR gene of
O. oeni is cotranscribed
with the downstream
clpC gene. Sequence analysis of the
O. oeni IOB 8413 (ATCC BAA-1163) genome revealed the presence of potential
CtsR operator sites upstream from most of the major molecular
chaperone genes, including the
clp genes and the
groES and
dnaK operons. Using
B. subtilis as a heterologous host, CtsR-dependent
regulation of
O. oeni molecular chaperone genes was demonstrated
with transcriptional fusions. No alternative sigma factors appear
to be encoded by the
O. oeni IOB 8413 (ATCC BAA-1163) genome.
Moreover, apart from CtsR, no known genes encoding regulators
of stress response, such as HrcA, could be identified in this
genome. Unlike the multiple regulatory mechanisms of stress
response described in many closely related gram-positive bacteria,
this is the first example where
dnaK and
groESL are controlled
by CtsR but not by HrcA.

INTRODUCTION
In order to respond to stressful situations, all organisms have
developed adaptive networks, including stress responses. Organisms
undergo complex programs of differential gene expression, involving
a rapid increase in the concentrations of specific sets of proteins,
such as heat shock proteins (HSPs). Some HSPs, such as GroEL,
DnaK, small HSP, and several Clp ATPases, are molecular chaperones
that facilitate the proper folding of cellular proteins. Others,
such as the Clp ATP-dependent protease, degrade incorrectly
folded proteins (
25). In
Escherichia coli, HSP synthesis is
controlled at the transcriptional level by two alternative sigma
factors:
32 and
24 (
58). In contrast to
E. coli, the heat shock
response in the model gram-positive bacterium
Bacillus subtilis involves at least three different classes of heat-inducible
genes distinguished by their regulatory mechanisms (
28). Genes
of class I (
groESL and
dnaK) are regulated by the HrcA repressor,
which binds to the palindromic operator sequence CIRCE (for
"controlling inverted repeat of chaperone expression"). Expression
of class II heat shock genes requires the alternative sigma
factor
B (
43,
44). Class III genes are controlled by the class
three stress gene repressor, CtsR, which recognizes a tandemly
repeated heptad operator sequence (
16). Class IV genes comprise
heat shock genes of unknown regulation, suggesting the existence
of other thermoregulatory mechanisms. However, the model organism
B. subtilis does not reflect all of the mechanisms of stress
response regulation in gram-positive bacteria. Thus, in
Streptomyces albus, a mycelium-forming gram-positive soil bacterium, two
negative regulators in addition to HrcA, HspR (for "heat shock
protein repressor") and RheA (for "repressor of
hsp18"), control
HSP synthesis. The HspR repressor binds to an inverted-repeat
sequence called HAIR (for "HspR-associated inverted repeat")
and represses the
dnaK operon (
27). The
hsp18 gene is controlled
by the negative regulator RheA, which binds to an inverted-repeat
sequence (
53). The
groESL operon is controlled by HrcA (
26).
Although the induction of
hsp genes is a universal response,
organisms have diverse regulatory mechanisms for controlling
HSP synthesis. Comparative genomics allows us to predict the
regulation of heat shock genes by CtsR and/or HrcA. Thus, the
dnaK and
groESL operons of the lactic acid bacterium
Lactococcus lactis contain CIRCE elements in their promoter regions, suggesting
that these genes may be regulated by HrcA, whereas CtsR regulates
clp gene expression (
56). Some bacteria simultaneously use more
than one strategy to ensure the well-adjusted production of
heat shock proteins under harsh conditions. For example, heat
shock regulation processes mediated by CIRCE and
32 coexist
in some bacteria, including
Agrobacterium tumefaciens,
Bordetella pertussis,
Caulobacter crescentus, and
Zymomonas mobilis (
2,
3,
20,
39,
40,
45,
46,
50,
51). Dual heat shock regulation by
HrcA and CtsR has been demonstrated for the
Staphylococcus aureus dnaK and
groESL operons and for the
Streptococcus salivarius clpP gene (
10,
11). These dual regulatory mechanisms are probably
not redundant but may act together synergistically to maintain
low levels of expression in the absence of stress and to ensure
that synthesis of different HSPs is tightly coordinated under
adverse environmental conditions.
