Previous Article | Next Article ![]()
Journal of Bacteriology, December 2006, p. 8460-8468, Vol. 188, No. 24
0021-9193/06/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JB.01212-06
Copyright © 2006, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Division of Infectious Diseases, Children's Hospital Boston,1 Division of Rheumatology, Immunology and Allergy, Brigham & Women's Hospital,2 Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts3
Received 3 August 2006/ Accepted 4 October 2006
|
|
|---|
|
|
|---|
In contrast to many bacterial pathogens, where virulence mechanisms such as toxin production or secretion of other effector molecules cause host cell death and lead to acute disease following infection, primary M. tuberculosis infection typically causes minimal disease (26). Though in a small minority of persons initial infection may progress to clinically apparent disease, more commonly the infection is contained and infected individuals remain asymptomatic. In some infected persons, years to decades later, active bacterial replication resumes, causing disease that results both from extensive bacterial replication and a host inflammatory response that is unable to control the infection.
This disease pattern suggests the need for sophisticated bacterial mechanisms that are driven by the host environment, to allow initial active replication, long-term persistence, and the ability to resume active replication. While substantial progress has been made in identifying many genes required for initial replication and virulence in short-term infection models, these processes may be most relevant only for the early stages of M. tuberculosis infection. Adaptations associated with macrophage infection, starvation, and hypoxia have been identified (1, 31, 42, 44). Relatively little is known, however, about mechanisms that allow this organism to transition from active replication to a state of long-term persistence in the absence of extensive replication and then back again to active replication.
Most bacterial adaptations result from changes in specific gene expression. Our laboratory has focused on the regulation of M. tuberculosis transcription by alternative sigma factors as a mechanism by which this bacterium can achieve transcriptional regulation in response to specific stimuli. By controlling multiple genes and operons, alternative sigma factors can modify bacterial physiology and/or modulate the host-pathogen interaction in response to environmental signals. In past work, we and others have identified regulatory pathways that play critical roles in mycobacterial stress response regulation and in virulence in acute infection models in mice (16, 19, 22, 29, 30, 38, 40, 48, 52). In the current work, we have characterized the regulon of the M. tuberculosis alternative sigma factor SigM. Negative regulation of virulence-associated surface lipids and positive regulation of Esx family secreted protein and nonribosomal peptide synthetase genes by this sigma factor suggest that SigM activity may play a role in long-term in vivo adaptation to specific host environments, rather than in virulence early during the course of infection.
|
|
|---|
Escherichia coli strains DH5
(Life Technologies), TOP10 (Invitrogen), and XL1-Blue (Stratagene) were used as host strains for cloning experiments. Luria-Bertani (LB) broth or agar plates containing appropriate antibiotic were used for growing E. coli strains; 50 µg/ml kanamycin, 100 µg/ml ampicillin, and 100 µg/ml hygromycin were added to the culture medium as indicated, and 10% sucrose was added to the solid medium for counterselection of M. tuberculosis mutants.
Real time RT-PCR for mRNA quantitation. RNA extracted from M. tuberculosis H37Rv starting at early log phase and ending at stationary phase was used to measure growth phase-dependent changes in expression of sigM. The reverse transcription and PCR were performed using the QuantiTech SYBR green reverse transcription-PCR (RT-PCR) kit (QIAGEN) and an ABI7000 sequence detection system. Duplicates of each reaction with 200 ng of templates were performed. Control reactions were performed using the sigA gene, which has been shown to be stably expressed during growth (28). Serial dilutions of genomic DNA were amplified using the sigM or sigA primers to generate standard curves of sigA or sigM DNA versus threshold cycle. The relative amounts of cDNA produced in the RT-PCRs were interpolated from these standard curves and expressed as the ratio of sigM to sigA.
Construction of M. tuberculosis sigM mutant and sigM-overexpressing strains and complementation. The M. tuberculosis sigM mutant was constructed by targeted mutagenesis using a temperature-sensitive sacB delivery system as described previously (35, 38). Briefly, sigM was disrupted by insertion of a kanamycin resistance gene, and the resulting construct was cloned into pRH1351, which harbors the sacB and xylE genes (38). The resulting vector was electroporated into M. tuberculosis H37Rv, and transformants were selected at 30°C on kanamycin plates. Single colonies were grown in broth at 30°C and then plated on sucrose plates at 39°C. The resulting colonies were analyzed by PCR, and candidate sigM mutants were confirmed by Southern analysis.
