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Journal of Bacteriology, July 2008, p. 4437-4446, Vol. 190, No. 13
0021-9193/08/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JB.00055-08
Copyright © 2008, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.


Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Loyola University Chicago, Maywood, Illinois 60153
Received 11 January 2008/ Accepted 16 April 2008
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RscS has been shown to regulate transcription of the syp (symbiosis polysaccharide) gene cluster (50). The syp cluster is a group of 18 genes that encode proteins important for production of a surface polysaccharide. Most of the genes in this cluster are required for symbiosis, and disruption of these genes results in a severe colonization defect (51). Recently, an increased-activity allele of rscS (rscS1) was identified that greatly increased the transcription of the syp cluster in culture (50). This allele encodes a wild-type protein but has mutations in the transcript that increase protein levels (15a, 50). When present on a multicopy plasmid, rscS1 induces various biofilm phenotypes in culture. These phenotypes include wrinkled colony morphology, adherence to glass surfaces, and pellicle formation. Furthermore, rscS1 dramatically increases the size of the bacterial aggregates on the light organ and confers a dramatic advantage in competitive colonization assays (50).
rscS encodes a large (927-amino-acid) protein predicted to contain multiple domains involved in signal detection and relay. The most conserved domains are a histidine kinase/ATPase (HATPase) domain, a response regulator-like receiver (Rec) domain, and a histidine phosphotransferase (Hpt) domain (Fig. 1), suggesting that after autophosphorylation, the phosphoryl group is relayed within RscS before transfer to a cognate response regulator. One possible role of the phosphorelay of hybrid sensor kinases is to allow multiple regulatory inputs, similar to what occurs in the multiprotein phosphorylation cascade regulating sporulation in Bacillus subtilis. In this phosphorelay, multiple sensor kinases and phosphatases regulate the flow of phosphate and thus signal transduction (35). A second possible role for hybrid sensor kinases may be to act as "rheostats" that modulate the level of the response to the level of the input signal, as has been proposed for the Bordetella hybrid sensor kinase BvgS (8). It is not yet known whether these conserved sequences in RscS are necessary for its activity.
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FIG. 1. Linear map of RscS domains. The locations of amino acid substitutions are indicated above the map, while deletions are shown below the map.
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150-amino-acid periplasmic domain (3, 7, 45). Other examples are the CitA/DcuS-like sensor kinases which detect concentrations of a signal molecule (citrate in the case of CitA) with a PAS-like fold in the PP domain (34, 37). While the large PP domain of RscS exhibits no similarity to PP domains involved in signal detection, this domain is conserved in putative proteins encoded by rscS alleles isolated from other V. fischeri strains (Mark Mandel, personal communication) and is present in a protein encoded by a putative rscS homolog from the coral pathogen Vibrio shilonii AK1 (accession number ZP_01865491). Thus, the PP domain of RscS may play a role in signal detection. The TMR of membrane-bound sensor proteins has been implicated in sensing cell envelope stress, as well as in transduction of signal from the periplasm to the kinase domain. Many of the sensor kinases thought to perceive signals through their TMR have four or more TM helices (30). The sensor kinase LiaS from B. subtilis and its homologs, however, are predicted to have just two TM helices, like RscS. This sensor kinase responds to the presence of sublethal concentrations of antibiotics active against the cell wall, possibly through interaction of its TMR with the membrane protein LiaF (23). The role of the TMR in signal transduction has been studied most extensively with the bacterial chemoreceptors, in particular the aspartate receptor Tar (30). In these dimeric receptors, the two TM helices of each of the monomers form a four-helix bundle. The orientation of the helices relative to one another changes in response to ligand binding (13). In the case of Tar, ligand binding triggers a pistonlike movement of the signaling helix down toward the cytoplasm. This action regulates autophosphorylation of an associated histidine kinase (12, 33).
The third possible signal detection domain in RscS is its putative PAS domain. PAS domains are found in all kingdoms of life and have a conserved protein fold but limited sequence homology (19). They are important for detection of signals such as changes in light, redox potential, oxygen, and the presence of small ligands, such as ATP (44). Signal detection by PAS domains frequently requires the presence of a bound cofactor (44). Many sensor kinases have cytoplasmic PAS domains implicated in signal detection (30). For example, the O2 sensor FixL from rhizobia possesses a heme-binding PAS domain; the interaction of O2 with the heme cofactor results in inactivation of the kinase activity (17). Escherichia coli ArcB also has a cytoplasmic PAS domain; the interaction of oxidized quinones with this domain is thought to inhibit the kinase activity of this sensor kinase (29).
Despite the importance of the complex regulator RscS in inducing biofilm formation, little is known about the specific sequences essential for RscS activity. In this study, we examined the contribution of each RscS domain to protein activity by generating deletions and site-specific substitutions and evaluating their effects on rscS1-dependent biofilm phenotypes. Our results support the identification of RscS as a hybrid sensor kinase; replacement of predicted phosphorylated residues resulted in a decrease in or loss of biofilm formation. Moreover, our data demonstrate a critical role for PAS in RscS function. Finally, the other predicted sensor domains, TMR and the PP domain, contribute to RscS activity, and the PP domain has an apparently negative effect. These data allowed us to conclude that RscS integrates both positive and negative signals to regulate biofilm formation.
