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Journal of Bacteriology, April 2006, p. 2446-2453, Vol. 188, No. 7
0021-9193/06/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JB.188.7.2446-2453.2006
Copyright © 2006, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
The Transcriptional Regulator VqmA Increases Expression of the Quorum-Sensing Activator HapR in Vibrio cholerae
Zhi Liu,
Ansel Hsiao,
Adam Joelsson, and
Jun Zhu*
Department of Microbiology, University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Received 25 October 2005/
Accepted 9 January 2006

ABSTRACT
Vibrio cholerae is the causative agent of the severe diarrheal
disease cholera. A number of environmental stimuli regulate
virulence gene expression in
V. cholerae, including quorum-sensing
signals. At high cell densities, quorum sensing in
V. cholerae invokes a series of signal transduction pathways in order to
activate the expression of the master regulator HapR, which
then represses the virulence regulon and biofilm-related genes
and activates protease production. In this study, we identified
a transcriptional regulator, VqmA (VCA1078), that activates
hapR expression at low cell densities. Under in vitro inducing
conditions, constitutive expression of VqmA represses the virulence
regulon in a HapR-dependent manner. VqmA increases
hapR transcription
as measured by the activity of the
hapR-lacZ reporter, and it
increases HapR production as measured by Western blotting. Using
a heterogenous
luxCDABE cosmid, we found that VqmA stimulates
quorum-sensing regulation at lower cell densities and that this
stimulation bypasses the known LuxO-small-RNA regulatory circuits.
Furthermore, we showed that VqmA regulates
hapR transcription
directly by binding to its promoter region and that expression
of
vqmA is cell density dependent and autoregulated. The physiological
role of VqmA is also discussed.

INTRODUCTION
The gram-negative bacterium
Vibrio cholerae is the causative
agent of cholera, an acute dehydrating diarrhea still endemic
in many parts of the developing world (
6). The ability
of
V. cholerae strains to cause severe enteric infection in
humans is dependent on the expression of cholera toxin (CT)
and a pilus colonization factor known as the toxin-coregulated
pilus (TCP). The genes involved in CT and TCP production are
controlled by a series of signal transduction cascades. Two
membrane-localized complexes thought to respond to environmental
signals, ToxRS and TcpPH, activate the transcription of
toxT.
ToxT, in turn, activates the transcription of the virulence
regulon (ToxR regulon), including the cholera toxin genes
ctxA and
ctxB and the
tcp genes responsible for TCP biosynthesis.
In addition, Skorupski and coworkers have identified AphA as
an activator of
tcpPH expression (
18,
29). The environmental
cues influencing the expression of virulence genes in vivo are
poorly characterized, but extensive studies have indicated the
importance of a variety of stimuli, including temperature, pH,
bile salts, and quorum-sensing signals (
15,
19).
Single-celled bacteria are able to produce and respond to small diffusible molecules called autoinducers. These molecules accumulate as cell density increases and regulate the expression of a range of genes to control a variety of physiological functions, in a process known as quorum sensing (10, 33). Many gram-negative bacteria use a set of diffusible N-acyl homoserine lactones (AHLs) that generally serve as cell-to-cell communication signals. The key regulatory components of these signaling systems are LuxI-type proteins, which act as AHL synthases, and LuxR-type proteins, which serve as AHL receptors and AHL-dependent transcription factors (9). The quorum-sensing system in V. cholerae, which does not possess AHL-dependent signal transduction pathways, has been shown to respond to at least two autoinducer molecules: CAI-1, whose structure has yet to be solved, and AI-2, a furanosyl borate diester also produced by Vibrio harveyi and many other bacteria.
In V. cholerae, quorum sensing has been shown to negatively regulate virulence gene expression (26, 38). Accumulation of these autoinducers modulates the activity of a central regulator, LuxO, via membrane receptors CqsS and LuxPQ (26). At low cell densities, LuxO actively represses the expression of another key quorum-sensing regulator, HapR, by activating the expression of a set of small RNAs (21). At high cell densities, LuxO is inactivated, and thus hapR expression is activated. In V. cholerae, quorum sensing has been shown to negatively regulate virulence gene expression (26, 38). HapR decreases tcpPH transcription indirectly by repressing transcription of aphA (18). HapR also represses the vps (Vibrio polysaccharide synthesis) operon, thus negatively regulating biofilm formation (13, 35, 37). In addition, HapR directly up-regulates the expression of hapA, which produces secreted hemagglutinin (HA)/protease, responsible for detachment of the vibrios from the intestinal epithelium (7, 17, 23).
