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Journal of Bacteriology, July 2006, p. 4663-4672, Vol. 188, No. 13
0021-9193/06/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JB.00125-06
Copyright © 2006, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Brody School of Medicine, East Carolina University, Greenville, North Carolina 27834
Received 23 January 2006/ Accepted 17 April 2006
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osuA) resulted in the inability to utilize starch or glycogen and an insertional mutation into the osuD gene (
osuD) was severely impaired for growth on starch media. Transcriptional studies indicated that maltose, maltooligosaccharides, and starch were inducers of osu expression and that maltose was the strongest inducer. A transcriptional activator of osuABCD, OsuR, was identified and found to mediate maltose induction. The
osuA and
osuD mutants were able to grow on maltose but not starch, whereas a mutation in osuR abolished growth on both substrates, indicating that additional genes under the control of OsuR are needed for maltose utilization. The osuABCD operon also was induced by exposure to oxygen and was shown to be part of the oxidative stress response important for aerotolerance of B. fragilis. Transcriptional analyses showed that osuA was induced 20-fold by oxygen, but OsuR was not required for this activation. Analysis of osu mutants suggested that expression of the operon was important for survival during oxygen exposure but not to hydrogen peroxide stress. |
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B. fragilis has evolved a complex oxidative stress response to allow it to combat the toxic effects of oxygen exposure. Although not capable of replication in an aerobic environment, it has been well established that this organism can synthesize new RNA and upregulate a distinct set of more than 28 proteins in response to oxygen exposure (32). These include catalase (encoded by katB), superoxide dismutase (sod), alkyl hydroperoxide reductase (ahpCF), thioredoxin peroxidase (tpx), and the nonspecific DNA binding protein (dps), all of which play a role in detoxifying reactive oxygen intermediates and protecting cellular components (14, 15, 32, 35). Most of these detoxification enzymes (AhpC, Dps, Tpx, and KatB) are controlled at the transcriptional level by the redox-sensitive regulator OxyR, which modulates their expression in response to peroxide (31). Another level of oxidative stress control has been demonstrated for Dps, which can be induced during oxygen exposure in an OxyR mutant, although the levels of induction are lower than in the wild-type strain (30, 42).
Compared to the detoxification arm of the oxidative stress response, other aspects are not as well understood. In a study on the related organism, B. thetaiotaomicron, it was found that two key enzymes of central metabolism were rapidly inactivated by oxygen exposure and that this was in part responsible for aerobic growth inhibition (24); however, at the same time, glucose uptake is stimulated by oxygen (17). In another study with B. fragilis, it was reported that the genes for several metabolic enzymes were induced by aerobic exposure (42). The induced genes encoded an aerobic ribonucleotide reductase, a cation efflux pump, an aspartate decarboxylase and a starch binding outer membrane protein similar to SusC. Thus, there is likely a shift in metabolism that occurs during aerobiosis which remodels cellular physiology to help deal with the increased oxygen stress. Consistent with this is the ability of B. fragilis to consume oxygen when present in the nanomolar range by using a cytochrome bd oxidase (2). In order to better understand the role of this aerobically induced metabolism, we have begun to characterize the novel multigene operon that encodes the SusC-like outer membrane protein. In B. thetaiotaomicron, the SusC gene is part of a seven-gene starch utilization locus and is required for starch binding on the cell surface. Moreover, SusC also was the first described member of a larger orthologous family of outer membrane proteins found extensively in the Bacteroides and related genera. In fact, there are nearly 80 paralogous genes within B. thetaiotaomicron (The Institute for Genomic Research [http://www.tigr.org/tigr-scripts/CMR2/GenomePage3.spl?database=ntbt01]) and 54 related genes in B. fragilis (The Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute [http://www.sanger.ac.uk/Projects/B_fragilis/]). Except for the case with the SusC gene, the functions of these genes have not been determined, but it is generally expected that most will be found to be involved in some aspect of nutrient binding and uptake.
In the present study, the oxygen-induced B. fragilis SusC gene homolog was found to be in a four-gene operon. This operon was shown to be necessary for starch utilization during anaerobic growth, as well as being oxygen responsive. Two of the genes have significant homology to genes in the sus operon of B. thetaiotaomicron, but the types of genetic organization of these two operons are quite different. Given the propensity of Bacteroides to switch off central metabolism upon oxygen exposure, it was curious that the expression of a metabolic operon was strongly up-regulated under such conditions. In this study, we begin to elucidate the regulation and control of this operon and determine its role and contribution to starch utilization and to the oxidative stress response in this organism.
