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Journal of Bacteriology, September 2006, p. 6143-6152, Vol. 188, No. 17
0021-9193/06/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JB.00381-06
Copyright © 2006, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Department of Microbiology, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington 98195-7242,1 Department of Microbiology, University of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa 522422
Received 16 March 2006/ Accepted 12 June 2006
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Hydrogen utilization is typically mediated by uptake hydrogenases that catalyze the oxidation of hydrogen. Electrons derived from this process are then transferred to ferredoxins and cytochromes (43). R. palustris encodes a membrane-bound nickel-iron uptake hydrogenase and many accessory proteins for the synthesis and assembly of this enzyme (25). Manipulating R. palustris to produce hydrogen efficiently will require us to understand how it regulates its uptake hydrogenase. It will also be important to know whether mutations that block hydrogen uptake also cause changes in gene expression related to the inability to recycle reducing power. Finally, we were interested to know whether the regulatory system that directly controls uptake hydrogenase gene expression may also control the expression of other R. palustris genes outside the hydrogenase gene cluster.
We discovered early in our studies that the sequenced strain of R. palustris (strain CGA009) behaved as if it were a hydrogen uptake mutant. Careful inspection of its genome sequence subsequently revealed that strain CGA009 has a frameshift mutation in its hupV gene, which encodes one of the protein components of a predicted HupUV hydrogen sensor protein. To characterize uptake hydrogenase expression in more detail in R. palustris, we repaired the hupV frameshift mutation and generated a strain that was wild type with respect to hydrogenase synthesis. We then used a promoter-lacZ transcriptional fusion to examine hydrogenase gene expression in R. palustris cells growing in several different metabolic modes, and we investigated the effects of several different regulatory mutations on uptake hydrogenase expression. Microarray experiments comparing a hupS structural gene mutant with wild-type cells showed that hydrogen uptake and utilization by cells growing under nitrogen-fixing conditions on malate has a significant effect on the expression of about 30 genes. Other microarray experiments with the hupV mutant suggest that the HupUV hydrogen sensor protein regulates the expression of several sets of genes in addition to hydrogenase uptake genes.
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and S17-1 were grown at 37°C in Luria-Bertani medium. Where indicated, R. palustris was grown with 100 µg per ml gentamicin (Gm), 100 µg per ml kanamycin (Km), and 10% sucrose. E. coli was grown with 100 µg per ml ampicillin (Ap), 80 µg per ml spectinomycin (Sp), or 20 µg per ml Gm. |
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TABLE 1. Bacterial strains, plasmids, and primers used in this study
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Construction of R. palustris mutant strains and repair of the hupV mutation to generate CGA010.
To determine the type of mutation present in the CGA009 hupV gene, we amplified and sequenced a 250-bp fragment of the hupV gene from five different strains of R. palustris by using primers hupVS1 and hupVS2 (Table 1) and compared the sequences to the CGA009 hupV sequence. The frameshift mutation present in CGA009 hupV was repaired by two-step overlap extension PCR (19) with the following modifications. In the first step, primers hupVP1-BamHI and hupV-I2 were used to PCR amplify the region upstream from the frameshift (
0.8 kb), and primers hupVP2-BamHI and hupV-I1 were used to amplify the region downstream from the frameshift (
0.6 kb). Primers hupV-I1 and hupV-I2 are complementary to each other and bind to hupV at both flanking ends of the frameshift. They contain four extra bases that were added to correct the frameshift (the four inserted bases are in bold type in Table 1). In a second step, a mixture of the two PCR products (100 ng each) was used as the template in a third PCR amplification using the primers hupVP1-BamHI and hupVP2-BamHI. The product of the third amplification contained the 4-bp insertion in the hupV gene that is necessary to restore the correct reading frame. This PCR product was approximately 1.4 kb and contained engineered BamHI sites at its 5' and 3' ends. It was digested with BamHI and ligated into BamHI-digested pUC19, yielding the plasmid pUC-hupV. The 1.4-kb BamHI fragment was then subcloned into BamHI-digested pJQ200KS, giving pJQ-hupV. This plasmid was mobilized from E. coli S17-1 into R. palustris CGA009 by conjugation. Colonies that contained plasmids that had undergone a single recombination to become inserted into the chromosome were identified by growth on PM plus Gm. These colonies were streaked onto PM plates supplemented with 10% sucrose to identify strains that had undergone a double recombination to lose the sacB-containing vector. Colonies that contained the repaired hupV gene were confirmed by PCR and sequencing. A strategy similar to that used to repair hupV was used to generate in-frame hoxJ and RPA0981 deletion mutants. PCR primers and recombinant plasmids are described in Table 1.