The lactic acid bacterium Oenococcus oeni, mostly responsible for malolactic fermentation in wine, is able to survive and grow under very harsh conditions. Malolactic fermentation, occurring after the completion of alcoholic fermentation, lowers wine acidity by converting malic acid into lactic acid and improves the taste (18, 36). After alcoholic fermentation, wine is a hostile medium for bacterial growth because of nutritional starvation, low pH, and the presence of sulfites and of high ethanol concentrations. Because of its ability to grow in such a hostile medium, O. oeni is a good model for studies of stress response in lactic acid bacteria. Among O. oeni stress response genes, hsp18, trxA, clpX, and clpP have been previously characterized (4, 30, 31). Expression of these genes was followed during growth and under several stress conditions. All these genes are heat inducible, but differential expression was observed during the growth phase. clpX is preferentially expressed at the beginning of the exponential phase, clpP was expressed during all stages of growth at a high basal level and reached its maximum in the exponential phase, and hsp18 mRNA was detected only at the end of the exponential phase. The trxA gene was expressed during all stages of growth with no significant difference in the level of expression. An understanding of the regulatory mechanisms controlling stress gene expression is therefore essential in studying the ability of O. oeni to survive and grow under unfavorable environmental conditions. The determination of the complete genome sequence of O. oeni strain IOB 8413 (ATCC BAA-1163) was carried out by our laboratory in collaboration with the Laboratoire de Biotechnologie et Microbiologie Appliquée (UMR 1219, INRA-Université Victor Segalen Bordeaux 2), the Centre de Bioinformatique de Bordeaux (CbiB, Université Victor Segalen Bordeaux 2), and GENOME Express (Grenoble, France) (33). The genome assembly of O. oeni currently consists of 33 contigs. This project has revealed numerous gene systems that are likely to be important for our understanding of the physiology of this lactic acid bacterium. Here, we report the identification of a CtsR ortholog in O. oeni. Potential CtsR operator sites were found upstream from the clp genes and the groESL and dnaK operons, and we show that CtsR controls the expression of most of the O. oeni molecular chaperone genes. In contrast to the diversity of stress response mechanisms described in many gram-positive bacteria, no gene encoding an alternative sigma factor or any other known regulator of stress response, such as HrcA, could be identified in the O. oeni IOB 8413 (ATCC BAA-1163) genome. This is the first example of dnaK and groESL operons under the exclusive control of CtsR without dual regulation by both HrcA and CtsR.

MATERIALS AND METHODS
Bacterial strains, growth media, and transformation conditions.
O. oeni strain IOB 8413 (ATCC BAA-1163) was grown at 30°C
in FT80 medium (pH 5.3) (
9). For stress experiments, cells grown
to the mid-exponential phase were shocked for half an hour by
transfer to 42°C and addition of ethanol (11% [vol/vol])
or HCl (1 M) to pH 3.6.
B. subtilis 168 (
trpC2) and QB4991 [
trpC2 amyE::('
lacZ aphA3)
ctsR] (
16) were used as heterologous hosts
to measure the activities of transcriptional fusions.
E. coli ER2738 [F'
lacIq 
(
lacZ)
M15 zzf::Tn
10(Tet
r)/
fhuA2 supE thi 
(
lac-proAB)

(
hsdMS-mcrB)] (New England Biolabs) was used for cloning experiments.
E. coli was grown at 37°C in Luria-Bertani (LB) medium.
Electroporation was used for
E. coli transformation, with selection
on LB plates supplemented with ampicillin (100 µg/ml).
B. subtilis was grown at 37°C in LB medium and transformed
as described previously (
42). Transformants were selected on
LB plates supplemented with chloramphenicol (5 µg/ml).
RNA extraction and analysis.
