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Journal of Bacteriology, April 2005, p. 2793-2800, Vol. 187, No. 8
0021-9193/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JB.187.8.2793-2800.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Department of Chemical Engineering, University of California,1 Synthetic Biology Department, Physical Biosciences Division, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, California2
Received 24 September 2004/ Accepted 3 January 2005
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The cluster of genes required for the catabolism of propionate was first identified in and characterized for Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium (12, 15), and a closely related gene cluster was found in E. coli during the sequencing of this bacterium (1). These genes constitute a locus composed of two divergently transcribed units. One unit is the single gene prpR, which encodes a member of the sigma-54 (
54)-dependent activator family (32, 40). The second transcriptional unit contains the prpBCDE operon, which encodes the enzymes for propionate metabolism (also known as the 2-methylcitrate pathway), allowing growth on propionate as a sole carbon and energy source (15). Interestingly, the region between the two transcriptional units contains a putative
70-dependent promoter for prpR and a
54-dependent promoter 5' to prpBCDE (Fig. 1). To date, four regulatory elements have been shown to participate in the transcriptional activation of the prpBCDE operon of S. enterica serovar Typhimurium LT2: PrpR, a coactivator of PrpR such as 2-methylcitrate or a derivative,
54, and integration host factor (IHF) (15, 32, 47). Very little is known about the regulation of prpR expression itself.
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FIG. 1. Nucleotide sequence of the prpR-prpBCDE bidirectional promoter region in E. coli and S. enterica (A). On the basis of previous work (32), a 70 promoter for prpR, a consensus 54 binding region 5' to prpBCDE, and two ribosome-binding sites (RBS) are underlined and labeled in the promoter region between the two transcriptional units. The proposed ATG start sites for PrpR and PrpB are boxed. Putative CRP-binding sequences are identified, shaded, and labeled. An inverted repeat (GTTTCAT-10 nt-ATGAAAC), which may be a PrpR-binding site for activation of the prpBCDE promoter, is in italics. Nucleotides in the region between the two genes are numbered 5' to 3' on the basis of the E. coli sequence. Putative binding sites for regulator proteins are shown (B). The inferred 10 and 35 region and 12 and 24 region of each promoter are indicated. Reporter plasmids were constructed by fusion of the prpBCDE promoter to the gene encoding RFP and/or the prpR promoter to the gene encoding LacZ.
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54 RNAP holoenzyme (E
54) and PrpR, an NtrC-like protein in S. enterica (15, 32, 47). Promoter sequences recognized by E
54 are well conserved (TGGCAC-5 nucleotides [nt]-TTGCA/T, situated between 26 and 11 bp) and distinct from classical 35, 10
70-type consensus promoters (Fig. 1A). E
54 binds to its cognate promoters as a transcriptionally inactive closed complex. Activator proteins in the NtrC family interact directly with E
54 to stimulate transcription from
54-dependent promoters (27), which are generally involved in nitrogen regulation in E. coli. Since nitrogen assimilation consumes energy and intermediates of central metabolism (35, 38), the direct action of the cAMP-CRP complex as a modulator of E
54 could provide a regulatory link between carbon and nitrogen metabolism by the dual regulatory role of PTS components and the cAMP-CRP complex (the activation of
70-dependent promoters involved in carbon metabolism and the downregulation of
54-dependent promoters involved in nitrogen assimilation) (5, 36, 37). Recently, it has been reported that CRP-cAMP can bind at
54-dependent promoters and inhibit the ability of E
54 to activate transcription (46, 48). This effect appears to be both CRP and
54 dependent.
In this work, the overlapping and opposing promoter elements for E. coli prpR and prpBCDE within the propionate catabolic gene cluster were investigated by using site-specific mutations and transcriptional fusion reporter constructs. We show that the catabolism of propionate in E. coli and S. enterica serovar Typhimurium is modulated by catabolite repression together with PrpR. Our results imply that the cAMP-CRP complex can act as a positive transcriptional regulator of both the
70-dependent prpR promoter and the
54-dependent prpBCDE promoter.
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TABLE 1. E. coli and S. enterica strains and plasmids used in this study
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A lacZ mutant of E. coli W3110 was constructed by allelic exchange with the integration plasmid pBRINT-TsGm (2). Mutations in crp and cya in E. coli W3110 and DH10B strains were constructed by a PCR-mediated gene disruption method (7).