To generate a hupS mutant, a 1.3-kb DNA fragment containing the hupS gene plus approximately 0.5 kb of upstream and downstream flanking DNA was generated by PCR. The amplification product contained engineered XbaI cloning sites at both ends. This product was then digested with XbaI and cloned into XbaI-digested pUC19 to generate pUC-hupS. A 5.3-kb fragment containing a lacZ-Km cassette was excised from EcoRI-digested pHRP314, treated with Klenow fragment to create blunt ends, and ligated into BsmI-digested and alkaline phosphatase-treated pUC-hupS to generate pUC-hupS::lacZ-Km. The correct orientation of the cassette within the hupS gene was verified by PCR. A 6.6-kb fragment containing hupS::lacZ-Km was excised from pUC-hupS by digestion with XbaI and cloned into XbaI-digested pJQ200KS to generate pJQ-hupS::lacZ-Km. This construct was mobilized from E. coli S17-1 into R. palustris by conjugation. Sucrose-resistant, Km-resistant colonies were selected and screened by PCR for the loss of the hupS wild-type gene and presence of hupS::lacZ-Km. An rpoN::Tn5 mutant was identified from an R. palustris mini-Tn5-lacZ1 mutant library (17).
Construction of a hupS promoter-lacZ transcriptional fusion plasmid.
A reporter plasmid containing a promoterless lacZ gene fused to the hupS promoter region was constructed by a two-step cloning procedure, as described previously (32). Briefly, a 0.6-kb DNA fragment containing the promoter region of hupS was amplified by PCR with the hupS1 and hupS2 primers. The PCR product contained engineered BamHI and SmaI sites on its 5' and 3' ends, respectively. This product was digested with BamHI and SmaI and directionally ligated into BamHI-SmaI-digested pHRP316, adjacent to a
(Smr/Spr) cassette. This resulted in pHR316-PhupS. Fragments containing the
(Smr/Spr) cassette and the promoter region were then cut out and inserted upstream of a promoterless lacZ gene in pHRP309 to create pHRP309-PhupS. This was confirmed by restriction analysis and sequencing. pHRP309-PhupS was first moved into E. coli S17-1 by transformation and then mobilized into R. palustris by conjugation. Transconjugants were selected by growth on PM plus Gm and confirmed by colony PCR. ß-Galactosidase activity was measured as previously described (9).
Hydrogen measurements. Hydrogen was measured with a Hewlett Packard 5890 series II gas chromatograph equipped with a thermal conductivity detector and a Molecular Sieve 13X column (80/100 mesh; inner diameter, 0.25 in. by 8 ft). The temperatures of the oven, injector, and detector were 50°C, 100°C, and 100°C, respectively. Hamilton (Reno, NV) sample lock syringes were used to inject gas samples into the gas chromatograph. Protein concentrations were determined with the Bio-Rad (Richmond, CA) protein assay kit.
Transcriptome analyses. Transcriptome analyses were carried out with glass slide microarrays prepared as described previously (29). R. palustris strains were subcultured at least twice after initial inoculation from a plate. Cells were grown to an optical density at 660 nm of 0.25 to 0.35 (mid-logarithmic phase), chilled in an ice-water bath, harvested by centrifugation, and frozen at 80°C for RNA isolation at a later time. Thawed cells were disrupted, and RNA was isolated and its quality checked as described previously (29). Labeled cDNA was prepared by direct incorporation of either the Cy3-dCTP or Cy5-dCTP fluorophore (Amersham Biosciences) during a first-strand reverse transcription reaction. Each 45-µl reaction mixture contained 12 µg of total RNA; 13.5 µg of random primers (Invitrogen); 9 µl of 5x SuperScript II RT reaction buffer (Invitrogen); 10 mM dithiothreitol; 0.5 mM (each) dATP, dGTP, and dTTP; 0.2 mM dCTP; 40 U of RNasin (Promega); 3 µl of 1 mM Cy3- or 1 mM Cy5-dCTP; and 600 U of SuperScript II reverse transcriptase (Invitrogen). After a 2-h incubation at 42°C, 15 µl of 0.5 M EDTA (pH 8.0) and 15 µl of 1 M NaOH were added to the sample, and incubation was continued at 65°C for 30 min. The sample was then neutralized by the addition of 30 µl of 3 M sodium acetate (pH 5.2) and 45 µl of H2O to bring the volume to 150 µl. The labeled cDNA was purified with the QIAquick PCR purification kit (QIAGEN). The labeling efficiency was calculated by measuring the A260 and either the A550 for Cy3 incorporation or the A650 for Cy5 incorporation. Prior to the hybridizations, the array slides were incubated in prehybridization buffer as described previously (29). Hybridizations with fluorescently labeled cDNA were performed, slides were scanned, and data analysis was carried out as described previously (29). Genes whose ratios were greater than or equal to 2 and whose scores were less than 0.025 were considered to be expressed at higher levels (30). Genes whose ratios were less than 0.5 and whose scores were greater than 0.975 were considered to be expressed at lower levels (30).
