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Journal of Bacteriology, December 2007, p. 9037-9043, Vol. 189, No. 24
0021-9193/07/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JB.01152-07
Copyright © 2007, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.

Departamento de Biología Molecular, Universidad de Cantabria, and Instituto de Biomedicina y Biotecnología de Cantabria, Universidad de Cantabria-CSIC-IDICAN, Santander, Spain
Received 20 July 2007/ Accepted 24 September 2007
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In the conjugative plasmid R388, the relaxosome is formed by the oriT plus three proteins: the accessory proteins TrwA and integration host factor (IHF) and the relaxase TrwC (27). The conjugation accessory protein TrwA is a 53-kDa tetrameric DNA binding protein. It has been assigned to the ribbon-helix-helix family of proteins (25), which are associated with transcriptional repression processes (1). TrwA binds specifically to two sites at oriT, sbaA and sbaB, lying on direct repeats 1 and 2 and on inverted repeat 4 (IR4), respectively (26) (Fig. 1). TrwA binding to oriT leads to an increase in TrwC nicking activity as well as the transcriptional repression of the trwABC operon. Deletion of trwA shows a 105-fold reduction in assays of mobilization of an oriT-containing plasmid (26).
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FIG. 1. Schematic representation of R388 oriT. Coordinates are given as in reference 19. Arrows indicate the presence of iterons, direct repeats (DRs) and IRs. The nic site is shown as a vertical arrowhead. TrwA and IHF binding sites are underlined with dashed and dotted lines, respectively. The TrwC binding site is underlined with a double line.
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The relaxase TrwC is a bifunctional enzyme, comprising an N-terminal relaxase domain (N293), which displays supercoiled DNA nicking, single-stranded DNA cleavage, and DNA strand-transferase abilities, and a C-terminal domain, where DNA helicase and ATPase activities are localized (23). In addition, a third domain involving the N-terminal 600 residues has been associated with the ability of TrwC to mediate efficient oriT-oriT recombination on double-stranded DNA (dsDNA) substrates (4). Furthermore, TrwC is the only relaxase described to promote site-specific integration of a conjugatively transferred plasmid DNA into a dsDNA oriT copy present in the recipient cell (9).
The oriT-specific recombination activity has been previously characterized (4). In addition to the catalytic activity of TrwC, TrwA was described to be necessary for efficient recombination. Two distinct recombination loci, i.e., minimal oriT sites needed for efficient recombination, were described, oriT1 and oriT2. The two recombination loci showed different DNA requirements. Intriguingly, both could be deleted of TrwA binding sites without affecting the reaction efficiency. These substrates without the sba sites behave as better substrates for TrwC-mediated recombination than full-length oriTs in the absence of TrwA. Deletion of the sba sites also removes the IHF binding sites, ihfA and ihfB. Based on the previously described inhibition of TrwC nicking activity by IHF (27) and the positive effect of deletion of the IHF binding sites on recombination, it has been proposed that IHF binding to oriT inhibits TrwC-mediated recombination (4).
The ability to promote site-specific recombination between two cognate oriTs in the absence of conjugation is rare in relaxases, although it is not unique. As for TrwC (4, 9, 20), a similar oriT-oriT recombination ability has been described for three additional relaxases, NikB of the IncI1 plasmid R64 (14) and the relaxases of Enterococcus faecalis plasmids pAD1 (12) and pAM
1 (11). In the case of the oriT recombination catalyzed by NikB, the reaction on dsDNA substrates was strictly dependent on the presence of protein NikA, which is homologous to TrwA (14). Conversely, on single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) substrates NikB was sufficient to promote recombination, although NikA does accelerate the reaction. A hypothetical role for NikA in the generation of ssDNA for efficient recombination was proposed by those authors (14). Similarly, in TrwC-mediated recombination, we have observed a dependence on situations such as replication or transcription that favors ssDNA exposure at recombination locus oriT1 (4).
