Journal of Bacteriology, November 2005, p. 7876-7880, Vol. 187, No. 22
0021-9193/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JB.187.22.7876-7880.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Department of Veterinary and Biomedical Sciences, College of Veterinary Medicine, University of Minnesota, St. Paul, Minnesota 55108
Received 13 July 2005/ Accepted 31 August 2005
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A typical TCS is composed of a membrane-associated histidine kinase, which acts as a sensor protein extending through the cytoplasmic membrane to monitor environmental changes and to activate a response regulator existing in the cytoplasm modulating gene expression (15, 34). The well-studied TCS Agr is a positive regulator of exoproteins, including proteases, hemolysins, and toxins (32). Additionally, the TCS Agr is a repressor of the transcription of protein A, coagulase, and some adhesins in late-exponential-phase growth in vitro (32). Other two-component systems, such as saeRS, arlRS, and srrAB, also influence the expression of some virulence factors (1, 13, 11, 35, 39). Another system, LytSR, controls bacterial autolysis by positively regulating the transcription of genes responsible for the synthesis and transport of cell wall murein hydrolase (4). The vraSR loci are homologous to the yvqEC loci of B. subtilis and positively modulate cell wall biosynthesis in S. aureus (23).
The yycFG system, which has orthologs in Bacillus subtilis (7, 8) and Streptococcus pneumoniae (36), is the only known regulatory system essential for cell viability in S. aureus (26). It was reported that in B. subtilis the YycFG system controls the ftsAZ operon, which is involved in the process of cell wall division (12). However, there is no such evidence in S. aureus and S. pneumoniae, while it has been reported that YycF regulates SsaA and IsaA antigens in S. aureus (6) and cell wall synthesis in S. pneumoniae (29-31) and other essential genes (16). In this study, we report another essential two-component signal transduction system, YhcSR, in S. aureus, which may be involved in the modulation of genes critical for bacterial growth.
Construction and characterization of a TetR-regulated yhcS antisense RNA isogenic strain. TetR-regulated antisense RNA can effectively down-regulate gene expression and has been successfully used to identify genes essential for bacterial survival in S. aureus (18, 20, 21). To examine the essentiality of the YhcSR regulatory system, a TetR-regulated yhcS (sensor) antisense strain was constructed in the clinical human S. aureus isolate WCUH29 and was denoted JSAS909. Briefly, the oligonucleotide primers YhcSfor and YhcSrev (see Table S1 in the supplemental material) were used to amplify a 353-bp yhcS fragment from S. aureus genomic DNA. The resulting DNA fragments were cloned into pYH3 DNA in an antisense orientation (40). The recombinant DNA, pJYJ909, was electroporated into RN4220 first and then was introduced into the wild-type human isolate WCUH29 and selected with erythromycin (5 µg/ml) (18, 19). The electrotransformants were confirmed by PCR and were denoted RN4220/yhcS-as and JSAS909 (WCUH29/pJYJ909). The phenotypes of the yhcS antisense strain and control strains were observed on a blood agar plate in the presence or absence of an inducer (anhydrotetracycline [ATc]) of antisense RNA. The control parent vector and a control unrelated antisense RNA (a gene encoding a nonessential hypothetical protein) grew in the presence of the inducer (Fig. 1A). In contrast, the yhcS antisense strain JSAS909 was unable to grow on the blood agar plate in the presence of the inducer. This result demonstrates that induced yhcS antisense RNA causes a lethal effect on bacterial growth.
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FIG. 1. (A) Phenotype of the S. aureus yhcS antisense strain on tryptic soy agar (TSA) plates during ATc induction. Overnight cultures of S. aureus strains were diluted and plated onto TSA-erythromycin plates with or without the inducer ATc (1 µg/ml) and incubated overnight at 37°C. Lane 1, WCUH29/pYH3 control; lane 2, yhcS antisense strain JSAS909; lane 3, unrelated antisense control. Also shown are growth curves of control strain WCUH29/pYH3 (B) and JSAS909 (C) in TSB containing 5 µg/ml of erythromycin and various concentrations of ATc (in nanograms/milliliter). The cultures were diluted to 104 CFU/ml with TSB containing appropriate antibiotics and different concentrations of an inducer (anhydrotetracycline [ATc], at concentrations of 0, 10, 50, 100, 250, or 500 ng/ml). Cell growth was monitored at 37°C by measuring the optical density at 600 nm (OD600) every 15 min, with 1 min of mixing before each reading using a SpectraMax plus Spectrophotometer (Molecular Devices). The grow curves represent one of three repeated experiments.
