Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering, Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois 60208
Received 13 May 2005/ Accepted 2 August 2005
| ABSTRACT |
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H and
F regulons. However, sigE expression could not be detected within 7.5 h of initial spo0A expression, consistent with the observed extended time between the appearance of clostridial forms and endospore formation. The results were compared with microarray comparisons of the wild-type strain and the nonsolventogenic, asporogenous M5 strain, which lacks the pSOL1 megaplasmid. While some results were similar, the expression of primary metabolism genes and heat shock proteins was higher in M5, suggesting a difference in metabolic regulation or a butyrate stress response in M5. The results of this microarray platform and analysis were further validated by comparing gene expression patterns to previously published Northern analyses, reporter assays, and two-dimensional protein electrophoresis data of metabolic genes (including all major solventogenesis genes), sporulation genes, heat shock proteins, and other solventogenesis-induced gene expression. | INTRODUCTION |
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Solventogenic clostridia like Clostridium acetobutylicum produce acids during exponential-phase growth, and during stationary phase, they form granulose, take up acids to produce solvents, and sporulate. An understanding of the global events during this shift would provide invaluable information toward understanding cellular physiology at the genomic transcriptional level, thus facilitating a broader understanding of clostridial differentiation, as well as beneficial applications. Numerous papers have examined stationary-phase phenomena in clostridia, and several genes directly related to solvent formation and sporulation have been cloned. Microarrays have been successfully used to examine the temporal expression of genes during the sporulation of Bacillus anthracis, including the sporulation-specific sigma factors (45).
In this study, we performed DNA microarray analysis of C.acetobutylicum batch cultures during the exponential-growth, transitional, and early stationary phases with a newly developed, genomic-scale microarray platform (2) which provides superior sensitivity and accuracy. Samples were hybridized against a global RNA pool, and gene expression was compared to the expression from the mid-exponential phase of growth. Furthermore, we compared gene expression in the wild-type (WT) strain against that of asporogenous, nonsolventogenic strain M5, which lacks the pSOL1 megaplasmid (13).
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Analytical methods. The methods used for monitoring cellular growth were previously described (3). Culture supernatants were analyzed for glucose, acetate, butyrate, acetoin, ethanol, acetone, and butanol on a Waters high-performance liquid chromatography system (Waters, Milford, MA) (85).
Fermentations. A preinoculum flask was grown to an A600 of 0.2, and the culture was transferred to a BioFlo II (working volume, 3.6 liters; New Brunswick Scientific, Edison, NJ) reactor in a 10-fold dilution of CGM. The fermentation was pH controlled at a low end of 5.0 with 6 N NH4OH. Anaerobic conditions were maintained with nitrogen at flow rates of 125 ml/min (for an A600 below 1.0) and 25 ml/min (for an A600 above 1.0). Static flask cultures without pH control were carried out as previously described (2, 3).
RNA sampling, isolation, and cDNA labeling. The methods used for RNA isolation and reverse transcription and cDNA probe labeling have been previously described (2).
RNA pool construction. To measure differences in gene expression between time points within an experiment and to normalize signals against a universal sample, we hybridized the time course microarray samples against an oppositely labeled probe made from an RNA pool which was constructed as follows. A 500-ml bottle of CGM was inoculated with 5 ml of exponential-growth culture. RNA from all stages of growth was individually sampled, purified, and quantitated. An RNA pool was created by mixing equal quantities of purified RNA from the exponential-growth, transitional, and early stationary phases. Microarray probes were then made as previously described (2).
Microarray construction and hybridizations. The methods used for the construction and validation of the full-genome microarrays and hybridizations were described previously (2). Briefly, microarrays were spotted with PCR-generated probes (designed to minimize cross hybridization) 150 to 500 bp in size. A total of 3,802 genes are present on the microarrays (97% genome coverage). Samples from the fermentation time course were hybridized against oppositely labeled cDNA made from the above-described RNA pool. Two hybridizations were performed at each time point. To minimize dye biases, dyes (Cy3 and Cy5) were swapped for each replicate.
Microarray analysis. Microarray data were normalized by using a segmental nearest-neighbor logarithmic expression ratio of the mean approach (97) coded in MATLAB (MathWorks, Natick, MA). To factor out the RNA pool from microarray ratios in the time course experiment, each gene's normalized ratio was divided by the normalized ratio of the same gene at first mid-exponential time point A (Fig. 1A). The result is the ratio of expression of a gene at a given time point compared to time point A. Normalized ratios were grouped by expression similarity with either self-organizing maps (SOMs; GeneCluster, version 2.0) (80) or average-linkage hierarchical clustering (Cluster [20] or TIGR MeV, version 3.0.3 [64]). Before SOM analysis, genes with microarray signals significantly above the background at all time points were standardized by dividing each gene's ratio at each time point by the square root of the sum of the squares of the gene's ratios within an experiment. The result is that the sum of the squares of each gene's standardized ratios within an experiment is 1. Data were visualized colorimetrically with heat plots (or Eisen plots) (20) with TreeView (version 1.5) (20) or TIGR MeV (64).
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| RESULTS |
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We also analyzed samples from a time course comparison of a static-flask culture (without pH control) of the WT strain against asporogenous, nonsolventogenic strain M5 (12) (degenerate strain lacking the pSOL1 megaplasmid [13]), which we previously used to validate this microarray technology (2). RNA samples for the WT-to-M5 comparison were taken during the exponential-growth (a and b), transitional (c), and stationary (d and e) phases. The results from the WT-M5 comparison are shown alongside the WT time course expression results and are specifically discussed only if they provide additional or different evidence regarding gene expression.