RNA extraction was performed using Tri Reagent (Sigma) according to the manufacturer's instructions and 0.4 g of glass beads (70 to 100 µm) to disrupt cells with a FastPrep cell disintegrator (Bio 101, Inc.). Samples were then treated as recommended by the manufacturer and used for Northern blotting, primer extension analysis, reverse transcription-PCR (RT-PCR), or quantitative RT-PCR (QRT-PCR) experiments. Northern blotting was carried out as described by Sambrook et al. (48). A DNA fragment corresponding to the O. oeni ctsR gene was amplified by PCR using oligonucleotides olcg1 and ctsR1 (Table 1). This fragment was radiolabeled with [
-32P] dATP (Perkin-Elmer) using a random-primer DNA-labeling kit (Invitrogen) and used as a probe in Northern hybridization experiments. Primer extensions were performed by incubating 5 µg of RNA, 20 pmol of oligonucleotide, 92 GBq of [
-32P]dATP (111 TBq/mmol; Perkin-Elmer), and 100 U of SuperScript II reverse transcriptase (Invitrogen). For each primer extension experiment, two oligonucleotides were chosen to hybridize approximately 100 bp downstream from the translation initiation codon (Table 1). The corresponding DNA-sequencing reactions were carried out by using the same oligonucleotides and PCR-amplified DNA fragments carrying the respective promoter regions. RT-PCR and QRT-PCR were performed with O. oeni RNA (2 µg) treated with 2 units of DNase (Invitrogen). cDNAs were synthesized with random hexamers (50 ng) using the Superscript II reverse transcriptase. PCRs were performed using cDNAs with appropriate primers (Table 1). hsp mRNA levels were quantified by QRT-PCR assays using qPCR Mastermix and a SYBR Green I kit (Eurogentec). The ldhD gene (AJ831540) was chosen as an internal control gene (4, 17). Amplifications were performed on a Bio-Rad I-cycler with the SYBR Green system. Thermal-cycling conditions included the following steps: initial denaturation at 95°C for 10 min, followed by 45 cycles at 95°C for 15 s and 60°C for 30 s. Fluorescence measurements were recorded during each annealing step. Four dilutions of cDNAs were performed. The specificity of each primer pair was determined with a melting curve. The efficiency of real-time amplification was determined by running a standard curve with serial dilutions of cDNA. A PCR that amplifies the target sequence with 100% efficiency (E) can double the amount of PCR products in each cycle. The efficiency, E, is calculated by the formula E = [10(1/s) 1] x 100, where s is the slope of the standard curve. The results were analyzed using the comparative critical-threshold method, in which the amount of target RNA is adjusted to a reference relative to an internal calibrated target RNA.
DNA manipulations and analysis.
Molecular biology techniques were carried out using standard
methods (
48). Double-stranded plasmid DNA was purified with
the QIAprep spin miniprep kit (QIAGEN). Nucleotide sequences
were determined by the dideoxy chain termination method using
the DNA sequencing cycle Reader kit (MBI Fermentas). PCR products
and DNA restriction fragments were purified using the QIAquick
PCR purification kit (QIAGEN). Restriction endonucleases (Invitrogen),
DNA ligase (Invitrogen), and
Taq polymerase (Qbiogen) were used
according to the manufacturers' specifications.
Plasmids and plasmid constructions.
Plasmid pDL (57) was used to construct transcriptional fusions with the Bacillus stearothermophilus bgaB gene, encoding a thermostable ß-galactosidase (29), with subsequent integration at the amyE locus. bgaB transcriptional fusions were constructed using EcoRI-BamHI (or EcoRI-HindIII) fragments generated by PCR using the oligonucleotide pairs olcg17/olcg18, olcg11/olcg12, olcg16/olcg20, olcg9/olcg40, olcg7/olcg8, clpE1/clpE2, olcg3/olcg4, and olcg14/olcg15 (Table 1), corresponding to the O. oeni mleA (X82326), ctsR (AJ890338), hsp18 (AJ250422), clpX (Y15953), clpP (AJ606044), clpL2 (AJ890337), grpE (AJ890339), and groES (AJ890340) promoter regions, respectively. These fragments were digested with EcoRI and BamHI (or HindIII) and inserted into EcoRI- and BamHI (or HindIII)-digested pDL to generate pDLmleA, pDLctsR, pDLhsp18, pDLclpX, pDLclpP, pDLclpL2, pDLgrpE, and pDLgroES, respectively. To examine the effect of site-directed mutagenesis of the CtsR operator sequence on the expression of a groES'-bgaB fusion, a PstI site was introduced between nucleotides 22 and 27 of the groES regulatory region in pDLgroES to generate pDLgroESmut through PCR using the oligonucleotide pairs olcg15/groES4 and groES5/olcg14 (Table 1).
ß-Galactosidase assays.
Overnight cultures of B. subtilis grown on LB medium supplemented with chloramphenicol (5 µg/ml) were diluted to an optical density at 600 nm of 0.05 in fresh medium and grown at 37°C until an optical density at 600 nm of 0.5 was reached, after which one-half of the culture was shifted to 48°C. Samples were taken each hour to determine ß-galactosidase activity as described previously (41, 42), and the activity was expressed as Miller units per mg cellular protein. Protein concentrations were determined using the Bradford method (Bio-Rad [Richmond, Calif.] reagent) with bovine serum albumin as the standard (8).
Database comparisons and sequence analysis.
