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Journal of Bacteriology, November 2005, p. 7631-7638, Vol. 187, No. 22
0021-9193/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JB.187.22.7631-7638.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Instituto de Biología Molecular y Celular de Rosario (IBR-CONICET) and Departamento de Microbiología, Facultad de Ciencias Bioquímicas y Farmacéuticas, Universidad Nacional de Rosario, Suipacha 531, 2000 Rosario, Argentina
Received 18 May 2005/ Accepted 26 August 2005
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The pathway by which Bacillus subtilis utilizes inorganic sulfate as sulfur source seems to be very similar to that used by E. coli. Indeed, B. subtilis possess all of the genes and enzymes required to convert sulfate into sulfide and for the incorporation of sulfide into cysteine (20, 27) (Fig. 1). The B. subtilis cysH operon encodes a 3'-phospho-adenosine-5'-phosphosulfate (PAPS) reductase, a sulfate permease (CysP) and the enzymes catalyzing the reduction of sulfate to sulfite (22, 23). The cysI and cysJ genes encoding the two subunits of the sulfite reductase are part of an operon and were recently identified (37). Once sulfide is synthesized it is condensed with O-acetyl-L-serine (OAS) in a reaction catalyzed by a O-acetylserine-(thiol)-lyase (or cysteine synthetase), coded by the cysK gene, to give cysteine. In addition, B. subtilis contains two cysK paralogs, yrhA and ytkP. However, CysK seems to be the main enzyme catalyzing this final step. This conclusion is based on the observation that although a cysK mutant can still grow with sulfate, betanesulfonate, and sulfite as sole sulfur sources, its growth rates are significantly lower than those of the wild-type strain growing in similar conditions (37).
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FIG. 1. Pathway for sulfate assimilation and biosynthesis of cysteine in B. subtilis. Genes involved in each step are indicated. The effect of the CysL, YtlI, and YrzC transcriptional regulators on their target genes is indicated with open arrowheads (positive regulation) or bars (negative regulation).
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Recently, three systems involved in L-cystine uptake have been characterized. Two of them, TcyABC and TcyJKLMN, are ABC transporters, whereas TcyP is a symporter (4). TcyJKLMN participates also in the uptake of cystathionine, S-methylcysteine, djenkolic acid, and other sulfur compounds (4). This high-affinity transporter is part of the ytmI operon which also includes genes coding for a riboflavin kinase, a putative acetyltransferase and a putative amidohydrolase (5, 33). The expression of this operon responds to sulfur availability being higher under sulfur limitation (4). YtlI is a positive regulator of the ytmI operon and its expression is also regulated in response to the sulfur source being high in the presence of methionine and low in the presence of sulfate (1, 4, 5). Recently, another putative regulator encoded by the yrzC gene was involved in the regulation of the ytmI operon. YrzC was shown to be a negative regulator of this operon, although no direct binding of YrzC to the ytmI promoter was proven until now (33).
The expression of the ssu operon, which is required for the assimilation of sulfur from sulfonates, is repressed by cysteine and sulfate and is derepressed by taurine and glutathione (38). This operon is regulated at the level of transcription initiation and transcription termination by an S-box-independent mechanism, but no regulator has been identified yet (36). Interestingly, a B. subtilis mutant containing a transposon insertion in the cysK gene, which does not belong to any of the aforementioned sulfur-related operons, exhibited constitutive expression of the ssu operon and the cysK gene itself (37). These results suggest that CysK could also have a regulatory function, or that the accumulation of a metabolite as a consequence of CysK inactivation would be responsible for the derepression of the cysK and ssu transcriptional units (37). Taking into account that sulfonate and sulfate assimilatory pathways are related and that CysK catalyzes the last step of such pathways, we decided to determine whether a cysK mutation also affects cysH expression.
We show here that cysH, as well as almost all of the genes required for sulfate assimilation, is constitutively expressed in cysK mutants and that this expression is not due to OAS accumulation. Our results provide evidence for a novel mechanism for global control of sulfur assimilation in which CysK couples the status of sulfur availability with the expression of genes involved in cysteine biosynthesis.
