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Journal of Bacteriology, December 2005, p. 7955-7962, Vol. 187, No. 23
0021-9193/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JB.187.23.7955-7962.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Wake Forest University School of Medicine, Winston-Salem, North Carolina 27157,1 Department of Microbiology and Immunology and Cystic Fibrosis/Pulmonary Research and Treatment Center, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, North Carolina 275992
Received 30 June 2005/ Accepted 29 August 2005
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B arm of the immune system and provokes the release of proinflammatory mediators such as tumor necrosis factor, interleukin 6, interleukin 8, and nitric oxide by macrophages, monocytes, and epithelial cells (14, 27, 37). The bacterial flagellum is comprised of two substructures: the membrane-spanning hook-basal body and an external filament. The biosynthesis and assembly of a functional flagellum are subject to a highly complex and tightly controlled regulatory cascade which requires coordinate expression of approximately 50 genes encoding structural subunits, regulatory proteins, motor force generators, and chemosensory machinery (5). In P. aeruginosa, flagellar genes are clustered in three distinct regions of the chromosome, and a four-tiered transcriptional regulatory circuit controls flagellum synthesis (15). The FleQ protein, an NtrC-like transcriptional activator, has been referred to as the master regulator of this pathway, as it belongs to the top tier of the intricate flagellar hierarchy and is required for the expression of all other known flagellar genes with the exception of fliA (8, 15, 29).
In the case of chronic CF pulmonary infections, P. aeruginosa strains initially colonizing the lung are likely derived from the environment and generally have a motile phenotype (32). Flagellar components have been shown to bind to airway mucins and are necessary in establishing infection (6, 7, 42). However, as the disease progresses, the initially motile strains frequently convert to a nonmotile phenotype. Loss of the flagellar structure may reduce the release of inflammatory mediators by the host immune system and thus offer P. aeruginosa a selective advantage in the CF lung (14). Interestingly, the nonmotile phenotype of P. aeruginosa is found almost exclusively in CF isolates (32). In many cases, the loss of the flagellum is coordinately regulated with the overproduction of the exopolysaccharide alginate, thus yielding mucoid, nonmotile variants of P. aeruginosa. Previously published data revealed that in the CF isolate FRD1 (mucA22), alginate and flagellum biosynthesis are inversely regulated by the alternative sigma factor AlgT (AlgU,
22) (23). While the role of AlgT in the biosynthesis of alginate is well understood (24, 38), not much is known about how AlgT regulates flagellum expression. It has been shown that in motile, nonmucoid P. aeruginosa strains, the activity of AlgT is minimal due to the inhibitory effect of the anti-sigma factor MucA (24, 50). However, in the majority of CF isolates, including most of those examined in this study, mucA is inactivated due to mutations that occur in vivo, which ultimately leads to a deregulation of AlgT (24).
The goal of this study was to determine if the AlgT-mediated inhibition of flagellum biosynthesis is common in mucoid P. aeruginosa CF isolates and to identify the target(s) of AlgT within the flagellar regulatory hierarchy. We observed that 70% of mucoid CF isolates tested lacked flagella, and in all representative strains examined, AlgT was required for this repression. Microarray analysis, reverse transcriptase (RT)-PCR, and promoter fusion assays revealed that the expression of most genes of the flagellar regulon was significantly downregulated in the presence of AlgT, and fleQ was identified as the earliest target of AlgT within the flagellar hierarchy. To test whether the negative control of fleQ expression by AlgT is sufficient to account for the lack of flagella in mucoid CF isolates, FleQ was ectopically expressed in mucoid, nonflagellated P. aeruginosa isolates. The results obtained by Western blot analysis, motility assays, and transmission electron microscopy (TEM) indicated that increased expression of FleQ reversed the AlgT-mediated inhibition of flagellum expression in CF isolates. Together, these data suggest that the AlgT-mediated repression of P. aeruginosa flagellum biosynthesis is a common regulatory mechanism in mucoid CF isolates and occurs by inhibiting expression of the flagellar master regulator fleQ.