Sequence comparisons with the GenBank database were accomplished using the National Center for Biotechnology Information BLAST (1) network service. Multiple alignments were performed with the CLUSTAL W program (13). A systematic search using regular expressions was performed to find CtsR-binding sites (GTCAANNNNGGTC) in the O. oeni genome. O. oeni sequences were from the O. oeni IOB 8413 (ATCC BAA-1163) sequencing project (CONSRTM Laboratoire de Microbiologie-Université de Bourgogne, GENOME Express, Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique [INRA], Laboratoire de Microbiologie et Biotechnologique Appliquée-Faculté d'Oenologie de Bordeaux, and Centre de Bioinformatique de Bordeaux-Université Bordeaux 2). The genome sequence data will be available though a dedicated website.
Nucleotide sequence accession numbers.
The DNA sequence data described in this work have been deposited in GenBank with the following accession numbers: AJ890337 (clpL2), AJ890340 (groES), AJ890339 (grpE), and AJ890338 (ctsR-clpC).

RESULTS
Characterization of a ctsR-like gene in O. oeni.
Analysis of the
O. oeni IOB 8413 (ATCC BAA-1163) genome revealed
a 480-bp open reading frame (ORF) encoding an 18-kDa protein
sharing 50% amino acid sequence identity with CtsR of
B. subtilis,
which negatively regulates the transcription of several stress-regulated
genes (
16,
28). Thus, this
O. oeni ORF was named
ctsR. The
O. oeni CtsR protein contains the predicted helix-turn-helix DNA
binding motif characterized by Derré et al. (
16). Analyzing
the DNA region downstream of
ctsR, we identified a 2.47-kb ORF
encoding an 823-amino-acid polypeptide with a predicted molecular
mass of 91.5 kDa. The amino acid sequence of this predicted
protein has strong amino acid sequence identity with members
of the HSP100/Clp ATPase family. The similarity is particularly
striking in the ATP binding domains. Comparison with the microbial
genome database (
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/BLAST/) revealed
that the
O. oeni Clp ATPase shares 58%, 51%, and 50% identical
amino acid residues with the ClpC proteins of
Enterococcus faecalis (NP 816879),
B. subtilis (P37571), and
Listeria innocua (NP
469609), respectively, and it was therefore designated ClpC.
The stop codon (TAA) of the
O. oeni ctsR gene overlaps the probable
start site of
clpC by 8 nucleotides, as previously described
in
Lactococcus lactis (
56). Downstream of
ctsR, we did not find
an inverted-repeat structure typical of Rho-independent transcriptional
terminators, suggesting that
ctsR and
clpC are organized as
an operon. The 5'-end mRNA of
ctsR was determined by primer
extension analysis using RNA extracted from an exponentially
growing bacterial culture either before or after heat shock
treatment (Fig.
1). The transcriptional start site was identified
at nucleotide position 15, with reference to the presumed
translational start codon. A 35 (TTGGTC) and a 10
(TATAAT) hexamer separated by 18 nucleotides, highly similar
to the consensus of
O. oeni housekeeping promoters, were identified
at an appropriate distance from the transcriptional start site.
No extension signal was detected using RNA extracted from cells
harvested before stress treatment. These results show that
ctsR expression is induced by heat shock. Three nucleotides upstream
of the transcriptional start site, we found a 17-bp sequence
(AGTCAAGAATGGTCAAA) closely resembling the consensus sequence
A/GGTCAAANANA/GGTCAAA of the CtsR-binding site in gram-positive
bacteria (
16). Expression of
O. oeni ctsR was investigated by
Northern blotting using a 150-bp
ctsR-specific PCR fragment
as a probe. A 3.6-kb transcript, likely corresponding to a
ctsR and
clpC cotranscript, was detected in RNA extracted from the
shocked culture (data not shown). Additionally, RT-PCR analysis
using appropriate primers confirmed the presence of a
ctsR-
clpC cotranscript (data not shown).
Stress induction of the O. oeni ctsR-clpC operon.
To examine whether expression of
ctsR is induced by stress in
O. oeni, we exposed exponential-phase cultures to various stress
conditions: upshift from 30°C to 42°C, addition of ethanol
(11% [vol/vol]), or shift to pH 3.6. Total RNAs were isolated
before or 30 min after stress treatment. A quantitative RT-PCR
experiment was set up using the constitutive
ldhD gene as an
internal control (
4,
17). Intragenic fragments of
ldhD and
ctsR were amplified using the ldhD1/ldhD2 and olcg1/ctsR1 oligonucleotide
pairs, respectively (Table
1). As expected, higher levels of
ctsR mRNA were detected in stressed cells than in unstressed
cells (Table
2, row 1). The amount of
ctsR transcript increased
fivefold after heat shock or the addition of ethanol and fourfold
after downshift to pH 3.6.
