Previous Article | Next Article ![]()
Journal of Bacteriology, April 2007, p. 3296-3301, Vol. 189, No. 8
0021-9193/07/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JB.01860-06
Copyright © 2007, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
,
Scott N. Peterson,2 and
Arthur M. Friedlander1*
Bacteriology and Headquarters Divisions, United States Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases, Frederick, Maryland 21702,1 Department of Microbial Genomics, The Institute for Genomic Research, Rockville, Maryland 208502
Received 11 December 2006/ Accepted 23 January 2007
|
|
|---|
|
|
|---|
![]() View larger version (20K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 1. Schematic diagram of the TraSH screening strategy. (A) TraSH probe generation. Genomic DNA from a population containing transposon insertions (red) is partially digested with the four-base cutter Tsp509I and size fractionated; fragments are ligated to Y-shaped linker DNA (blue) which encodes an inactive T7 promoter but not the complementary strand. Ligation products are subjected to PCR amplification using a transposon-derived primer and a linker-derived primer which encodes a functional T7 promoter; logarithmic amplification of PCR products is dependent upon DNA synthesis from the transposon-derived primer, which generates the linker-derived primer binding site (extension of the linker, which would generate a binding site for the linker-derived primer, is prevented by a 3' amino modification [red asterisk]). As a result, PCR products are generated only from sequences adjacent to transposon insertions. PCR products are transcribed in vitro from the T7 promoter, and amino-allyl-labeled cDNA probes are reverse transcribed from the RNA. (B) Microarray hybridization of TraSH probes. A population of mutants containing multiple transposon insertion mutations (indicated by arrowheads above genes A, B, and C) grown on rich medium (preselection) is subjected to growth under selective pressure (postselection). TraSH probes, PCR amplified from the mutant populations before and after growth selection and differentially labeled with fluorescent dyes, are cohybridized to microarrays. Clones harboring mutations in genes required for fitness under the selective pressure (gene B) are reduced or eliminated from the postselection population, resulting in reduced microarray hybridization signals compared to those of the parental preselection population. The figure was adapted from the study of Sassetti and Rubin (20).
|
Ames harboring the capsule plasmid (pXO1 pXO2+) and a derivative of this strain, B. anthracis
Ames gdh, modified at the chromosomally encoded gdh locus [
gdh (atxA
kan PpagA-lacZ pagR)], which was used in screens for genes that influence anthrax toxin and capsule expression (data not shown). Mutagenesis was performed as described by Gominet et al. (8). The mutants were selected for growth on brain heart infusion agar plates containing spectinomycin (250 µg/ml) incubated 15 h at 37°C. Pools of mutants of each of the two strains (
Ames and
Ames gdh) were maintained separately to generate two mutant populations, which were designated WAD205 and WAD272, respectively. The use of two distinct mutant populations enhanced analyses of the coverage of each population with transposon insertions and allowed detection of insertional biases (see below). Differential plating and sequence analysis of the insertion sites of several clones demonstrated that roughly 10% of the mutants harbored mutations in which, following transposition of elements encoded inside the inverted repeats, the plasmid had integrated into the chromosome via Campbell-type recombination (data not shown). No evidence of multiple insertions was observed using probes derived from mini-Tn10 in Southern hybridization analyses of several mutant genomes (data not shown). To determine the location and distribution of transposon insertions in each mutant population, TraSH probes were generated from each population as described by Sassetti and Rubin (20), with the following modifications. B. anthracis genomic DNA that was partially digested with Tsp509I and ranged from 700 to 2,000 bp long was ligated to linker DNA generated by annealing two oligonucleotides, BD154 (5'-AATTCGACCACGACCA-C7 amine modification-3') and BD155 (5'-CCGTTTAATACTACTCACTATAGGGAGATGGTCGTGGTCG-3'), which contained an inactive version of the consensus T7 promoter (10), as well as a 5' overhang complementary to the Tsp509I sticky end. Products of the ligation reaction (2 µl) were used as a template in a PCR (40 µl) performed with transposon-derived primer E1 (5'-CGTTGGCCGATTCATTAATGC-3') or E3 (5'-CGATATTCACGGTTTACCCAC-3') and linker-derived primer BD156 (5'-CCGTTTAATACGACTCACTATAG-3'), which encodes a mismatch resulting in a functional consensus T7 promoter in the amplified products (10). The PCR products were cleaned and transcribed in vitro using a T7-Megashortscript kit (Ambion, Austin, TX), and aminoallyl-dUTP cDNA was synthesized as described by Bourgogne et al. (3). The cDNA derived from both mutant populations was coupled to either Cy3 or Cy5, and the differentially labeled probes were cohybridized to a whole-genome B. anthracis microarray containing both amplicons and oligonucleotides (referred to as spots) printed in duplicate as described previously (3). Microarray signals were analyzed using the GenePix software (Molecular Devices, Sunnyvale, CA). The spots associated with transposon insertions in each population that had sufficient signal intensity for further analysis were those for which the intensity of at least 50% of the pixels was greater than the local background intensity plus two standard deviations for both spots corresponding to a gene, as defined by Badarinarayana et al. (2). Spots that did not meet these criteria were excluded from further analyses.