An M. tuberculosis strain overexpressing sigM from the inducible acetamidase promoter was created as described previously (19). The sigM open reading frame was PCR amplified and cloned downstream of an inducible acetamidase promoter in the integrating vector pMV306 (47). The construct was sequenced and electroporated into wild-type M. tuberculosis H37Rv. The transformants were selected for kanamycin resistance. An extra copy of sigM at the L5 phage attB site was confirmed by PCR. Expression of sigM was measured by real-time PCR to confirm inducible expression.
Complementation of the sigM mutant was performed as described previously (19). Briefly, sigM with the 5' region containing the sigM promoter sequences was cloned into the integrating vector pMV306 containing a hygromycin resistance cassette. The construct was electroporated into the sigM mutant strain of M. tuberculosis, and the colonies were selected for hygromycin resistance. The resulting clones were screened by PCR.
Microarray experiments and gene identification. Oligonucleotide microarrays of M. tuberculosis obtained from the Pathogen Functional Genomic Resource at The Institute for Genomic Research were used for microarray experiments to identify SigM-regulated genes. These microarrays represent all the annotated genes of M. tuberculosis H37Rv and additional genes from M. tuberculosis strain CDC1551. These additional genes either are not annotated or are differently annotated in strain H37Rv.
Two separate sets of microarray expression experiments were performed. In one set the wild type was compared to the sigM mutant, and in the second set the sigM overexpression strain of M. tuberculosis was compared to the sigM mutant. Six independent RNA samples were hybridized and analyzed for the comparison of wild type versus sigM mutant, and three independent samples were analyzed in the comparison of sigM overexpression strain versus mutant. In all experiments the test sample (wt or sigM overexpression strain) was labeled with Cy5 and the control (sigM mutant) was labeled with Cy3. In experiments involving the sigM overexpression strain, 0.2% acetamide was added to the cultures 1 hour prior to harvesting. RNA isolation, cDNA synthesis, labeling, and hybridization were performed as described previously (38).
The hybridized slides were scanned using an Axon 4000B scanner. Microarray spot intensities were defined and quantified using GENEPIX software (Axon, Union City, CA). The median value from the raw data was normalized by the LOWESS method (23). Statistical analysis was performed using BRB array tools (wt versus mutant arrays) (45) (http://linus.nci.nih.gov/BRB-ArrayTools.html) and the National Institute of Aging array analysis tool (overexpression versus mutant arrays) (43) (http://lgsun.grc.nia.nih.gov/ANOVA/). We used the most conservative error model, "the maximum of averaged and actual error variance," in order to reduce false positives. P values are false detection rate values, i.e., the proportion of false positives expected among genes detected as significant.
RNA preparation and primer extension.
RNA isolation and primer extension experiments were performed as described previously (38). Total RNA was isolated from wild-type M. tuberculosis, the sigM mutant strain, and the sigM-overexpressing strain grown to mid-log phase (optical density at 600 nm = 0.4). Acetamide was added to each culture to a concentration of 0.2% at 1 hour prior to harvesting. For primer extension analysis, 0.5 pmol of
-32P-labeled reverse primer was mixed with 8 µg of RNA in a 6-µl volume. Reverse transcription reactions were then performed as described, and the reaction products were analyzed on a sequencing gel. DNA sequencing reactions, performed with the same primer used for primer extension, were run in adjacent lanes to determine the sizes of the transcripts generated. Specific transcripts were quantified with a phosphorimager and normalized to a sigA transcript generated from the same RNA sample.
Lipid analysis. Nonpolar surface lipids were extracted from late-log-phase cultures of wt, sigM insertional mutant, and sigM-overexpressing strains of M. tuberculosis. Each strain was grown in 50 ml of medium in a 250-ml flask to late log phase, and the wet weights of the cell pellets were determined. The pellets were resuspended in 1 ml of hexane and vortexed for 5 min. The cell suspension was centrifuged at 3,000 rpm for 5 minutes, and the hexane fraction was collected. Three milliliters of chloroform-methanol (1:1) was added to the hexane fraction. The extracted lipids in hexane-chloroform-methanol were dried under a stream of nitrogen and resuspended in 0.5 ml of chloroform-methanol (1:1).