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Q (kindly supplied by R. Ramphal), PAO1, WFPA50 (PAO1 fliC::xylE-aacC1), FRD1 (mucA22), FRD440 (mucA22 algT::Tn501), FRD2700 (attB::pBAD-fleQ), and PAK
Q/pAT6 (attB::pBAD-fleQ) were used for this study. Other P. aeruginosa strains used included mucoid, nonmotile CF isolates CF1, CF2, and CF3 and their isogenic algT mutants, as well as a collection of other CF-derived mucoid strains (9, 47). Escherichia coli strain JM109 (Promega) was utilized for all cloning experiments. Strains SM10 and HB101/pRK2013 (19) were used to transfer plasmids to P. aeruginosa. Oligonucleotides used in this study are listed in Table 1. |
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TABLE 1. Oligonucleotides used in this study
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Q (8) with EcoRI and BamHI and cloning the resulting fragment into the corresponding restriction sites of mini-CTX lacZ. Plasmid pAT6 was generated by amplifying fleQ by PCR with primers fleQ5 and fleQ6 (Table 1). The PCR product was cut with EcoRI and SmaI and cloned into the corresponding sites of pSW195 (48). The three plasmids were tested for the correct insert by sequencing. Plasmid pFlp2 (26) was used to excise unwanted mini-CTX lacZ vector sequences from fusions that were integrated into the P. aeruginosa chromosome. Plasmid pJF15 (20) contains a functional copy of the algT gene and was used for complementation analysis. Media, antibiotics, and enzyme assays. Luria broth (LB; 10 g tryptone/liter, 5 g yeast extract/liter, 5 g NaCl/liter) and LBNS (LB without NaCl) were used throughout the study. In addition, LB and LBNS agar plates (broth and 15 g agar/liter) were used. Plasmids used in this study were maintained in E. coli by antibiotic selection with 15 µg/ml of tetracycline, 100 µg/ml of ampicillin, and 30 µg/ml of kanamycin. For P. aeruginosa, antibiotics were used at 100 µg/ml of tetracycline and 300 µg/ml of carbenicillin. For counterselection, sucrose (5%) and Irgasan (25 µg/ml) were used. For experiments that involved ectopic expression of FleQ, media were supplemented with 0.1 to 2.5% arabinose. The ß-galactosidase assays were performed using o-nitrophenyl-ß-D-galactopyranoside (ONPG) as a substrate (33). Promoter activity was calculated in amounts of ONPG hydrolyzed per minute as a function of cell density with the following equation: units = 1,000 x OD420 (1.75 x OD550)/t x V x OD600 (where t is the time in minutes, V is the volume in ml, and ODn is the optical density at n nm).
Transcriptional profiling. For transcriptional profiling, strain FDR1 (mucA22) and the isogenic algT mutant FRD440 (mucA22 algT::Tn501) were used. Overnight bacterial cultures were diluted to a starting OD600 of 0.01 in 25 ml of LB and grown with shaking (300 rpm) at 37°C under aerobic conditions. When cultures reached an OD600 of 0.5 (mid-exponential growth phase), 1.5 ml of culture (approximately 7.5 x 108 bacteria) was centrifuged at high speed in a microcentrifuge for 1 min. The bacterial pellet was suspended in 100 µl of lysozyme solution (1 mg/ml; Sigma) and incubated at room temperature for 5 min. RNA was purified from the lysed bacterial fraction with a commercially available RNeasy Mini RNA purification kit (bacterial protocol; QIAGEN). RNA samples were eluted with 80 µl of RNase-free distilled water and treated with 10 µl of RQ1 DNase (Promega) for 1 h at 37°C. A second purification was performed using an RNeasy Mini kit (RNA cleanup protocol) followed by elution in 60 µl of RNase-free distilled water. cDNA was synthesized, converted to cDNA targets, and hybridized to GeneChip P. aeruginosa genome arrays (Affymetrix) as described previously (46).
