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Department of Microbiology and Immunology, University of Melbourne, Victoria 3010, and Murdoch Childrens Research Institute, Royal Children's Hospital, Parkville, Victoria 3052, Australia
Received 26 July 2006/ Accepted 19 October 2006
| ABSTRACT |
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| INTRODUCTION |
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LT is secreted by the type II protein secretion pathway, which is encoded by the gspCDEFGHIJKLM gene cluster on the chromosome of ETEC strain H10407 (30). This ETEC gene cluster exhibits a high degree of homology with the gene cluster epsCDEFGHIJKLM of Vibrio cholerae, which codes for various structural components of the type II secretion pathway responsible for secretion of cholera toxin (26). E. coli K-12 strains do not produce LT and cannot secrete endogenous proteins. Sequence analysis of E. coli K-12 strains MG1655 and W3110 has shown that the genetic region at min 67, which corresponds to the region containing the ETEC gspCDEFGHIJKLM cluster, carries a large deletion which encompasses eight open reading frames (gspDEFGHIJK) (30). The DNA sequences of the remnants of the type II secretion pathway and the flanking regions in E. coli K-12 are almost identical to those in ETEC (30). In addition, E. coli K-12 carries a cryptic general secretory pathway at min 74.5 (9), but expression of this group of genes is permanently silenced by H-NS (7).
The ETEC gspCDEFGHIJKLM cluster is located downstream of the glc operon encoding proteins involved in the utilization and transport of glycolate (19). Three open reading frames, yghJ, pppA, and yghG, are positioned between the two gene clusters (Fig. 1A). While the function of the proteins encoded by yghJ and yghG is unknown, the pppA gene codes for a protease (prepilin peptidase). The PppA protein from E. coli K-12 is able to process the precursors of the Neisseria gonorrhoeae type IV pilin PilE and the Klebsiella oxytoca type IV pseudopilin PulG (8). The yghJ-pppA-yghG-gspCDEFGHIJKLM gene cluster is present in other pathogenic E. coli strains, including enteropathogenic E. coli (EPEC), enteroinvasive E. coli, enteroaggregative E. coli, and uropathogenic E. coli strains, but the contribution of the type II secretion pathway to the virulence of these strains, if any, is not known.
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| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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[
80d lacZ
M15
(lacZYA-argF)U169 deoR recA1 endA1 hsdR17 supE44 thi-1 gyrA96 relA1] (Zymo Research Corp., Glasgow, Scotland) was used for cloning. E. coli MC4100 [
(argF-lac)U169 rpsL150 relA araD139 flb5301 deoC1 ptsF25] (1), E. coli PD145 (MC4100 hns-205::Tn10) (3), and E. coli BSN29 (MC4100 trp::Tn10
hns stpA60::Kmr) (14) were used as hosts to analyze the expression of various lacZ fusions. The prototypical ETEC strain H10407 (5) was used as a source of DNA for PCR amplification of yghJ, pppA, yghG, gspC, and gspD fragments. Plasmid pMU2385 (32) was used to construct various lacZ fusions. Oligonucleotides used in this study are listed in Table 1. Trimethoprim was used at a final concentration of 40 µg/ml in Luria broth. Restriction enzymes and chemicals were purchased commercially. Purified RNA polymerase holoenzyme was purchased from USB Corp. The purified H-NS and StpA proteins used in the in vitro experiments were provided by A. Ishihama (Nippon Institute for Biological Science, Tokyo, Japan).
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Reverse transcription-PCR (RT-PCR). RNA was isolated from ETEC strain H10407 grown in Luria broth at 37°C by use of an RNeasy purification kit (QIAGEN GmbH, Hilden, Germany). RNA samples (10 µg) were treated with 8 U of DNase I (New England Biolabs, Ipswich, MA) for 2 h at 37°C in the presence of RNasin (Promega) to remove contaminating DNA. cDNA was synthesized as follows. Total RNA (1 µg) was mixed with specific primer Y178 or Y195. The samples were denatured at 65°C for 5 min and then chilled on ice. Following the addition of deoxynucleoside triphosphates, dithiothreitol, RNasin, and Superscript III reverse transcriptase (Invitrogen), reactions were carried out at 54°C for 2 h. PCRs were performed using the cDNA samples as templates in the presence of the specific primer pairs shown in Fig. 1A and Table 1. Control experiments were done using the total RNA as the template.