Prediction of CtsR regulon members by scanning the IOB 8413 (ATCC BAA-1163) genome.
Invariance of the DNA recognition helix motif of the CtsR sequence
is in agreement with the high conservation of the target nucleotide
sequence (
16). A similar sequence was identified in the promoter
regions of the
hsp18,
clpX, and
clpP genes of
O. oeni (
4,
30,
32). To identify members of the
O. oeni CtsR regulon, a detailed
DNA motif analysis of the
O. oeni IOB 8413 (ATCC BAA-1163) genome
was carried out using the CtsR operator consensus sequence.
Additional CtsR operator sites were found upstream from the
clpL2 gene, as well as the
dnaK and
groESL operons encoding
the major cell chaperones. No CtsR operator site was found upstream
from the temperature-induced
ftsH gene, encoding an AAA-type
metalloprotease (
7). Alignment of the seven potential CtsR-binding
sites identified in the
O. oeni genome produced the following
consensus sequence: (A/G)GTCAA(A/G)AANGGTCAA(A/G) (Fig.
2),
which is very similar to the consensus sequence defined by Derré
et al., (A/G)GTCAAAAN(A/G)GTCAAA (
16). As previously pointed
out by Jobin et al. (
32), although a potential binding site
is also found upstream from the
clpX gene (
32), the number of
nucleotides between the repeats is not conserved, suggesting
that this sequence may be vestigial. We note that three direct
heptanucleotide sequences are found upstream from the
grpE gene,
the first gene of the
dnaK operon, where the second repeat is
complementary to the 35 sequence of the promoter. Three
motifs have previously been reported upstream from the
clpP gene and four motifs upstream from the
hsp18 gene (
4,
16,
30).
Expression of the clpL2 gene and the groESL and dnaK operons is induced by stress.
The
clpL2 gene of
O. oeni encodes a second ClpL protein showing
48% identical amino acid residues with the product of the previously
characterized
clpL gene (
4). The
O. oeni dnaK operon is comprised
of three genes,
grpE,
dnaK, and
cbpA, whereas the
groES and
groEL genes constitute the
groESL operon. The organization of
the major cell chaperone genes in
O. oeni did not differ significantly
from that described in many gram-positive bacteria (
52). However,
instead of
dnaJ, the
O. oeni dnaK operon presents a
cbpA gene.
The CbpA protein is an analog of the DnaJ molecular chaperone,
which lacks the 69-amino-acid cysteine-rich zinc finger domain
of DnaJ (
55). Mapping of the transcriptional start sites was
investigated for the
clpL2 gene and for the
groES and
dnaK operons
(Fig.
3A). Transcription start points are preceded by appropriately
spaced 10 sequences and 35 sequences, which share
strong similarity with sequences previously described for
O. oeni promoters (Fig.
3B). Moreover, putative CtsR operator sequences
overlap or are near the 35 and 10 sequences of
the identified transcriptional start sites, which strongly suggests
CtsR-dependent expression of these genes. The induction of
hsp18,
clpX, and
clpP expression under stress conditions has previously
been reported (
4,
30,
32). Characterization of the
clpL2 gene
and the
groESL and
dnaK operons was investigated to determine
if these genes are also stress response genes. In order to determine
the level of induction of the
clpL2 gene and the
dnaK and
groESL operons after stress treatment, a quantitative RT-PCR experiment
was set up. For the
dnaK and
groESL operons, expression of the
first gene of each operon,
grpE and
groES, respectively, was
followed. Induction ratios were calculated relative to the level
of transcripts detected in unstressed cells (Table
2). Intragenic
fragments of the
clpL2 (AJ831552),
groES, and
grpE genes were
amplified using the clpE2/clpE3, groES6/groES7, and grpE7/grpE8
oligonucleotide pairs, respectively. As shown in Table
2, the
amounts of
clpL2,
grpE, and
groES transcripts were increased
12-fold, 16-fold, and 6-fold, respectively, 30 min after a temperature
upshift from 30 to 42°C. After addition of ethanol (11%
[vol/vol]), the induction factors were 75 for
clpL2 and 5 for
grpE and
groES. After a shift to pH 3.6, the amounts of
clpL2 and
grpE transcripts increased fivefold and threefold, respectively.