Microarray analysis. Hybridization intensity data were extracted from the scanned array images, and intrachip normalizations were performed using Affymetrix Microarray Suite 5.0 software. In order to eliminate noise, we discarded those genes that yielded "absent" or "marginal" calls (based on the default setting in Microarray Suite 5.0) for both strains. The remaining transcripts that showed greater-than-threefold changes in mRNA levels were considered candidate AlgT-regulated genes (see Table S1 in the supplemental material). The summary of the entire microarray data set is provided in Table S2 in the supplemental material.
Generation of FRD2700 and PAK
Q/pAT6.
Vector pAT6 was transferred into P. aeruginosa FRD1 or PAK
Q by a triparental spot mating (7 µl of an overnight culture of HB101/pRK2013, 7 µl of an overnight culture of JM109/pAT6, 2 µl of an overnight culture of FRD1 or PAK
Q), which was done by incubation at 37°C for 7 h. Colonies were subsequently streaked onto selective media containing tetracycline and Irgasan. Positive clones were verified for integration of the vector by PCR using primers CTX1 and attB2 (Table 1). Vector sequences were removed using pFlp2 (49). Final clones were screened by PCR analysis using primers attB4 and attB5 (Table 1) (49).
Genomic DNA isolation and PCR assay. P. aeruginosa genomic DNA was purified with Wizard genomic DNA isolation reagents by following instructions from the manufacturer (Promega). PCR assays were performed in 10-µl reaction mixtures containing 100 to 150 ng of genomic DNA, the appropriate primers (0.5 µl of 50-ng/µl primer stocks) listed in Table 1, and Taq 2x Master Mix (Promega). PCRs involved 30 cycles (94°C/1 min, 55°C/1 min, and 72°C/1 min).
Total RNA isolation and RT-PCR assay. P. aeruginosa total RNA was purified with Ambion RNA isolation reagents by following instructions from the manufacturer (Ambion). A 5-µl volume of the isolated RNA was resolved on a 1% agarose gel at 100 V for 10 min to validate the purity of RNA. RNA was converted to cDNA using SuperScript II RT (Invitrogen) as described by the manufacturer. Following this, PCRs with 10-µl portions of FRD1 and FRD440 cDNA were performed with 0.5 µl cDNA, the appropriate primers (0.5 µl of 50-ng/µl primer stocks) listed in Table 1, and Taq 2x Master Mix (Promega). The PCRs involved 25 cycles (94°C/1 min, 55°C/1 min, and 72°C/1 min) for all samples except for fliC cDNA (30 cycles under the same conditions). The reaction products were resolved on a 0.7% agarose gel. Band intensities were determined using a Kodak Image Station 2000RT system.
Static growth experiments and isolation of algT mutants. For the static growth experiments (17, 48), an overnight shaking culture of mucoid, nonmotile P. aeruginosa was diluted 1:100 in 5 ml LBNS. The cultures were placed into test tube racks and incubated statically at 37°C for 96 h. The cultures were briefly vortexed, tenfold dilutions were performed, and 100-µl aliquots were plated onto LBNS agar plates. Nonmucoid colonies were isolated and complemented with pJF15 (algT+) (20). Clones that reverted back to the mucoid phenotype were selected and cured of pJF15 by passing on nonselective media. The algT gene was amplified by PCR using primers algT1 and algT2 and sequenced.
Flagellum-mediated motility assays.
For flagellum-mediated motility assays, bacteria were stab inoculated onto 0.3% motility agar (0.3% agar in LBNS). Arabinose (0.1 or 2.5%) was added when indicated. Motility plates were incubated overnight at 37°C. Motility was assessed by measuring the diameters of the circular zones that the colonies spread from their points of inoculation (7). Bacteria were considered motile if their zone of motility was
5 mm (7).