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TABLE 1. Strains and plasmids
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Mutant construction. By use of routine procedures (39) and the primers listed in Table 2, a 650-bp internal fragment of osuA and an 800-bp fragment of osuD was amplified from the 638R chromosome by PCR and cloned into the suicide vector pFD842. These constructs, pFD1038 and pFD1039, were then mobilized from Escherichia coli DH10B into B. fragilis 638R by an aerobic triparental mating procedure (41). Transconjugants were selected on BHIS agar containing rifampin (20 µg/ml), gentamicin (100 µg/ml), and erythromycin (10 µg/ml). Colony PCR was used to confirm single-crossover disruption of the target genes. Briefly, a single colony was picked using a sterile pipette tip and boiled for 5 min in a 1.5-ml tube containing 38 µl H2O. Twelve microliters of a PCR supermix containing 2.5 U Platinum Taq DNA polymerase, 1 x PCR buffer, 50 mM MgCl2, 10 mM dNTPs (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA), and gene-specific primers was then added to a total volume of 50 µl, and PCR was performed as follows: 95°C for 3 min (1 time), then 95°C for 30 seconds, 55°C for 30 seconds, 72°C for 1 min (35 times), and then 72°C for 10 min (1 time).
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TABLE 2. Oligonucleotide primers
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For complementation of IB393, the osuR gene was PCR amplified using the primers described in Table 2 and was cloned into an expression vector (pFD972) with BamHI and SmaI, resulting in plasmid pFD1040. Similarly, pFD1077 was constructed to be used to complement
osuD mutants.
Northern hybridizations and 5' RACE.
Total RNA isolation using the hot phenol method and Northern blotting were performed as described previously (34). osuA and osuD gene-specific probes were generated by PCR amplification of 638R genomic DNA and labeled with [
-32P]dCTP by using the Prime-a-Gene labeling system (Promega, Madison, WI). RNA used for 5' rapid amplification of cDNA ends (RACE) was further purified on an RNeasy column (QIAGEN Inc., Valencia, CA), followed by DNase I treatment according to the manufacturer's instructions (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA). The 5' RACE was performed as described by the manufacturer (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA), using raceosu1 and raceosu2 primers (Table 2) to generate 5'-specific cDNA products. Nested PCR amplification was performed using an abridged universal amplification primer (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA) and suscdwnst1 (Table 2). The final amplified 5' RACE products were sequenced at the Molecular Biology Resources Facility at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville. Twenty clones with 5' RACE fragments generated from anaerobic conditions and 20 clones with 5' RACE fragments generated from oxidative stress conditions were sequenced.
RT-PCR and real-time RT-PCR. Total RNA was purified and DNase I treated as described above. One hundred nanograms of RNA template and appropriate primer sets (Table 2) were used in a one-tube reverse transcription-PCR (RT-PCR) with the Accessquick RT-PCR system (Promega, Madison, WI). Reaction conditions were as follows: 45°C for 45 min (1 time), 95°C for 3 min (1 time), then 95°C for 30 seconds, 55°C for 30 seconds, 72°C for 1 min (35 times), and then 72°C for 10 min (1 time). cDNA was synthesized by reverse transcriptase with random hexamers. Real-time RT-PCR amplification was performed using gene-specific primers (Table 2) with product sizes of approximately 150 bp. The PCR efficiency of each primer set was determined with a standard curve using serially diluted BamHI-digested 638R genomic DNA. The cDNA templates were used in a reaction mixture containing iQ SYBR green supermix (Bio-Rad, Hercules, CA) and gene-specific forward and reverse primers. Reaction conditions were 95°C for 3 min (1 time), then 95°C for 10 seconds, 55°C for 15 seconds, and 72°C for 15 seconds (40 times). Gene-specific products were quantified as a measure of incorporated SYBR green fluorescent dye. 16S rRNA was amplified to serve as an internal reference point against which expression of the genes of interest were normalized. Relative expression levels were determined in both anaerobic growth and oxygen exposure using the equation described previously (25). Results were expressed as n-fold induction of expression upon exposure to oxygen, with 1 representing anaerobic expression. For expression analysis with SDM supplemented with different carbohydrates, results were expressed as n-fold induction of expression relative to expression during growth in glucose medium.