No increase in the amount of
groES transcripts was observed
under these conditions. These results show that the expression
of genes preceded by a likely CtsR operator site is stress inducible
and probably depends on the CtsR repressor.
Apart from clpX, all O. oeni genes preceded by a likely CtsR operator site are derepressed in a B. subtilis
ctsR mutant.
Because no genetic tool adapted to carry out gene inactivation
in
O. oeni is yet available, CtsR-dependent regulation of
O. oeni genes was examined using
B. subtilis as a heterologous
host. Transcriptional fusions between the promoter regions of
the
O. oeni ctsR,
hsp18,
clpX,
clpP,
clpL2,
grpE, and
groES genes (Table
1) and the
bgaB gene of
B. stearothermophilus,
which encodes a thermostable ß-galactosidase, were
integrated as single copies at the
amyE locus of
B. subtilis.
The
mleA gene, whose promoter region contains no CtsR operator
site, was used as a negative control. The ß-galactosidase
activities of strains carrying
bgaB transcriptional fusions
were monitored during growth in Luria broth medium. As expression
of fusions followed similar patterns (data not shown), expression
levels were compared in the mid-exponential phase. As shown
in Fig.
4, expression of transcriptional fusions was low in
the wild-type strain at 37°C and expression was increased
4- to 15-fold when cells were shifted to 48°C. As expected,
no increase in the expression of the
mleA'-
bgaB fusion was observed.
These results indicate that the tested expression of
O. oeni stress response genes is inducible under heat shock conditions
in the heterologous host,
B. subtilis. To test whether CtsR
does indeed play a role in controlling expression of
O. oeni genes, the expression of these fusions was tested in
B. subtilis strain QB4991, in which the entire
B. subtilis ctsR gene is
deleted (
16) (Fig.
4). In a
ctsR background, expression of
ctsR'
-bgaB,
clpL2'
-bgaB,
groES'
-bgaB,
hsp18'
-bgaB,
clpP'
-bgaB, and
grpE'
-bgaB fusions was derepressed, whereas expression of
mleA'
-bgaB and
clpX'
-bgaB fusions was unchanged. Apart from expression of the
clpX'
-bgaB fusion, expression levels of fusions were not significantly
different at 37°C and 48°C in the
ctsR mutant (data
not shown). These results strongly suggest that the
O. oeni hsp18 and
clpL2 genes and the
ctsR-clpC,
dnaK, and
groESL operons
are negatively controlled by CtsR in
O. oeni, whereas
clpX expression
does not seem to depend on this regulator. We note that, apart
from
clpX and
ctsR genes, the derepressed expression levels
are higher in the
ctsR mutant than in the wild-type strain after
a temperature upshift from 37°C to 48°C. Similar results
were reported by Derré et al. in experiments to follow
heat shock induction of the
B. subtilis clpP gene (
16). The
residual inductions observed in the
ctsR mutant could be the
consequence of a complex pleiotropic role played by the CtsR
regulator. Moreover, in a heterologous host, the expression
of fusions may not be completely derepressed because of differences
in the affinities of the
B. subtilis CtsR protein for the
O. oeni direct-repeat CtsR operator sites.
Site-directed mutagenesis of the groESL promoter.
To confirm that the CtsR operator site of the
hsp genes is the
key element recognized by CtsR in
B. subtilis, site-directed
mutagenesis of the
groES promoter was performed. The mutated
promoter sequence was obtained by insertion of a PstI site in
the repeated sequence of the CtsR operator site. In this way
the TTGACC sequence (located at positions 22 to 27)
was mutated to CTGCAG (Fig.
3B). This mutated promoter sequence
was cloned upstream from the
bgaB gene, and the
groESmut'-
bgaB transcriptional fusion was then integrated as a single copy
at the
amyE locus of
B. subtilis. The activity of the
groESmut'-
bgaB fusion was measured in the wild-type
ctsR background. Compared
to that of
groES'-
bgaB, expression of the
groESmut'-
bgaB fusion
was 24-fold higher. These data demonstrated that
B. subtilis CtsR negatively regulates
O. oeni hsp expression by specific
recognition of the predicted direct-repeat CtsR operator site
located upstream from these genes.