Construction of lacZ transcriptional fusions. The various lacZ transcriptional fusions were constructed by PCR amplification of desirable DNA fragments using ETEC (H10407) chromosomal DNA as the template and the primers described in Table 1. Each of the PCR fragments, which were flanked by a BamHI site and a HindIII site, was cloned into TOPO TA cloning vector and sequenced. The fragments were then excised from the TOPO derivatives and cloned into the BamHI and HindIII sites of the single-copy plasmid pMU2385 to create lacZ transcriptional fusions.
ß-Galactosidase assay. ß-Galactosidase activity was assayed as described by Miller (16). Specific activity was expressed in units described therein. The data are the results of at least three independent assays.
In vitro transcription.
Runoff transcription assays were performed by using a method based on the standard single-round conditions described by Igarashi and Ishihama (13). The reaction mixtures contained a linear DNA template (approximately 300 ng) and 1 U of RNA polymerase. The samples were incubated at 37°C for 25 min in a total volume of 35 µl of in vitro transcription buffer (50 mM Tris-HCl [pH 7.8], 50 mM NaCl, 3 mM magnesium acetate, 0.1 mM EDTA, 0.1 mM dithiothreitol, and 25 µg/ml bovine serum albumin). Following the incubation, 15 µl of start solution (containing 1x transcription buffer with 0.67 mg/ml heparin, 0.53 mM each of ATP, CTP, and GTP, 0.053 mM UTP, and 3 µCi of [
-32P]UTP) was added to initiate RNA synthesis. Transcription was allowed to proceed for 5 min before the reaction was terminated by phenol extraction. A portion of each sample (15 µl) was mixed with sequencing dye mix and analyzed on a 6% sequencing gel.
EMSA.
The 32P-labeled yghJ fragment used in an electrophoretic mobility shift assay (EMSA) was generated as follows. The oligonucleotide primer Y182 (Table 1) was labeled with 32P at its 5' end by using [
-32P]ATP and T4 polynucleotide kinase. The yghJ fragment (308 to +282) was amplified by PCR using the 32P-labeled primer 32P-Y182, unlabeled primer Y187 (Table 1), and TOPO-yghJ (1 to 622). The EMSA was carried out as described by Dole et al. (4). Following the incubation of the end-labeled yghJ fragment with various amounts of purified H-NS or StpA protein at 22°C for 20 min, the samples were analyzed by electrophoresis on 5% native polyacrylamide gels (37.5:1). The electrophoresis was carried out at 4°C for approximately 12 h at 10 V/cm.
KMnO4 footprinting. A portion (0.5 µg) of the linear yghJ fragment (308 to +282) was incubated in 20 µl of in vitro transcription buffer in the presence or absence of H-NS and StpA protein at 22°C for 10 min. RNA polymerase (1 U) was then added to reaction mixtures. Following a further incubation at 30°C for 30 min to allow open complex formation, the samples were treated with 2.5 µl of KMnO4 (80 mM) for 3 min at room temperature. The reaction was then quenched with 2 µl of ß-mercaptoethanol (14.7 M). Following purification of the samples on a MicroSpin column S-200 (GE Healthcare, Buckinghamshire, England), the DNA was cleaved with piperidine at 90°C for 20 min. Primer extension reactions were carried out in a thermal cycler for 25 cycles, using PCR Mastermix (Promega) and 32P-labeled primer (Y184). The extension products were analyzed on a 6% denaturing polyacrylamide gel next to a GA ladder. The latter was made by a Maxam and Gilbert sequencing method using the yghJ fragment, which was generated by PCR using primers 32P-Y184 and Y187.