In this work we characterize the roles of host factors in TrwC-mediated recombination on dsDNA substrates. We describe a regulatory module, in which TrwA and IHF proteins act as enhancer and inhibitor of the reaction, respectively. Additionally, we show how the formation of an active transcription elongation complex at oriT1 is inhibitory for site-specific recombination. We obtained elevated recombination efficiencies on substrates containing short oriT copies in the absence of TrwA in an IHF– background. The conjugation frequency was also enhanced under these conditions. Overall, the data presented suggest that TrwA counteracts the effect of host factors that maintain the relaxosome in a "closed" topological conformation for TrwC nicking at oriT, which is presumably a limiting step for the initiation of both conjugation and recombination processes.
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(16) was used as a host for the recombination assays on a wild-type IHF (IHF+) background. For the IHF– background, we constructed strain CIG1 (see below). Bacterial plasmids used in this work are listed in Table 1. Luria-Bertani broth was used for bacterial growth and was supplemented with agar for solid culture. Selective media included antibiotics at the following concentrations: ampicillin (Ap), 100 µg/ml; chloramphenicol (Cm), 25 µg/ml; kanamycin (Km), 50 µg/ml; nalidixic acid (Nx), 20 µg/ml; streptomycin (Sm), 300 µg/ml; spectinomycin (Sp), 100 µg/ml; and trimetroprim (Tp), 20 µg/ml. X-Gal (5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indolyl-β-D-galactopyranoside) was supplied at a concentration of 60 µg/ml. |
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TABLE 1. Plasmids used in this work
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strain by the method of Datsenko and Wanner (5). Oligonucleotides Sp_hip_5 and Sp_hip_3 (Table 2) were used to amplify an Sp resistance cassette from a mini-Tn5 Sm/Sp cassette DNA template (8) containing at the ends 40 bp homologous to the 5' and 3' regions of the target gene sequence. One hundred nanograms of the PCR product was transformed into arabinose-induced DH5
cells harboring a plasmid, pKD20, coding for an L-arabinose-inducible
Red recombinase. Transformed cells were grown at 30°C and plated on LB agar plus Sp. Colonies were tested for positive inactivation of hip by PCR analysis with oligonucleotides Hip5 and Hip3 (Table 2). |
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TABLE 2. Oligonucleotides used in this work
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Recombination assays.
All substrate plasmids to test recombination are derivatives of plasmid pCIG1028 (4), which carries two directly repeated copies of R388 oriT separated by a Kmr gene and a lacIq gene. Intramolecular recombination was tested as described previously (4). Briefly, a lacZ
M15 strain harboring the substrate plasmid (pCIG1028 or its derivatives) and a helper plasmid coding for TrwC (plus TrwA when indicated) was grown as described previously (4) and plated on selective media with X-Gal. Recombination between the two oriT copies of the substrate plasmid induces expression of the downstream lacZ
gene. Recombination frequency is estimated by the number and aspect of blue colonies. The strict correlation between recombination and the appearance of blue color was previously confirmed by DNA restriction analysis (4).
Rif treatment.
E. coli strains CIG1and DH5
harboring plasmid pSU1621 (coding for TrwC) and pCIG1028, a substrate plasmid with full-length oriTs, were grown at 37°C overnight to saturation on a selective LB broth containing Km and Ap. Since the Km resistance cassette is encoded within the recombination-excised DNA, selection with Km keeps the recombined plasmids below detection levels. After the overnight incubation, 100 µl of a 10–6 culture dilution was plated on LB agar plus Ap, Cm, X-Gal, and different sub-MIC levels of rifampin (Rif) (0, 0.5, 1, and 2 µg/ml). Recombination frequency is measured as a simple percentage of recombinant (blue) with respect to nonrecombinant (white) colonies. All colonies showing blue sectors are counted as positive recombinants.
Conjugation assays.
Standard mating assays were performed as described previously (15). Strains DH5
and CIG1 (IHF+ and IHF–, respectively) were used as donor and/or recipient strains. Recipient cells contained plasmid pET29c in order to confer Km resistance for positive selection of transconjugants. Plasmid pSU1376, coding for a 330-bp R388 oriT, was mobilized with plasmid pCIG1077 (containing all of the transfer region of R388 except oriT) or pSU1529 (containing all of the transfer region of R388 except oriT and trwA).