DISCUSSION
Little is known about the regulation of stress response in
O. oeni, although many stress response genes have been characterized
in the bacterium. Analysis of the complete
O. oeni IOB 8413
(ATCC BAA-1163) genome sequence indicates the existence of an
ortholog of the CtsR regulator, as well as several potential
target genes. In this work, we have characterized the
ctsR gene
of
O. oeni IOB 8413 (ATCC BAA-1163). As in most low-G+C% gram-positive
bacteria studied so far,
ctsR is the first gene of the
clpC operon in
O. oeni. Expression of the
ctsR-clpC locus is induced
by stress, and the transcription start site, located upstream
from
ctsR, appears to be dependent on CtsR. In
S. aureus and
the gram-positive rod-shaped bacteria (
Bacillus,
Clostridium,
and
Listeria), the
ctsR gene is the first gene of a four-cistron
operon in which the last gene encodes the ClpC protein and the
mcsA and
mcsB genes encode modulators of CtsR (
10,
34,
35,
47,
49). In
L. lactis, three genes,
ctsR,
clpC, and
orf55, constitute
the operon (
56), whereas in the
Streptococcus group there are
only two genes,
ctsR and
clpC, expressed via the same transcript
driven from the promoter upstream of
ctsR (
49). Furthermore,
genome sequence analysis allowed us to predict that the
ctsR and
clpC genes are organized as an operon in
Lactobacillus plantarum (NC_004567). The absence of
mcsA-like and
mcsB-like genes appears
to be specific to the
Streptococcus group and lactic acid bacteria
and suggests a mechanism to modulate CtsR different from those
described for the model organism
B. subtilis. Initial attempts
to complement the
B. subtilis
ctsR mutant by expressing the
heterologous
O. oeni ctsR gene in
B. subtilis were unsuccessful.
The
O. oeni ctsR gene, integrated at the
thrC locus under the
control of the P
xylA xylose-inducible promoter, was transcribed
in the heterologous host in the presence of xylose. Nevertheless,
repression of transcriptional fusions was not observed. A similar
result was obtained with constructions including the ribosome
binding site motif of the
B. subtilis ctsR gene. This result
could be explained by a positive effect of a Clp ATPase, such
as the
O. oeni ClpL protein, on CtsR. Indeed, previous work
suggests a positive role of the
B. subtilis ClpC protein on
CtsR by activating CtsR and promoting DNA binding (
15). The
O. oeni CtsR protein may be rapidly degraded in the
B. subtilis
ctsR mutant, because of the absence of a specific cochaperon.
In addition to the likely CtsR operator sites previously identified upstream from the clpX and hsp18 genes, analysis of the O. oeni IOB 8413 (ATCC BAA-1163) genome database allowed us to predict CtsR-binding sites upstream from the clpL2 gene, as well as the ctsR-clpC, groESL, and dnaK operons. The CtsR-binding sites overlap or are near the
70-dependent promoters, suggesting that CtsR probably acts by competing or interfering with RNA polymerase E-
70 binding. Repression may also occur throughout a roadblock mechanism preventing RNA polymerase progression along the DNA. Using B. subtilis as a heterologous host, we showed that the O. oeni hsp18, clpP, and clpL2 genes and ctsR-clpC, dnaK, and groESL operons are repressed by CtsR from B. subtilis. Moreover, site-directed mutagenesis of the CtsR operator site located in the groESL promoter region led to derepression of the expression of the groESL operon. Taken together, these results indicate that CtsR acts as the master regulator of molecular chaperone gene expression in O. oeni.
