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Journal of Bacteriology, April 2005, p. 2501-2507, Vol. 187, No. 7
0021-9193/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JB.187.7.2501-2507.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Transcriptome Analysis of Shewanella oneidensis MR-1 in Response to Elevated Salt Conditions
Yongqing Liu,1,
Weimin Gao,1,
Yue Wang,2
Liyou Wu,1
Xueduan Liu,1
Tinfeng Yan,1
Eric Alm,3
Adam Arkin,2,3
Dorothea K. Thompson,1
Matthew W. Fields,1,4 and
Jizhong Zhou1*
Environmental Sciences Division, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge, Tennesee,1
Department of Bioengineering, University of California,2
Physical Biosciences Division, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, California,3
Department of Microbiology, Miami University, Oxford, Ohio4
Received 4 August 2004/
Accepted 18 November 2004

ABSTRACT
Whole-genomic expression patterns were examined in
Shewanella oneidensis cells exposed to elevated sodium chloride. Genes
involved in Na
+ extrusion and glutamate biosynthesis were significantly
up-regulated, and the majority of chemotaxis/motility-related
genes were significantly down-regulated. The data also suggested
an important role for metabolic adjustment in salt stress adaptation
in
S. oneidensis.

TEXT
Shewanella species inhabit diverse environments, including spoiled
food (
11) and infected animals (
35), deep-sea and freshwater
lake sediments (
8,
45,
54), and oilfield waste sites (
44).
Shewanella oneidensis MR-1, a facultative, gram-negative bacterium, was
isolated from sediments of Lake Oneida in New York (
32). The
bacterium can anaerobically respire numerous organic compounds,
including fumarate and dimethyl sulfoxide (
28), as well as reduce
metals such as Fe(III), Mn(IV), Cr(VI), and U(VI) (
22,
29,
32).
Because of the respiratory versatility, which may be exploited
for immobilization of environmental pollutants (i.e., chromium
and uranium) in soil and groundwater, the metal-reducing capabilities
of
Shewanella spp. have been intensively investigated (
6,
14,
15,
26,
30,
33,
39).
The MR-1 genome was recently sequenced (16), and some fundamental similarities and disparities between MR-1 and other sequenced bacteria have been observed (16). To experimentally probe the genomic response of S. oneidensis to various physiologically relevant environmental stresses, a whole-genome cDNA microarray for MR-1 was constructed in this laboratory. In this study, we used this cDNA microarray to profile transcriptional responses of MR-1 to elevated sodium salt stress. The results indicated that the expression of the genes involved in osmolyte protection, cation efflux/influx, motility, and electron transport were significantly altered.
MR-1 requires a relatively high salt concentration for optimal growth.
Many Shewanella species have been isolated from marine environments, whereas some, like MR-1, have been isolated from freshwater environments (36, 39). To understand how various salt concentrations impact the growth of S. oneidensis, MR-1 cells were cultivated in triplicates in MR2A medium (12) containing different amounts of NaCl (ranging in concentration from 0 to 0.6 M) at 30°C under aerobic conditions (shake flasks, 120 rpm). Growth curves (Fig. 1) indicated that (i) the growth rate increased slightly with additional NaCl levels up to 0.4 M, (ii) cells grown in the presence of 0.4 M NaCl entered stationary-phase growth at a lower optical density (OD) than cells grown in the presence of 0.1 to 0.3 M NaCl, (iii) the growth rate decreased significantly with the addition of 0.5 M NaCl, and (iv) cell growth was drastically reduced in the presence of 0.6 M NaCl. Based on these results, MR-1 cells required NaCl levels between 0.1 to 0.3 M for optimal growth (5.8 to 17.5 g/liter) in aerobic MR2A medium. A slight decrease in overall growth was observed at 0.4 M NaCl; 0.5 M NaCl (29.2 g/liter) reduced the maximum growth rate twofold compared to the maximum growth rate observed at 0.1 to 0.3 M NaCl, and the maximum growth rate at 0.6 M NaCl was reduced over fourfold. For the present study, 0.5 M NaCl was used as a moderate stress for MR-1 cells.
Microarray analysis of salt adaptation response in MR-1.
A whole-genome cDNA microarray was constructed and described
previously (
7,
13,
49). Briefly, gene-specific DNA fragments
(<75% homology) were selected as probes with the software
PRIMEGENS (
52), and the primers were designed to amplify the
gene-specific DNA fragments. A total of 4,648 pairs of gene-specific
primers were designed based on the known sequences (
13,
16)
and synthesized. Gene-specific fragments were PCR amplified
in 96-well plates 8 to 16 times in 100-µl reaction mixtures,
purified, pooled, quantified, and diluted to a minimum concentration
of 50 ng/µl. Microarray fabrication, hybridization, and
scanning were carried out as described previously (
7,
13,
23,
49).