TEM. Bacteria were grown in LBNS with or without arabinose to an OD600 of 0.5. Formvar-coated copper grids were hydrophilized by immersion in 100% ethanol. One drop of bacterial culture was added per grid. After 1 min, excess liquid was wicked off without completely drying the grid to avoid flagellum shearing. Grids were washed twice by floating them on ultrapure water. Subsequently, a drop of 2% uranyl acetate was added and wicked off after 1 min. TEM was performed on a Philips 400 transmission electron microscope operated at 80 kV.
Western blotting. Western blotting was performed using whole-cell lysates. The lysates were prepared from P. aeruginosa grown in LBNS with or without arabinose to an OD600 of 0.5. A 1-ml volume of cells was centrifuged for 3 min at 14,000 rpm, and the pellet was resuspended in 100 µl FB (10 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.0, 100 mM NaCl, 1 mM MgCl2). A 10-µl (see Fig. 1 and 2) or 25-µl (see Fig. 6) volume of each suspension was examined by Western blotting. Rabbit anti-flagellin serotype A and anti-flagellin serotype B antiserum (23) were used at dilutions of 1:20,000. Horseradish peroxidase-conjugated donkey anti-rabbit immunoglobulin (Amersham Biosciences) was used as the secondary antibody at a dilution of 1:10,000. The blot was developed using SuperSignal West Dura extended-duration substrate (Pierce) and exposed to film for 5 to 30 s prior to development.
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FIG. 1. Flagellin expression of mucoid P. aeruginosa CF isolates. A representative Western blot of whole-cell lysates was derived from P. aeruginosa strains. Lane 1, control for flagellin A serotype; lane 2, control for flagellin B serotype; lane 3, fliC mutant WFPA50; lanes 4 to 14, mucoid CF isolates. The results indicated that 70% of the strains tested were mucoid and lacked flagellin.
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FIG. 2. AlgT inhibits flagellum biosynthesis. Whole-cell lysates of mucoid, nonmotile P. aeruginosa CF isolates and their isogenic algT mutants were separated by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and examined for flagellin expression by Western blotting with flagellin B antiserum. Lane 1, PAO1 (flagellin B control); lanes 2 and 3, mucoid, nonmotile CF isolate 1, AlgT+ and AlgT, respectively; lanes 4 and 5, mucoid, nonmotile CF isolate 2, AlgT+ and AlgT, respectively; lanes 6 and 7, mucoid, nonmotile CF isolate 3, AlgT+ and AlgT, respectively. As a loading control, a second gel was simultaneously prepared and processed by Coomassie blue staining and contained equivalent amounts of total protein.
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FIG. 6. Inhibition of fleQ by AlgT is sufficient for the loss of flagellum expression. (A) Western blot of whole-cell lysates. Lane 1, type B flagellin; lane 2, FRD1; lane 3, FRD2700 (FRD1 with fleQ under the control of an arabinose-inducible promoter) with no arabinose; lanes 4 to 7, FRD2700 plus arabinose (lane 4, 0.1% arabinose; lane 5, 0.5% arabinose; lane 6, 1.0% arabinose; lane 7, 2.5% arabinose). (B) Motility assay on 0.3% agar. (I) PAO1 (motile control); (II) FRD1 (nonmotile control); (III) FRD2700 with no arabinose; (IV) FRD2700 plus 0.1% arabinose. (C) TEM of negatively stained P. aeruginosa. (I) FRD2700 with no arabinose; (II) FRD2700 plus 0.1% arabinose; (IV) FRD2700 plus 2.5% arabinose.