Confirmation of gene expression from previous published studies. To further (2) verify the accuracy of this microarray platform, we used results from numerous previous studies which had examined differential expression of C. acetobutylicum genes or proteins during the transition from the exponential growth phase and acidogenesis to stationary phase and solventogenesis.
Solventogenic pSOL1 megaplasmid genes aad-ctfA-ctfB (CAP0162 to CAP0164) and adc (CAP0165) and chromosomal solventogenic genes bdhA (CAC3299) and bdhB (CAC3298) (Fig. 2A) were upregulated at time point E, coinciding with the onset of solvent formation. The expression of most of these genes increases continuously throughout the stationary phase; however, differential expression of bdhA is lower than that of the other genes, peaks in early stationary phase, and then steadily decreases, although it remains at levels higher than those in the exponential phase. At time point I, expression of the sol operon (aad-ctfA-ctfB) is over 1,200-fold higher than at the early exponential-phase time point. Expression of aad-ctfA-ctfB (29, 66), adc (23, 25, 29, 66), bdhA, and bdhB (23, 66, 88) at the onset of solventogenesis has been well established. In the results presented here, at time point D, expression of adc (2.5-fold higher) and bdhB (2.3-fold higher) seems to be initiated before expression of aad-ctfA-ctfB. This is consistent with previous reports (23, 25, 29, 66) and indicates that the regulation of these genes may differ from that of the sol operon. Some of the previous studies (25, 66) were performed with transient chemostat cultures. While the present study was performed with a batch culture, the sequence of solventogenic events is apparently conserved regardless of the culture system. Expression of spo0A (CAC2071), the master regulator of solventogenesis and sporulation in solvent-forming clostridia (29, 59), is discussed later.
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Several stress proteins have been shown to be induced prior to or at the onset of sporulation. According to the B. subtilis classification of heat shock proteins (72), the classes induced during solventogenesis in C. acetobutylicum include the class I hrcA (orfA)-grpE-dnaK-dnaJ (CAC1280-CAC1283) and groESL (CAC2704-CAC2703) transcripts (7, 56) and the previously described class III hsp18 transcript (CAC3714) (56, 66, 69). All of these transcripts were upregulated 2.5- to 9.3-fold by the onset of solventogenesis at time point E (Fig. 2C). Just before the onset of solventogenesis at time point D, some of the class I genes were first upregulated at lower levels, including hrcA (2.1-fold), groES (3.0-fold), and groEL (2.2-fold).
Other heat shock proteins were also induced during the shift to solvent production (Fig. 2C). The ctsR-yacH-yacI-clpC (CAC3192 to CAC3189) operon was induced 5- to 11-fold at time point E. We note that class III genes in B. subtilis are regulated by CtsR (15), and others have noted that the hsp18 gene in C. acetobutylicum has an exact B. subtilis-like CtsR recognition sequence directly upstream of the gene (72, 84). The class IV (regulated by neither HrcA nor CtsR) hsp90 (CAC3315, htpG) gene was induced 4.3-fold at time point D and 12-fold at time point E. The putative protease-encoding lonA (CAC0456) gene was induced 3.5- to 5.6-fold starting at time point F.
In the WT-M5 comparison, several heat shock proteins have higher expression in M5 at time point d (Fig. 2B and C), which corresponds to early stationary phase in both cultures (Fig. 1B). In our previous analysis, we reported higher expression of ctsR, hsp90, dnaJ, groES, clpC, and dnaK in M5 at time points corresponding to 10 h after the onset of sporulation in the WT strain (83). One possibility is that expression of the heat shock proteins in M5 may be a response to stress from increased butyrate accumulation (relative to the WT) at lower pH values (31) since these cultures were carried out without pH control.
Expression of primary metabolic genes. Expression of the acetate formation genes pta (CAC1742) and ack (CAC1743) increased up to twofold during the transitional and early stationary phases (Fig. 2A). Previous Northern analysis of ack expressed in chemostat cultures indicated relatively constant expression between acidogenic and solventogenic cells (92). The expression of butyrate formation genes ptb (CAC3076) and buk (CAC3075) was slightly upregulated (1.5- to 2.3-fold) during the late exponential and early stationary phases. Northern (29) and reporter (86) analyses showed that ptb-buk transcript expression was highest in late exponential phase, corresponding to the expression pattern presented here.
Expression of the butyryl coenzyme A (butyryl-CoA) formation genes thl (CAC2873), hbd (CAC2708), crt (CAC2712), etfA (CAC2709), etfB (CAC2710), and bcd (CAC2711) generally increased in stationary phase but not more than 1.9-fold. Two previous analyses of thl expression in batch cultures have indicated similar expression patterns (29, 86), but a third study with a continuous culture indicated that thl has relatively high expression during the early exponential growth phase, decreased expression through the remaining exponential growth phase, and then higher expression corresponding to solvent production (93). It is unclear if the difference in early exponential-phase gene expression is a continuous-culture-specific effect.