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DNA sequence analyses of yhcSR indicated that yhcS and yhcR are located in the same operon and might be cotranscribed from a common promoter (Fig. 2A). To examine this possibility, reverse transcription-PCR (RT-PCR) was performed using a forward primer specifically binding to yhcS and a reverse primer specifically binding to yhcR (see Table S1 in the supplemental material). No PCR product was yielded from the negative control using total RNA as templates (Fig. 2B, lane NRT). In contrast, using the total cDNA of S. aureus as templates, a 1.6-kb PCR product was yielded at the expected size (Fig. 2B). This result indicated that both yhcS and yhcR are cotranscribed from a common promoter. Therefore, the induced yhcS antisense RNA may have an impact on yhcR expression.
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FIG. 2. Cotranscription of yhcR and yhcS genes by RT-PCR. Total RNA was extracted using the Promega mini kit from collected S. aureus cells after the appropriate cell density was reached (optical density at 600 nm, 0.4). RNA samples were further treated with DNase I to remove the residual genomic DNA. The cDNA was synthesized by employing RNA as a template using a Promega reverse transcription kit. Cotranscription of the yhcR and yhcS genes was demonstrated by RT-PCR using the yhcS138 and YhcRrev1 primers (Table 1). (A) Schematic representation of yhcSR genes in S. aureus. NRT, total RNA of S. aureus used as the template; RT, synthesized cDNA used as the template; C, positive control, the genomic DNA used as the template.
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Second, we examined the effect of the induced yhcS antisense RNA on the level of the endogenous YhcR protein. The YhcR-his tag fusion protein was purified from Escherichia coli and confirmed by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (data not shown) and was used to immunize the mice for induction of YhcR antibodies, which was used for immunoblotting YhcR. The results showed that the cytoplasm fractions of JSAS909 without induction of yhcS antisense RNA reacted strongly with the anti-YhcR antisera (Fig. 3). Following an induction, the level of yhcR expression significantly decreased to an approximately 12-fold lower level of reactivity, as measured by densitometer scanning. In contrast, the reactivity of whole-cell proteins of the control strain, WCUH29/pYH3, against anti-YhcR antisera was not affected by ATc induction. This result indicated that induced yhcS antisense RNA effectively downregulated yhcR expression and that the yhcSR regulon is critical for bacterial growth. We do not know why previous studies (10, 21) did not reveal that the yhcSR regulon is critical for bacterial growth. One possible explanation is that our random library has not been exhausted for screening all open reading frame antisense RNAs. Alternatively, our results might be due to the different efficacies of different antisense RNA expression systems or to the fact that the copy number of target genes in normal cells may have an influence on a cell's sensitivity to the induced antisense RNA (data not shown).
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FIG. 3. Western blot analysis of yhcR expression during induction of yhcS antisense RNA. S. aureus strains were incubated in TSB with appropriate antibiotics in the presence of an inducer (anhydrotetracycline [ATc] or IPTG) at 37°C overnight. Cell pellets from 1 ml of culture at an optical density of 600 nm of 1.0 were collected by centrifugation and washed once with 1 ml of phosphate-buffered saline. To enrich the YhcR protein, cytoplasm fractions were prepared as described previously (5). Equal amounts of proteins samples were loaded onto a sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel, and Western immunoblotting was performed as described previously (18). Proteins from S. aureus whole-cell lysis probed with mouse anti-YhcR antibodies are shown. Lane 1, standard YhcR; lanes 2 and 3, WCUH29/pYH3; lanes 4 and 5, JSAS909.
