Previous Article | Next Article ![]()
Journal of Bacteriology, April 2005, p. 2308-2314, Vol. 187, No. 7
0021-9193/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JB.187.7.2308-2314.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Laboratory of Plant Pathology, Graduate School of Agriculture, Kyoto Prefectural University, Kyoto,1 National Institute of Agrobiological Sciences, Tsukuba,2 Laboratory of Molecular Plant Pathology, School of Bioresources, Hiroshima Prefectural University, Shobara,3 Faculty of Agriculture, Miyazaki University, Miyazaki, Japan4
Received 20 October 2004/ Accepted 16 December 2004
|
|
|---|
|
|
|---|
The expression of hrp genes is highly regulated. These genes are induced only in plants or certain nutrient-poor synthetic media and are not induced in nutrient-rich complex media (3, 16, 20, 30, 31, 33, 40). There are two types of hrp regulatory systems in plant-pathogenic bacteria (1, 14). In group I systems, which are found in Pseudomonas syringae, Erwinia sp., and Pantoea stewartii, a member of the ECF family of alternative sigma factors, called HrpL, functions as the regulator for other hrp genes (21, 42, 43). On the other hand, in group II systems, which are found in Xanthomonas sp. and Ralstonia solanacearum, either the AraC-type transcriptional activator HrpX (Xanthomonas sp.) or HrpB (R. solanacearum) regulates expression of other hrp genes (13, 29, 39).
In xanthomonads, the hrp cluster comprises six hrp loci, hrpA to hrpF, which encode components of a type III secretion system, and all of these genes are required for full pathogenicity (5). Two regulatory genes that control expression of the hrp genes have been identified in the genus Xanthomonas. The product of hrpG, which belongs to the OmpR family of two-component regulatory systems, activates the expression of hrpA and hrpX (37, 38), and HrpX controls expression of other hrp genes (hrpB to hrpF) along with some effector proteins (4, 19, 25, 39).
Many HrpX regulons in xanthomonads are preceded by a consensus sequence motif, called the plant-inducible promoter (PIP) box (TTCGC-N15-TTCGC), in the promoter regions (10, 24, 26, 39). Also, in R. solanacearum a similar motif (TTCG-N16-TTCG; called the hrpII box by Cunnac et al. [7]) functions as the cis-acting regulatory element controlling expression of HrpB regulons, such as hrp genes and effector proteins (7). A homodimer of HrpX or HrpB is thought to directly bind the cis-acting regulatory elements, although no experimental evidence for this hypothesis has been obtained (6, 7). The PIP/hrpII box can be an effective marker for screening HrpX and HrpB regulons from the entire genomic sequence database, and several of these regulons are predicted to be involved in the pathogenicity of xanthomonads and R. solanacearum, respectively (8, 27; H. Ochiai, Y. Inoue, M. Takeya, A. Sasaki, and H. Kaku, unpublished data). da Silva et al. (8) found 12 and 20 candidates for HrpX regulons in Xanthomonas campestris pv. campestris and Xanthomonas axonopodis pv. citri, respectively, which did not include the genes in hrp clusters, and 95 candidates were found in R. solanacearum (7). However, genes with an imperfect PIP box, such as TTCGC-N8-TTCGC for hrpF, and genes without a PIP box have been found to be expressed in an HrpX-dependent manner (23; Terashima, unpublished data)
Xanthomonas oryzae pv. oryzae is the causal agent of bacterial leaf blight of rice (34). Like other xanthomonads, X. oryzae pv. oryzae possesses an hrp gene cluster, which is essential for pathogenicity on susceptible rice cultivars and induction of an HR on resistant rice cultivars and nonhost plants and is controlled by HrpG and HrpXo (X. oryzae pv. oryzae HrpX) (19, 26, 25, 33; Ochiai et al., unpublished; Tsuge, unpublished data). In addition, some reports have shown that effector proteins are secreted via the type III secretion system in this bacterium (11, 12, 44).
Recently, the whole genome sequence of X. oryzae pv. oryzae has been determined (Ochiai et al., unpublished). Prior to screening for HrpXo regulons preceded by a PIP box in the genome database, it is important to examine whether a sequence in a PIP box is absolutely required for expression of the following gene or whether some base substitutions in the sequence are permissible for a functional level of the activity.