DNA manipulation and site-directed mutagenesis. Bacterial genomic DNA and plasmid DNA were routinely prepared with QIAGEN miniprep kits (QIAGEN Inc., Chatsworth, Calif.). PCR was performed with Pfu DNA polymerase under standard conditions. Site-directed mutagenesis of the cAMP-CRP binding site in probes used in the promoter assays was performed by PCR with primers containing the desired mutation.
Assay of promoter activity in vivo. Twenty hours after incubation, RFP fluorescence at an excitation wavelength of 405 nm and an emission wavelength of 535 nm and OD600 were measured with a Tecan SpectraFluor plus plate reader (Tecan-US, Durham, N.C.). RFP fluorescence was normalized for cell density (RFP fluorescence per OD600 unit). ß-Galactosidase activity was measured in accordance with the protocol of Miller (28) with 9 h of incubation. Absorbance of o-nitrophenol (the product of the LacZ assay) at 420 nm and OD600 were measured with a SPECTRAmax Plus microtiter plate reader and SOFTmax PRO software (Molecular Devices). Error bars show the standard deviation of experiments performed in triplicate unless otherwise noted.
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FIG. 2. Regulation of the prpBCDE and prpR promoters by glucose (Glc) or glycerol (Gly) in E. coli JSW1 and S. enterica TR6583. Strains JSW1 (A, C) and TR6583 (B, D) harboring the dual PprpBCDE-rfp/PprpR-lacZ reporter plasmid pAPLPR were grown in LB medium plus the indicated carbon sources at 0.2 or 0.4% and in the absence of propionate (black bars) or in the presence of 10 mM propionate (hatched bars). RFP fluorescence per unit of OD600 (A and B; prpBCDE promoter) and ß-galactosidase activity (C and D; prpR promoter) were measured.
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Catabolite repression affects transcription from PprpBCDE independently of prpR expression. To determine if transcription from the prpBCDE promoter is directly subject to catabolite repression or if this effect is purely the result of catabolite repression of prpR expression, we used the PprpBCDE-rfp reporter fusion in conjunction with a plasmid containing prpR under control of the TC-inducible promoter, Pzt1. This promoter is not regulated by glucose or glycerol (data not shown) (41), so that PrpR will be expressed at a consistent level regardless of catabolite repression. Nevertheless, PprpBCDE activity consistently decreased to near background levels in the presence of glucose or glycerol in cells expressing PrpR from Pzt1 (Fig. 3A). Therefore, we conclude that the decrease in PprpBCDE activity is not mediated solely by a decrease in PrpR in the cell. Interestingly, PprpBCDE activity was threefold greater in cells harboring extra Pzt1-prpR on a multicopy plasmid (pZBRR) even in the absence of TC, compared with other strains in which prpR was present only on the chromosome (Fig. 3). This may be attributable to basal or "leaky" transcription from Pzt1, resulting in an increase in the levels of PrpR, indicating that prpBCDE expression might be tightly controlled by the levels of the secondary activator, PrpR (13). Unexpectedly, addition of TC showed some negative effect on PprpBCDE-rfp activity. Previous studies have shown that transcription factors encoded on a plasmid under the control of a nonnative promoter are expressed at high levels relative to native expression levels (20). Recently, it has been reported that PrpR bound to two regions in S. enterica that have the consensus sequence 5'-CGTTTCATGAAACG-3' and span bases 55 to 68 and 77 to 90 from the start codon of the prpR gene, as shown in Fig. 1 (33). Gel shift assays suggested that two sites show different affinities for PrpR and PrpR may bind in different oligomerization states to the two binding sites. Regulation of prpBCDE expression might be affected by different concentrations of PrpR, which could explain how high concentrations of PrpR would lead to a decrease in promoter activity, but we do not know how this inhibition might occur.
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FIG. 3. Regulation of the prpBCDE promoter by glucose or glycerol in cells expressing PrpR. E. coli JSW1 strains harboring the PprpBCDE-rfp reporter with no extra copy of prpR (pZBR, black bars) or the PprpBCDE-rfp reporter and prpR under the control of Pzt1 (pZBRR, hatched bars) were grown in LB medium plus 0.4% glucose (Glc) or glycerol (Gly) with 10 mM propionate (Prop) or 5 ng of TC per ml.
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FIG. 4. Effects of crp and cya mutations on the prpBCDE and prpR promoters. Strains harboring pAPF8 (PprpBCDE-rfp) (A) or pAPR8 (PprpR-lacZ) (B, C) were grown in LB medium with or without 10 mM propionate. RFP fluorescence per unit of OD600 (A) and ß-galactosidase activity (B, C) were measured.