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In order to determine the effect of the conditional mutations of yhcS and yhcR on growth, the bacterial cell densities were measured at an optical density of 600 nm during intervals of incubation in TSB with different IPTG concentrations. The results showed that regardless of the presence of IPTG, both Pspac-regulated yhcS and yhcR mutants showed a long lag phase of growth, which may result from the general effect of antibiotics in the medium (Fig. 4). However, it was observed that the growth of both Pspac-regulated yhcS and yhcR mutant strains reached log phase much earlier with IPTG than those without IPTG, indicating a dependency on yhcSR gene products (Fig. 4). Surprisingly, the differences of the growth of cultures disappeared after the mid-log phase of growth (Fig. 4). In addition, it has been observed that there are no significant changes of phenotypes and CFU of cells grown in medium with or without IPTG (data not shown). To explore the reason why the growth of the Pspac-regulated yhcS or yhcR mutant is not dependent on IPTG induction after early log phase, we examined whether there is leaky transcription of yhcR or yhcS without IPTG by using real-time RT-PCR. The results showed that without IPTG the leaky level of yhcS expression in SASJ104 or yhcR expression in SAS204 was almost the same level as that in wild-type cells, while the transcriptional levels of both yhcS and yhcR were significantly increased with the induction of IPTG (data not shown). These results indicated that neither SASJ104 nor SASJ204 was a tightly controlled mutant.
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FIG. 4. Growth curves of the Pspac-regulated yhcS (A) and yhcR (B) mutants during the induction of yhcS or yhcR expression with IPTG. S. aureus strains were incubated at 37°C overnight in TSB with appropriate antibiotics. The cultures were diluted to 104 CFU/ml with TSB containing appropriate antibiotics and different concentrations of inducer (IPTG at concentrations of 0, 0.2, 50, or 4,000 µM). Cell growth was monitored at 37°C by measuring the optical density at 600 nm (OD600nm) every 15 min, with 1 min of mixing before each reading using a SpectraMax plus Spectrophotometer (Molecular Devices). The figure represents one of three repeated experiments.
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8,000 CFU). Collectively, the above results demonstrated that the YhcSR regulon is required for bacterial survival in vitro. The effect of down-regulation of yhcSR expression on bacterial susceptibility to different stresses. To explore the reason why the yhcSR regulon is required for bacterial survival, we examined the cell's susceptibility to various stresses, including pH, temperature, nutrition, ions, osmolarity, and different antibacterial agents. The results showed that the stress of pH (5.2), nutrition (diluted TSB), temperature (42°C), different ions (NO2 and NO3), or high concentrations of sugars or NaCl had no specific impact on the growth of yhcS antisense strains (data not shown). Moreover, the results in Table 1 show that there were no significant changes in the MICs for the control strain. In contrast, the yhcS antisense-expressing strain was selectively hypersensitive to phosphomycin (the MIC decreased eightfold during the induction of yhcS antisense RNA), an inhibitor of UDP-N-glucosamine 1-carboxyvinyltransferase (MurA), which is involved in the first step in murein biosynthesis of a cell wall biosynthesis pathway (3). No significant changes were observed for the other cell wall biosynthesis inhibitors, vancomycin and bacitracin, although yhcYZ of B. subtilis was shown to be induced by bacitracin (27). It has been reported that the vraSR null mutant becomes hypersensitive to different cell wall synthesis inhibitors, including vancomycin, bacitracin, and phosphomycin (23). The yhcSR and vraSR loci are homologous to the yhcYZ and yvqEC loci of B. subtilis, respectively, and YhcYZ and YvqEC may interact with each other in B. subtilis (22). Therefore, YhcSR and VraSR may cross-talk and directly or indirectly control some overlapping genes involved in a cell wall synthesis pathway.
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TABLE 1. MICs (in micrograms/milliliter) of compounds during induction of yhcS antisense with or without ATc
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This project was supported by grant AI057451 from the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Disease. This work was also supported in part by AHC Faculty Research Development Grant #03-02 at the University of Minnesota.
Supplemental material for this article may be found at http://jb.asm.org/. ![]()
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