The lipids were separated by silica thin-layer chromatography (TLC) with hexane and chloroform (9:1) as the solvent system. The lipids were visualized by spraying with acid (8% sulfuric acid and 3% cupric acetate) followed by heating at 110°C for 15 min. Pthiocerol dimycocerosate (PDIM) containing PIM A, PIM B, and PIM C from the laboratory of Gurdyal Besra was used as a standard.
For mass spectrometry (MS) analysis, hexane-extracted surface lipids from various strains and PDIM standards were loaded onto 250-µm silica-coated glass TLC plate (10 by 20 cm) and then developed in a hexane-chloroform (9:1) solvent system. The lipids were visualized by spraying the plate with water, and three spots comigrating with the PDIM standard were marked. After overnight air drying, silica at the marked spots was loaded into a nanospray tip, and lipids were dissolved in 10 µl of 10 mM ammonium acetate (NH4C2H3O2) in chloroform-methanol (2:1) for positive-mode electrospray ionization mass spectrometry (ThermoFinnigan LCQ Advantage). Selected ions were analyzed by collisionally induced dissociation (CID)-MS/MS. The MS data were compared to the PDIM molecular structure described by Camacho et al. (5).
|
|
|---|
![]() View larger version (17K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 1. The M. tuberculosis sigM locus and mutant construction. A. sigM is located 5' of the thioredoxin reductase-thioredoxin operon. Our sequence data indicate a 93-bp intergenic region between sigM and Rv3912 in H37Rv, identical to the CDC1551 genome sequence but distinct from the published H37Rv sequence (9, 17). B. Southern blot analysis demonstrates the insertional inactivation of sigM. Wt, H37Rv; M, sigM mutant, C, complemented sigM mutant.
|
![]() View larger version (8K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 2. Growth of H37Rv versus that of the sigM mutant and expression of sigM in broth culture. A. Cultures were grown in Middlebrook 7H9 liquid medium, and the optical density at 600 nm (OD600)was measured at serial time points. B. RNA was extracted from H37Rv cultures at serial time points during growth and subjected to quantitative RT-PCR. Relative expression of sigM is shown as a ratio of sigM cDNA to sigA cDNA. Experiments were performed twice, with representative results of one experiment shown.
|
Identification of SigM-regulated genes and consensus SigM-dependent promoter elements. In the absence of an apparent role in oxidative stress adaptation, we sought to determine the genes that are regulated by this sigma factor as a means to gain insight into SigM function. Genome-wide transcription profiling experiments were performed using oligonucleotide glass slide microarrays. Initial experiments compared gene expression between the wt and the sigM mutant during log-phase growth in broth culture. In these experiments, a small number of positively regulated genes were identified. The signal strength and the expression ratios of genes with increased expression in the wt versus the sigM mutant in these experiments were quite low (spot intensity of <1% of maximum). Primer extension experiments performed with five genes that showed increased expression in the wt versus the sigM mutant did not identify any promoters that were clearly SigM dependent. These microarray experiments also confirmed the low basal expression of sigM in wt H37Rv.
Several genes were determined to have significantly increased expression in the sigM mutant versus the wt strain (Table 1). Most striking was the markedly increased expression of PPE60 in the sigM mutant. This gene encodes a protein in the proline-glutamate (PE)_polymorphic GC-rich repetitive sequence (PGRS) family of over 100 homologous proteins. These proteins contain a PE or proline-proline-glutamate (PPE) motif near the amino-terminus, and the PE_PGRS proteins also encode peptides that rich in glycine and alanine. Some of these proteins have been shown to be surface associated and to be recognized by the host immune system during infection (3, 12). Also notable was the moderately increased expression of several lipid biosynthetic genes, including most genes from the first operon of the PDIM biosynthetic and transport locus, and the independently transcribed mas gene from this locus, but not the fadD28-mmpL7 operon, which is also required for PDIM synthesis and export (5). Also up regulated were genes in the kasA-kasB operon, which functions in mycolic acid synthesis, as well as other independently transcribed lipid biosynthesis genes. Expression of several genes in the region of the devR-devS-Rv3134c hypoxia-induced two-component system operon (44) was also increased in the sigM mutant.