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Mucoid, nonmotile CF isolates contain mutations in mucA. It has been shown that approximately 80% of mucoid P. aeruginosa CF isolates harbor a mutation in mucA, which encodes an anti-sigma factor that controls AlgT activity (24). We wanted to determine if there was a correlation between the mucA status and the inhibition of flagellin expression in mucoid, nonflagellated P. aeruginosa CF isolates. To address this, we amplified and sequenced mucA in three flagellated and five nonflagellated mucoid CF isolates. In all strains lacking flagellin, we observed mutations in mucA (data not shown). In three of these, the mutation was identical to that observed in FRD1 (mucA22) and involved the loss of a G residue, which yields a premature stop codon and thus a truncated MucA (24). In each of the mucoid, flagellated CF isolates, no mutation was detected in the mucA gene. This suggests that the AlgT-mediated inhibition of flagellum synthesis requires the inactivation of mucA and subsequent deregulation of AlgT activity.
AlgT mediates the negative regulation of flagellum biosynthesis in mucoid, nonmotile CF isolates. Previous work has shown that in the mucoid, nonmotile CF isolate FRD1 (mucA22), AlgT is required for the inhibition of flagellum synthesis (23). Therefore, we were interested in determining whether this regulatory pathway is common among mucoid, nonflagellated P. aeruginosa isolates. We first generated algT mutants of several mucoid, nonmotile CF isolates. This was accomplished by culturing mucoid, nonmotile P. aeruginosa isolates under limiting oxygen conditions (17, 48). To identify algT mutants, the arising motile variants were complemented with algT. Subsequently, we amplified the algT gene of each mutant. Consistent with previous observations (17), the algT sequencing results revealed an algT29 mutation, which resulted in a Tyr at codon 29 being changed to Cys. The static-growth-derived algT mutants were used in subsequent experiments comparing isogenic AlgT+ and AlgT.
To determine whether the AlgT-mediated inhibition of flagellum expression is conserved among mucoid, nonmotile CF isolates, we compared the flagellin expression of mucoid, nonflagellated CF isolates and that of their isogenic algT mutants (Fig. 2). The results showed that while the mucoid, nonmotile parental strains clearly lacked flagellin (lanes 2, 4, and 6), flagellin expression was restored in the algT mutants (lanes 3, 5, and 7). All algT mutants analyzed expressed type B flagellin. In addition, the algT mutants tested exhibited flagellum-mediated swimming motility. When these mutants were complemented with algT, alginate production was restored, and flagellar motility and flagellin expression were abolished (data not shown). These results designate AlgT as a regulator of flagellum biosynthesis in mucoid, nonmotile CF isolates of P. aeruginosa.
Microarray analysis of isogenic AlgT+ and AlgT P. aeruginosa strains. Upon identification of AlgT as a regulator of flagellum expression, we wanted to determine its target(s) within the complex flagellar hierarchy. Previous work in our laboratory showed that the AlgT-mediated control of flagellum biosynthesis within the flagellar hierarchy occurs downstream of rpoN, which codes for an alternative sigma factor involved in flagellum expression, and upstream of fliC, which encodes flagellin, the major component of the flagellar filament (23). In order to identify candidate AlgT-regulated genes, we performed single replicate microarray analysis of the mucoid, nonflagellated strain FRD1 (mucA22) and its isogenic nonmucoid, flagellated algT mutant, FRD440 (mucA22 algT::Tn501), by using a P. aeruginosa whole-genome microarray (Affymetrix). The summary of the entire microarray data set is provided in Table S2 in the supplemental material. Based on our analysis, we identified 552 candidate AlgT-controlled genes out of the 5,666 predicted open reading frames included on the microarray (see Table S1 in the supplemental material). As expected, the microarray data showed significantly higher mRNA levels for alginate biosynthetic and regulatory genes in the presence of AlgT. In contrast, the mRNA levels of many flagellar genes were significantly reduced in the AlgT+ strain FRD1. P. aeruginosa contains approximately 50 genes encoding structural and assembly components of the flagellum or proteins of the chemotaxis machinery, which are clustered in three regions of the bacterial chromosome (15). The most pronounced inhibitory effect of AlgT was seen in flagellar genes clustered in region I, which contains regulatory and structural genes involved in flagellum expression. These include fleQ and fleSR, coding for essential regulators of flagellum biosynthesis (15), and fliC, which encodes the main structural component of the flagellar filament. In region I, mRNA levels of fliC were 16-fold lower in the AlgT+ strain than in the AlgT strain. The fliI and fliH genes, which code for an ATPase and a regulator of the ATPase protein, respectively (15), were least affected by AlgT. The genes clustered in region II and III were moderately affected by AlgT and were downregulated between two- and threefold. The effect of AlgT on mRNA levels of known flagellar genes is summarized in Fig. 3.