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FIG. 5. Effects of crp and cya mutations on the prpBCDE promoter in cells expressing PrpR in trans. E. coli strains JSW1, JSW2, and JSW3 harboring PprpBCDE-rfp with prpR under the control of Pzt1 (pZBRR) were grown in LB medium with or without 10 mM propionate and without TC. RFP fluorescence per unit of OD600 was measured.
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54, PrpR, and CRP) are involved in the regulation of prpBCDE transcription.
Mutations with a putative cAMP-CRP binding site.
A potential binding site for the cAMP-CRP complex within the promoter region of prpRBCDE was identified on the basis of similarity to the consensus binding site (11) (Fig. 1A). To demonstrate that the putative CRP-binding sequence plays a role in the regulation of the prpBCDE and prpR promoters, the consensus sequence was altered by site-directed mutagenesis. To examine the effect of the putative cAMP-CRP binding site on prpBCDE expression, six nucleotide substitutions were made at the consensus CRP-binding site (AAACGTTAACT
TTACCCtGACC [changed nucleotides are underlined]) in the promoter region of the PprpBCDE-rfp fusion (Fig. 6C). These substitutions resulted in a significant decrease in promoter activity compared to that in the wild type (Fig. 6A), reflecting the effect of the crp or cya mutation in JSW2 and JSW3 (Fig. 4A).
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FIG. 6. Effects of mutations in the putative CRP-binding site on PprpBCDE-rfp (A) and PprpR-lacZ (B) expression in strain JSW1. Strains harboring pAPF8/8# (PprpBCDE-rfp) or pAPR8/8# (PprpR-lacZ) were grown in LB medium with or without 10 mM propionate. The site-directed mutations within the putative cAMP-CRP binding site are shown in panel C. The mutation sites are underlined below the wild-type binding sequences. RFP fluorescence per unit of OD600 (A) and ß-galactosidase activity (B) were measured.
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PrpR-binding region. To outline the PrpR-binding region, serial deletions were made in the prpBCDE promoter sequence and promoter strength was measured with an rfp reporter construct (Fig. 7). Interestingly, only the reporter plasmid carrying the entire intergenic sequence between the start codons of the divergent prpR and prpB genes (pAPF8) showed PprpBCDE-rfp expression. The function of the divergent prpBCDE promoter was completely destroyed even by deleting prpR promoter sequences (with PrpR supplied in trans) (pAPF7), suggesting that the PrpR-binding site for activation of the prpBCDE promoter overlaps the prpR promoter itself (Fig. 1). Indeed, an inverted repeat sequence (GTTTCAT-10 nt-ATGAAAC) was found to encompass the 35 region of the prpR promoter, and this sequence is conserved in both S. enterica and E. coli. Since the submission of this report, Palacios and Escalante-Semerena have reported footprinting experiments that confirm a PrpR-binding site encompassing this repeat sequence (33).
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FIG. 7. Effects of upstream deletions on prpBCDE expression. E. coli W3110 strains harboring one of the plasmids ranging from pAPF1 to pAPF8 were grown in LB medium with 10 mM propionate. After 30 h of incubation, RFP fluorescence per unit of OD600 was measured. pAP is an empty vector. The results are averages from two independent experiments.
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The prpBCDE promoter is a
54-dependent promoter activated by CRP.
CRP can act as a global regulator in E. coli by binding to specific DNA sites in or near target promoters and enhancing the ability of RNAP to bind and initiate transcription (3, 4). Commonly, cAMP-CRP is an activator of the
70-dependent transcription of genes coding for catabolism of alternative carbon sources (19). Work presented here supports the hypothesis that cAMP-CRP participates in the PrpR-mediated activation of a
54-dependent prpBCDE promoter that allows catabolism of the alternative carbon source propionate. This result adds another layer of complexity to a promoter already known to require two other proteins, IHF and PrpR, for transcriptional activation (Fig. 1B).
In this study, we have shown that the
54-dependent prpBCDE promoter is positively regulated by CRP together with PrpR, which implies direct contact between CRP and E
54 or activation via DNA conformational changes. CRP may function, at least in part, through (i) direct protein-protein interaction with a second activator that facilitates interactions between a second activator and DNA, (ii) CAP-induced DNA bending that facilitates interactions between a second activator and RNAP, and/or (iii) CRP-induced DNA bending that facilitates interactions between PrpR and its target site and stabilizing the DNA-PrpR interaction (10, 22, 26, 34, 39). The exact molecular mechanism will be the focus of future study and may elucidate new mechanisms of CRP-mediated transcription activation. In fact, cAMP-CRP-mediated activation at
54-dependent promoters may occur by one or more mechanisms.