Transposons were associated with 82% of the WAD205 genes and 68% of the WAD272 genes, including virulence plasmid pX02 and chromosomal loci (Table 1). A comparison of the WAD205 and WAD272 hybridization signals showed that the intensities of the signals for a majority of the genes were equivalent in the two populations; moreover, the signal patterns suggested that transposon insertion in each population was unbiased and of high density (Fig. 2). Although a majority of the genes associated with transposons were shared between both mutant populations, a significant portion of the signals were observed in only one of the populations (Table 1). This observation indicated that neither of the mutant populations harbored transposon insertions in all nonessential genes. Therefore, any list of genes identified in screens using either of these mutant populations would likely be incomplete. Several genes with high-intensity hybridization signals were observed in each mutant population (Fig. 2). However, the intensities of these genes varied widely between the two populations, and few genes had high-intensity signals in both populations. These observations suggested that the intense hybridization signals resulted from overrepresentation of clones sustaining transposon insertions early in the mutagenesis culture (resulting in siblings) and not from repeatedly targeted sequences in the B. anthracis genome (hot spots) or sequence characteristics of the spots arrayed on the microarray slides (G+C content or nucleotide length). Collectively, these results suggested that transposon insertion was unbiased and of sufficient density, targeting both virulence plasmid and chromosomal genes, to permit global TraSH analyses of a majority of the pathogen's genome.
|
View this table: [in a new window] |
TABLE 1. Tn10 distribution in two distinct B. anthracis Ames (pXO1 pXO2+) populationsa
|
![]() View larger version (35K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 2. Hybridization signals for two distinct B. anthracis Ames mutant populations. Each gene's hybridization signal intensity for WAD205 and WAD272 populations following recovery of each population on rich medium with antibiotics was plotted. Genes with low signal intensities (as defined in the text) in either population were not included. Hybridizations were performed four times. The data were derived from a single representative experiment.
|
TraSH assay permits global identification of genes required for growth, sporulation, and germination.
To demonstrate that the adapted mutagenesis and probe generation methods could be effectively used in a TraSH screen, we applied them to genetic analysis of the development of heat-resistant B. anthracis spores and spore germination. These are developmental pathways that have been studied extensively in Bacillus subtilis, and bioinformatic analyses have identified putative sporulation and germination orthologs in the B. anthracis genome (17).
Ames mutant population WAD205 was cultured in triplicate by spreading 106 mutant bacilli on tryptic soy agar plates containing spectinomycin and allowing the cells to sporulate. The resultant spore populations were heat shocked (40 min at 65°C) to kill clones containing transposon mutations in genes required for generation of heat-resistant spores, which would likely exist as heat-sensitive bacilli. The three populations of heat-resistant spores were inoculated into separate flasks containing brain heart infusion broth with spectinomycin and incubated for 15 h to germinate the spores and to amplify viable clones. As a result, clones harboring mutations in genes required for optimal growth in rich medium, development of heat-resistant spores, and spore germination in rich medium were eliminated from the populations recovered or their numbers were diminished. TraSH probes were synthesized from each of the three sporulated populations (postselection), combined with differentially labeled TraSH probes synthesized from the presporulated parent population (preselection), and hybridized to the B. anthracis microarray in duplicate. Data were filtered as described above to include only spots with significant presporulation hybridization signals on all six arrays using the GenePix software. The data for all six hybridizations were then normalized using average spot intensity (Lowess) (6), combined, averaged, and filtered to identify genes required for optimal growth, sporulation, or germination with preselection mutant population/postselection population hybridization signal ratios significantly greater than 1 (P < 0.05, as determined by a t test; Benjamini and Hoch FDR filter) using the GeneSpring software. An additional filter excluded genes which resulted in subtle defects in growth, sporulation, or germination (less than threefold change in median preselection/postselection hybridization signal ratios). Genes required for optimal growth, sporulation, or germination in all three selected populations (253 genes) are described in Table S1 in the supplemental material.