|
View this table: [in a new window] |
TABLE 1. Genes with increased expression in the sigM mutant strain versus H37Rva
|
|
View this table: [in a new window] |
TABLE 2. Genes with increased expression in the sigM overexpression strain versus the sigM mutanta
|
To identify candidate SigM-regulated promoters, primer extension analysis was performed on genes with the highest expression ratios. Where multiple genes from an apparent operon were up regulated in the sigM overexpression strain, primer extension analysis was performed on the first gene in the operon. These experiments identified several promoters that appear to be wholly dependent on SigM and one for which the majority of expression is SigM dependent (Fig. 3). The SigM-dependent esxU promoter identified in these experiments lies within the esxU coding region in the H37Rv and CDC1551 annotated genome sequences. This result indicates that the in vivo start codon of this gene is further 3' than predicted. The potential initiation codons 3' of the transcription start site would result in an EsxU protein of 105 or 92 amino acids (rather than the annotated 125 residues), which is more consistent with the predicted sizes of the other Esx proteins, which range in size from 90 to 119 residues.
![]() View larger version (35K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 3. Primer extension analysis of SigM-dependent promoters. RNA was isolated from the sigM overexpression strain (M+) and the sigM mutant (M) and reverse transcribed with gene-specific antisense primers. A sequencing reaction was performed with the same primer, and reactions were resolved on sequencing gels to identify transcription start sites. Reverse transcription was performed using the same RNA with a sigA primer as a control in each experiment.
|
![]() View larger version (16K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 4. Alignment of SigM-dependent promoters. The regions 5' of experimentally determined SigM-dependent transcription start sites were aligned. The conserved sequences in the 35 and 10 regions are boxed, with conserved bases shown in boldface. The transcription start site of each gene is underlined and shown in boldface.
|
![]() View larger version (10K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 5. sigM expression represses PDIM biosynthetic gene transcription. A. Quantitative primer extension analysis was performed using equal amount of total RNA from the H37Rv (wt), sigM mutant (M), and sigM overexpression (M+) strains of M. tuberculosis. The numbers below each lane indicate quantification of the transcript relative to expression in the wt, normalized to sigA expression in the same experiment. Experiments were performed twice, and representative results are shown. B. Organization of the PDIM biosynthesis and transport locus. Arrows indicate the three transcripts previously identified in this region (5).
|
![]() View larger version (16K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 6. sigM expression inhibits PDIM synthesis. A. Nonpolar surface lipids were extracted and subjected to silica TLC in comparison with a PDIM standard B. Mass spectrometry analysis of lipids corresponding to the uppermost spot in the PDIM triad, which were directly scraped onto nanospray tips, extracted by solvent, and analyzed by nanospray electrospray ionization-MS, yielding ions that correspond to those expected from an alkane series of ammonium (m/z 1371, 1385, 1399, 1413, and 1427) and sodium (m/z 1376, 1390, 1404, 1418, and 1432) adducts of PDIM. C and D. CID mass spectra of the ion at m/z 1390.4 yielded fragment ions corresponding to sodium adducts of products that have lost one (m/z 951.9) or two (m/z 513.5) mycocerosic acids (m/z 461).
|
|
|
|---|
The function of the PPE proteins and the related PE and PE_PGRS proteins is not known. Different members of this family have been shown to be induced or repressed in response to different conditions in vitro, and some of these proteins have been shown to be antigenic during human or animal infection or to be required for virulence (7, 8, 32, 37, 51). These data suggest that these proteins function to modulate immunity or other aspects of host-pathogen interactions. The positive regulation by SigM of PPE1 and PPE19, versus negative regulation of PPE60 by SigM, suggests distinct functions for these PPE proteins in vivo and is consistent with the recently described opposite regulation in vivo of PE_PGRS16 versus PE_PGRS26 (14).