The prpR promoter behaves like a class I CRP-dependent promoter.
In class I CRP-dependent promoters, CRP is known to activate transcription from a DNA site located upstream of the DNA-binding site for E
70, with the site for CRP usually centered at position 62.5, 72.5, or 92.5 relative to the transcription start site. At these promoters, CRP interacts with the C-terminal domain of the RNAP
subunit (
CTD), facilitating the binding of
CTD to the DNA segment adjacent to the CRP-binding site (4). By sequence alignment and site-directed mutagenesis, we have identified a putative CRP-binding site required for activation of the prpR promoter centered near position 62 relative to PprpR, suggesting that this is a class I CRP-activated promoter. Although the data presented here make a strong argument for a class I CRP-binding site, we cannot rule out the possibility that other regulatory elements outside of this binding site (Fig. 1) can contribute to the transcriptional regulation of prpR. Indeed, when serial deletions in the prpR promoter region were analyzed for promoter function, a deletion that eliminated the 153-to-237 region (Fig. 1A) displayed two- to threefold higher prpR promoter activity in DH10B compared to the fusions containing whole promoter sequences (data not shown). As this region overlaps the
54-dependent prpBCDE core promoter, this finding suggests that the binding of E
54 could inhibit transcription of the divergent prpR promoter or that another regulatory element acting on the 153-to-237 region may negatively regulate prpR gene expression. Because the effect is observed in DH10B, which does not carry prpR, the negative regulation might be due to a secondary DNA structure formed by binding of IHF to the region.
Implications of PrpR and CRP binding.
Transcriptional factors that regulate the
54 class of sigma factors are specific for this class of sigma factor (25, 30). On the other hand, CRP is capable of regulating genes transcribed by a variety of sigma factors such as
70,
38,
32, and
24 (25). Recently, however, it has been shown that E
54 promoters can be responsive to CRP, since the
54-dependent promoters dctA and glnAP2 are down-regulated via an interaction between E
54 and the cAMP-CRP complex (46, 48, 49). The authors proposed a regulatory role for the cAMP-CRP complex as a switch balancing carbon metabolism and nitrogen assimilation in E. coli by cAMP-dependent repression of a
54-dependent promoter via CRP. Also, Lu and Abdelal proposed that expression of the putative
54-dependent astC promoter in S. enterica serovar Typhimurium is subject to carbon catabolite repression and requires CRP, together with arginine and ArgR, for activation of the ast operon (23). On the other hand, despite the effect of catabolite repression on the expression of astC in E. coli, Kiupakis and Reitzer (18) were unable to demonstrate CRP binding at the astC promoter. Interestingly, unlike the
54-dependent promoters described above,
54-dependent prpBCDE genes are not involved in nitrogen metabolism (38). Our finding that the cAMP-CRP complex activates a
54-dependent promoter in concert with a member of the
54-dependent activator family suggests that the CRP family might interact with the
54-dependent expression system regardless of nitrogen metabolism.
Since the submission of our work, the inverted repeat sequence GTTTCAT-10 nt-ATGAAAC was demonstrated to encompass the PrpR-binding site by in vitro footprinting experiments (33). This binding site overlaps PprpR's own E
70 promoter-binding site for prpR transcription. The implication that prpR expression might be autoregulated by the prpR gene product will be the subject of future study.
In conclusion, data presented here clearly show a role for the cAMP-CRP complex in the activation of the two divergent promoters:
70-dependent PprpR and
54-dependent PprpBCDE. The tightly overlapping promoters between prpR and prpBCDE are influenced by the expression levels of the opposing promoters, offering new perspectives for further studies of CRP-mediated gene expression and interactions between
70-dependent promoters and
54-dependent promoters. Future work will focus on the precise mechanisms by which the cAMP-CRP complex works in concert with IHF and PrpR to simultaneously control expression from these two promoters.
We thank J. C. Escalante-Semerena for S. enterica TR6583.
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54-dependent Pu promoter of the TOL plasmid. J. Biol. Chem. 274:15562-15568.
54 (
N). Mol. Microbiol. 10:903-909.[Medline]
54 bacterial enhancer-binding protein family: mechanism of action and phylogenetic relationship of their functional domains. J. Bacteriol. 175:6067-6074.
54 RNA polymerase and blocks transcriptional activation of the dctA promoter. EMBO J. 17:786-796.[CrossRef][Medline]
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