Heat shock gene regulation in gram-positive bacteria is mediated by the alternative sigma factor
B and/or by transcriptional repressors, such as CtsR, HrcA, or HspR (10-12, 16, 21, 23, 56). However, the numbers of sigma factors found in bacterial genomes differ greatly, ranging from 18 in B. subtilis (37) to only 3 in the L. lactis genome (6), emphasizing the complexity and diversity of genetic regulatory mechanisms in bacteria. The O. oeni IOB 8413 (ATCC BAA-1163) genome contains only one housekeeping sigma factor gene (rpoD), and to the best of our knowledge no genes for alternative sigma factors, such as
B. Moreover, the promoters of stress genes characterized in this study are preceded by typical
70 35 and 10 boxes, suggesting that they all depend on the housekeeping form of RNA polymerase for expression. Regulation of clp genes of gram-positive bacteria is often described as CtsR dependent, whereas groESL and dnaK operons are often controlled by HrcA. In B. subtilis and closely related species (Bacillus anthracis, B. stearothermophilus, Bacillus halodurans, Clostridium acetobutylicum, Clostridium difficile, Clostridium perfringens, Listeria monocytogenes, and L. innocua), the two regulons are clearly distinct (11), whereas in the streptococcal group (Streptococcus pneumoniae, Streptococcus pyogenes, Streptococcus mutans, Streptococcus agalactiae, L. lactis, and S. salivarius), the HrcA and CtsR regulons partially overlap (Fig. 5). In the latter group, the groESL operon presents both the CtsR target site and the CIRCE sequence organized in tandem (12). In S. aureus, HrcA and CtsR act together to control the expression of the dnaK and groESL operons (10). In this work, we demonstrate that the CtsR repressor is the major regulator of molecular chaperone gene expression in O. oeni. Interestingly, we have been unable to identify either an hrcA gene or CIRCE operator sequences in the O. oeni IOB 8413 (ATCC BAA-1163) genome sequence so far. In contrast, genome sequence analysis indicates the existence of a predominant HrcA control of stress gene expression in Lactobacillus bulgaricus (S. Penaud and E. Maguin, personal communication), suggesting the absence of combined regulation by CtsR and HrcA in both of these lactic acid bacteria. Chastanet et al. (12) have shown that CtsR and HrcA act together synergistically to maintain low-level expression of the dnaK and groESL operons in the absence of stress, suggesting that this dual regulation is probably not redundant. In fact, the predominant CtsR control of molecular chaperone gene expression in O. oeni, like the probable major role of HrcA in L. bulgaricus, may play a role in coordinating synthesis of HSPs during stress response. Under optimal growth conditions, CtsR would prevent the synthesis of unnecessary stress proteins until environmental changes (ethanol, acid, nutritional stresses, etc.) strongly induce transcription of stress genes, including the clp genes and major cell chaperone operons (groESL and dnaK), thus enhancing the adaptability of these lactic acid bacteria under adverse environmental conditions by coordinating the synthesis of HSPs.
Apart from the
clpX gene, all of the tested
O. oeni molecular
chaperone genes are dependent on CtsR. The expression of
clpX has been shown to be heat inducible in different organisms (
22,
24,
32,
54). The
clpX gene of
B. subtilis belongs to class IV
heat shock genes, controlled by an unknown mechanism (
23). In
this work, we have noted the presence of a vestigial CtsR-binding
site upstream from the
clpX gene promoter of
O. oeni, since
the spacing between the direct repeats is not conserved and
CtsR is not able to repress
clpX. This site may be an evolutionary
remnant, suggesting that this gene was once under CtsR regulation.
Furthermore, quantitative RT-PCR analysis of genes under the
control of CtsR revealed that induction factors are different
depending on the gene and type of stress treatment. There may
be other mechanisms, perhaps at the posttranscriptional level,
such as mRNA stability, to ensure regulation of molecular chaperone
synthesis under adverse environmental conditions. Previous studies
have identified a long untranslated sequence at the 5' end of
clpX mRNA (5' untranslated region) and suggested that it could
be involved in stability and/or control of translation (
32),
as described previously in different organisms (
14,
19,
38).
Future work will involve studying the role of this 5' untranslated
region in the stability of mRNA under stress conditions, which
could constitute an additional level of heat shock gene regulation
in
O. oeni.
The identification of members of the CtsR regulon is an essential step toward a more comprehensive understanding of the role of this regulon in stress adaptation. Analysis of the effects of mutations in individual CtsR-dependent genes on stress adaptation is required to address whether and to what extent CtsR-dependent genes contribute to survival in wine. These studies will provide an essential contribution to the understanding of the cell physiology of O. oeni. In order to carry out gene inactivation in O. oeni, future studies will focus on the construction of an integrative vector for gene disruption derived from the conjugative plasmid pGID052 (5).

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We are grateful to P.S.D.M. for helpful discussion and proofreading
the manuscript and D. Garmyn for constant interest in this work.
We thank T. Msadek for providing
B. subtilis strains and the
pDL vector.
This work was supported by the Ministère de l'Education Nationale de la Recherche et de la Technologie, the Université de Bourgogne, and the Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Laboratoire de Microbiologie, UMR UB/INRA 1232, ENSBANA, Université de Bourgogne, 1 Esplanade Erasme, F-21000 Dijon, France. Phone: (33) 3 80 39 66 78. Fax: (33) 3 80 39 66 40. E-mail:
cosette.grandvalet{at}u-bourgogne.fr.


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Journal of Bacteriology, August 2005, p. 5614-5623, Vol. 187, No. 16
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