Disk inhibition assays. One hundred microliters of an overnight BHIS culture was spread onto Wilkens-Chalgren agar plates. A 6-mm sterile disk was placed in the center of the plate, and 10 µl of either 3% menadione in dimethyl sulfoxide, 3% hydrogen peroxide aqueous solution, or 0.5% t-butyl hydroperoxide aqueous solution was applied to the disk. Plates were incubated anaerobically at 37°C for 24 h and the growth inhibition zones around the paper disks were measured and reported in millimeters. For menadione sensitivity, plates were first incubated aerobically for 6 h before being placed in the anaerobe chamber for recovery. Diameters of the zones of growth inhibition were measured in millimeters. All assays were performed in triplicate.
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-glucosidase, amylase, and pullulanase enzymes from a variety of organisms, but this similarity was not detected in SusF. The osuD gene (2,859 bp) encodes a putative amylase, and analysis of the protein sequence for conserved domains detected strong matches to
-amylase (Pfam database accession number pfam00128.11), pullulanase (COG database accession number COG1523.1), and a signal peptide sequence of 23 amino acid residues (4). Database searches only showed sequence homology to amylase, pullulanase, and other enzymes in the glycosidase 13 family.
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FIG. 1. Functional map and operon structure of the osu locus. A. Functional map derived from base pairs 3709740 to 3720756 of the B. fragilis 638R genome sequence. The approximate sizes of osu mRNA transcripts are shown by arrows below the map and RT-PCR primer sets 1 through 5 are shown above the map. B. RT-PCR analysis of the osuABCD operon. Agarose gel showing RT-PCR products resulting from primer pairs shown in panel A. Lane designations are as follows: Mw, 1-kb molecular mass standard; lane 1, primer set 1; lane 2, primer set 2; lane 3, primer set 3; lane 4, primer set 4; lane 5, primer set 5. Lanes 6 and 7 were positive controls using primer sets 1 and 5, respectively, in PCRs with wild-type strain 638R DNA.
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To determine if the osu operon was required for starch utilization two mutations,
osuA (IB367) and
osuD (IB371), were constructed by insertional inactivation. These single-crossover disruptions of the target genes by the suicide plasmid should, in the case of
osuA, have a polar effect on the osuABCD operon. When compared to wild-type 638R in SDM-glucose or -maltose medium over 24 h, neither mutant displayed a significant defect in growth (Fig. 2A and B). However, both mutants were severely impaired in medium with starch as the sole carbon/energy source. The
osuA mutant was completely unable to utilize starch, but the
osuD mutant, although severely hampered, maintained a slow growth rate over 24 h (Fig. 2C).
osuD eventually reached wild-type growth density after approximately 70 h in starch medium, but
osuA never recovered (data not shown). The
osuD strain was complemented by a plasmid containing osuD under the control of a weak constitutive promoter. As shown in Fig. 2C, this complemented strain grew at a greater rate than the mutant in medium with starch, but it did not reach wild-type growth rates. In contrast, the
osuA mutant strain still failed to grow when complemented with osuD. These findings indicate that the osuABCD operon is the primary starch utilization operon in B. fragilis. The
osuA mutant also was unable to utilize glycogen as a carbon source (data not shown), suggesting that this operon also is required for utilization of this more highly branched glucose polymer.
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FIG. 2. Growth of osu mutant strains (osuA and osuD) in SDM supplemented with glucose, maltose, or starch. Wt, wild type. A. SDM supplemented with 0.3% glucose. B. SDM supplemented with 0.3% maltose. C. SDM supplemented with 0.5% starch. Data are presented as the means of three independent experiments performed in triplicate.