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derivative by introducing a Sp resistance cassette disrupting the hip gene in a DH5
strain. We transformed substrates lacking sba and ihf sites [oriT(1-200)] at position oriT1 and/or oriT2 (Fig. 2a) into isogenic IHF+ and IHF– strains and tested them for their ability to host TrwC recombination in both the presence and absence of TrwA in the helper plasmid. In addition, we tested substrates harboring deletions involving only ihfB and sbaA [oriT(1-270)]. In the presence of TrwA, all substrates behaved very efficiently in IHF– and IHF+ backgrounds, giving rise to a 100% recombination frequency (data not shown) as measured by the color phenotype. However, a negative effect of IHF on recombination is evident in the absence of TrwA (Fig. 2b, compare top and bottom panels). While plasmid pCIG1028, harboring the full-length oriTs, was not affected by the IHF background (Fig. 2b, panel 1, top and bottom), substrate plasmids with oriT1(1-270) were far better substrates for recombination in IHF– strains (panels 6 and 7). To a lesser extent, this enhanced recombination phenotype was also observed when oriT2 harbored the deletion of ihfB and sbaA [oriT2(1-270)] (panel 5). A very mild effect (if any) was observed in substrate plasmids containing oriT1(1-200) (panels 3 and 4), and virtually no effect was observed with oriT2(1-200) (panel 2). Since in substrate plasmid pCIG1028 oriT1 is 402 bp long and oriT2 is 330 long, we constructed plasmid pCIG1108, with oriT1(1-330), and confirmed that it did not behave significantly differently from pCIG1028 (data not shown). Thus, binding of IHF to the region from bp 200 to 270 of oriT inhibits recombination.
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FIG. 2. (a) Schematic view of a substrate construction. oriT1 is the first oriT encountered by the replication fork, represented by a gray triangle. nic sites are pictured as black triangles, lying on the DNA strand to be nicked by the relaxase. sba and ihf sites are indicated with black and gray rectangles, respectively. Numbers represent oriT coordinates. The expected product of recombination is depicted to the right. Deletion of the intervening DNA segment between the two nic sites eliminates a lacIq repressor gene and places the lacZ gene close to the lactose promoter. As a result, the lacZ gene is expressed from the recombined substrates. (b) Recombination on substrates harboring different oriT deletions involving sba and ihf sites. The reactions are all in the absence of TrwA and in strains DH5 (top row) or CIG1 (bottom row), which provide the IHF+ or IHF– background, respectively. The extent of DNA present at each oriT copy is indicated below each column, together with the corresponding genotype. + and – symbols represent the estimated relative recombination. (c) Recombination on a substrate containing oriT1 harboring a mutation in the –10 box, under the same conditions as for panel b.
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IHF effect in conjugation. An in vivo role of IHF in R388 conjugation was previously discarded, since no effect on conjugation frequencies was observed by using IHF– strains as either donors or recipients (19). These experiments were performed in all cases in the presence of TrwA. We have suggested a role of IHF as a repressor of TrwC nicking activity in recombination, while TrwA lifts IHF inhibition. This would imply that if a similar regulatory mechanism was imposed on relaxosome processing during R388 conjugative transfer, it would not be detected in the presence of TrwA. We set up mating assays in the presence or absence of TrwA in different IHF backgrounds in donor and/or recipient cells. Transfer frequencies in the absence of TrwA were about 104-fold lower than those obtained in the presence of TrwA, regardless of the IHF background, as previously reported. Interestingly, in the absence of TrwA, transfer frequencies from IHF– donors were higher. In spite of the variability between different experiments, this increase was observed in every experiment. Table 3 shows the ratio of frequencies obtained between IHF– and IHF+ donor strains: in the absence of TrwA, the ratios indicate an average increase of 5- to 10-fold with IHF– cells as donors. In the presence of TrwA, there was no significant difference when donor cells were either IHF+ or IHF–.