Recent studies have suggested that quorum-sensing regulation in V. cholerae is far more complicated than previously thought. The VarS/VarA two-component sensory system comprises an additional quorum-sensing-dependent regulatory input, which uses an additional set of small RNAs together with the global regulatory protein CsrA to modulate gene expression in V. cholerae (20). Furthermore, hapR expression is repressed at high cell densities by HapR itself, although the significance of this autorepression is unknown (22). In this study, we identified an additional regulator, VCA1078, that modulates the V. cholerae quorum-sensing regulon by increasing the expression of hapR. Genetic and biochemical studies suggest that this regulator binds directly to the hapR promoter. We thus name VCA1078 VqmA (Vibrio quorum modulator A).

MATERIALS AND METHODS
Bacterial strains, plasmids, and culture conditions.
Escherichia coli and
V. cholerae strains used in this study
are listed in Table
1 and were propagated in LB containing appropriate
antibiotics at 37°C, unless otherwise noted. The plasmid
harboring P
tac-controlled
vqmA was constructed by PCR amplifying
the
vqmA (VCA1078) coding sequence and cloning it into the pMal-c2x
vector (New England Biolabs), resulting in pZL3 (no
malE) or
pJZ179 (in frame with
malE). A
vqmA in-frame deletion was constructed
by overlapping PCR of the
vqmA flanking region and cloning into
pWM91 (
24). The resulting plasmid was then introduced into
V. cholerae strains and selected for double homologous recombination
events. Plasmids containing
vqmA lacking its helix-turn-helix
DNA binding domain sequences (

HTH) were constructed by digesting
pJZ179 with NruI and XbaI, filling in with Klenow fragment,
and religating. The
hapR-lacZ reporter plasmid was constructed
by cloning the PCR-amplified
hapR promoter region into the transcriptional
LacZ reporter vector pKP302 (
28). The
vqmA-lacZ transcriptional
reporter fusions were constructed by cloning of either an internal
fragment of
vqmA or intact 5'
vqmA sequences into a suicide
plasmid containing promoterless
lacZ (pJZ244) on pGP704 (
27).
The resulting plasmids were then introduced into
V. cholerae strains lacking
lacZ and screened for homologous recombination
events.
Microarray analysis.
The primers for PCR amplification of all
V. cholerae full-length
open reading frames (ORFs) were synthesized as previously published
(
5). All PCR products were spotted onto GAPSII slides (Corning)
using OminiGrid 100 (Gene Machines, Inc) (performed by
Penn Microarray Core Facilities). Strains ZLV102 and ZLV105
were grown to mid-log phase in AKI medium, which is optimized
for virulence gene expression (
16), containing appropriate antibiotics
and 0.1 µM isopropyl-ß-
D-thiogalactopyranoside
(IPTG). The RNA was isolated using TRIzol reagent (Invitrogen)
and cleaned with an RNeasy kit (QIAGEN). Fluorescently labeled
cDNA was prepared by direct incorporation of fluorescent nucleotide
analogues (Cy3-dCTP and Cy5-dCTP) during a first-strand randomly
primed reverse transcription reaction. The differentially labeled
cDNAs were combined and subsequently applied to the array surface
under conditions that favor hybridization. Microarray slides
were scanned using a GenePix 4000B (Axon, Inc). For every ORF-specific
spot, the resulting fluorescence intensity of each of the labels
was measured, and intensities were compared using the GenePix
Pro 6.0 software system (Axon, Inc).
Luminescence assay.