The glycolytic genes for the conversion of glucose to acetyl-CoA (Fig. 2A) show variable expression patterns. Expression of the first gene in the pathway, the putative glucokinase (CAC2613), decreases 2.6-fold near the onset of stationary phase (time point F). Most of the remaining glycolytic genes showed higher expression at stationary-phase time points, including the triosephosphate isomerase gene (tpi, CAC0711; 2.0-fold higher, time point G), gap (CAC0709; 2.2-fold higher, time point H), the phosphoglycerate mutase gene (pgm, CAC0712; 2.8-fold higher, time point G), and the enolase gene (eno, CAC0713; 11-fold higher, time point H). However, expression of 3-phosphoglycerate kinase (pgk, CAC0710) changed no more than 1.5-fold (time point D). Several transcriptional start sites and transcripts have been identified in the CAC0709-to-CAC0713 locus (including gap, gap-pgk, gap-pgk-tpi, and tpi) (70), and the eno and pgm genes are apparently regulated separately. Therefore, we would not expect a common expression pattern within this genetic locus.
In acidogenesis, glycolysis-generated NADH is reduced by ferredoxin, which is, in turn, regenerated by hydrogenase. During stationary phase, NAD(P)H is required for solvent production. As NAD(P)H is shunted to solventogenesis, hydrogenase activity decreases (27, 36). This has also been shown on the transcript level, as hydA expression in acidogenic, continuous cultures is higher than in solventogenic cultures (27). In the WT time course (Fig. 2A), expression of hydA (CAC0028) decreases 2.9-fold at point F and remains low for the remaining stationary-phase time points, thus confirming prior reports.
SOM analysis of functional groups. SOM analysis was used to look for global expression patterns across the genome. Data for genes that had signal intensities significantly greater than the background at all nine time points (3,546 genes out of a total of 3,802 on the microarray) were standardized and then organized by SOMs into 24 clusters. The expression patterns for all 24 clusters were visualized with an Eisen plot (Fig. 3A).
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Clusters t12 and t18 are very similar, both containing genes whose expression level is lower in the stationary phase than that in exponential-growth phase. While the two combined clusters have 487 (12.9%) of the genes in this analysis, the clusters are enriched with 26% of all nucleotide transport and metabolism genes (category F), thus suggesting that this activity is downregulated in stationary phase. These clusters also contain 46% of the genes related to translation (category J), which suggests that, as expected, transcription of proteins for translation is higher in exponential phase.
Clusters t6 and t7 also show decreased expression at transitional- and stationary-phase time points. The two clusters contain 497 (13.2%) of the genes but are enriched with 43% of the cell motility genes (category N) and 19% of the cell wall-membrane biogenesis genes (category M). The C. acetobutylicum genome contains 108 motility-related genes, and 104 of these genes were included among the aforementioned 3,546 genes of this analysis. The majority of genes annotated as having roles in assembly of the flagella or chemotaxis are downregulated at some point during or after late exponential-phase growth. Of the 104 motility-related genes, over 40 genes were downregulated by at least threefold in transitional or stationary phase (time points F to I). In previous studies with C. acetobutylicum nonsolventogenic, asporogenous strain M5, we noted that expression of motility genes in stationary-phase cultures was higher in M5 than in the WT (83), thus suggesting that stationary-phase gene regulation associated with solventogenesis and sporulation downregulates motility gene expression.
pSOL1 gene expression. The majority of pSOL1 genes have increased expression at the beginning of stationary phase (Fig. 4A). The SOM clusters with the most pSOL1 genes are t11 (51 genes), t17 (21 genes), t16 (13 genes), t10 (11 genes), and t4 (10 genes). More than 20 genes were induced at least 10-fold at the onset of solventogenesis. Some of the strongly induced genes include (Fig. 4B) the solventogenic megaplasmid genes as previously described (Fig. 2A); CAP0058 (rare lipoprotein A-related protein), CAP0101 (hypothetical protein), CAP0102 (membrane protein), and CAP0129 (glycogen-binding regulatory subunit of S/T protein phosphatase I); and the loci CAP0135 (annotated as an oxidoreductase), CAP0136 (astB-chuR-nirJ-related protein), CAP0138 (related to biotin carboxylase N-terminal fragment), and CAP0139 (acyl carrier protein family). We previously observed that butanol stress induced expression of CAP0058 in a groESL-overexpressing strain (84) and CAP0102 in four different C. acetobutylicum strains (3).
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Genes required for the synthesis of the aromatic amino acids phenylalanine, tyrosine, and tryptophan are found primarily in two clusters (Fig. 5A). The aro locus, CAC0892 to CAC0899, consists of genes required for the formation of the intermediate chorismate and other precursors for phenylalanine and tyrosine synthesis; another cluster, CAC3157 to CAC3163, converts chorismate into tryptophan. Conversion of the intermediates to amino acids requires an aspartate aminotransferase (five genes are putatively annotated as such in the C. acetobutylicum genome), and phenylalanine synthesis also requires prephenate dehydratase (CAC0217). The major clusters of aromatic amino acid biosynthesis genes are upregulated during stationary phase, with maximum upregulation occurring in early stationary phase. The cluster containing CAC0892 to CAC0899 is expressed up to sevenfold more strongly in early stationary phase, and the tryptophan formation cluster containing CAC3157 to CAC3163 is expressed up to threefold more strongly. The aro locus members are grouped in clusters t2 (CAC0896 and CAC0898), t3 (CAC0897), and t4 (CAC0892 to CAC0895 and CAC899), and the tryptophan formation genes are grouped in clusters t4 (CAC3159 to CAC3163), t16 (CAC3158), and t18 (CAC3157).