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TABLE 1. Bacterial strains and plasmids
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To construct plasmid pDK1, PCR-amplified cysK gene was cloned under the control of the xylose-inducible promoter Pxyl (17) into pGES45 (G. E. Schujman, unpublished data), which derives from vector pDG795 (13).
In order to obtain cysK mutants, the parental strains were transformed with chromosomal DNA of the cysK strain SB11 (Table 1) and selected on LB plates supplemented with the proper antibiotics.
Genetic techniques. Plasmid preparations, restriction enzyme digestions, and agarose gel electrophoresis were carried out as described previously (30). E. coli-competent cells were transformed with supercoiled plasmid DNA by using the calcium chloride procedure (30). Transformation of B. subtilis was carried out by the method of Dubnau and Davidoff-Abelson (7). The amy phenotype was assayed as previously described (32).
ß-Galactosidase assays. B. subtilis strains harboring cysH-lacZ fusions were grown overnight in LB medium. The cells were collected by centrifugation and diluted in sulfur-free minimal medium containing cysteine as the sulfur source. When cultures reached exponential phase of growth, cells were collected by centrifugation, washed several times with sulfur-free minimal medium, and finally resuspended in sulfur-free minimal medium supplemented with the appropriate compounds, as described in each experiment. Samples were taken at 1-h intervals or at the indicated times after resuspension and assayed for ß-galactosidase activity as previously described (22). Specific activity was expressed in Miller units (MU) (25). In cases where xylose was used as inducer, glycerol was used as carbon source to prevent catabolic repression.
DNA microarrays analysis. RNA was extracted, labeled, and analyzed with B. subtilis DNA microarrays as described previously (3). Briefly, B. subtilis JH642 strain was grown overnight in sulfur-free minimal medium containing glutathione or cysteine as the sulfur source to compare the expression profile in both sulfur sources. In order to compare wild-type and cysK mutant expression profile, the strains were grown overnight in sulfur-free minimal medium with cystine as a sulfur source supplemented with casein hydrolysate and yeast extract. Cells were collected by centrifugation and diluted in the same medium to an optical density at 600 nm (OD590) of 0.2. The cultures were grown at 37°C for 4 h. Appropriate volumes of culture were used in each case according to the optical density at the collection time. Culture samples were fixed with 20°C methanol and RNA extracted with RNeasy minikit (QIAGEN). Labeled cDNA was generated from RNA samples by direct incorporation of Cy3- or Cy5-labeled dUTP into cDNA. Differentially labeled samples from two different conditions were mixed and hybridized to the DNA microarrays, and each experiment was done three times. Images were processed and analyzed with GenePix 3.0 software (Axon Instruments, Inc.). Background signal was not subtracted from the signal intensity of the spots. Once spots with significant signals were identified (to be considered a valid signal, 40% of the pixels in a spot had to be at least 1 standard deviation above the local background in at least one of the channels), the two channels were normalized by making the total signal in each of the channels equal. The ratios from the independent samples were log2 transformed, and then the data for each individual spot were averaged between the three replicate experiments (independently grown and prepared samples). The geometric mean and standard deviation of the entire population were then calculated. Any spot that had a ratio that was more than 2.5 standard deviations away from the mean was considered an outlier. All of the microarrays data are available upon request.
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FIG. 2. Constitutive expression of the cysH operon in a cysK background. Strains MC530 (PcysH-lacZ) and MCK530 (PcysH-lacZ, cysK) (A) and DA642X (Pxyl-lacZ) and DA642X-K (Pxyl-lacZ, cysK) (B) were grown in sulfur-free minimal media supplemented with cystine, casein hydrolysate, and yeast extract. Cells were recovered by centrifugation and inoculated in sulfur-free minimal medium in the absence or presence of cystine. The addition of 5 mM 1,2,4-triazole or 0.8% xylose is indicated. Samples were taken 4 h after resuspension. ß-Galactosidase activities are expressed in MU.