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-amylase. To determine if OsuD had amylase activity, overnight BHIS cultures of 638R,
osuA and
osuD were spotted onto starch azure amylase indicator plates containing the nonrepressing carbon source xylose and starch. Following incubation, a zone of clearing was observed around strain 638R but not surrounding the two mutant strains (Fig. 3). Amylase activity in cell extracts showed that there was a decrease in total amylase activity in
osuD from 1.45 U to 0.55 U, and this was restored in part in the osuD-complemented strain (1.12 U). It is not clear why the starch azure plates did not show a clear zone for
osuD but it could indicate a difference in substrate specificity for the different amylolytic enzymes. As implied by the starch azure plates, some OsuD seemed to release from the cells and analysis of culture supernatants were consistent with this observation (data not shown). However, this may just represent loss from lysed cells as suggested for B. thetaiotaomicron (9). Overall, these results are consistent with osuD encoding an enzyme with amylase activity, but the gene clearly is not responsible for all B. fragilis amylase activity.
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FIG. 3. Amylase activity of the B. fragilis osu mutant strains on starch azure plates. Ten microliters of an overnight BHIS culture of wild-type strain 638R (W+), IB367 ( osuA), and IB371 ( osuD) were spotted onto starch azure plates and incubated at 37°C. Starch azure plates contained 0.5% xylose, 0.3% starch, and 0.4% starch azure to allow for growth of the mutant strains.
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Northern hybridization analysis indicated that osu transcription was not as straightforward as first implied by the RT-PCR analysis. When cells were grown anaerobically with starch as the sole carbon/energy source, two distinct mRNA species were observed (Fig. 4). The predominant mRNA was approximately 7 kb in size, and it hybridized to an osuA probe but not to an osuD probe. This mRNA was predicted to encode the first three genes of the operon. The second mRNA species was approximately 9 kb and was observed in cells grown with starch when it was probed with either an osuA or osuD probe. Based on the size and its homology to both probes, this mRNA was predicted to include the entire osuABCD operon. Interestingly, this larger mRNA species was only about 1/18 as abundant as the 7-kb mRNA (based on densitometry analysis); this difference in abundance may have been overlooked in the RT-PCR results due to the large number of cycles used in the PCR.
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FIG. 4. Autoradiographs of Northern blots probed with internal fragments of osuA or osuD. Total RNA was isolated from mid-log-phase cultures of strain 638R grown anaerobically in SDM supplemented with either 0.3% glucose (G) or 0.5% starch (S) as the sole carbon/energy source. All lanes contain 30 µg of total RNA. Approximate sizes of the hybridizing transcripts were extrapolated from a molecular mass ladder in an adjacent lanes.
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FIG. 5. Role of secondary structure in the expression of osuD. A. Sequence of the intergenic region between osuC and osuD. The inverted repeat is shown by the arrows over the sequence and the 19-bp deletion disrupting the structure is shown by the dashed line under the sequence. B. Phosphorimager image of Northern blot analysis of wild-type 638R (W+) and the mutant IB442 (with the 19-bp deletion) ( 19 bp) grown on SDM with starch as the sole carbon/energy source. The probe was an internal osuA gene fragment. The arrows to the right of the autoradiograph show the location of the 7- and 9-kb mRNA species. C. Amylase activity on starch azure plates. Ten microliters of overnight cultures grown in BHIS were spotted on starch azure plates as described in the legend to Fig. 3. Incubation was for 24 h at 37°C.
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FIG. 6. Induction of osuA and osuD expression by maltooligosaccharides in the wild-type strain 638R. Relative expression was determined by real-time RT-PCR during anaerobic growth in SDM supplemented with glucose (G1), maltose (G2), maltotriose (G3), maltopentaose (G5), maltoheptaose (G7) or starch (STA). Real-time RT-PCR results were normalized to the amount of 16S rRNA in each sample and then expressed as n-fold induction relative to the expression during growth in glucose medium. Data are presented as the means from three independent experiments.
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FIG. 7. Role of OsuR in growth and gene expression. Wt, wild type (638R); osuR, osuR mutant. A. Effect of osuR mutation on growth in SDM supplemented with starch or maltose. B. Effect of starch on the expression of osuA in wild-type and osuR mutant strains. Relative expression levels were determined during anaerobic growth in a xylose-containing basal medium supplemented with or without 0.5% starch. Results are expressed as n-fold induction relative to expression levels in basal xylose medium without starch. Strains were grown anaerobically to mid-log phase and then 0.5% starch was added to induce osuABCD expression. Total RNA was isolated 1 h after starch addition and expression of osuA was analyzed by real-time RT-PCR. Data are presented as the means from three independent experiments.