Cosmid pBB1, carrying the V. harveyi lux operon (1), was introduced into V. cholerae strains by electroporation. The resulting strains were grown in LB with appropriate antibiotics at 30°C overnight, diluted to a concentration of 1:1,000 in fresh LB, and incubated at 30°C. Luminescence was read at 30-min intervals for 7 h using a Bio-Tek Synergy HT spectrophotometer. Cultures were diluted, and cell density was monitored by counting CFU. Relative light units are defined as 103 light units/CFU ml1.
Western blotting (immunoblotting) of HapR.
Strains were grown in LB overnight and inoculated at 1:100 into LB broth. Samples were withdrawn at the time points indicated. Cell pellets were lysed, and total protein was measured by a Bio-Rad protein assay kit. Portions (0.1 mg) of total protein were size fractionated by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, transferred to a nitrocellulose membrane, and immunoblotted with affinity-purified polyclonal anti-HapR rabbit antiserum.
Detection of cholera toxin.
GM1 ganglioside enzyme-linked immunosorbent CT assays (12) were carried out following overnight incubations of V. cholerae strains with shaking at 37°C in AKI medium with appropriate antibiotics and IPTG (0.1 µM).
ß-Galactosidase activity assays.
E. coli or V. cholerae strains containing LacZ reporter fusions were grown at 37°C in LB with IPTG (0.1 µM). Samples were withdrawn at the time points indicated and then assayed for ß-galactosidase activity as previously described (25).
Gel retardation assays.
Maltose-binding protein (MBP)-VqmA fusions were purified through amylose columns according to the manufacturer's instructions (New England Biolabs). PCR products containing different lengths of the hapR promoter region were digested with XbaI and end labeled using [
-32P]dCTP and the Klenow fragment of DNA polymerase I. Binding reaction mixtures contained 0.1 ng DNA and 0.5 µg wild-type or
HTH VqmA proteins in a buffer consisting of 10 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.9), 1 mM EDTA, 1 mM dithiothreitol, 60 mM KCl, 30 mg/ml calf thymus DNA, 20 mg/ml bovine serum albumin, and 10% glycerol. After 20 min of incubation at room temperature, samples were size fractionated using 5% polyacrylamide gels in 0.5x TAE buffer (20 mM Tris-acetate, 1 mM EDTA [pH 8.5]). The radioactivity of free DNA and VqmA-DNA complexes was visualized by using a StormB840 PhosphorImager (Molecular Dynamics).
Infant mouse colonization assay.
The infant mouse colonization assay has been described previously (11). Briefly, V. cholerae mutant strains were mixed with the wild-type strain, and approximately 105 cells were inoculated into 6-day-old CD-1 suckling mice. After a 20-h period of colonization, intestinal homogenates were collected, and the ratio of mutant to wild-type bacteria was determined.

RESULTS
Overexpression of the LuxR family protein VqmA represses virulence gene expression in vitro.
In bacteria, gene expression is often highly regulated by various
transcription factors. This is supported by the large numbers
of conserved transcriptional regulators revealed by microbial
genome sequencing. For example, in the
V. cholerae genome, there
are eight open reading frames annotated as LuxR family proteins
(
14). LuxR family proteins are thought to share an AHL interaction
region and DNA binding motif (
9). However, while all annotated
LuxR family proteins in
V. cholerae share a conserved helix-turn-helix
DNA binding motif (
3), they show very weak homology to the conserved
AHL binding domains (data not shown). Furthermore, no AHL synthase
genes are present in the
V. cholerae genome, and no AHL signals
can be detected under laboratory culture conditions using a
sensitive AHL bioassay strain (
36) (data not shown). Thus, these
LuxR-type proteins in
V. cholerae may not be involved in the
process of interaction with self-produced AHL signals. To investigate
the genes possibly regulated by these LuxR family proteins,
we performed microarray analysis to compare the transcriptional
profiles of strains with chromosomal in-frame deletions of these
genes to those of strains with plasmids overexpressing the corresponding
genes. Artificially activating these regulatory genes enabled
us to detect target genes that otherwise might not be affected
under the experimental conditions we normally use. Interestingly,
overexpression of one of the annotated LuxR family genes, VCA1078,
which is predicted to encode a 319-amino-acid protein sharing
a conserved carboxyl-terminal DNA binding motif with only the
LuxR protein of
Vibrio fischeri, leads to the repression of
the entire ToxR virulence regulon (Table
2). For example, genes
in the TCP island are repressed 2.3- to 5.2-fold in the VCA1078-overexpressing
strain. Similarly, the
ctxA and
ctxB genes, which encode the
two subunits of cholera toxin, are also inhibited (threefold)