Here, we constructed plasmids harboring an hrcU-ß-glucuronidase (GUS) gene fusion (hrcU::gus) preceded by a base-substituted PIP box and showed that some base substitutions in the consensus sequence of the PIP box (two TTCGC sequences) do not result in a complete loss of promoter activity. Two genes preceded by the imperfect PIP box (TTCGC-N15-TTCTG or TTCGC-N15-TGCGG) are actually expressed in an HrpXo-dependent manner in X. oryzae pv. oryzae.
|
|
|---|
HrpXo is an hrpXo-deficient mutant derived from T7174R (32). Strains of X. oryzae pv. oryzae were cultured at 28°C on the nutrient-rich non-hrp-inducing medium NBY (35) or on nutrient-poor hrp-inducing medium XOM2 (33). Escherichia coli DH5
MCR was grown at 37°C in Luria-Bertani medium or LM agar (28). Media were supplemented with antibiotics at the following concentrations: rifampin, 20 µg/ml; ampicillin, 50 µg/ml; cycloheximide, 50 µg/ml; kanamycin, 25 µg/ml for X. oryzae pv. oryzae and 50 µg/ml for E. coli; and spectinomycin, 25 µg/ml for X. oryzae pv. oryzae and 50 µg/ml for E. coli. |
View this table: [in a new window] |
TABLE 1. Bacterial strains and plasmids used in this study
|
Base substitutions in the PIP box of the hrpC promoter region. Base substitutions in the PIP box of the hrpC promoter region were generated by a recombinant PCR method (15). An approximately 300-bp EcoRI-BamHI fragment containing the PIP box of hrpC was excised from pHMPIPGUS2 and cloned into pBluescript II SK(+) (Stratagene, La Jolla, Calif.). By using the plasmid as a template, PCRs were performed with KOD-Plus polymerase (TOYOBO, Osaka, Japan) used according to the manufacturer's instructions and the following two sets of primers: (i) T3 primer and the sense primer corresponding to the PIP box with a base substitution (for base substitutions in the first TTCGC sequence, 5'-CAAATCATTCCGGCTTCGCCAGGCCATCC-3'; for base substitutions in the second TTCGC sequence, 5'-CAGGCCATCCACACATTCGCCTGGAAAACG-3'; underlined nucleotides were base substituted) and (ii) T7 primer and the antisense primer corresponding to the reverse of the sense primer (for base substitutions in the first TTCGC sequence, 5'-GGATGGCCTGGCGAAGCCGGAATGATTTG-3'; for base substitutions in the second TTCGC sequence, 5'-CGTTTTCCAGGCGAATGTGTGGATGGCCTG-3'). Then two amplified fragments were purified by agarose gel electrophoresis and annealed with each other; this was followed by a DNA extension reaction with KOD-Plus. By using the product as a template, a second PCR was performed with the T3 and T7 primers. The PCR product with a base substitution in the PIP box was digested with EcoRI and BamHI, and the corresponding region in pHMPIPGUS2 was substituted.
Assay of GUS activity. GUS activity was assayed as described previously (18, 33).
Reverse transcription PCR (RT-PCR). The total RNA of bacteria cultured in XOM2 for 1 day was extracted with an RNeasy kit (QIAGEN, Valencia, Calif.). cDNA synthesis and PCR were performed with RiverTra-Ace reverse transcriptase (TOYOBO) and KOD Dash polymerase (TOYOBO), respectively, used according to the manufacturer's instructions.
Plasmid construction. A BamHI-EcoRI fragment containing a gus gene from pBSGUS (33) was cloned between BamHI and SalI sites of pUC118 to generate pUCGUS. An approximately 800-bp BglII (filled-in)-EcoRI fragment containing 400 bp of the 5' coding region of orf1 and 400 bp of the promoter region were ligated with pUCGUS treated with BamHI, T4 DNA polymerase, and EcoRI. The plasmid obtained, designated pBSPIPORF1, was digested with EcoRI and HindIII and cloned into the broad-host-range vector pHM1 to generate pHMPIPORF1. An approximately 600-bp NotI-EcoRI fragment containing 400 bp of the 5' coding region of orf2 and 200 bp of the promoter region were cloned into pBluescript II SK(+), and a 600-bp EcoRI (filled-in)-KpnI fragment was excised from the plasmid and ligated with pBSGUS treated with SmaI and KpnI to obtain pBSPIPORF2. A NotI-HindIII fragment containing the orf2 promoter region and the orf2::gus fusion was inserted into pHM1, generating pHMPIPORF2. For base substitutions in the PIP box upstream of orf1 and orf2, recombinant PCR were performed with pBSPIPORF1 and pBSPIPORF2, respectively, and this was followed by cloning of the regions containing the promoter and the gus gene fusion into pHM1. The plasmids were introduced into X. oryzae pv. oryzae by electroporation as described previously (32).