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Aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases attach tRNAs with the appropriate amino acid. Transcription of the genes encoding these proteins has a mixed response to the stationary phase, with approximately half being downregulated when entering the stationary phase (data not shown). The reason for specific aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase downregulation is not clear. It is noted that the seryl-tRNA synthetase (CAC0017) is upregulated up to 180-fold more strongly in stationary phase (Fig. 2B), which is consistent with solventogenic-phase protein level reports for this protein (69).
Inorganic-ion transport and metabolism (functional category P). SOM analysis of inorganic-ion-related genes (Fig. 3A) does not reveal any specific enrichment within a cluster. However, there are clear patterns among specific ion transporters.
Expression of genes related to inorganic-ion metabolism is dependent on the type of ion targeted by the gene. Numerous genes putatively related to cobalt metabolism (CAC0294, CAC0771 to CAC0773, CAC1365, CAC1368, CAC1369, and CAC1852; Fig. 5B) had decreased expression in later stages of growth. Cobalt is required for cobalamin (vitamin B12) activity, and the C. acetobutylicum genome contains the genes for its (anaerobic) biosynthesis (53, 63). A large number of these genes are also downregulated in later stages of growth, which may suggest coregulation between these two classes of genes. Cobalamin is a necessary cofactor for various reactions involving rearrangements including glycerol dehydratases for glycerol metabolism and transmethylation for the formation of methionine from homocysteine (28, 32).
Other inorganic-ion transport-related systems are upregulated in stationary phase, including several genes related to iron uptake (Fig. 5C). Two genes (CAC0951 and CAC2634) related to the iron uptake regulator Fur are upregulated during the transition to stationary phase. A putative operon encoding two FeoA-like proteins (CAC1029 and CAC1030) and an FeoB-like GTPase (CAC1031) was upregulated at least 18-fold in stationary phase. The ferrous uptake system feo, which was initially characterized in Escherichia coli (39), is believed to be responsible for anaerobic iron uptake. Clostridium perfringens (75) and Clostridium thermocellum (Department of Energy Joint Genome Institute, http://img.jgi.doe.gov) contain orthologs for both feoA and feoB, and Clostridium tetanii (9) contains an feoB ortholog. Other iron uptake genes upregulated in stationary phase include a putative iron transport operon (CAC1988 to CAC1990), a gene encoding a product similar to the iron storage protein ferritin (CAC0845), and a ferrichrome transport permease (CAC0788). Iron limitation has been shown to inhibit sporulation in B. subtilis (1). Specifically, the aconitase protein, a citric acid cycle gene required in B. subtilis for sporulation (14), requires iron (24), so it is possible that upregulation of iron uptake genes coincides with this metabolic demand. Iron limitation has also been shown to decrease acetone formation (37) as the acetoacetate decarboxylase enzyme requires iron (90).
Lipid transport and metabolism (functional category I).
A large cluster of genes (data not shown) was identified that contains genes annotated as being related to fatty acid synthesis. The annotations include two 3-oxoacyl-(acyl carrier protein) synthases (CAC2008 [pksF] and CAC2011 [fabH]), 3-hydroxyacyl-CoA dehydrogenase (CAC2009 [mmgB]), two enoyl-CoA hydratases (CAC2012 and CAC2016 [both named fadB]), an acyl carrier protein (CAC2017), and malonyl CoA-acyl carrier protein transacylase (CAC2019). The upregulated lipid metabolism genes described above are part of a large locus of 47 genes (CAC1980 to CAC2026), nearly all of which show strong upregulation in stationary phase. Twenty-nine of these genes are in cluster t17, and 12 are in cluster t23, both indicating higher expression in stationary phase (Fig. 3A). All but 3 are on the same DNA strand, and 37 of the genes are upregulated at least fivefold in stationary phase. We have previously shown that fatty acid synthesis genes on a different locus (CAC3568 to CAC3579) were upregulated in spo0A-overexpressing strain 824(pMSPOA) (3). Since 824(pMSPOA) undergoes sporulation earlier than the plasmid control strain (29), this gene expression pattern was attributed to sporulation. Here, genes CAC3568 to CAC3573 had 1.5- to 2.2-fold increased expression at time point F (data not shown), near the onset of sporulation. In B. subtilis, fatty acid synthesis is required for sporulation (71) and various genes related to fatty acid metabolism have been shown to be directly regulated by
E (10, 19) and Spo0A (22, 49). Thus, it may be inferred that fatty acid metabolism might also be regulated by a stationary-phase regulator like Spo0A in C. acetobutylicum.
Expression analysis of functional groups in WT versus M5 cultures. The results presented here confirm the expression of some known stationary-phase events in C. acetobutylicum. Another way to understand stationary-phase phenomena is to compare the WT strain with M5, which is unable, due to loss of the megaplasmid, to sporulate or make solvents, both of which are stationary-phase events. We performed SOM analysis of the WT-M5 data set based on the analysis of the experiment shown in Fig. 1B. A small subset (the pSOL1 genes) of these data was used to validate the microarrays (2), but otherwise, these data have not been biologically analyzed. Microarray analysis of M5 cultures with partial-genome arrays (ca. 25% coverage) has been previously published (83); note that in this present analysis the ratios are reported oppositely (WT/M5 compared to M5/WT previously). Genes that contained a signal above the background in at least one channel for all five time points (3,064 genes out of 3,802 present on the microarray) were standardized and organized with SOMs, and functional groups across SOM clusters (n = 3,251 functional categorizations for 3,064 genes) were analyzed as described above for the WT time course microarray analysis (Fig. 3B).