in such a strain. The inhibition of virulence gene expression
is not due to a general inhibitory effect of protein overproduction,
since no virulence gene repression was observed when other LuxR
family proteins were overexpressed (data not shown) or with
expression of the control protein MalE. We renamed VCA1078
vqmA (
Vibrio quorum-sensing
modulator
A), because its gene product
regulates the quorum-sensing system of
V. cholerae (see below).
Repression of virulence genes by constitutively expressed VqmA is HapR dependent.
To verify the microarray data, we measured the production of
CT, a major virulence determinant, after growth in AKI medium,
which is known to induce virulence factor production (
16). The
strains with constitutively expressed VqmA produced 93% less
cholera toxin than a wild-type strain (Fig.
1). Deletion of
vqmA did not affect CT production.
Microarray analysis indicated that the expression of two regulators,
the LuxR family protein VCA0888 and HapR, was up-regulated when
VqmA was constitutively expressed (Table
2). Overexpression
of VCA0888 did not affect CT production (data not shown), indicating
that VCA0888 is not involved in virulence gene regulation. However,
previous studies have demonstrated that HapR represses virulence
gene expression by repressing
aphA transcription (
18,
38). Remarkably,
hapR expression is increased more than fourfold in the strain
constitutively expressing VqmA [VqmA(Con)]. This suggests that
VqmA may act on virulence gene expression through HapR. To test
this possibility, we examined CT production in a
hapR mutant.
In contrast to
hapR+ strains harboring the P
tac-
vqmA plasmid
(producing only 7% of the CT made in wild-type strains), overexpression
of VqmA in the
hapR mutant had only a minimal effect on CT production
(80% of the CT produced by the wild type) (Fig.
1), while a
plasmid constitutively expressing
hapR in such a strain restored
the repression of CT production (data not shown). These results
indicated that the inhibitory effect of VqmA on the virulence
regulon required functional HapR.
VqmA activates hapR transcription at low cell densities.
Our microarray experiment revealed that VqmA regulates hapR transcription. To further confirm the microarray data and to investigate how VqmA affects hapR transcription, we monitored the expression of a chromosomal hapR-lacZ transcriptional fusion in a vqmA deletion mutant, a wild-type vqmA strain, and a strain with multiple copies of constitutively expressed vqmA as a function of cell density. Figure 2A shows that hapR expression is higher at low cell densities (optical density at 600 nm [OD600], <0.6) in strains with a single copy of vqmA (wild type) and strains constitutively expressing vqmA than in vqmA deletion mutants. However, at high cell densities (OD600,
1.5), the expression of hapR is similar in all three strains tested.
To further confirm that VqmA regulates
hapR, we used a Western
blot assay to measure HapR production in strains with plasmids
with different forms of
vqmA. Equal amounts of total protein
were loaded onto sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis
gels. In the wild-type strain, HapR was detectable when mid-log
phase was reached, although little HapR was found in
vqmA mutants
at these cell densities (Fig.
2B). In contrast, when VqmA was
constitutively expressed, HapR was detected at lower cell densities
(OD
600,

0.2). At high cell densities, all strains produced similar
amounts of HapR protein. We interpret these data as indicating
that VqmA contributes to
hapR regulation primarily at low cell
densities.
VqmA increases HapR-activated gene expression.