Among the lipid genes negatively regulated by SigM are the kasA-kasB operon, required for mycolic acid synthesis; the type I fatty acid synthase gene fas; pks2 and pks3; and several genes involved in the synthesis and transport of PDIMs. These data suggest that sigM expression may have extensive effects on regulating the content and/or quantity of M. tuberculosis surface lipids. Consistent with the gene expression data, we observed striking derepression of PDIM surface lipids in the M. tuberculosis sigM deletion strain. PDIMs have been shown to be important virulence determinants required for efficient replication in the lung during short-term infection of mice (6, 11). The negative regulation by SigM of these lipid virulence determinants suggests that SigM is not required for virulence early during the course of infection. In support of this interpretation, microarray experiments examining gene expression following acute macrophage infection did not demonstrate induction of sigM expression, nor was sigM expression significantly increased during short-term mouse infection (42, 49). Also consistent with this inference, a recent study in which sigma factor mutant strains were examined in the guinea pig, a highly susceptible animal model of tuberculosis, found that a sigM-deleted strain was not attenuated (21). Strikingly, however, and consistent with our data showing derepression of PDIM synthesis, the sigM mutant strain appeared to be hypervirulent at the early time points in this model, with greater numbers of granulomas and increased necrosis compared to the wild type.
Our transcription and lipid synthesis data, together with these infection data, suggest the hypothesis that regulation of gene expression by SigM may play a role in bacterial adaptation later in the course of in vivo infection or in specific host tissues. In this model, SigM activity, induced in response to specific host stimuli, would result in adaptation not only via increased expression of SigM-dependent genes but also by down-regulating surface lipids and other factors that are important in acute infection. Microarray transcription analysis of in vitro models of persistence that may be relevant to latency, i.e., starvation and hypoxia, does not show increased expression of sigM or the genes that it regulates under these conditions (1, 44). Similarly, our data do not show increased sigM transcription on entry into stationary phase. If SigM does play a role in adaptation to specific host environments, these data indicate that the host signals required to induce sigM expression are not modeled by these in vitro conditions.
SigM also regulates the Esx proteins EsxT and EsxU, present in the Esx-4 putative secretion locus, and two other Esx proteins, EsxE and EsxF, that are not physically linked to genes encoding a putative secretion apparatus. ESAT-6 and Cfp-10, the first-described members of the Esx family of small secreted proteins, have been extensively characterized as potent T-cell antigens and important virulence factors (reviewed in reference 4). Of the other 21 M. tuberculosis Esx proteins, EsxG and EsxH have been shown to be regulated by IdeR in response to iron depletion, and a number of Esx proteins have been shown to be recognized by immune T cells in humans or animals infected with M. tuberculosis (4, 41). Based on the data discussed above, in contrast to ESAT-6 and Cfp-10, which are important in the pathogenesis of acute infection, we hypothesize that these SigM-regulated Esx proteins may function in bacterial adaptation and/or host modulation at later stages of infection.
The SigM-dependent operon encoding an NRPS (Rv0096-Rv0101) is also likely to function in modulation of the host-bacterium interaction. In Streptomyces spp., where they have been extensively studied, NRPSs synthesize a wide range of bioactive molecules, including several antibiotics, many of which are secreted. A separate M. tuberculosis gene cluster that includes genes encoding NRPSs and polyketide synthases has been shown to synthesize mycobactins, secreted iron-chelating siderophores that are required for bacterial replication in macrophages (13, 36). The SigM-dependent NRPS-encoding operon is highly conserved in M. bovis and M. leprae but not in M. smegmatis, although there is significant similarity between an M. smegmatis NRPS-encoding gene and the M. tuberculosis nrp gene. Disruption of this M. smegmatis locus, which contains four NRPS modules, resulted in absence of glycopeptidolipid biosynthesis, suggesting that these genes may synthesize the peptide core of the glycopeptidolipids in this species (2). Though only Rv0101 is annotated as encoding an NRPS in the M. tuberculosis H37Rv genome, using sequence- and structure-based motif analysis methods (15), we have identified NRPS motifs in both Rv0099 and Rv0100. This analysis indicates that Rv0099 (annotated as fadD10) encodes an adenylation/activation domain-containing protein and that Rv0100 encodes a peptidyl carrier protein. In addition, our analysis indicates that the amino terminus of Rv0101 (nrp) contains an unannotated NRPS condensation domain. These analyses indicate that this operon encodes an NRPS composed of three modules, each of which contains activation, peptidyl carrier, and condensation domains, with the first two domains of the first module encoded in Rv0099 and Rv0100.