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FIG. 3. cysK is a trans-acting regulator of cysH expression. (A) Strains MCK530-DK1 (PcysH-lacZ, cysK thrC::Pxyl-cysK) and MCK530-C795 (PcysH-lacZ, cysK thrC::pDG795) were grown in sulfur-free-minimal medium supplemented with threonine, cystine, casein hydrolysate, yeast extract, and xylose. When cultures reached the exponential phase of growth, cells were recovered by centrifugation and washed several times with sulfur-free minimal media. The cells were then resuspended in sulfur-free minimal media supplemented with threonine and xylose in the absence or in the presence of cystine. Samples were taken 4 h after resuspension. ß-Galactosidase activities are expressed in MU. (B) Cells were treated as described in panel A legend, but the experiment was carried out in the absence of xylose.
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Constitutive expression of cysH in a cysK background is not due to OAS accumulation. In Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium, CysK catalyzes a reaction (triazolylase) between OAS and 1,2,4-triazole, giving 1,2,4-triazole-1-alanine as a product (19), which reduces the intracellular concentration of OAS. We have previously reported that OAS is an inducer of cysH expression and that this effect on cysH transcription is independent of sulfur starvation and insensitive to cystine repression (21). Accordingly, when cultures of strains MC530 grown in sulfur-free minimal medium were supplemented with 5 mM 1,2,4-triazole, transcriptional activation of cysH did not take place either in the absence or in the presence of cystine (Fig. 2A). However, addition of 1,2,4-triazole to the cysK mutant MCK530 (Fig. 2A) did not result in repression of cysH transcription, presumably because this strain is unable to reduce the OAS pools in the presence of the inhibitor. Since CysK catalyzes the condensation of OAS with sulfide to form cysteine, these data suggested that derepression of cysH in a cysK mutant could be due to accumulation of OAS. To test this possibility, we constructed strain DAOK-530, a cysK mutant derived from strain 1A3-530 which is an OAS auxotroph. Strains 1A3-530 and DAOK-530 were treated as indicated in Materials and Methods for ß-galactosidase activity determination. In the last step, the cells were diluted in sulfur-free minimal medium supplemented either with cystine or cystine plus OAS. Four hours after resuspension, cysH expression was low in strain 1A3-530 unless the inducer OAS was present (Fig. 4). In contrast, in the cysK strain DAOK-530 cysH expression was derepressed in the absence of external OAS, although this strain is unable to synthesize the inducer, and it was not affected by the addition of OAS (Fig. 4).
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FIG. 4. Derepression of the cysH operon in a cysK background is not due to OAS accumulation. Strains 1A3-530 (cysE, PcysH-lacZ) and DAOK-530 (cysE, PcysH-lacZ, and cysK) were grown and recovered by centrifugation as described in Fig. 2. Washed cells were then inoculated in sulfur-free minimal media supplemented with cystine or cystine plus OAS. Samples were taken 4 h after resuspension. ß-Galactosidase activities are expressed in MU.
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cysK is a global negative regulator of genes involved in sulfur metabolism. To see whether other genes involved in sulfur metabolism, in addition to the cysH and ssu operons, are upregulated in a cysK mutant, we compared the whole transcriptome of strain JH642 grown with either glutathione or cystine as the sole sulfur source with that of a cysK isogenic strain, JH642K, grown with cystine as a sulfur source. To this end, the cultures were grown for 4 h in these media, and the genomic expression profiles of the samples were analyzed by using DNA microarrays containing 4074 of the 4106 protein coding genes of B. subtilis (see Materials and Methods).