Of the 127 pSOL1 genes included in the set of 3,064 genes, 109 are included in the three similar clusters c14, c18, and c19 (as indicated by the close proximity on the hierarchical tree of Fig. 3B), all indicating lower expression in M5 at four or five time points. Several solventogenic genes are included in clusters c14 and c19, including the megaplasmid genes aad, ctfA, ctfB, and adc and the chromosomal butanol dehydrogenase gene bdhA. Previous transcriptional analysis of M5 showed significantly decreased expression of these solventogenic genes (83). Also included in these clusters is the putative sigD sigma factor (CAC2143; regulator of flagella, motility, and autolysin expression in B. subtilis).
Nearly 50% of the genes annotated as motility related (category N) are included in cluster c17 (down in M5 during the exponential phase) or cluster c18 (down in M5 at all five time points). We previously noted that that lower expression of motility-related genes in M5 occurs during exponential phase (83). The biological interpretation of this result may be that, during the exponential-growth phase, WT cultures are more motile, but during the stationary phase, WT expression of motility genes decreases (as discussed above), thus leading to decreased expression relative to M5. Another nonmotile and nonsolventogenic C. acetobutylicum mutant, DP4-X, has been described as having an altered flagellin and lacking three solventogenic enzymes which probably correspond to the aad, ctfA and ctfB, and adc genes. These results seem to describe a degenerate mutant like M5 (55).
Clusters c5, c10, c11, and c15 contain genes with higher expression in M5, especially during the stationary phase (Fig. 3B). These clusters contain 26% of the genes in the SOM analysis but are enriched with 34% of the genes related to carbohydrate transport and metabolism, including the glycolytic genes pfk, gap, pgk, tpi, pgm, and eno and all five genes used in the conversion of acetoacetyl-CoA to butyryl-CoA (hbd, etfA, etfB, bcd, and crt) (Fig. 2A), a pattern we have previously reported (higher expression in M5) (82). Also included in clusters c5, c10, c11, and c15 are 41% of the genes related to energy production (category C) and 45% of the genes related to coenzyme transport and metabolism (category H). Finally, 46% of the category O genes (posttranslational modification, protein turnover, and chaperone genes) belong also to clusters c5, c10, c11, and c15. Included are many chaperone transcripts, such as the operon hrcA-grpE-dnaK-dnaJ, clpC, hsp90, hsp18, protease-encoding clpA (CAC1824), and two lonA-annotated genes (CAC2637 and CAC0456). All these genes have the same general expression pattern, with significantly higher expression in M5 at the two stationary-phase time points. The chaperone operon groESL (CAC2703 and CAC2704) is in cluster c0 (higher in M5), but expression in M5 does not exceed WT expression by more than 1.9-fold.
Forty percent of the amino acid synthesis and metabolism genes (category E) are in clusters c1, c5, and c6 (higher expression in M5) and cluster c9 (downregulated in M5). in accordance with the KEGG Pathway database (www.genome.jp/kegg/pathway.html), significant numbers of genes in clusters c1, c5, and c6 were identified as being part of branched-chain amino acid synthesis (10 genes), histidine metabolism (8 genes), and aromatic amino acid biosynthesis (11 genes). While expression during exponential phase of several branched-chain amino acid synthesis genes is higher in M5 than in the WT, the expression levels are similar during stationary phase (Fig. 2B). Since it was previously shown that expression of these genes was upregulated in the WT in the stationary phase, the diminished difference in expression of the genes in stationary phase is likely due to upregulation in the WT cultures. Thus, we conclude that in the WT, expression of branched-chain amino acid synthesis genes is correlated with stationary-phase gene expression.
In stationary phase, clusters c3, c8, and c9 exhibit higher expression in the WT than in the M5 strain. While these clusters contain 23% of the genes analyzed, they contain 46% of the translation and ribosomal structure and biogenesis genes (category J). Thirty-three of these genes are specifically annotated as ribosomal proteins, and eight encode aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases, including seryl-tRNA synthetase (CAC0017). This seems to contradict what was reported during the WT time course (Fig. 3A). One possible explanation is that both the WT and M5 strains downregulate the expression of ribosomal proteins in stationary phase, but downregulation is more profound in M5. All four of the previously mentioned serine biosynthesis genes were assigned to cluster c9, confirming that expression of this operon is associated with stationary phase (Fig. 2B) (69).
Clusters c3, c8, and c9 also contain many sporulation-related genes, including the sporulation-specific transcriptional factor spo0A (CAC2071), the putative spoIIA operon (CAC2306 to CAC2308) that includes sigF (CAC2306), spoIIGA (CAC1694), and sigE (CAC1695), sigG (CAC1696), and nine predicted stage V sporulation-related genes. abrB (CAC0310) (74), the transitional stage gene regulator that is antagonistic to spo0A, has roughly the opposite expression of spo0A, being located in cluster c10 (higher expression in M5 in stationary phase). Higher expression of sporulation genes in the WT is expected due to the M5 asporogenous phenotype.
Expression of sporulation genes.