Nucleotide sequence accession number. The novel sequence reported here has been assigned GenBank accession number 826429.
| RESULTS |
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Transcription of the yghJ promoter is repressed by H-NS and StpA proteins in response to a temperature downshift. In ETEC, expression of the eltAB operon, which codes for the A and B subunits of LT, is repressed by the regulatory protein H-NS when cells are grown at low temperature, e.g., 22°C (31, 33). To determine if transcription of the yghJ promoter, which is responsible for the expression of the LT-specific type II secretion pathway, is also regulated by H-NS and its paralog, StpA, the pMU2385 derivative which carried the yghJ-lacZ transcriptional fusion was transformed into isogenic E. coli K-12 strains MC4100 (wild type), PD145 (hns), and BSN29 (hns stpA). ß-Galactosidase levels were assessed for each of the transformants grown in Luria broth at 37°C or 22°C.
The results showed that at 37°C the yghJ-lacZ fusion expressed 135 units of ß-galactosidase activity in the wild-type host, MC4100 (Table 3). Although the level of expression from the yghJ promoter was unchanged (127 units) in the hns background (PD145), there was a twofold increase in yghJ transcription (269 units) in the hns stpA background (BSN29) (Table 3).
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The results of this analysis show that transcriptional expression of the yghJ promoter is strongly repressed at 22°C and that the regulatory proteins H-NS and StpA play a key role in the temperature-dependent repression of yghJ. In addition, these results indicate that the 622-bp yghJ fragment which was used for constructing the yghJ-lacZ fusion contains a cis-acting element(s) involved in the repression of yghJ by H-NS and StpA.
Deletion analysis of the yghJ regulatory region. In order to characterize the regulatory region of the yghJ gene, four PCR fragments which contained various deletions were generated (Fig. 2A). Each of the mutant DNA fragments was transcriptionally fused with the lacZ structural gene, and the effects of the deletions on yghJ transcription and regulation were examined by ß-galactosidase analysis.
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Deletion of 426 bp from the 5' end (mutant 427-622) brought about a severe defect in promoter activity. Moreover, the low levels of transcription from this mutant fragment were no longer significantly repressed by H-NS and StpA at 22°C.
Mutant 171-410, which lacks 170 and 212 bp from the 5' and 3' ends, exhibited a sharp increase in transcription at 37°C. The levels of expression by this mutant were increased to 489 and 436 units in the wild-type and hns stpA strains, respectively (Fig. 2A). At 22°C, transcription of this mutant construct was derepressed in the wild-type strain to the same levels as in the hns stpA background.
These results indicate the presence of a major promoter between positions 171 and 410. The finding that deletions from either the 5' end or the 3' end of the yghJ promoter region caused significant derepression at 22°C in the wild-type host suggested that the entire yghJ regulatory region is required for efficient repression by the H-NS and StpA proteins.
Mapping the start site of transcription by in vitro transcription.
A single-round in vitro transcription experiment was performed to map the start site of yghJ transcription. In this assay, two linear yghJ fragments encompassing positions 171 and 603 and 171 and 452, respectively, were used as DNA templates (Fig. 2B and C). In the presence of E. coli
70 RNA polymerase, each template synthesized a single transcript, indicating the presence of only one promoter in the DNA fragments used (Fig. 2C). Transcription from templates 171-452 and 171-603 produced 132-base and 283-base transcripts, respectively. The size difference of the two transcripts matched the difference in length of the two DNA templates at the 3' ends. Based on these data, the start site of transcription for yghJ was mapped to the adenine residue at position 321 that is 229 bp upstream of the putative start codon for the YghJ protein (Fig. 2B). Inspection of the sequence immediately upstream of the start site of transcription (here designated position +1) revealed the presence of putative 10 (TAAAAC) and 35 (TTGCTT) hexamers (separated by 16 bp) for a
70 promoter (Fig. 2B).
Binding of H-NS and StpA to the yghJ promoter region.
Both the H-NS and StpA proteins are known to have a strong preference for binding to curved DNA structures. To examine if there was any intrinsic DNA curvature in the yghJ promoter region, we analyzed the yghJ upstream sequence by using the program BEND-IT (http://hydra.icgeb.trieste.it/
kristian/dna/bend_it.html). The yghJ promoter region is predicted to be highly curved (Fig. 3A).