We harvested cells grown in the presence of 0.1 M (control condition) or 0.5 M (salt stress condition) NaCl for analysis. To evaluate biological variations, we extracted total cellular RNA from three sets of independent salt-stressed and control cultures to serve as biological replicates and that were hybridized at least twice for each replicate set by an optimized protocol (7, 13, 23, 49). The ratios of the salt-stressed samples to the control samples for an arrayed gene were normalized by a trimmed geometric mean (48). Data points that were not consistently reproducible and had a disproportionately large effect on the statistical result were removed (23). Student's t test was used to identify differentially expressed genes by comparing the means of the normalized and log-transformed control versus salt-treated data with a total of 12 replicates in each set. A significance cutoff for the t statistic (P = 0.05) of a two-tailed test was chosen, and also required genes with significant changes to show a greater than twofold average change in expression level. As a result, a balance between the number of false negatives and trends supported by concerted changes among multiple genes within the same operon or pathway is achieved. For comparison, we also used the empirical Bayesian method of Lonnstedt and Speed (24) to rank and identify genes with significant changes, and the results are consistent by both methodologies.
The quality of the microarray data was assessed based on a number of criteria. First, expression patterns for genes in the same putative operons were checked. The similarity in gene expression patterns between gene pairs predicted to be in the same operon to that of randomly chosen gene pairs was compared. Consistent with this expectation, we observed that genes within the same operon responded in a similar fashion under salt stress compared to genes randomly selected from the genome. Observed pairwise differences in log ratio expression levels were significantly smaller for the within-operon set (Kolgomorov-Smirnoff test, D = 0.3925, P = < 2.2 x 1016) (37). Second, genes known to function together displayed similar changes in expression levels, as described throughout this article. One example is the consistent down-regulation of flagellar assembly genes (Table 1). Third, expression patterns of well-studied genes were verified (e.g., cation efflux transporters and Na+/H+ antiporters; Table 1S, online supplementary data [http://www.esd.ornl.gov/facilities/genomics/pubs/Table1S.xls]). Finally, we selected four predicted open reading frames (ORFs) that displayed significant changes in expression that have not been previously described as osmotic stress response genes in other organisms for real-time quantitative reverse transcription-PCR analysis (23). The expression patterns of the selected genes (pflA, aceA, acnA, and SO3874) were similar to the patterns observed with the microarrays (Table 2S, online supplementary material [http://www.esd.ornl.gov/facilities/genomics/pubs/Table2S.pdf]).
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TABLE 1. Operon organizations and expression ratios of flagellar assembly genes in regions 1, 4, 5, and 6 and chemotaxis genes in regions 2 and 3
|
Overall genomic expression profile of MR-1 in response to salt stress.
The overall genomic expression profiles indicated that the expression
of a considerable subset of genes was affected during growth
in the presence of 0.5 M NaCl. We identified a total of 518
genes (11.2% of the total gene content) as significantly upregulated
and 598 genes (13%) as significantly down-regulated by a factor
of 2 or more. According to the genome sequence annotations provided
by The Institute for Genomic Research (
http://www.tigr.org/),
the majority of the up-regulated genes fell into the following
functional categories: amino acid biosynthesis, protein synthesis,
biosynthesis of cofactors, prosthetic groups, energy metabolism,
and fatty acid/phospholipid metabolism. A large fraction of
the most-highly-down-regulated genes were annotated as chemotaxis-related
proteins. Similar to previous studies of microbial stress response
(
19,
23,
42,
53), changes in the expression of ORFs predicted
to be involved with protein biosynthesis seem to play an important
role in modulating cellular activities that allow adaptation
to environmental stress (Table 1S).
Salt stress activated genes involved in Na+ efflux and K+ accumulation.
Na+ extrusion and replacement with K+ is the primary response of Escherichia coli to NaCl stress. To balance the large amounts of cation accumulation, E. coli will also accumulate glutamate (46). MR-1 appears to respond similarly to NaCl stress. First, genes encoding K+ uptake proteins were up-regulated, as well as Na+ efflux system components that included the Trk K+ uptake system, Na+/H+ antiporters, and Na+ efflux transporters (Table 1S). As expected, genes (SO1325 and SO4410) putatively involved in glutamate synthesis and a Na+/glutamate symporter gene (SO2923) were up-regulated in MR-1 by NaCl stress (Table 1S).