Microarray data accession number. The microarray data have been deposited at http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/geo under accession number GSE4320.
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FIG. 1. Organization of the uptake hydrogenase gene cluster in R. palustris (RPA0959 to RPA0981). Arrows indicate the direction of transcription. Functions were assigned based on deduced similarities to known proteins (41, 43).
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FIG. 2. Photoautotrophic growth of R. palustris strains CGA010 and CGA009 in the presence of hydrogen (A) or sodium thiosulfate (B). Data are representative of three different experiments.
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FIG. 3. Alignment of the R. palustris strain CGA009 hupV gene frameshifted region with the corresponding hupV gene regions from five other strains of R. palustris. Numbers indicate the location in the strain CGA009 genome sequence. The hupV frameshift was probably acquired during laboratory cultivation.
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TABLE 2. Hydrogen production, doubling times, and protein yields of R. palustris wild type and hydrogen uptake mutants grown under nitrogen-fixing conditionsa
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TABLE 3. Effects of growth conditions on hupS promoter-lacZ expressiona
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RpoN is required for the expression of the R. palustris uptake hydrogenase. The R. palustris HoxA protein is a predicted RpoN-dependent transcriptional activator with a central AAA+ domain and an N-terminal helix-turn-helix DNA binding motif. We observed basal levels of PhupS-lacZ expression in rpoN mutant (strain CGA555) cells grown photoheterotrophically on malate with 10% hydrogen (data not shown). This indicates that RpoN is required for the expression of the uptake hydrogenase in R. palustris.
A novel sensor kinase protein has a small effect in repressing hydrogenase expression. A mutant disrupted in the PAS domain-containing sensor kinase RPA0981 exhibited a small elevation of PhupS-lacZ gene expression compared to wild-type cells in some metabolic contexts. The most pronounced effect of the mutation was on hydrogenase expression in cells grown photoheterotrophically with 100% hydrogen (Table 3).
The RegS-RegR two-component regulatory system represses hydrogenase expression. The observation that the PhupS-lacZ fusion was expressed to high levels independently of hydrogen concentration during nitrogen fixation and carbon dioxide fixation suggested that another regulatory system, in addition to the HupUV-HoxJA system, must control hydrogenase synthesis in R. palustris. Since these processes each require large amounts of reducing equivalents, we investigated the possible involvement of RegSR, an R. palustris two-component system that is homologous to the RegB-RegA and PrrB-PrrA two-component global regulatory systems that are thought to respond to intracellular redox status to regulate gene expression in the purple nonsulfur bacteria R. capsulatus and R. sphaeroides (8, 39). RegBA and PrrBA mutants have pleiotropic growth defects (15, 28). These systems have been shown to activate expression of photosynthesis, carbon fixation, and nitrogen fixation genes and to repress hupS expression (8, 14, 20). RegS is a predicted membrane-bound sensor histidine kinase, and RegR is its cognate response regulator-transcription factor. An R. palustris regSR deletion mutant grows as the wild type under photoheterotrophic, photoautotrophic, and nitrogen-fixing conditions (S. Romagnoli and F. R. Tabita, personal communication; F. E. Rey, S. K. Samanta, and C. S. Harwood, unpublished results). This indicates that, in contrast to Rhodobacter, RegSR does not play a pivotal role in global gene regulation in R. palustris. Because the regSR mutant did not have any obvious growth defects, we were able to test the effect of the RegSR regulatory system on hydrogenase gene expression in cells grown in different metabolic modes. regSR mutant cells harboring PhupS-lacZ showed higher ß-galactosidase activities than did wild-type cells under all conditions tested, indicating that, as in R. capsulatus, RegSR represses hydrogenase synthesis. There was an inverse correlation between the degree of repression by RegSR and the amount of reductant used by cells in a particular growth mode (Table 3). RegSR had the smallest repressive effect on hupS expression in cells grown under nitrogen-fixing or photoautotrophic conditions.