In addition to repressing virulence gene expression, the quorum-sensing regulator HapR also activates the heterologous promoter of the V. harveyi luxCDABE operon (26). To study the relationship between VqmA and quorum-sensing regulation, we introduced the V. harveyi luciferase genes into strains with different vqmA constructs and used light production as an indicator of quorum-sensing-dependent gene expression. Cultures were diluted, and light production per cell was measured during subsequent growth. Figure 3A shows that the wild-type strain produced light in a cell density-dependent pattern. This U-shaped curve is due to the dilution of the culture and thus a drop in the extracellular autoinducer levels to below the threshold concentration required for stimulation of lux expression. As cell density increases, lux is induced over time due to the accumulation of new autoinducers (26). Constitutive VqmA expression in either vqmA mutants or wild-type strains caused earlier induction of Lux activity than that observed for the wild type with a control vector. On the other hand, Lux induction was delayed in the vqmA deletion strain containing only a vector plasmid. In addition, overproduction of VqmA in either luxO mutants (displaying constitutive lux expression) or hapR mutants (no light produced) did not affect light production (data not shown). These data indicate that the quorum-sensing system is activated at lower cell densities when VqmA is present. Furthermore, VqmA proteins do not affect autoinducer production, as evidenced by the fact that all four strains produced similar amounts of both CAI-1 and AI-2 under these conditions (data not shown).
Recent work from Bassler and colleagues reveals that when
V. cholerae is at a low cell density, phosphorylated LuxO (LuxO-P)
activates a set of small regulatory RNAs, which work together
with Hfq to destabilize
hapR mRNA (
21). At high cell densities,
LuxO is dephosphorylated and thus inactive. Constitutive mutations
in the
luxO allele, such as D47E (
8,
13) and L104Q (
32), "lock"
the LuxO protein into a state mimicking LuxO-P. These constitutive
LuxO mutants therefore inactivate the quorum-sensing system
by constitutively repressing
hapR expression. To investigate
the interaction between VqmA regulation of
hapR and the LuxO-small-RNA
(LuxO-sRNA) regulatory circuits described above, we introduced
pMal-c2x (vector control) or pZL3 (P
tac-vqmA) into the strain
containing a constitutive
luxO (L104Q) allele and measured Lux
expression. Figure
3B shows that Lux was not expressed in the
luxO(Con) mutant containing a vector control, as previously
reported (
32), but overexpression of VqmA induced light production
more than 100-fold greater than that with the vector control.
However, compared to that in wild-type strains, VqmA cannot
fully recover light production in
luxO constitutive mutants.
These data suggest that VqmA can partially overcome the LuxO-sRNA
inhibitory effect on
hapR transcription, possibly by activating
the production of more
hapR mRNA. No light was detected in the
hapR mutants, suggesting that VqmA itself cannot activate the
lux operon.
VqmA regulates hapR transcription directly.
Our data suggest that VqmA plays a role in quorum-sensing regulation by increasing hapR expression. To investigate further whether VqmA activates hapR transcription directly or through other regulators, we constructed a plasmid containing the hapR promoter fused with a lacZ transcriptional reporter in E. coli and assayed for ß-galactosidase activity. Compared to a vector control, VqmA increased hapR-lacZ expression (Fig. 4A). Deletion of the conserved helix-turn-helix DNA binding domain of VqmA completely abolished ß-galactosidase activity. VqmA activation of hapR transcription in E. coli suggests that VqmA acts directly on the hapR promoter or, alternatively, activates a regulator gene that is conserved between V. cholerae and E. coli.
We then purified the VqmA protein as MBP fusions and performed
a gel retardation assay to test whether VqmA binds directly
to the
hapR promoter DNA. The MBP-VqmA fusion protein retained
the same activity as the wild-type VqmA protein, as judged by
the capacity of induction of
hapR expression in
E. coli and
in
V. cholerae (data not shown). Two kinds of DNA fragments
were labeled. The shorter fragment comprised the region of the
hapR promoter from the predicted 35 sequences (
22) to
the translational start site, while the second fragment extended
an additional 200 bp upstream of the 35 region. Purified
MBP-VqmA retarded the mobility of the DNA fragment containing
the region upstream of 35 (Fig.
4B, lane 2) but not the
shorter fragment (lane 6). Addition of unlabeled target DNA
abolished the retardation (lane 3), indicating that the binding
of VqmA is specific and is located upstream of the 35
region. Purified MBP-VqmA lacking the helix-turn-helix DNA binding
domain did not shift the
hapR promoter DNA (lane 4), further
confirming that the DNA binding domain of VqmA is essential
for its activity.