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In the presence of StpA, three protein-DNA complexes (I, II, and III in Fig. 3B) were formed. At the lowest StpA concentration (15.6 nM), only a very small proportion of the DNA fragment was shifted to form complexes I and II. As the amounts of StpA increased, more DNA was shifted and the slower-migrating complexes (II and III) became predominant. Only a single retarded band (I) was seen in the presence of H-NS (Fig. 3C). Increased amounts of the complex were formed as the concentration of H-NS was raised from 31.3 to 250 nM. Judging by the concentrations of the StpA and H-NS proteins at which the same amounts of DNA were shifted, it appeared that the DNA-binding affinity of StpA was about four times higher than that of H-NS.
H-NS and StpA inhibit open complex formation at the yghJ promoter. To study the molecular details of the H-NS- and StpA-mediated regulation of the yghJ promoter, we performed a KMnO4 footprinting experiment. The linear yghJ fragment (308 to +282) was incubated with either the H-NS or the StpA protein (500 nM) at 22°C for 15 min. This was followed by the addition of E. coli RNA polymerase into the reaction. The samples were incubated for a further 25 min at 30°C to allow the formation of open complexes. After the treatment with KMnO4, primer extension was carried out to measure the presence of open complexes. In the presence of RNA polymerase, the primer extension products representing cleavages at positions 7, 8, 9, and 10 of the template strand were observed (Fig. 4). The presence of either H-NS or StpA was able to block the formation of the transcribing bubble.
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| DISCUSSION |
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70 promoter identified at the start of the transcriptional unit playing a major role in the expression of this pathway. Expression of this operon was tightly controlled by the global regulatory proteins H-NS and StpA in response to low temperature. The temperature-dependent repression was achieved by a specific interaction between the regulatory proteins and their DNA target in the regulatory region of the yghJ promoter. The first open reading frame (yghJ) in the greater gsp cluster encodes a putative lipoprotein of 1,520 amino acid residues. YghJ shares extensive homology (64%) with an accessory colonization factor, AcfD, of V. cholerae, which is associated with bacterial virulence (21). A proteomic analysis has indicated that the YghJ protein is required for normal functionality of the type II secretion pathway in E. coli (D. Baldi et al., unpublished data). Downstream of yghJ is the pppA gene coding for the prepilin peptidase. Homologues of the PppA protein from the bacterial pathogens Pseudomonas aeruginosa and V. cholerae are required for processing of the type IV prepilin subunits and modification of the prepilin-like components of the type II secretion pathway, including GspG, GspH, GspI, GspJ, and GspK (25). Given the functional relationship of YghJ and PppA to the type II secretion pathway, it is not surprising that the yghJ and pppA genes and the gsp genes have evolved to form a single operon and that their transcription is coordinately regulated. Studies of pppA expression in E. coli K-12 have suggested that a promoter upstream of yghJ drives at least part of pppA transcription and that genes of the cluster yghJ-pppA-yghG-gspCLM are cotranscribed (8).
The identification of weak promoter activity in the upstream region of the ETEC pppA gene is consistent with findings made with the pppA gene of E. coli K-12 (8). However, the weak activity of this promoter suggests that it plays only a relatively minor role in the expression of pppA and the type II secretion pathway in ETEC. Peptidase activity encoded by the pppA gene of E. coli K-12 was detectable in strains grown only at or above 37°C but not at 30°C. Analysis using a translational pppA-lacZ fusion demonstrated fourfold thermoregulation at the level of translation (8). The identification of a much stronger upstream promoter (the yghJ promoter) whose expression is temperature dependent suggests that the thermoinduction of pppA expression occurs not only at the level of translation but also at the level of transcription in both E. coli K-12 and ETEC.
The E. coli K-12 counterpart of the ETEC gspC gene has been designated ecfA, following the identification of a putative
E promoter near the start of the open reading frame (2). The 35 and 10 regions of the proposed
E promoter of ecfA contain the sequences AAAATT and GCTGA, respectively, and are separated by a 17-bp spacer (2). However, this putative E. coli K-12
E promoter was not among the members of the
E regulon identified in a separate genetic study (22). Recently, Rhodius et al. (23) reported the composition of the
E regulons in E. coli K-12, as well as those in other gram-negative bacteria, but were unable to confirm the function of the putative ecfA promoter in E. coli K-12. The corresponding region of the ETEC gspC gene contains the same sequence as the proposed ecfA promoter of E. coli K-12, except for a C-to-T change at the second position of the spacer. Using a gspC-lacZ transcriptional fusion, we were unable to detect any basal level of transcription from the gspC upstream region at 37°C (Table 2) or 42°C (results not shown). This suggests that either the putative
E promoter is also not functional in ETEC or its expression requires stimulation by a transcriptional regulator(s). Nevertheless, even if this putative promoter is active under certain conditions in ETEC, it will contribute to the expression of genes only downstream of gspC as the proposed start site of transcription is positioned downstream of the putative start codon for GspC.