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TABLE 3. Ratios of conjugation frequencies using IHF– and IHF+ donor strains
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The proposed promoter for the trwABC operon is situated at bp 273 and 296 of oriT (–35 and –10 boxes, respectively). To test a possible effect of transcription from this promoter on the recombination reaction, we introduced a mutation converting this putative –10 box (TAGGAT) to an XhoI restriction site (CTCGAG) in oriT1, which would impede RNA polymerase binding. We tested this plasmid (pCIG1106) as a substrate for recombination. Figure 2c shows how recombination is strongly enhanced in IHF– backgrounds in the absence of TrwA. No enhancing effect was obtained by mutating the promoter in the presence of IHF.
The observed inhibitory effect of the mutation in the –10 box sequence could be caused by RNA polymerase binding to oriT or by the formation of an active RNA elongation complex. The antibiotic Rif blocks the elongation of the RNA transcript at the 5' end without affecting its binding to the promoter (2). Thus, the effect of Rif could allow us to distinguish between the two possibilities. We tested the effect on recombination of subinhibitory concentrations of Rif on substrates containing full-length oriTs in the absence of TrwA. Cultures were grown to saturation in liquid media selective for the substrate (Km) and the helper plasmid (Ap). Selecting the substrate plasmid with Km rather than with Cm would force the selection of cells harboring unrecombined substrates. After the overnight incubation, the cells were plated on increasing subinhibitory concentrations of Rif plus X-Gal, and blue colonies were counted. While no fully blue colonies were obtained, very significantly, cell cultures plated on Rif-containing media started to show incipient blue colonies, characterized by the presence of blue sectors and dots. These were counted as recombinants, to give us a measure of the frequency of recombination. Figure 3 shows the effect of increasing levels of Rif (0, 0.5, 1, and 2 µg/ml) on TrwC-mediated recombination in both IHF+ and IHF– backgrounds. In the absence of IHF, increasing concentrations of Rif lead to an increasing number of these partially blue colonies. A Rif concentration of 0.5 µg/ml was sufficient to increase the frequency of recombinants from 3 to 22%. When 1 µg/ml of Rif was supplied to the medium, 45% of colonies were monitored as recombinants, and when the concentration reached 2 µg/ml, 97% recombination was obtained. No significant difference was observed when Rif was added in the absence of TrwC or with an IHF+ strain (Fig. 3).
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FIG. 3. Effect of sub-MIC levels of Rif in TrwC-mediated recombination. CIG1 or DH5 strains harboring a full-length oriT substrate and a helper plasmid coding for TrwC, or TrwA only as a control, were plated in LB agar plus 0, 0,5, 1, or 2 µg/ml Rif and X-Gal. The frequency of recombination [f(rec)%] was calculated as described in Materials and Methods. Values are means from two to five independent experiments ± standard deviations.
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In the absence of TrwA, the enhanced recombination of substrates lacking the region from bp 200 to 330 of oriT suggested the presence of some inhibitory factor within this oriT region (4). The region comprises TrwA and IHF binding sites (Fig. 1), and IHF is known to inhibit TrwC cleavage in the relaxosome (27). In fact, in the absence of TrwA, we observe an inhibitory role of IHF in recombination. When recombination is tested in an IHF– background, recombination is strongly enhanced in substrates harboring oriT1(1-270) (Fig. 2b, panels 6 and 7), which still conserves an IHF binding site. This suggests that the inhibitory role of IHF is exerted prominently by binding to this recombination locus and thus probably acting in the initiation of the reaction. Substrates lacking both ihfA and ihfB sites [oriT(1-200) show little difference according to the IHF background, which would support the idea that the inhibitory effect exerted by IHF occurs mainly through binding to its putative binding sites within the oriT. The fact that the role of IHF is not observed in the presence of TrwA suggests a role of TrwA opposed to that of IHF, in a way similar to that by which nic cleavage of supercoiled DNA by TrwC is enhanced by TrwA and inhibited by IHF (27).