Isolation of an orf1 mutant and an orf2 mutant of X. oryzae pv. oryzae T7174R. From the genomic library of T7174R, plasmids harboring an approximately 8.5-kb fragment containing orf1 and an 8.2-kb fragment containing orf2 were selected, and transpositions with each of the plasmids and transposon EZ::TN <KAN-2> (Epicentre, Madison, Wis.) were performed according to the manufacturer's instructions. Clones with a transposon at position 57 of orf1 (position 1 was A of the initiation codon) and at position 157 of orf2 were screened by restriction analysis followed by sequence analysis. By using the plasmids, marker exchange mutagenesis of X. oryzae pv. oryzae T7174R was performed as described previously (32).
Pathogenicity test. Bacteria grown on NBY agar for 2 days at 28°C were suspended in distilled water to a concentration equivalent to an A600 of 0.3. Pathogenicity tests with rice plants (Oryza sativa cv. IR24) were performed by the clipping method (22). Lesion length was measured 2 weeks after inoculation. The ability to induce an HR in tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum cv. Momotaro) was tested by infiltration of bacterial suspensions into the leaf parenchyma.
|
|
|---|
HrpXo, which is deficient in the hrp regulatory gene hrpXo. Each transformant was incubated in the hrp-inducing medium XOM2 for 15 h, and then GUS activity was measured, revealing the hrpXo-dependent expression of HrcU::GUS, as described previously (33) (data not shown). We introduced a base substitution into each of the nucleotides in the consensus sequences (TTCGC sequences) in pHMPIPGUS2 and transformed T7174R with each of the plasmids. All transformants had reduced GUS activity after 15 h of incubation in XOM2 compared with the strain with the plasmid containing the perfect PIP box (Fig. 1). The effects of a base substitution on promoter activity depended not only on the location of the substituted nucleotide but also on the base used after substitution, and several base-substituted PIP boxes retained considerable promoter activity. In particular, 50 to 70% the wild-type activity was observed when the last nucleotide of each TTCGC was changed to G or T. Interestingly, the base substitution resulting in TTCGA for each TTCGC resulted in less promoter activity. Twenty-five to 35% activity was found in the case of TTCGC-N15-TGCGC, as well as TTCGC-N15-TTCTC and TTCGC-N15-ATCGC, but little activity was found in the case of TTCGC-N15-T(A/C)CGC, although the same nucleotides were substituted (base substitutions are underlined). Generally, the effects of a base substitution in the first TTCGC sequence on the promoter activity were greater than the effects of a base substitution in the second sequence. Little GUS activity was observed when the transformants were incubated in non-hrp-inducing medium NBY or when each plasmid was introduced into 74
HrpXo (data not shown).
![]() View larger version (28K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 1. Relative promoter activities of imperfect PIP boxes with base substitutions in the first (A) and second (B) TTCGC sequences. Each nucleotide of the consensus sequences of the PIP box (TTCGC sequences) in pHMPIPGUS2 was base substituted. Transformants with each of the plasmids were incubated in XOM2 for 15 h, and the GUS activity was measured. The values are activities relative to the activity with the wild-type PIP box and are averages and standard deviations for five independent experiments.
|
HrpXo (data not shown). The results suggest that even genes preceded by an imperfect PIP box with certain one- or two-base substitutions might be expressed in an HrpXo-dependent manner.