The expression of vqmA is autoregulated.
Our data demonstrated that VqmA regulates quorum sensing in V. cholerae by activating hapR expression. We were thus interested in how vqmA itself is expressed. To study this, we constructed two vqmA-lacZ chromosomal transcriptional fusions. One construct retains the intact vqmA gene, and the other has a disrupted vqmA gene (see Materials and Methods for details). Figure 5 shows that in the vqmA+ background, the expression of vqmA increased with cell density and reached maximal activity in late log phase. In contrast, vqmA expression in the vqmA disruptant background does not increase during cell growth. These data imply that VqmA autoregulates its own promoter.
Strains carrying mutations in vqmA have no colonization defect.
We have shown that constitutive expression of the
vqmA genes
repressed virulence gene expression in an in vitro inducing
condition, while deletion of
vqmA did not affect virulence gene
expression. We examined whether VqmA affects
V. cholerae pathogenesis
by comparing the colonization capacities of the wild type and
vqmA mutants using an infant mouse model. As expected, strains
carrying a
vqmA deletion can colonize infant mice as well as
the wild-type strain (data not shown), indicating that
vqmA is not involved in colonization, at least in the infant mouse
model.

DISCUSSION
In this study, we have shown that the transcriptional regulator
VqmA modulates
V. cholerae quorum-sensing systems by directly
increasing the expression of the quorum-sensing master regulator
HapR. The gene encoding VqmA (VCA1078) is located on the small
chromosome and may be divergently transcribed with a gene encoding
pyridoxamine 5'-phosphate oxidase (VCA1079). Quorum sensing
in
V. cholerae has been shown to negatively regulate virulence
gene expression in vitro by repressing the expression of
aphA,
whose gene products are required for the activation of the entire
virulence regulon. Constitutive expression of VqmA induces quorum
sensing early in growth and leads to repression of virulence
genes. In the
vqmA deletion mutant, quorum sensing displays
a delay but is eventually fully induced. It is unclear what
role VqmA plays during
V. cholerae infection.
vqmA is not expressed
in
V. cholerae isolated from cholera patients' stool samples
(
2) but is highly expressed in the rabbit ileal loop model of
V. cholerae infection (
34). Thus, we speculate that
vqmA expression
differs under different environmental conditions and affects
quorum-sensing systems accordingly.
Although VqmA and other annotated LuxR family proteins may function independently of acyl homoserine lactone signals, used as quorum-sensing molecules in many other gram-negative bacteria, these proteins play regulatory roles in V. cholerae. In addition to VqmA, another protein in this group, VpsT (VCA0952), has been shown to serve as a positive transcriptional regulator of vps gene expression (4). Another noteworthy aspect of VqmA is that this protein has a conserved PAS domain (named after three proteins in which it occurs: Per, Arnt, and Sim), found widely among prokaryotes and eukaryotes (data not shown). PAS domains have been found to bind ligands and to act as sensors for light and oxygen in signal transduction (30). Although our in vitro MBP-VqmA DNA retardation assays indicated that the VqmA protein is able to bind its target promoter DNA, we cannot rule out the possibility that binding of additional ligands may enhance VqmA activity. We thus speculate that VqmA might be able to detect certain unknown environmental signals and modulate cell density-dependent cellular functions when needed.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We are grateful to John Mekalanos for providing insights and
guidance to this study. We thank Jeffrey Weiser and Deborah
Hung for helpful discussions and critical review of the manuscript.
We also thank Bonnie Bassler for providing the HapR antiserum.
This study was supported by an NIH/NIAID K22 award (AI060715) and a Penn Genomics Institute seed grant. Z.L. is supported by the Felsen Diarrhea Research Fund.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of Microbiology, University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, Philadelphia, PA 19104. Phone: (215) 573-4104. Fax: (215) 898-9557. E-mail:
junzhu{at}mail.med.upenn.edu.


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Journal of Bacteriology, April 2006, p. 2446-2453, Vol. 188, No. 7
0021-9193/06/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JB.188.7.2446-2453.2006
Copyright © 2006, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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