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Induction of osu by oxidative stress. The osuA gene was initially identified as an oxidative stress gene and Northern hybridization analysis revealed that the 7-kb osuA-containing transcript was highly induced upon exposure to atmospheric oxygen (Fig. 8A) (42). Similar levels of osu induction were observed for an oxyR deletion mutant, suggesting that this is an OxyR-independent response. The dominant mRNA observed was the 7-kb species, just as seen with starch induction (Fig. 4), and the larger species was not readily detected by Northern hybridization. Real-time RT-PCR analysis showed that there was nearly a 20-fold increase in osuA expression upon oxygen exposure, whereas osuD expression was only increased fivefold (Fig. 8B). The induction of osuD was somewhat less compared to that observed for starch induction (Fig. 6).
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FIG. 8. Oxygen-induced expression of the osu operon. A. Autoradiograph of Northern blot probed with internal osuA gene fragment. Total RNA was isolated from mid-log-phase cultures of strains 638R (wild type [wt]) and IB298 (oxyR) grown anaerobically in BHIS () or stressed by aerobic incubation for 1 h (+). All lanes contain 30 µg of total RNA. Approximate size of the hybridizing transcript, shown in kb, was extrapolated from a molecular mass ladder in an adjacent lane. B. Effect of oxygen stress on induction of osuA and osuD expression in the wild-type strain. Relative expression levels were determined by real-time RT-PCR for both anaerobic growth and oxygen exposure. Wild-type strain 638R was grown anaerobically to mid-log phase in BHIS and then exposed to oxygen for 1 h. Total RNA was isolated, and the expression of osuA and osuD was analyzed, with the results expressed as n-fold induction upon exposure to oxygen relative to anaerobic expression. Data are presented as the means from three independent experiments.
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Contribution of the osu operon to the oxidative stress response.
To test the hypothesis that expression of osu is important for survival during oxidative stress, sensitivity to oxygen was tested in the
osuA and osuR mutants (Fig. 9A). When compared to the parent strain, there was a significant effect of oxygen exposure on the viability of the
osuA mutant. Viability decreased during the first 24 h of aeration dropping more than two logs in 24 h. Interestingly, an osuR mutant showed no significant difference in viability over 72 h compared to the wild type. There was no difference in viable counts of anaerobic cultures for these strains (data not shown).
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FIG. 9. Effect of osu on survival during oxidative stress. A. Survival of wild-type (wt)(), osuA ( ) and osuR ( ) strains following exposure to atmospheric oxygen. Mid-log-phase cells (A550 of 0.35) grown in BHIS were exposed to oxygen by shaking at 250 rpm in air at 37°C. Viable cell counts were determined over 72 h. Inset, real-time RT-PCR analysis of osuA expression during oxygen exposure (ox) or under anaerobic conditions (an). The relative n-fold increase in expression is compared to anaerobic conditions, which were normalized to 1. B. Sensitivity of osuA and osuR mutant strains to oxidizing agents. Disk diffusion assays were used to compare wild-type (638R), osuR (IB393), and osuA (IB367) strains. Results are reported as the diameter of growth inhibition around filters treated with the following oxidizing agents: 3% menadione (MD), 3% hydrogen peroxide (H2O2), 0.5% t-butyl hydroperoxide (t-butyl). Values are the means from three independent experiments performed in triplicate.
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osuA mutant also showed increased sensitivity to menadione exposure in growth inhibition assays but it was not markedly affected by exposure to the oxidizing agents H2O2 or t-butyl hydroperoxide (Fig. 9B). An osuR mutant showed no significant difference from the wild type in sensitivity to any of the oxidizing agents. The different survival phenotypes of
osuA compared to the osuR mutant suggested that oxygen stress controls osu expression by an OsuR independent mechanism. Consistent with this idea, Real-time RT-PCR analysis of oxygen induced osuA expression was similar for both the osuR mutant and wild-type cells (Fig. 9A, inset). To determine if different promoters were being used for transcription during oxidative stress compared to anaerobic growth on starch, 5' RACE was used to map the transcription start site of the osu operon. Under anaerobic conditions with starch induction, the osu 5' end mapped 42 bp upstream from the predicted translational start site for OsuA in 70% of the sequenced clones (14/20) (Fig. 10). The remaining clones obtained from anaerobic conditions had 5' ends at apparently random positions. Under conditions of oxygen stress, transcription was initiated 44 bp from the translational start site in 100% of sequenced clones (20/20). Inspection of the DNA sequence adjacent to the transcription start sites revealed two potential B. fragilis promoters similar to the consensus sequence (TAnnTTTG) in the 7 region (3). Also, about 69 bp upstream from the 33 region of the promoter, there was a conserved inverted repeat usually associated with binding of the LacI type regulator family proteins (Fig. 10). Further, within this inverted repeat was a 14/15 match to the consensus binding site for B. subtilis CcpA which is a LacI family regulatory protein capable of both repression and activation of transcription (22, 48).