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FIG. 3. Organization of P. aeruginosa flagellar genes and the effect of AlgT on their expression. Microarray analysis comparing transcriptomes of isogenic AlgT+ and AlgT P. aeruginosa strains was performed. Significantly lower levels of mRNA were observed for the majority of flagellar genes. fleQ, which encodes the flagellar master switch, was identified as the highest target of AlgT within the flagellar hierarchy. Arrows indicate the direction of transcription of the flagellar operons.
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While the single replicate microarray analysis provided an overview of the AlgT effect on flagellar genes, we wanted to validate the obtained results and performed RT-PCR as an independent assay. We chose a representative for each class of the flagellar genes and analyzed mRNA levels in isogenic AlgT+ and AlgT P. aeruginosa strains (Fig. 4). The class I gene fleQ was downregulated threefold in the presence of AlgT, which was comparable to the array data (3.2-fold). The class II gene fliE, which encodes a flagellar hook-basal body complex protein (15), was repressed 1.9-fold (array data, 2.9-fold) in the AlgT+ strain. Expression of flgC, which codes for a basal body rod protein (15) and belongs to the third class of flagellar genes, was reduced 7.3-fold in the presence of AlgT (array data, 6.2-fold). Class IV genes flgM, which codes for an anti-sigma factor (22), and fliC were downregulated 2.5- and 15.8-fold, respectively, which also corresponded to the array data (2.1- and 16.1-fold, respectively). As an internal control, we evaluated expression of the omlA gene, which encodes a constitutively expressed outer membrane lipoprotein (34). This was validated by the array data and the RT-PCR assay. Thus, the RT-PCR data provided strong support for the microarray data and independently confirmed the role of AlgT in the inhibition of flagellar gene expression.
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FIG. 4. RT-PCR comparing flagellar gene expression in isogenic AlgT+ and AlgT P. aeruginosa strains. RT-PCR was performed on representatives of the four classes of flagellar genes to compare their mRNA levels in isogenic AlgT+ and AlgT P. aeruginosa strains. The RT-PCRs were separated on an agarose gel, and band intensities were compared using a Kodak Image Station 2000RT system. omlA was included as constitutive control (34). Shown are the averages of four independent experiments and standard deviations. Differences (n-fold) in mRNA levels for both microarray and RT-PCRs are indicated.
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FIG. 5. AlgT inhibits fleQ expression. fleQ::lacZ fusions were integrated into the chromosomes of mucoid, nonmotile P. aeruginosa CF isolates and their isogenic algT mutants at the neutral attB site. Promoter activity was measured with ß-galactosidase assays using ONPG as a substrate and determined as amounts of ONPG hydrolyzed min1 as a function of cell density. omlA::lacZ fusions were included as a constitutive control (34). Shown are the averages of four independent experiments and standard deviations.
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Q. The resulting strains, FRD2700 and PAK
Q/pAT6, were grown in the absence and presence of arabinose and examined for flagellin expression by Western blot (Fig. 6). In the absence of the inducer, FRD2700 did not express flagellin (Fig. 6A, lane 3). However, as the concentration of inducer was increased, a dose response increase in expression of flagellin was observed (6A, lanes 4 to 7). The results obtained for PAK
Q/pAT6 mirrored those observed for FRD2700 (data not shown).