The time course of sporulation events in B. subtilis is more thoroughly studied than in any clostridia. Research on the early sporulation events in clostridia has been recently reviewed (17). Much of this research to date has examined the expression of Spo0A, which is the master regulator of stationary-phase gene expression in both the bacilli and the clostridia (29, 30, 59). The C. acetobutylicum sigma factors
A,
E,
G, and
K have been cloned (68, 94) and shown to be expressed in a temporal fashion similar to that in B. subtilis (65). Since sporulation is a complex process involving hundreds of genes, we wanted to examine if orthologous sporulation genes in C. acetobutylicum were expressed temporally like the corresponding genes in B. subtilis. We take Spo0A activation (phosphorylation) as the beginning of the differentiation (sporulation) program. In B. subtilis, the end of exponential-phase growth coincides with several early sporulation events, including transcription of the histidine kinase kinA (57), expression of spo0A (57), and repression of abrB (a key target of phosphorylated Spo0A) (33). Here, we use the induction of the now well-established phosphorylated Spo0A targets (29, 59) solventogenic genes aad-ctfA-ctfB and adc as corresponding to the onset (T0) of sporulation, and this corresponds to time point E of the WT time course analysis (t = 9.25 h) and time point c (t = 8.4 h) of the WT-M5 analysis. These time points approximately correspond to the first appearance of clostridial cigar-shaped forms (data not shown). B. subtilis literature on sporulation and gene expression frequently refers to T0 as the onset of sporulation, and numbers larger than zero indicate later time points (for example, T1 denotes 1 h after the onset of sporulation). Selecting this time point on a growth curve can be inexact, as morphological changes are not readily apparent.
We have previously published a transcriptional analysis (83) of the spo0A knockout strain SKO1 (29). Figure 6 displays the expression patterns of selected sporulation genes for the WT-versus-SKO1 comparison in addition to the present WT time course and the WT-versus-M5 comparison. The WT-SKO1 results were normalized as described in the original analysis (83); also, the expression ratios were inverted to WT/SKO1.
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H (encoded by the spo0H/sigH gene), which directs the expression of some of the earliest expressed sporulation genes, including spo0A (57) and the sigF operon (96). Expression of the corresponding sigH gene in B. subtilis is driven by the primary sigma factor
A, and peak expression of spo0H occurs at 40 min before the onset of sporulation, after which expression decreases (89). It has been recently suggested that in C. acetobutylicum, spo0H expression is constitutive (17). Expression of the putative C. acetobutylicum spo0H/sigH gene (CAC3152) is slightly higher at time points E (onset of sporulation) and G (3 h after the onset of sporulation) (Fig. 6). Expression of CAC3152 is higher in WT cells than in M5 cells and steadily increases throughout the stationary phase. Thus, the expression pattern of the putative sigH gene does not exactly match the orthologous B. subtilis gene. In order to examine if
H is functional in C. acetobutylicum, we next tried to analyze the expression of the orthologous C. acetobutylicum
H regulon. Twenty-one operons in B. subtilis are known to be directly regulated by
H (summarized in reference 8). Of the known
H-regulated genes, a limited number (dnaG-sigA, ftsAZ, spoIIAA-spoIIAB-sigF, spo0A, spoVG, and spoVS) have orthologs in C. acetobutylicum. Since the dnaG-sigA and ftsAZ (26) operons in B. subtilis are also known to be expressed by
A promoters and it is already known that spo0A is expressed at the onset of sporulation, we used as a canonical set of
H regulon genes in C. acetobutylicum the spoVG (CAC3223) and spoVS (CAC1817) genes. In B. subtilis, spoVS expression is induced around T0 to T1 (60) and expression of spoVG is induced near the onset of sporulation (89, 100). Hidden Markov models trained with B. subtilis
H-binding motifs as previously described (53) identified potential
H-binding motifs upstream of these putative C. acetobutylicum spoVG and spoVS genes (data not shown). In the C. acetobutylicum time course (Fig. 6), spoVS shows induced expression at time points D (1.5 h before the onset of sporulation), E (the onset of sporulation), and F (1.5 h after the onset of sporulation). spoVG has induced and sustained expression starting at the onset of sporulation. Both genes are more strongly expressed in stationary-phase WT cells than in M5 cells. In the WT-SKO1 comparison, spoVS expression coincides with the initial expression of spo0A and aad-ctfA-ctfB. These results strongly suggest that the putative spoVG and spoVS genes have a role in stationary-phase activities and, owing to their early expression and similarities to B. subtilis data, may also be regulated by
H. Thus, sigH seems to be expressed and active just before T0.
Forespore-specific sigma factor
F is encoded in the spoIIAA-spoIIAB-sigF operon, is known to be regulated by both
H and Spo0A (95), and is typically expressed within an hour of the onset of sporulation in B. subtilis (21). In the time course C. acetobutylicum microarray data, the genes spoIIAA (CAC2308), spoIIAB (CAC2307), and sigF (CAC2306) are highly expressed starting at the onset of sporulation (time point E), as expected. In the M5 experiment, the transcripts are expressed more strongly in WT cells at the stationary-phase time points. In the WT-SKO1 comparison, expression of spoIIAA-spoIIAB-sigF coincides with the onset of spo0A and aad-ctfA-ctfB expression. Two C. acetobutylicum genes homologous to B. subtilis
F-regulated genes were upregulated 3 to 5 h after sigF expression in the WT time course experiment: spoIIQ (CAC1252; 2.6-fold higher expression at time point I) and spoIIR (CAC2898; 2.4-fold higher expression at time point I). In B. subtilis, expression of spoIIR and spoIIQ has been shown to begin 90 to 120 min after the onset of sporulation (40, 46). The expression of spoIIQ and spoIIR indicates
F functionality. A third
F-regulated gene, spoIIIG/sigG (encoding the
G sigma factor), is discussed later.
spoIIE is a serine phosphatase necessary for sporulation which dephosphorylates SpoIIAA so that it can release SpoIIAB from
F (16). Expression is driven by a
A promoter but requiring phosphorylated Spo0A (99). In B. subtilis, expression of spoIIE starts approximately 1 h after the onset of sporulation, with the highest expression approximately 1 h later; spoIIE has a temporal expression pattern similar to that of the spoIIA (sigF) and spoIIG (sigE) operons (99). Expression of spoIIE in C. acetobutylicum (CAC3205) has been shown to coincide with solvent formation, and antisense downregulation of the gene has been shown not to affect solvent formation (73). In the experiments presented here, spoIIE expression starts 3 to 5 h following sigF expression and the onset of sporulation and peaks approximately 5 h after the onset of sporulation (2.2-fold higher expression than the initial time point).