Microarray data indicate that the HupUV-HoxJA system activates expression of a dicarboxylic acid transporter, a formate transporter, and a glutamine synthetase in addition to hydrogenase genes. We used transcriptome analysis to identify genes that were differentially expressed between wild-type (CGA010) and hupV mutant (CGA009) cells grown photoheterotrophically with malate under nitrogen-fixing conditions. We also compared the transcriptome of a hupS mutant with that of the wild type. As expected, hupV was necessary for high levels of transcription of the hupSLC structural genes. The auxiliary genes hupDEFGHIJK are also positively regulated by this system but to a lesser degree. Furthermore, the expression of genes encoding the auxiliary Hyp proteins showed a very small dependence or no dependence at all on hupV (Fig. 4). Genes located outside the hydrogenase gene cluster that showed higher levels of expression in wild-type cells than in the hupV mutant were additional candidates that might be directly controlled by the HupUV-HoxJA regulatory system. In order to exclude genes that showed increased expression in wild-type cells due to indirect effects of hydrogen uptake and recycling, we included only genes that were not expressed at higher levels in wild-type cells than in a hupS mutant (nine candidate genes) and whose expression was dependent on RpoN (seven candidate genes) (Y. Oda and C. S. Harwood, unpublished results). Finally, we retained only those genes whose expression patterns were validated in independent experiments using an Affymetrix microarray platform that compared the wild type and the hupV mutant. Genes that met these criteria are listed in Table 4. These include genes for a putative dicarboxylic acid uptake system, a formate transporter, and a glutamine synthetase. In addition, we found one gene (RPA2297) that showed decreased expression levels in the wild type in a hupV-, rpoN-dependent fashion. RPA2297 encodes a conserved, unknown protein. Its expression level was 47-fold lower in wild-type cells than in the hupV mutant.
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FIG. 4. Average expression ratio (wild type/hupV) of genes in the uptake hydrogenase gene cluster. Cells were grown under nitrogen-fixing conditions in the presence of 10 mM malate. Data are averages of duplicates from three different experiments.
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TABLE 4. Genes unlinked to the hydrogenase gene cluster that are regulated by hupV
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TABLE 5. Effects of hydrogen uptake on gene expression
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FIG. 5. Regulation of the uptake hydrogenase in R. palustris. The HupUV-HoxJA system activates expression of the uptake hydrogenase and other genes indicated in response to hydrogen. RegSR and, to a lesser extent, RPA0981 negatively modulate expression of the uptake hydrogenase, possibly in response to reducing conditions. The hydrogen-dependent regulatory system is similar to that of R. eutropha (27). CM, cytoplasmic membrane.
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The phenotype of an RPA0981 mutant resembles that of the regSR mutant but is less pronounced. That is, this putative sensor kinase appears to repress hydrogenase expression. The presence of PAS domains in RPA0981 suggests that it may function to sense some aspect of redox. Because of the close physical proximity of its gene on the chromosome, HoxA is a likely candidate to be the transcriptional activator cognate to RPA0981. If so, RPA0981 would be predicted to negatively modulate expression of the uptake hydrogenase by phosphorylating HoxA.