![]() View larger version (39K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 2. Relative promoter activities of imperfect PIP boxes with two base substitutions. Two nucleotides (indicated by X at the top and by underlining at the bottom) of the consensus sequences of the PIP box (TTCGC sequences) in pHMPIPGUS2 were base substituted. Transformants with each of the plasmids were incubated in XOM2 for 15 h, and the GUS activity was measured. The values are activities relative to the activity with the wild-type PIP box. For comparison, the activity of the imperfect PIP box with each of two base substitutions is indicated. The data are averages and standard deviations for five independent experiments.
|
HrpXo were incubated in XOM2, and total RNA was extracted; this was followed by RT-PCR analysis with a set of primers specific for each ORF. Although HrpXo-dependent expression was not confirmed for most of the variants (some of the ORFs were expressed even in 74
HrpXo, and in other cases no specific fragment was amplified even in T7174R), at least two ORFs preceded by TTCGC-N15-TGCGG and TTCGC-N15-TTCTG (orf1 and orf2, respectively) were found to be expressed in the wild type but not in the HrpXo mutant (Fig. 3). These ORFs corresponded to XOO0804 and XOO3803, respectively, in the genomic database of X. oryzae pv. oryzae (Ochiai et al., unpublished). A search with a BLAST program (2) revealed that XOO0804 and XOO3803 are homologous to XAC1124 (88%) and XAC0601 (91%) in X. axonopodis pv. citri (8), but they have no homology with known protein genes.
![]() View larger version (33K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 3. RT-PCR analysis of transcriptional regulation of orf1 (upper gel) and orf2 (lower gel) by HrpXo. The wild type (lanes 2 and 4) or 74 HrpXo (lanes 3 and 5) was incubated in XOM2, and RT-PCR (lanes 2 and 3) or PCR (lanes 4 and 5) was performed by using total RNA as a template. The PCR product obtained by using genomic DNA of T7174R (100 ng) as a template was used as a size marker (lane 1). The arrows indicate the locations of specific amplified fragments. The other bands are nonspecific.
|
HrpXo. T7174R(pHMPIPORF1) transformants incubated in XOM2 for 15 h had very high GUS activity that was higher than that of T7174R transformed with pHMPIPGUS7G10G, which contained an hrcU::gus gene fusion preceded by the original promoter region, except that the PIP box was replaced with TTCGC-N15-TGCGG (Table 2). On the other hand, 74
HrpXo(pHMPIPORF1) had little GUS activity. T7174R(pHMPIPORF1) incubated in the non-hrp-inducing medium NBY also had little GUS activity (data not shown). We introduced another base substitution in TTCGC and TGCGG into the imperfect PIP boxes. T7174R transformed with each of the resulting plasmids, pHMPIPORF1M1 and pHMPIPORF1M2, containing TTAGC-N15-TGCGG and TTCGC-N15-TGAGG, respectively, showed dramatic decreases in GUS activity (Fig. 4). |
View this table: [in a new window] |
TABLE 2. Relative GUS activities of transformants with plasmids harboring an orf1::gus or orf2::gus gene fusion
|
![]() View larger version (30K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 4. Effects of base substitutions in the imperfect PIP boxes preceding orf1 (A) and orf2 (B) on promoter activity. Each imperfect PIP box preceding orf1 and orf2 in pHMPIPORF1 and pHMPIPORF2, respectively, was further base substituted to obtain pHMPIPORF1M1 (TTAGC-N15-TGCGG), pHMPIPORF1M2 (TTCGC-N15-TGAGG), pHMPIPORF2M1 (TTAGC-N15-TTCTG), and pHMPIPORF2M2 (TTCGC-N15-TTATG). Transformants with each plasmid were incubated in XOM2, and the GUS activity was measured. The values are activities relative to the activity with the wild-type PIP box and are averages and standard deviations for five independent experiments.
|
HrpXo(pHMPIPORF2) and T7174R transformed with plasmids (pHMPIPORF2M1 and pHMPIPORF2M2) that harbor an additional base-substituted PIP box (TTAGC-N15-TTCTG and TTCGC-N15-TTATG, respectively) had less GUS activity than T7174R(pHMPIPORF2) (Table 2 and Fig. 4). Virulence and HR-inducing ability of orf1 and orf2 mutants. We generated mutants that had a kanamycin resistance gene inserted into orf1 and orf2 by marker exchange mutagenesis. Rice cultivar IR24, which is susceptible to parental strain T7174R, was inoculated with the mutants. The lesions formed by the mutants were similar to those formed by the parental strain (data not shown). Also, there were no difference in induction of an HR on tomato between the mutants and the wild type.