This NRPS-encoding operon has previously been shown to be up regulated in an M. tuberculosis mutant strain in which the gene encoding the response regulator of the SenX3-RegX3 two-component system was deleted. This mutant was attenuated for growth in macrophages and mildly attenuated for replication in vivo in mice, suggesting that the products of the PPE1-NRPS operon are not required for macrophage survival or short-term infection in mice (34), which is consistent with the hypothesis that SigM-regulated genes are not required for acute infection. This locus was also analyzed in a transposon mutant of M. bovis in which Mb100, the homologue of Rv0097, was disrupted (20). These authors observed that this strain did not produce PDIM or glycosylphenol-PDIM, and they hypothesized that this locus is directly involved in PDIM biosynthesis. They also demonstrated marked up regulation of transcription 5' of the insertion and decreased gene expression 3' of the insertion (including all genes containing NRPS motifs). Our data suggest a mechanism for the increased expression of the 5' genes of this operon and an alternative explanation for the absence of PDIMs in the Mb100-disrupted strain. Our data suggest a model in which sigM is repressed by the products of the nrp locus. Expression of sigM is derepressed in the Mb100-disrupted strain because of decreased expression of NRPS-encoding genes 3' of the insertion. Increased sigM expression leads to increased expression from the SigM-dependent promoter 5' of PPE1, the first gene of this operon. The absence of PDIMs in this strain would result from repressed transcription of the known PDIM biosynthesis genes that we have shown to be negatively regulated by SigM.
This work also identified clear SigM-dependent consensus promoter elements, particularly in the 35 region. Consensus promoters recognized by four other ECF sigma factors, SigD, SigE, SigH, and SigL, have been identified experimentally (19, 38-40). When the SigM-dependent consensus is compared to these promoters, a core five-base sequence, GGAAC, is found in the 35 element, with T in place of the first G in the SigL-dependent consensus and the T in place of the second G in the SigD-dependent consensus. There is more variation among the consensus sequences at the positions immediately 5' and 3' to this core sequence. The 10 element consensus sequences are more divergent than the 35 element. The SigM consensus is most similar to the 35 region of the promoters recognized by SigE and SigH, but it lacks the conserved 10 GTT sequence of these promoters. Reviews of our and other groups' published microarray data do not suggest that the SigM-regulated genes identified here are also significantly regulated by any of these other ECF sigma factors (19, 22, 30, 38). These findings suggest that the core 35 region is required for efficient promoter binding and/or transcription initiation of all of these sigma factors and that binding specificity results from a limited number of nucleotides at either end of the 35 element and from differences in the 10 region sequences.
This work demonstrates the regulation by SigM of genes that are likely to modulate the host-pathogen interaction. Changes in SigM activity provide a mechanism by which the production of surface-associated and secreted molecules can be altered during infection. The absence of induction of sigM following macrophage or short-term mouse infection, the negative regulation by SigM of PDIM synthesis, the increased virulence of a sigM mutant in guinea pigs, and the attenuation in macrophages and short-term mouse infection of a mutant in which the SigM-dependent PPE1-nrp operon is up regulated indicate that the SigM regulon does not play a role in M. tuberculosis virulence early during infection. Rather, we hypothesize that SigM may function in M. tuberculosis pathogenesis at later stages of infection, e.g., during latency or in specific host tissue environments. Elucidation of the function of SigM-dependent genes and analysis of the expression of SigM-regulated genes during the course of acute and chronic infection will be essential to gain insight into the role of the SigM regulon in the complex pathogenesis of tuberculosis.
Microarrays were provided by the NIAID-sponsored Pathogen Functional Genomic Resource at TIGR. We thank Gurdyal S. Besra for the gift of the PDIM standard, Seby L. Edassery for assistance with microarray analysis, Neal Padte for construction of the M. smegmatis sigM mutant, and Simon Dove for review of the manuscript.
Published ahead of print on 6 October 2006. ![]()
|
|
|---|
factors involved in the regulation of extracytoplasmic functions. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 91:7573-7577.This article has been cited by other articles:
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Copyright © 2009 by the American Society for Microbiology. For an alternate route to Journals.ASM.org, visit: http://intl-journals.asm.org | More Info»