As expected from our previous results (21) and those from Van der Ploeg et al. (38), the amount of RNA from the cysH and ssu operons was greatly increased in cells grown in the presence of glutathione, a poor sulfur source. As shown in Table 2, in addition to the genes mentioned above, almost all of the genes coding for proteins with similarity to enzymes involved in cysteine biosynthesis were significantly induced in cells grown in the presence of glutathione. Exceptions were ytkP, an O-acetylserine-(thiol)-lyase paralog, two open reading frames, yvdB and ybaR, that would code for proteins similar to sulfate permeases belonging to the SulP family, and the serine transacetylase paralog yvfD (Table 2). The fact that ytkP, one of the two cysK paralogs, is not induced would agree with the results obtained by Van der Ploeg et al. (38), which showed that a cysK yrhA double mutant is unable to grow with sulfate or thiosulfate as sole sulfur sources. Other induced open reading frames were the recently characterized L-cystine ABC-type transporter TcyJKLMN and the symporter TcyP (4), remarking their role in the adaptation of B. subtilis to an environment with a poor sulfur source. We also detected a pronounced induction of the ytlI gene and the ytmI operon (which includes the tcyJKLMN genes) involved in sulfur assimilation (4, 5). These results agree with those obtained by Coppée et al., who compared the protein expression pattern of B. subtilis grown in the presence of either sulfate or glutathione (5). Thus, the transcriptional induction observed for cysK, ytmI, ssuA, ssuD, and ytmI is also reflected in an increase in the synthesis of the corresponding proteins. However, these authors were unable to detect an increase in the synthesis of proteins coded by the cysH operon or several other proteins probably involved in cysteine metabolism (5). Our results also agree with those of Burguiere et al., who characterized the L-cystine transporters (4). Surprisingly, cysE and cysS, which code for the enzymes serine transacetylase and cysteinyl-tRNA synthetase that catalyze the synthesis of OAS and the attachment of cysteine to its cognate tRNA, respectively (11), showed low levels of induction under sulfur limitation. It has been suggested that cysE and cysS, which are part of an operon, are transcriptionally regulated by the "T box" antitermination mechanism (11), which is widely used by gram-positive bacteria for control of amino acid biosynthesis and aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase gene expression. Although we expected that transcription of the cysE and cysS genes should respond to variations in the levels of cysteine we cannot discard a different sensitivity of the tRNA charging response.
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TABLE 2. Expression profile of sulfur metabolism-related genes in strains JH642 and JH642K
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Here we show that, as previously reported for the ssu operon (37), disruption of the cysK gene, which encodes the enzyme that catalyzes the final step in the biosynthesis of cysteine, results in constitutive expression of the cysH operon. Notably, this effect is not due to the accumulation of OAS. Moreover, the expression of almost all genes with a putative function in cysteine biosynthesis, as well as of many genes probably involved in sulfur assimilation, is derepressed in the absence of CysK. Since all of these genes are repressed in cells growing on good sulfur sources, the simplest model for the function of CysK in global regulation of sulfur assimilation is that this protein is a sensor of the status of sulfur availability. It is worth mentioning that in a cysK background, the cysJI operon, which is under the control of CysL activator (14), is also derepressed. This could indicate that CysK is controlling the expression of cysJI at another level, possibly in response to a different signal, or that the effector sensed by CysL is accumulating in a cysK background.
Another global transcriptional regulator of sulfur amino acid metabolism was recently described in Lactococcus lactis. In this organism FhuR, a LysR-type activator, controls the expression of genes involved in the novo synthesis of cysteine, methionine as well as of genes involved in the interconversion of both amino acids (34). In this case it was also suggested that OAS acts as a cofactor of FhuR inducing the expression of the regulon (34). This regulatory mechanism, however, differs significantly from the one used by E. coli and B. subtilis, where the diversity of regulators and signals allows the independent control of the genes required for the synthesis and interconversion of cysteine and methionine (34).