Besides the primary response, a secondary response (i.e., the accumulation of compatible osmolytes) may occur when a cell is subjected to salt concentrations of 0.5 M or higher, as observed in E. coli (46). Genes that encode the enzymes for trehalose and estoine biosynthesis, however, have not been identified in MR-1, and the corresponding compounds have not been reported. Sequence annotation of the MR-1 genome revealed two operons that contain proABC genes encoding enzymes for proline synthesis (SO1121, SO1122, and SO3354), but the expression of these genes was not significantly changed under the salt stress conditions examined (Table 1S). Interestingly, the accumulation of glycine betaine was observed in S. oneidensis cells grown in the presence of salted and smoked salmon (20). The authors stated that exogenous choline in the fish was transported and converted to glycine betaine (20). Therefore, MR-1 appears to have the ability to synthesize glycine betaine from choline. Generally, choline is first oxidized to glycine betaine aldehyde by the enzyme choline dehydrognase (BetA) in E. coli or by a type III alcohol dehydrogenase (GbsB) in Bacillus subtilis. The intermediate glycine betaine aldehyde is then further oxidized to glycine betaine by glycine betaine aldehyde dehydrogenase BetB in E coli or GbsA in B. subtilis (46). We identified two candidates (SO3496 and SO4480) for aldehyde dehydrogenase, one gene for type II (SO1490) and one gene for type III alcohol dehydrogenase (SO2054), but no candidates for choline dehydrogenase. These candidates, however, may function together to convert choline into glycine betaine in MR-1. The two putative alcohol dehydrogenase genes (SO3498 and SO4480) were slightly but not significantly up-regulated, and the other two aldehyde dehydrogenase genes (SO1490 and SO2054) were significantly down-regulated. It is therefore unlikely that glycine betaine biosynthesis was enhanced under the growth conditions tested.
Up-regulation of respiration-related genes.
Microarray analyses indicated that genes involved in both aerobic and anaerobic respiration were significantly up-regulated in salt-stressed MR-1 cells (Fig. 2 and Table 1S). The up-regulated genes involved in aerobic respiration included tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle enzymes and ATP synthase (SO4746 to SO4753), and ORFs predicted to play a role in anaerobic respiration included components of fumarate, nitrate, and nitrite reductases. Consistent with the activation of these enzymes, key genes involved in the biosynthesis of such cofactors as molybdopterin (2, 17, 50), heme (55), and menaquinone (31, 41) were also up-regulated (Table 1S). Up-regulated genes reported to be involved in fermentation were also observed, including formate dehydrogenase, quinone-reactive Ni/Fe hydrogenase, and acetate kinase.
Pyruvate can be respired either aerobically through the TCA
cycle or anaerobically by formate dehydrogenation and fermentation.
The pyruvate formate-lyase encoded by
pflAB is the key enzyme
that catalyzes pyruvate to formate (
1), leading to the final
products H
2 and CO
2. Significant up-regulation of the
pflAB genes was observed, suggesting a possible redirection of pyruvate.
At the same time, an operon that contained aconitase, methylcitrate
synthase, methylisocitrate lyase, and a conserved hypothetical
protein was up-regulated 6.7- to 9.1-fold. The apparent up-regulation
of both aerobic and anaerobic respiration genes has also been
reported for
E. coli cells exposed to seawater for 20 h (
40).
The glyoxylate bypass can reduce NADH production as well as allow a partial TCA to function to generate intermediates for anabolic reactions (e.g., amino acid biosynthesis) without the decarboxylation steps that result in loss of carbon (CO2). The methylcitric acid pathway can provide additional energy from fatty acid and acetate catabolism. Apparently, the cell needs energy to survive the stress, but the aerobic respiration that can produce more energy may simultaneously generate extra reactive oxygen species as by-products (43), thus resulting in oxidative stress. This effect was observed in the moderately halophilic Shewanella sp. strain CN32, which requires 5 to 6% NaCl for optimal growth (4). Up-regulation of anaerobic respiration could help reduce oxidative stress to the cell. In addition, the cells may undergo clumping as a protective response to osmotic stress, as observed in Azospirillum brasilense (18) and Vibrio cholerae (51), and therefore may experience microaerophilic or anoxic conditions. However, the aggregation of MR-1 cells during salt stress was investigated as previously described (18), and significant aggregation was not detected for either the control or salt-stressed cells (data not shown). Observation of the cells by light microscopy also supported this conclusion. However, the cells were shaken during incubation, and significant clumping might have been prevented. Further work is needed to discern the possible connection between clumping and anaerobic metabolism.
Down-regulation of flagellar assembly genes impacted cell motility.