To determine if elevated levels of FleQ also promote motility, we performed motility assays using soft agar with and without arabinose. In the absence of the inducer, FRD2700 was nonmotile, as indicated by the lack of a motility zone observed on the motility plates (Fig. 6B, section III). In contrast, overexpression of FleQ in FRD2700 restored flagellum-mediated motility, resulting in a zone of motility (32 mm) comparable to that observed for the motile control, PAO1 (33 mm) (Fig. 6B, sections IV and I, respectively). Similar results were obtained when the motility of strain PAK
Q/pAT6 was examined on soft agar plates with or without arabinose (data not shown). In addition to performing these experiments, we examined FRD2700 by TEM to determine whether the bacteria were expressing a normal polar flagellum. Cells grown in the absence of the inducer did not express flagella (Fig. 6C, panel I). In the presence of the 0.1% arabinose, FRD2700 expressed a single polar flagellum characteristic for P. aeruginosa (Fig. 6C, panel II). Upon addition of higher concentrations of arabinose, FRD2700 became hyperflagellated. Flagella were observed on both poles of the cells, and flagellar numbers varied between three and eight (Fig. 6C, panel III is a representative). The mucoid phenotype of FRD2700 was unaltered upon induction of flagellar motility, which implies that the mucoid and the motile phenotypes are not mutually exclusive.
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While it has been suggested that there is no correlation between mucoidy and loss of flagellar motility in CF isolates (32), we observed that 70% of mucoid P. aeruginosa strains from CF patients did not express flagellin. These data indicated that in a subgroup of mucoid CF isolates, flagellum expression and alginate expression are inversely regulated. In most cases (80%), the conversion of P. aeruginosa to a mucoid phenotype in the CF lung is due to an inactivating mutation in mucA which results in deregulation of the alternative sigma factor AlgT (24). We observed that each of the mucoid CF isolates that lacked flagellin harbored a mutation in mucA. Sequencing of mucA in the mucoid, flagellated CF isolates of P. aeruginosa revealed that this gene was intact. In the latter case, overexpression of alginate is MucA independent and may involve the secondary, RpoN-dependent pathway (12).
It has been suggested that the mucoid phenotype and the lack of flagella provide P. aeruginosa with a selective advantage in the CF lung (32, 38). The copious quantities of exopolysaccharide form a barrier that shields the bacteria from inflammatory mediators as well as antibiotics. Moreover, infection of airway epithelial cells with mucoid P. aeruginosa results in increased expression of epithelial cellular genes with antiapoptotic effects. The presence of alginate not only attenuates host responses but also aids in the bacterial circumvention of host defenses (14). Flagella, on the other hand, are potent inducers of inflammatory mediators (14, 27, 28, 37). While flagella are essential in the colonization of the CF lung (6, 7, 42), they may become detrimental as the disease progresses. Thus, both loss of the flagellar structure and overproduction of alginate are advantageous for P. aeruginosa, as those allow it to evade the immune system and facilitate its persistence in the CF lung.
The inhibition/regulation of flagellum biosynthesis in response to external conditions is commonly observed among gram-negative bacteria. Usually, if the environmental conditions impose stress on the cells, flagellum synthesis is reduced or eliminated (2, 30). These conditions include nutrient availability, temperature, ionic composition, pH, and surface interactions (3, 30, 31, 40). Similar effects of environmental conditions have also been observed for Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium (3, 31). In both E. coli and Salmonella serovar Typhimurium, environmental conditions have been shown to regulate flagellum expression at the level of transcription. H-NS, a nucleoid protein, and a wide variety of transcription factors and two-component response regulators often modulate motility (1, 11, 21). In Bordetella bronchiseptica, the two-component system BvgAS is involved in the downregulation of flagella in response to external stimuli, such as MgSO4 or nicotinic acid (4). Therefore, it is possible that the FleQ-dependent repression of flagellum expression we uncovered in P. aeruginosa also occurs in response to environmental stress signals. In this context, Wolfgang et al. demonstrated that P. aeruginosa reduces flagellum synthesis when grown in the presence of mucopurulent respiratory liquids derived from CF patients. Upon exposure to CF airway fluid, an 80% reduction of fliC mRNA was observed, indicating the presence of a repressive signal in this environment (45).