It is interesting that, similar to the B. subtilis sulfur assimilation system, other regulatory circuits contain proteins that have a dual function with enzymatic and regulatory activities. In E. coli the Mal regulon is positively regulated by the transcriptional activator MalT. In addition to the positive effectors maltotriose and ATP, three proteins are able to interact with MalT modifying its activity. These are MalK, the ATP-hydrolyzing subunit of the high-affinity maltose transport system (2), Aes, an enzyme with acetyl esterase activity (16, 28) and MalY, an enzyme with cystathionase activity. It has been suggested that these three proteins would inactivate MalT by inhibiting its oligomerization (31). Another example is the E1 subunit of the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex from Azotobacter vinelandii, a central enzyme in aerobic respiration, which binds specifically to the fpr promoter modulating its transcription. However, the exact mechanism of action has not been determined (29). In B. subtilis the glutamine synthetase (GS) is involved in the regulation of the genes involved in nitrogen metabolism (10). GS, which is encoded by the glnA gene, synthesizes glutamine from ammonium and glutamate and is the only enzyme capable of assimilating ammonium into cellular metabolites (9). It is important to note the resemblance between the regulation of sulfate and ammonium assimilation in this organism. Both are assimilative reductive pathways and the final product is an amino acid, cysteine or glutamine, respectively. In the sulfate assimilatory pathway CysK, which synthesizes cysteine from sulfide and OAS, seems to be the main enzyme by which sulfide is incorporated into cysteine. In each case, the last enzyme of the synthesis of cysteine and glutamine, CysK and GlnA, respectively, seems to be involved in the regulation of the expression of the genes coding for these proteins. That is, null mutations in cysK or glnA lead to constitutive activity of their respective promoters (10; this study). However, in contrast to the preliminary description of the role of CysK in the regulation of sulfur metabolism reported here, the control of nitrogen assimilation by GS in B. subtilis is well characterized. In this organism, GS directly interacts with the nitrogen regulatory factor TnrA and regulates its DNA-binding activity. In conditions of nitrogen excess, the feedback-inhibited form of GS interacts with TnrA blocking the binding of this transcription factor to its target promoters (41). Our results seems to indicate that similar to the role of GS as a nitrogen sensor, CysK transmits the signal for sulfate availability to as-yet-unidentified transcription factors. Since CysK does not contain a consensus DNA-binding motif and attempts to demonstrate binding of CysK to the cysK promoter have failed (J. R. van der Ploeg, unpublished data), we propose that CysK would control gene expression of cysH through protein-protein interaction with the CysR putative repressor. Moreover, cysK is an autoregulated gene since its expression is increased in the absence of its gene product. Thus, it is tempting to speculate that the regulatory activity of CysK is controlled by a ligand that is an integral component of the sulfur assimilation pathway. A reasonable candidate for the regulatory ligand is OAS because (i) the cysE gene responsible for OAS synthesis is not under CysK control (Table 2), (ii) OAS is required for transcriptional activation of the cysH and ssu operons (21, 36) and cannot be replaced by N-acetyl-L-serine (data not shown), and (iii) cysH is actively transcribed regardless of the absence of OAS in a cysK background (Fig. 4). In addition, OAS binds to the active site of CysK since this enzyme catalyzes the synthesis of cysteine from sulfide and OAS. In the light of these arguments we propose that the intracellular levels of OAS modulate the ability of CysK to interact with the putative repressor CysR. When intracellular levels of sulfide are low, OAS accumulates. The binding of OAS to CysK presumably alters the protein conformation and decreases the affinity of CysK for CysR, promoting the dissociation of the complex from its operator. In a similar way CysK could also interact with other regulators of sulfate assimilation. Further analysis of this hypothesis, as well as the identification of the putative transcription factors proposed in this work, will be of great interest.
This study was supported by grants from the Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas (CONICET), Agencia Nacional de Promoción Científica y Tecnológica (FONCYT), and an International Fellowship from the American Society for Microbiology to G. E. Schujman. D. Albanesi is a fellow and M. C. Mansilla, G. E. Schujman, and D. de Mendoza are Career Investigators from CONICET. D. de Mendoza is an International Research Scholar from Howard Hughes Medical Institute.
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