|
|
|---|
In this study, we investigated the relationships between base substitutions in the consensus sequences (TTCGC sequences) and the promoter activities and showed that considerable activities were observed for several imperfect PIP boxes with one or two base substitutions. The conclusions of our study are as follows. (i) Generally, base substitutions in the TTCGC sequences resulted in highly reduced promoter activities, although in some cases considerable activity remained. (ii) The last nucleotide of each TTCGC can be changed to G or T with retention of more than 50% of the wild-type promoter activity. These results correspond to those of other researchers who found a TTCG-N16-TTCG PIP box. It is very interesting, however, that substitution of A for the last nucleotide (C) led to less promoter activity. Cunnac et al. (7) also reported decreased promoter activity after substitution with A in these nucleotides in the hrpII box of hrpY of R. solanacearum. (iii) Generally, base substitutions in the first TTCGC may affect promoter activity more than base substitutions in the second TTCGC. (iv) Two base substitutions in the TTCGC sequences may multiply the effect of the individual substitutions, but some imperfect PIP boxes with two base substitutions may function.
We proved that expression of at least two genes (orf1 and orf2) preceded by an imperfect PIP box with two base substitutions is actually HrpXo dependent by RT-PCR and by using constructs harboring gus gene fusions with orf1 and orf2, respectively. An additional base substitution in each of the imperfect PIP boxes resulted in loss of the promoter activities, revealing that the boxes actually function as the cis-acting regulatory element.
Cunnac et al. (7) compared the promoter regions of HrpB regulons in R. solanacearum and found conservation of the distance between the PIP box and the 10 box, which resembled the 10 binding element of the RNA polymerase
70 factor. We compared the flanking regions of the imperfect PIP boxes of orf1 and orf2 with those of hpa1, hrpB, hrpC, and hrpD in X. oryzae pv. oryzae and those of the popABC and hrpY operons in R. solanacearum and found that the distance between the PIP box and the 10 box-like sequence was well conserved not only upstream of hpa1, hrpB, hrpC, and hrpD but also upstream of orf1 and orf2 (Fig. 5). The findings suggest that in addition to the presence of the PIP box, the distance between the PIP box and the 10 box is important in X. oryzae pv. oryzae and that transcription of HrpX/HrpB regulons is likely to be regulated similarly, although the transcription start site of orf1 and orf2 could not be determined in this study.
|
View larger version (29K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 5. Sequence alignment for the promoter regions of orf1, orf2, hrpB, hrpC, and hrpD of X. oryzae pv. oryzae and hrpY and popABC of R. solanacearum. The open boxes indicate the PIP box and the 10 box. The underlined final nucleotides of hrpY and popABC are the transcription start determined by Cunnac et al. (7).
|
In this study, we investigated effects of base substitutions in the TTCGC sequences of the hrpC promoter regions on the promoter activity. Different results might be obtained for other genes with a PIP box. However, our results revealed that not only genes with a perfect PIP box but also genes with a base-substituted imperfect PIP box could be expressed in an HrpXo-dependent manner. The results suggest that more HrpXo regulons than expected might be scattered in the genome of X. oryzae pv. oryzae and that several of them are involved in pathogenicity of the bacterium. We found more than 250 HrpXo regulon candidates with perfect or imperfect PIP boxes that were thought to have more than 20% of the promoter activity of the perfect PIP box, according to the data obtained after base substitution in the hrpC PIP box. Many of them may be pseudogenes or may be expressed in an HrpXo-independent manner because RT-PCR analysis showed that only 2 of the 12 candidate genes which we tested (orf1 and orf2) were expressed in an HrpXo-dependent manner. For other candidate genes, an amplified signal was found even in the HrpXo mutant, or no signal was found even in the wild-type strain, which might have been due to technical problems.
Some of the HrpX regulons have been found to not have a PIP box (23; Terashima, unpublished). It is likely that expression of these genes is regulated by a protein(s) that is preceded by a perfect or imperfect PIP box and that is expressed in an HrpX-dependent manner, although we found no ORF homologous to a known regulatory gene in the HrpXo regulon candidates.
|
|
|---|
This article has been cited by other articles:
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Copyright © 2009 by the American Society for Microbiology. For an alternate route to Journals.ASM.org, visit: http://intl-journals.asm.org | More Info»