However, the model based on opposite effects of TrwA and IHF to control initiation of recombination did not explain all the results obtained. Remarkably, we observed no increase in the recombination proficiency of substrates containing full-length oriTs in IHF– backgrounds in the absence of TrwA (Fig. 2b, panel 1), while a release of IHF inhibition was observed on oriT(1-270). The oriT region from bp 300 to 330 contains the putative promoter sequence for the trwABC operon, for which TrwA is a transcriptional repressor (26). Hence, we tested whether RNA polymerase binding and the formation of an active transcription complex could affect the efficiency of recombination. For this purpose, we replaced the –10 box at oriT1, so that the RNA polymerase would not recognize and bind the promoter. This substrate behaves similarly to the substrate containing an oriT1(1-270) in IHF– strains; i.e., the mutation of the –10 box abolishes the inhibitory effect of the region from bp 270 to 330 (Fig. 2c). We also treated the cells with sub-MIC levels of Rif, which is known to alter transcription elongation but not RNA polymerase binding (2), and we observed a marked increase in recombination on substrates containing the full-length oriTs in the absence of TrwA and IHF (Fig. 3). Thus, it is the presence of an active transcription elongation complex that inhibits recombination, which could be explained by the effect on local supercoiling, since DNA superhelicity generated by transcription diffuses from its site of origin (32). It is well known that the level of supercoiling and DNA topology are involved in the assembly of nucleoprotein complexes engaged in DNA-processing reactions, in particular those implicated in site-specific recombination (28, 30). DNA transposition has also been reported to be repressed by transcription across its target sites (3, 7).
Figure 4 outlines a model by which site-specific recombination is tightly modulated by the concerted action of at least three different factors. Binding of host proteins IHF and RNA polymerase at oriT1 would impose a topological constraint, by IHF-mediated DNA bending and transcription-coupled DNA supercoiling. This constraint would maintain the relaxosome in a "closed" conformation, preventing ssDNA exposure and hence nicking by TrwC. In turn, TrwA would act as a positive regulator. Binding to the sba sites would lead to the ejection of RNA polymerase from oriT and to a switch from a "closed" to an "open" relaxosome formation, facilitating the stabilization of the cruciform at IR2 so that TrwC can firmly bind to catalyze cleavage at the nic site. This model would also be consistent with the apparent need of the complete IR2 at oriT1 but not at oriT2 (4).
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FIG. 4. Model for the role of accessory proteins in the modulation of TrwC-mediated recombination. IHF dimers are pictured in yellow, RNA polymerase is pictured in blue, TrwC is represented as a monomer in green, TrwA is represented as a tetrameric protein in red. Corresponding colored shadows indicate protein binding sites. Lightning bolts represent the enhancing effect of TrwA on TrwC activity exerted independently from its putative binding sites, a black curved arrow shows the ejection movement of RNA polymerase from the oriT caused by the action of TrwA, and red curved arrows represent TrwC catalytic nicking of the oriT at the nic site. The lengths of the oriTs at recombination locus 1 are indicated below the columns. Binding of IHF at the oriT represses nicking by TrwC. In the absence of IHF, formation of a transcription elongation complex exerts a similar inhibition. TrwA relieves the inhibition imposed both by IHF and RNA polymerase. Short sites (column 3) are constitutively in an "open" conformation, facilitating TrwC nicking.
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Deletion of the DNA sequences involved in the control of TrwC-mediated recombination permits the attainment of elevated recombination levels in the absence of TrwA between the minimal oriT loci previously described (4). It therefore seems plausible to attain good recombination/integration levels on very simple substrates and mediated solely by TrwC in the absence of any accessory proteins, which gives TrwC the ability to be used as a biotechnological tool for targeted integration of foreign DNA introduced by conjugation into any type of susceptible recipient cell.
This work was supported by grant BIO2005-00689 from the Spanish Ministry of Education to M.L. C.E.C. was a recipient of a FPI predoctoral fellowship from the Spanish Ministry of Education and a postdoctoral fellowship from the Public Foundation "Marqués de Valdecilla."
Published ahead of print on 5 October 2007. ![]()
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