The TraSH screen identified orthologs of 31 genes required for spore generation or germination in other Bacillus species, suggesting that these genes have similar, if not identical, roles in B. anthracis spore physiology (Table 2). These studies provided the first experimental evidence for the role of many of these elements in the development of the infectious anthrax spore. Approximately 50 genes essential for B. subtilis sporulation have been identified; orthologs of most of these genes have been identified in the B. anthracis genome by bioinformatic analyses (12). Roughly one-half of these predicted sporulation genes were identified in our TraSH screen. The failure to identify genes in our screen may have resulted from a lack of transposon insertions in the open reading frames or from the use of high-stringency screening conditions involving a single selective sweep for generation of heat-resistant spores. Genes encoding several germinant receptors that respond to specific environmental cues, such as inosine, histidine, and alanine, were identified, which is consistent with the idea that responsiveness to multiple germinants is required for optimal B. anthracis spore germination in vitro (25). The screen also identified several genes encoding elements of ABC transport systems, oligopeptide permeases, cytochrome synthesis proteins, and factors required for efficient spore cortex lysis and germination (Table 2). The essential roles of these factors in the development of heat-resistant spores and spore germination have been demonstrated in other Bacillus species (7, 8, 13, 14, 22, 27). Identification of these factors validated the adapted TraSH methods and demonstrated the assay's usefulness for functional analysis of the B. anthracis genome.
|
View this table: [in a new window] |
TABLE 2. B. anthracis orthologs of B. subtilis sporulation and germination genes identified in the TraSH screen
|
TraSH assay is predictive.
To independently demonstrate that the TraSH assay could be used to predict a gene's role in fitness, strains were constructed with insertion mutations in two conserved hypothetical genes identified in the screen (BA4451 and BA5728) that are present exclusively in the genomes of spore-forming bacteria (Bacillus and Clostridium spp.). Mutagenesis was performed as described previously (4) using shuttle plasmid pASD2 that harbored both ColE1 and pE194ts origins of replication and aphA-3 and aad-9 genes encoding resistance to kanamycin and spectinomycin, respectively. Heat-resistant spores of normal appearance were recovered from each strain, and no germination defects were observed for either strain using a spectrophotometric assay (data not shown). The TraSH assay is a competitive growth assay in which a limited number of growth-impaired mutants compete with growth-competent mutants. Therefore, a competitive growth assay was used to broadly measure the growth of the two mutant strains compared to the growth of the parent under selective conditions similar to those used in the TraSH screen. One million parental and mutant B. anthracis
Ames heat-activated spores were combined, spread on the surfaces of tryptic soy agar plates in triplicate, and allowed to germinate, grow, and resporulate. Spores were harvested from each culture and heat shocked to kill the bacilli. The ratios of parental bacteria to mutant bacteria before and after growth selection were determined by spreading appropriate dilutions of heat-shocked spores on tryptic soy agar plates with and without antibiotics and counting the resultant colonies. Following growth selection the ratios of the mutant strains to the parent were significantly reduced (Fig. 3). These observations demonstrated that the TraSH functional genomics screen is predictive of a gene's contribution to fitness in the environment selected.
![]() View larger version (20K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 3. Genes identified in the TraSH screen are required for optimal B. anthracis Ames fitness under the growth conditions used. Competitive growth, sporulation, and germination cultures were established in triplicate by mixing approximately equal numbers of parent and mutant bacterial spores. The ratios of mutant organisms to parent organisms before and after competitive culture were determined by plating dilutions of the mixed populations on medium with and without antibiotics and counting the resultant colonies. The error bars indicate the 95% confidence levels; P values were calculated by comparing the input and output parent bacterium/mutant bacterium ratios for each mutant strain.
|
Nucleotide sequence accession numbers.
The sequences of the B. anthracis
Ames gdh strain allele [
gdh (atxA
kan PpagA-lacZ pagR)] and shuttle vector pASD2 have been deposited in the GenBank database under accession numbers DQ898554 and DQ898555, respectively.
This project (project 9Y0001_06_RD_B) was funded by the Defense Threat Reduction Agency. S.N.P. was supported by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, National Institutes of Health, under contract N01-AI15447.
The opinions, interpretations, conclusions, and recommendations in this paper are those of the authors and are not necessarily endorsed by the U.S. Army.
Published ahead of print on 2 February 2007. ![]()
Supplemental material for this article may be found at http://jb.asm.org/. ![]()
Present address: Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences, Bethesda, MD 20814. ![]()
|
|
|---|
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»