Phylogenetic analysis suggested that S. oneidensis flagellar motor proteins were more closely related to the sodium-driven motors in Vibrio species than to proton-driven motors. In addition, homologs of the MotAB and MotXY proteins, which are thought to be associated with sodium-driven motors, were present in the MR-1 genome (5). Notably, 47 of 49 flagellar assembly genes were repressed by the NaCl stress (Table 1). All flagellar assembly genes are located in region 4 except for the motor-encoding genes (Table 1). Apart from a few methyl-accepting chemotaxis protein (MCP) genes (less than 5% of the total MCP) that are dispersed throughout the genome, almost all chemotaxis-related genes were either significantly down-regulated or unaffected (Table 1 and Table 1S).
To test whether the observed down-regulation of chemotaxis-related protein genes indeed impacted cell motility, cell motility was qualitatively tested with soft agar inoculations. We prepared both solid (1% agar) and semisolid (0.3% agar) MR2A plates in combination with different salt concentrations for motility assessments. Cells (5 µl; OD600 = 0.45) were applied to the center of the plate, the plates were cultivated at 30°C for 20 h, and the swarming behavior of the cells was observed. As expected, the cell motility was adversely affected under salt stress even at decreased NaCl concentrations (Fig. 3). These results indicated that down-regulation of flagellar assembly genes caused a decrease in motility, which agrees with previously reported observations for E. coli (21), B. subtilis (47), and Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium (34).
Transcriptional regulation of flagellar and chemotaxis genes
has been well studied (
3,
4,
25) and has been documented in
detail for bacteria of the
Enterobacterales (
9),
Bucillaceae (
47), and
Vibrionaceae (
27). Except for 28 MCP genes that are
located in different operons, MR-1 has more than 60 flagellar
assembly and other chemotaxis genes organized in at least 17
probable operons (Table
1). The operon organization of MR-1
flagellar ORFs most closely resembles that of
V. cholerae. Maintenance
of these large flagellar systems would seem to be a sizable
investment with respect to cellular economy. In
V. cholerae,
the operons constitute a large, coordinately regulated flagelar
regulon that is divided into three temporally regulated, hierarchical
transcriptional levels: early, middle, and late (
27). In
V. cholerae, FlrA, acting as a
54-dependent transcription factor,
activates transcription of
flrBC, a two-component signal transduction
system. The phosphorylation of FlrC by FlrB is required to activate
middle-level flagellar genes (
38), which includes most flagellar
assembly genes, and
fliA, which encodes a specialized sigma
factor,
28.
28 activity controls transcription of the late-level
genes like the flagellin, motor, and anti-sigma factor genes
(
27). Salt stress repressed the expression of
flrA and
flrC,
the master transcriptional regulator genes in MR-1, leading
to a complete shutdown of middle- and late-level flagellar assembly
genes (Table
1). MR-1 may be similar to
E. coli in terms of
flagellar gene expression regulation, in which a promoter or
promoters of the master operon
flhDC receive a number of global
regulatory signals, including the concentration of inorganic
salt (
9). The simultaneous detection of the whole-genomic expression
patterns in response to a specific environmental stress can
provide details about the possible connections between components
in regulatory networks.
Concluding remarks.
The up-regulation of energy metabolism, including electron transport, and down-regulation of flagellar biosythesis in response to elevated salt conditions suggested that MR-1 needs more ATP to pump sodium out of the cell. In addition, an increase in electron transport may directly contribute to the efflux of sodium via the sodium-translocating electron transport complex I. Under high-salt conditions, MR-1 may repress the expression of flagellar genes to conserve energy necessary for sodium transport. The genomic expression profile of MR-1 in response to the sodium salt stress together with comparative genomics analyses indicated that MR-1 resembled responses observed in V. cholerae. As with Vibrio (10), a majority of Shewanella species reside in oceans, costal waters, and estuaries and were therefore more tolerant to sodium salt stress. More genomic similarities of MR-1 to V. cholerae clearly outline the connections between environments where the microorganisms naturally reside.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This research was supported by The United States Department
of Energy under the Genomics: GTL and Microbial Genome Programs
of the Office of Biological and Environmental Research, Office
of Science. Oak Ridge National Laboratory is managed by University
of Tennessee-Battelle LLC for the Department of Energy under
contract DE-AC05-00OR22725.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Environmental Sciences Division, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge, TN 37831. Phone: (865) 576-7544. Fax: (865) 576-8646. E-mail:
zhouj{at}ornl.gov.

Y.L. and W.G. contributed equally to this study. 

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Journal of Bacteriology, April 2005, p. 2501-2507, Vol. 187, No. 7
0021-9193/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JB.187.7.2501-2507.2005
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