Our microarray data indicate, as expected, that the HupUV-HoxJA system regulates expression of the hydrogenase structural genes hupSLC. We were surprised to see that the average level of induction of hupS was smaller than that of hupL and hupC, because these three genes are predicted to be in an operon and the small and large subunits of the uptake hydrogenase form an heterodimer (41). One possibility is that segmental mRNA degradation is taking place (34). Expression of other genes in the hydrogenase cluster did not heavily depend on hupV (Fig. 4). The proteins encoded by these genes are likely necessary for the assembly of the metallocenters of both the sensor hydrogenase and the uptake hydrogenase (2, 5). Thus, they may need to be present at all times in order for a fully functional sensor hydrogenase to be made and ready to activate gene expression in response to hydrogen. We also found, unexpectedly, that HupUV-HoxJA regulates expression of genes for a predicted TRAP transporter for dicarboxylic acids (RPA1976-RPA1977), a formate transporter (RPA3201), and a glutamine synthetase (glnAII) (Table 4). TRAP transporters are tripartite proteins that typically include two integral membrane proteins and a periplasmic binding protein (22). A periplasmic binding protein gene is divergently transcribed from RPA1976-RPA1977 and does not appear to be controlled by HupUV-HoxJA. Formate and dicarboxylic acids, such as malate, are relatively oxidized compounds that can be completely incorporated into cell material under phototrophic growth conditions only if an exogenous reductant, such as hydrogen, is present as a cosubstrate. The induction of dicarboxylic acid and formate transport by hydrogen would be predicted to allow cells to attain higher growth yields on these compounds. In fact, we did observe that wild-type cells grew to higher cell densities on malate than did a hupV mutant when hydrogen was present (Table 2). Likewise, more reductant available from hydrogen probably results in more nitrogen converted into ammonia, which is incorporated into cell material by means of glutamine synthetases. R. palustris encodes four different glutamine synthetases (25), and GlnAII is the prevalent isozyme expressed by wild-type cells under nitrogen-fixing conditions (29). Although glnAII is mainly controlled by nitrogen starvation in an NtrB-NtrC-RpoN-dependent fashion (Oda and Harwood, unpublished results), our results suggest that the HupUV-HoxJA system also regulates its expression (Table 4).
Since hydrogen is produced along with ammonia as a product of nitrogen fixation, an uptake hydrogenase mutation results in a dramatic increase in the net amount of hydrogen that cultures accumulate under nitrogen-fixing conditions (Table 2). We reasoned that a transcriptome analysis of a hupS mutant would provide useful information about metabolic constraints that might be imposed on engineered, hydrogen-producing cells that are unable to take up and recycle hydrogen. About 30 genes were differentially expressed between wild-type and hupS mutant cells grown on malate under nitrogen-fixing conditions (Table 5). In most cases, the differences in expression levels were small. Many of the genes that were expressed at lower levels in wild-type cells than in hydrogen uptake mutant cells belonged to the hypothetical or conserved hypothetical category. Wild-type cells expressed higher levels of a high-affinity ammonium transporter (amtB), a nitrogen regulatory PII protein (glnK2), and a urea transporter (RPA3665-RPA3669) than did hupS mutant cells. This may reflect that cells sense a need to acquire more fixed nitrogen, since the ability to utilize hydrogen allows them to grow to higher cell yields with malate. Genes involved in cobalamin (vitamin B12) biosynthesis were also expressed at higher levels in the wild type, as was a gene encoding a predicted vitamin B12-dependent ribonucleotide reductase (nrd) (Table 5). Nrd converts ribonucleotide diphosphates into 2' deoxyribonucleotides for DNA synthesis and repair (35). Since the reaction catalyzed by Nrd requires reductant (18), it seems possible that the expression of this gene is activated in response to the availability of reductant. Alternatively, the slightly faster doubling time exhibited by wild-type cells under nitrogen-fixing conditions with malate (Table 2) may result in an increased demand for deoxyribonucleotides for DNA synthesis. Finally, increased expression of the outer membrane siderophore receptor RPA4803 indicates an increased requirement for iron, possibly for uptake hydrogenase synthesis. Taken together, our results indicate that the small changes in gene expression that were seen in wild-type cells relative to the uptake hydrogenase mutant are related to the requirements for making a functional hydrogenase, or they provide a minor increase in the ability to access reducing equivalents to allow better growth on the relatively oxidized carbon source, malate. Although hydrogen recycling does not appear to have a major global effect on gene expression, the presence of hydrogen induces expression of the hydrogenase genes and several other genes that enable R. palustris to grow slightly faster and to higher yields under nitrogen-fixing conditions, especially on relatively oxidized carbon sources such as malate.
We thank F. Robert Tabita for sharing strain CGA2023 and Jizhong Zhou for preparing the R. palustris microarray slides.
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