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FIG. 10. Identification of the osuABCD operon transcription initiation site. By use of 5' RACE analysis, the transcription start site was located 42 bp upstream from the translation start site of OsuA during anaerobic growth conditions with starch as the sole carbon source. During oxygen stress transcription was initiated 44 bp from the translational start site. Upstream from the start sites, a conserved inverted repeat putative binding site for the LacI type regulator family is shown in bold with arrows over the sequence. The consensus cre binding sequence for CcpA is shown below the conserved LacI binding site; W, A or T; N, any nucleotide; ST, starch. Lines below and above the sequence indicate the putative 7 and 33 promoter consensus sequences.
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osuA mutant completely inhibited the ability to grow on starch medium (Fig. 2). The first two gene products in the operon, OsuA and OsuB, were similar to SusC and SusD, respectively, which are required for starch utilization in B. thetaiotaomicron, where it has been shown that they interact to form a starch binding complex on the cell surface (7, 28, 29, 40). The C-terminal half of the OsuC gene product had some similarity to SusF. SusF together with SusE are two additional members of the Sus outer membrane complex, but they are not required for binding and SusF may even inhibit binding (7).
The last gene in the operon, osuD, encodes an enzyme with conserved domains for
-amylase and pullulanase, and it likely has an important although not exclusive role in starch hydrolysis. Consistent with this prediction, the
osuD mutant was impaired for growth on starch, and this growth inhibition was largely overcome by plasmid complementation (Fig. 2). The lack of full complementation may have resulted from inappropriate regulation and the uncoupling of osuD from its posttranscriptional control. In B. thetaiotaomicron, SusA is a neopullulanase responsible for the majority of starch hydrolysis and like
osuD, disruption of susA did not completely abolish growth on starch (9). A second B. thetaiotaomicron amylase, SusG, is located in the outer membrane and has been reported to be required for growth on starch. Interestingly, there is no homology between OsuD and either SusA or SusG, but based on the growth characteristics and enzyme assays with
osuD, there is at least one more amylolytic enzyme in B. fragilis that can partially compensate the loss of osuD. In fact, an examination of the B. fragilis genome reveals five additional ORFs with amylase motifs.
Starch and glycogen are cleaved by
-amylase to yield maltose which was shown to be a strong inducer of osu expression (Fig. 6). Starch itself and the maltooligosaccharides also induced the system, but it is likely that it was their digestion to maltose that resulted in induction. Free maltose would not likely be present in most environments where B. fragilis is found, so this would be an ideal inducer, as it would be one of the first signals indicating the presence of starch. Similarly, the B. thetaiotaomicron starch utilization system also is induced by maltose, but the regulatory proteins are different, as discussed below (6, 10). Induction of the osu operon resulted in the appearance of two mRNA species as shown by Northern analysis (Fig. 4). The small species was predominant and corresponds to the osuABC genes, whereas the larger species encompassed all four osu genes but was much less abundant. An explanation for this observation is that the intergenic region between osuC and osuD contains considerable secondary structure elements that could act as a rho-independent transcriptional terminator or other signal that might affect mRNA stability. A deletion construct that removed the stem-loop structure led to an increase in the level of the larger transcript and an increase in amylase activity (Fig. 5). This posttranscriptional regulation would allow higher levels of osuABC expression than amylase. This strategy would maximize the ability to bind and transport starch which in the gastrointestinal-tract environment would be the rate-limiting steps. Presumably, there would be sufficient amylase present in the periplasm to degrade all substrate that became available.