In B. subtilis, expression of the mother cell-specific sigma factor
E begins approximately 2 h after the onset of sporulation (41) and significant expression of spoIIIG (sigG) begins 150 to 210 min after the onset of sporulation (79). In the experiments presented here, expression of the sigE operon (spoIIGA-sigE; CAC1694 and CAC1695) and the sigG transcript (CAC1696) does not exceed 1.3-fold higher expression than the first microarray time point. If we examine several homologous genes known to be expressed from a
E-binding site in B. subtilis (i.e., spoIIP, spoIID, spoIIM, spoIIID, the spoIIIA operon, spoIVFB, spoVD, spoVE, and spoVR), we find that there is no clear pattern of expression in either the WT-M5 comparison or WT time course microarrays (data not shown). These results seem to indicate that
E and
G are not active in the sporulating clostridial cell up to 7.5 h after the onset of sporulation (and solventogenesis). In WT cells, Northern analysis of sigE and sigG had indicated expression approximately 10 h after the onset of sporulation (29). Expression data comparing the WT and M5 strains indicate that spoIIGA, sigE, and sigG are all expressed more strongly in WT cells than in M5 cells (2.6- to 18-fold more strongly at time point e, 9 h after the onset of solventogenesis), indicating that the genes are expressed in stationary-phase WT cultures.
Phase-contrast microscopy and differential interference contrast microscopy were performed to compare gene expression with cellular morphology. Swollen clostridial cells started to appear at 6.75 h (microarray time point C), with a greater abundance at 12.4 h (point I), and forespores and endospores began to appear at 26.7 h. The long delay in forespore appearance coincides with the apparent inability to detect sigE expression (Fig. 6). Consistent with this observation, microscopy of C. acetobutylicum P262 (now Clostridium sp. strain NCP262) indicated a 15- to 20-h delay between initial clostridial-form formation and forespore formation (35, 47). Collectively, these data suggest that forespore formation in C. acetobutylicum requires several more hours than in B. subtilis.
It is well established that clostridia do not contain an orthologous phosphorelay system or any identifiable sensory kinases similar to those (KinA, KinB, KinC, KinD, and KinE) employed by B. subtilis to phosphorylate Spo0A (51, 77, 78). We have previously suggested that the expression pattern of the C. acetobutylicum gene CAC3319 (annotated as encoding a signal transduction histidine kinase) might indicate a role similar to that of the aforementioned B. subtilis sensory kinases (83, 84). With the present time course microarray data, we can identify other candidate proteins that may act as sensory kinases for sporulation. For example, in B. subtilis, kinA is expressed maximally within 40 min of the onset of sporulation (4, 57) and expression of kinC starts at the onset of sporulation and peaks 1 h later (43). Therefore, it would be expected that expression of the putative kinA gene should be highest near the onset of sporulation and solventogenesis, corresponding to time point E or a slightly earlier time point. Of the 41 genes annotated in the C. acetobutylicum genome as being sensory histidine kinases, 8 are temporally upregulated near the onset of sporulation and solventogenesis (Fig. 6). In the case of M5, it is unclear whether loss of the megaplasmid would affect the expression of the putative sensory kinases. Of the eight potential sensory kinases, three (CAC0654, CAC1517, and CAC1582) are expressed more strongly in WT cells than in M5 cells during the transitional and stationary growth phases.
C. acetobutylicum contains three homologs (abrB0310, abrB1941, and abrB3647) for the transitional-state regulator abrB (51), and recent experiments suggest that abrB0310 might be the true transitional-state regulator (74). Because the three sequences are very similar (3), we designed the full-genome microarray to contain a probe for abrB0310 with the expectation that it could hybridize to all three abrB genes. The previous partial-genome microarrays contained probes for abrB1941 and abrB3647. In the WT-M5 and WT-SKO1 comparisons (Fig. 6), the expected result was observed with higher expression in both SKO1 (abrB3647) and M5 (abrB0310), which suggests that these asporogenic strains are unable to downregulate abrB expression. However, abrB0310 expression in the WT time course unexpectedly was highest at time point F, which is after the onset of sporulation. Since maximum expression of abrB in B. subtilis occurs 2 h before the onset of sporulation (33), it is unclear if the microarray probe is picking up signals from all three genes.
Putative granulose formation genes?