Expression of the yghJ promoter was strongly repressed at 22°C in the wild-type E. coli K-12 strain MC4100, but temperature-mediated repression was significantly relieved in an hns-deficient host and was further alleviated in an hns stpA mutant strain (Table 3). Similarly, deleting cis-acting elements located upstream and downstream of the yghJ core promoter also caused derepression (Fig. 2A). At 37°C, however, only two- to threefold repression of yghJ transcription by H-NS and StpA was observed (Fig. 2A). In an hns stpA host, levels of expression from the full-length yghJ fragment, as well as from the three truncated yghJ fragments, were three to four times lower at 22°C than at 37°C. It is possible that E. coli RNA polymerase functions at a suboptimal capacity at this promoter at low temperatures. Alternatively, an additional regulatory protein(s), which binds closer to the promoter core sequence, may also be involved in the temperature-mediated repression, as in the case of Salmonella enterica, where the Hha protein represses transcription of the hilA gene in concert with H-NS by binding to similar target DNA sequences under low osmolarity (6, 20).
The StpA protein is susceptible to proteolysis by Lon protease (15) and is present at 1/10 the level of H-NS in the E. coli cell (28). However, the binding affinity of StpA for the proU downstream regulatory element as well as for the yghJ promoter region is four times higher than that of H-NS (reference 28 and this study). H-NS can form heteromeric complexes with StpA, which enhances the stability of StpA (15). The mutant hns allele hns-205 codes for a C-terminally truncated H-NS molecule lacking the DNA binding domain (12). Free et al. (10, 11) have shown that StpA can function as a molecular adaptor for this truncated H-NS protein in the repression of the bgl operon. Based on this model, the partial repression of the yghJ promoter observed to occur in strain PD145 (hns-205) (Table 3) may be due to the presence of H-NS(truncated)-StpA hetero-oligomers.
The yghJ promoter region is AT rich (G+C content of 34%). A recent study has shown that H-NS specifically targets AT-rich sequences, resulting in the silencing of virulence genes in Salmonella enterica (18). Our findings indicate that H-NS also binds to the AT-rich and curved sequences within and around the yghJ promoter, leading to the inhibition of open complex formation during transcription initiation. This is in contrast to the situation with the eltAB operon where H-NS binds to silencer sites located within the first structural gene, blocking chain elongation by RNA polymerase (33). The bgl operon contains two separate silencer sites, one upstream of the promoter and the other 600 to 700 bp downstream (27). The binding of H-NS to these two sites inhibits transcription initiation and elongation, resulting in the complete silencing of bgl expression (4). Obviously, by binding to different positions and by interacting with other regulatory proteins, H-NS can generate a wide range of regulatory outcomes that reflect the physiological or pathogenic context of the proteins that it controls.
The type II secretion pathway which is required for the secretion of LT is an important virulence determinant of ETEC (30). However, the yghJ-pppA-yghG-gspCDEFGHIJKLM operon is also present and highly conserved in the genomes of many other pathogenic E. coli strains. A recent study in our laboratory has shown that the type II secretion pathway is expressed by EPEC strain E2348/69 at 37°C and is fully functional in EPEC and required for virulence (D. Baldi et al., unpublished data). As EPEC and other pathogenic E. coli strains do not synthesize LT, elucidation of the role of this operon in these strains would enhance our general understanding of E. coli pathogenicity.
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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This work was supported by program grant no. 284214 and project grant no. 400029 from the Australian National Health and Medical Council. D.L.B. is supported by Peter Doherty fellowship no. 251760 from the Australian National Health and Medical Council.
| FOOTNOTES |
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Published ahead of print on 3 November 2006. ![]()
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