Induction of the osu operon was mediated at the level of transcription by OsuR, which appears to function as a transcriptional activator responsive to maltose and related maltooligosaccharides. An osuR mutant was unable to grow in medium with starch or maltose as the sole carbon source (Fig. 7A), although conversely, both
osuA and
osuD demonstrated wild-type growth in maltose medium (Fig. 2). This suggests that OsuR is involved in regulation of a maltose utilization operon as well as the osu operon and supports the hypothesis that maltose is the inducer of the osu operon. The inability of an osuR mutant to grow on starch was not entirely due to the inability to utilize maltose but also resulted from a lack of transcriptional activation of the osuABCD operon (Fig. 7B). In B. thetaiotaomicron, there are two transcriptional regulators, MalR and SusR, which control expression of the sus genes in response to the presence of starch or maltose in the medium (6, 10). Unlike the B. fragilis OsuR regulator, SusR is responsible for the majority of sus transcriptional activation but it has no effect on maltose utilization and susR mutants grow well on maltose. Mutations in the second regulator, MalR, also affect sus transcription and show some defects in maltose and maltotriose utilization but can grow well on starch medium. A double malR and susR mutant does not grow on starch, maltotriose, or maltose; hence, there are at least two regulators responsible for starch utilization in B. thetaiotaomicron. It is interesting that, like with SusR and MalR, overexpression of OsuR on a plasmid resulted in enhanced growth on starch and higher expression of the starch utilization genes (Fig. 7). This suggests that the concentration of these regulators is critical for normal control of their regulons.
A unique observation investigated in this report was that the osuABCD operon was oxygen responsive (Fig. 8) and that expression was induced approximately 20-fold upon exposure to air. The Bacteroides spp. are some of the more aerotolerant anaerobic bacteria, and this is due in part to oxygen-induced synthesis of new proteins that protect the cell against toxic oxygen radicals, but there is little information on how oxygen exposure alters their metabolism to deal with the consequences of oxygen exposure (30, 32). The oxygen-induced expression of osuABCD appeared to be independent of the presence of peroxide, and OxyR did not control the response. Further experiments showed that oxygen induction also was independent of the starch/maltose regulation mediated by OsuR. As shown in Fig. 9, there were nearly wild-type levels of oxygen-induced osuA transcription in the OsuR mutant. There must be another level of control during the oxidative stress response that controls this operon. Concurrent with these results, there was a 2-bp shift in the transcriptional start site when cells were moved from anaerobic growth on starch to oxygen stress. This shift may not be significant, but it could indicate a shift in the binding of RNA polymerase that resulted from a change in the regulator.
It was not immediately clear why starch utilization would be induced by oxygen, but additional studies suggested that it was important for survival. The
osuA mutant was impaired in its ability to survive oxygen exposure over 72 h (Fig. 9A), and it was more sensitive than the parent strain to the superoxide-generating agent menadione (Fig. 9B). This mutant did not show sensitivity to the oxidizing agents H2O2 or t-butyl hydroperoxide, which is consistent with the osuABCD operon being independent of OxyR control. Conversely, an osuR mutant had wild-type sensitivity in all of the oxygen stress assays we performed. This was expected, since OsuR was not involved in oxygen regulation of the operon. The mechanism that mediates this protection is not understood and will be the focus of future work.
Polysaccharide utilization is an important activity in the lower intestine and the ability of resident bacteria to utilize different polysaccharides provides a distinct competitive advantage and may explain why Bacteroides spp. are the numerically predominant genus in the intestine. Recently, Sonnenberg et al. (47), described the capacity of B. thetaiotaomicron to redirect its carbohydrate utilizing abilities from dietary to host polysaccharides according to nutrient availability. The Bacteroides species have also been shown to cleave L-fucose moieties from host cell surfaces and internalize them for use as an energy source (16), as well as scavenging a wide variety of other host cell glycans both in vitro and in vivo (38). In the pathogenic environment, outside of the anaerobic colon, B. fragilis is exposed to a vast array of host cell polysaccharides, as well as to oxidative stress. It has been proposed that the B. fragilis neuraminidase is required during the course of infection to provide carbon sources from host tissues (12). It is tempting to speculate that the Osu starch utilization system is important in a similar way during infection and that the ability to induce these genes in the presence of oxygen may provide an advantage that will help the organisms to survive.
We thank C. Sund for useful discussions and input on the real-time RT-PCR.
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-glucosidase to growth of Bacteroides thetaiotaomicron on starch. J. Bacteriol. 178:7173-7179.
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