We have shown that AlgT mediates alginate and flagellum biosynthesis in P. aeruginosa in a reciprocal fashion. There is evidence in other bacterial species, including E. coli (36) and Vibrio cholerae (44), for a similar inverse control of flagellum and exopolysaccharide biosynthesis. In E. coli, downregulation of flagellum synthesis is often accompanied by an increase of colanic acid exopolysaccharide expression (36). In V. cholerae, mutations in flrA and flrC, which code for regulatory genes of flagellum biosynthesis, resulted in the induction of exopolysaccharide synthesis (44). These examples suggest that the coordinate regulation of exopolysaccharide production and flagellum expression may be a common feature of gram-negative bacterial species.
The assembly of a functional flagellum requires the coordinate expression of approximately 50 genes and is energetically costly. In E. coli, as much as 2% of the total biosynthetic energy expenditure is required for the synthesis and function of flagella (31). Flagellum genes are organized in an ordered regulatory cascade in which the expression of later genes requires the presence of earlier gene products. In peritrichously flagellated bacterial species, such as E. coli or Salmonella serovar Typhimurium, flagellum biosynthesis follows a three-tiered hierarchy, with flagellar genes being grouped into classes I to III. In contrast, monoflagellates, such as P. aeruginosa and Vibrio parahaemolyticus, regulate flagellum biosynthesis with a four-tiered cascade (classes I to IV) (5). In this report, we observed that the repression of flagellum synthesis in P. aeruginosa occurs by transcriptional inhibition of fleQ, a class I gene. The fleQ gene is the earliest in the transcriptional regulatory hierarchy and controls expression of all remaining genes of the flagellar regulon with the exception of fliA. As fleQ forms the master switch of the P. aeruginosa flagellar regulatory network, its reduced expression would ultimately have an inhibitory effect on downstream genes within the cascade. This is similar to the shutoff of flagellum synthesis in E. coli, where the class I master operon flhDC is transcriptionally repressed (40, 41).
Flagella are common among gram-negative bacteria and allow the microorganisms to reach favorable envirommental conditions and avoid detrimental environmental conditions. Thus, bacteria can successfully compete with other microbial species and colonize ecological niches optimal for their growth. Interestingly, flagella are also involved in virulence, adhesion, colonization, and biofilm formation. Stressful external conditions affect flagellar motility in similar fashions and often result in the inhibition of flagellum biosynthesis. The ability to tightly regulate the expression of flagella provides bacteria with the capacity to adapt to their changing environments. In opportunistic pathogens such as P. aeruginosa, for instance, the requirements for flagellum expression vary depending on their mode of growth within their host or within the environment (free swimming versus biofilm), and in each case, such expression or loss thereof provides the bacterium with a selective advantage. To persist in the CF lung, P. aeruginosa must be able to circumvent the immune defenses of the host, and repression of flagellum biosynthesis aids in accomplishing this goal. In mucoid, nonflagellated CF isolates of P. aeruginosa, flagellum expression is shut off as the result of the transcriptional inhibition of fleQ by the alternative sigma factor AlgT. A detailed knowledge of the mechanism of this inhibitory process in P. aeruginosa not only may be useful in understanding the adaptability of this opportunistic pathogen to its various environments but may also elucidate similar pathways in other flagellated gram-negative microorganisms.
The work was supported by Public Health Service grants AI-35177 and HL-58334 (D.J.W.).
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