Starting in early stationary phase, solvent-forming clostridia produce granulose (61, 62), a glycogen-like polymer used widely by bacteria for energy storage. Synthesis of the polymer via the ADP-glucose pathway requires ADP-glucose pyrophosphorylase (EC 2.7.7.27) and granulose synthase (EC 2.4.1.21). Operons containing these genes have been shown to be expressed by the sporulation-specific
H promoter in Bacillus stearothermophilus (42) and B. subtilis (8). The C. acetobutylicum genome contains a genetic locus (CAC2237, ADP-glucose pyrophosphorylase, glgC; CAC2238, ADP-glucose pyrophosphorylase, glgD; CAC2239, granulose synthase, glgA) bearing a sequential resemblance to these proteins. Operon prediction of the C. acetobutylicum genome (53) suggests a single transcript containing genes CAC2237 to CAC2240, where the annotation of CAC2240 suggests that it is a glucanotransferase; also, no
H promoter was located near the beginning of the transcript. Microscopy of the WT cultures indicated the first appearance of cigar shapes at 6.75 h (time point C) and a greater abundance at 12.4 h (time point I). In stationary phase, WT genes CAC2237, CAC2238, and CAC2240 are expressed up to 6- to 20-fold more strongly than in M5, confirming the correlation of granulose formation with solvent formation (61). At point F of the time course (1.5 h after the onset of sporulation), genes CAC2237, CAC2238, and CAC2240 are expressed two- to threefold more strongly than in mid-exponential-phase growth, generally with higher expression in all stationary-phase samples compared to exponential-phase growth, further suggesting a correlation with stationary-phase gene expression. Unexpectedly, CAC2239 generally had an expression pattern that was the opposite of that of the other genes, except for time point I, where its expression is 2.5-fold stronger than exponential-phase gene expression. Also in the C. acetobutylicum genome is a granulose phosphorylase (CAC1664, glgP) whose putative function is to depolymerize granulose and a putative carbon storage regulator (CAC2209, csrA), which in E. coli represses the expression of both glycogen biosynthesis (glgA) and degradation (glgP) genes (98). Expression of the putative csrA gene is downregulated at least threefold at time points E, H, and I, corresponding to the times during which granulose formation is expected. The putative glgP gene is upregulated starting at time point E and has 20-fold-induced expression at time point F. The reason for the contradictory expression of glgP and glgA is not apparent.
luxS expression. Functional autoinducer systems have been demonstrated in Clostridium difficile (11) and C. perfringens (52). In C. perfringens, the luxS gene has been demonstrated to be involved in toxin production. Autoluminesence assays of C. perfringens indicate that maximum autoinducer (AI-2) activity occurs during mid-exponential-phase growth (52). The protein thought to be responsible for autoinducer production is S-ribosylhomocysteinase, which is encoded by luxS. Sequence alignment of the protein encoded by the putative C. acetobutylicum gene luxS (CAC2942, 474 bp) and the B. subtilis protein (BSU30670) with BLASTP indicates that, over 158 amino acids, there exist 37% identity (50 amino acids) and 53% positive (72 amino acids) matches. During the time course (Fig. 1), expression of CAC2942 is roughly proportional to cell density (Fig. 5E) and is highest during the transitional and early stationary phases, where, at time points F to I, expression is 3 to 3.5 higher than in the early exponential phase. This result suggests that expression of luxS is dependent on the growth phase and may be associated with stationary-phase phenomena.
| DISCUSSION |
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Comparison of metabolic gene expression in the WT time course and the WT-M5 experiment indicates that M5 cultures have increased expression of glycolysis, butyryl-CoA formation, and butyrate formation genes in stationary-phase cultures (Fig. 2A). This seems to indicate a difference in the regulation of primary metabolism due to the loss of the megaplasmid. The continued production of butyrate in M5 seems to coincide with increased expression of heat shock proteins (Fig. 2B and C), which can be shown, by separate experiments, to induce a stress response.
Expression of some B. subtilis branched-chain amino acid synthesis genes is downregulated by the stationary-phase gene repressor CodY (50, 76), which presumably can also repress the expression of sporulation genes during exponential-phase growth (50, 58). Western blot assays of B. subtilis CodY indicated no change in protein expression during sporulation (58). The putative C. acetobutylicum codY gene (CAC1785) in the time course experiment has steadily decreasing expression at points B to H (mid-exponential growth phase through early stationary phase) compared to time point A (data not shown).
In B. subtilis, engulfment is completed 100 min after sporulation initiation, spoIIIG expression (
G, a prespore-specific event) starts at 120 min, and stage III is reached 150 min after sporulation onset (54). We were unable to confidently detect expression of sigE (CAC1695) or sigG (spoIIIG) in time course cultures within 7.5 h of spo0A and aad-ctfA-ctfB expression. Previous results have provided supporting evidence that spore formation is protracted in C. acetobutylicum. Continuous cultures of C. acetobutylicum have shown a 7- to 11-h lag from initial solvent production to significant sigE expression and forespore formation (65). As previously mentioned, other solventogenic clostridia have shown a 19-h delay between initial clostridial formation and forespore formation in a defined medium (47). The doubling time of C. acetobutylicum fermentation in this experiment was 1.0 h. While B. subtilis cells growing on rich medium would have a shorter doubling time, the magnitude of the difference in the forespore formation time between the organisms could not be explained by differences in growth rates alone.
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| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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We thank Carles Paredes for discussion of results and hidden Markov model calculations and Iwona Spath for the microscopy studies.
| FOOTNOTES |
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Supplemental material for this article may be found at http://jb.asm.org/. ![]()
| REFERENCES |
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E-dependent operon subject to catabolite repression during sporulation in Bacillus subtilis. J. Bacteriol. 178:4778-4786.
E regulon and the identification of additional sporulation genes in Bacillus subtilis. J. Mol. Biol. 327:945-972.[CrossRef][Medline]