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(48) and TOP10 (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA) were used as hosts for cloning and conjugation. V. fischeri strains were grown in complex medium (LBS [18, 41]) or in HMM (39) containing 0.3% Casamino Acids and 0.2% glucose (HMM-CAA-Glu) (51). Antibiotics were added, as needed, at the following final concentrations: chloramphenicol, 5 µg ml–1; erythromycin, 5 µg ml–1; and tetracycline (Tet), 5 µg ml–1 in LBS and 30 µg ml–1 in HMM. Agar was added to a final concentration of 1.5% for solid media. |
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TABLE 1. Plasmids and strains used in this study
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Site-directed mutagenesis. The large deletions in the periplasmic domain were generated by divergent PCR. Divergent primers specific for the end points of the desired deletions (Table 2) and Kod HiFi thermostable DNA polymerase (Novagen, Madison, WI) were used to PCR amplify around the appropriate rscS1-containing plasmid. The resulting PCR product was purified (GeneClean; Q-Biogene, Solon, OH), self-ligated, and transformed into TOP10 cells. The H323A, N345A, and F353A substitutions were generated by amplifying the 5' end of rscS using primer rscS1-RBS-F and the appropriate mutagenic reverse primer and the 3' end of rscS using the mutagenic forward primer and 9R2 (Table 2). The two fragments were then joined using splicing by overlap extension PCR (21) with rscS1-RBS-F and 9R2. The H867Q substitution was generated using a QuikChange kit (Stratagene, La Jolla, CA). The H412Q substitution was generated using the GeneEditor in vitro site-directed mutagenesis system (Promega, Madison, WI). The remaining substitutions were generated using a Change-It multiple-mutation site-directed mutagenesis kit (USB, Cleveland, OH).
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TABLE 2. Primers used in this study
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Western analysis. Cultures were grown in HMM-CAA-Glu with Tet overnight, and then 1-ml samples were removed and pelleted by centrifugation. Cells were resuspended in 50 µl of distilled H2O with a protease inhibitor cocktail for use with bacterial cell extracts (Sigma Aldrich, St. Louis, MO), and a 5-µl aliquot was removed for quantitation by the assay of Lowry et al. (27). After quantitation, cells were diluted as necessary to bring all samples to the same protein concentration, and then 1 volume of 2x sodium dodecyl sulfate dye was added. Cells were lysed by boiling them for 5 min, and then extracts were loaded on an 8% sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis gel. After electrophoretic separation, proteins were transferred to a polyvinylidene difluoride membrane and probed with anti-RscS antibodies as described elsewhere (15a).
Wrinkled colony morphology. In most experiments, plasmid-bearing strains were streaked onto LBS-Tet plates and incubated at 28°C overnight. To obtain the photographs shown in Fig. 4, the bacteria were grown at 28°C in LBS-Tet for 6 h, and then a 10-µl aliquot was spotted on LBS-Tet plates and incubated at 28°C for 19 h. Spotting produced wrinkled morphology similar to that produced by streaking for single colonies, but it resulted in a uniform size, which allowed more direct comparisons among the different strains.
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FIG. 4. Colony morphology of strains carrying RscS mutants. Bacteria were grown at 28°C in LBS-Tet for 6 h and then spotted on LBS-Tet plates and incubated at 28°C for 19 h. The experiment was performed at least in triplicate; representative results are shown. EV, empty vector.
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Pellicle formation. Cultures were grown in HMM-CAA-Glu with Tet overnight and then diluted in 3 ml (final volume) to an OD600 of 0.1. After 24 h of static incubation at 28°C, pellicle formation was assessed by drawing a pipette tip across the surface of the well. Formation of a visible film that was disrupted by the pipette tip was scored as positive for pellicle formation (+). Formation of a visible film only after 48 h of incubation was scored as ±. Strains which failed to form a film even after 48 h were scored as negative (–). The assay was performed in triplicate for each strain.
β-Galactosidase activity assays. Cultures were grown in rich medium (LBS) overnight, and β-galactosidase activity was measured as described previously (31). Total protein concentrations were determined by the method of Lowry et al. (27). The assay was performed in triplicate for each strain.
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Because the impact of RscS on biofilm formation has been observed only when an overexpression construct is used, we generated these and all other substitutions in the context of the increased activity allele rscS1 carried on a multicopy plasmid. In each case, transcription of the rscS allele was driven exclusively from the vector-derived lacZ promoter. As controls, we used the unmutagenized rscS1 plasmid pKG63 and vector pKV69. We then moved the resulting plasmids into V. fischeri and assessed RscS function. Specifically, we evaluated the abilities of the mutant alleles to produce protein and induce biofilm phenotypes, including syp transcription, wrinkled colony formation, pellicle formation, and surface attachment.
V. fischeri strains carrying plasmids with the H412Q and D709A substitution alleles produced full-length RscS protein, as evaluated by Western blot analysis (Fig. 2), but they exhibited severe defects in inducing biofilm phenotypes. First, these alleles failed to induce syp transcription, as monitored using a reporter strain bearing a chromosomal fusion of the sypA promoter to lacZ (PsypA::lacZ, KV2566 [Table 1]); the level of syp transcription induced by these alleles was 100-fold less than that induced by pKG63 (Fig. 3). Consistent with a loss of syp activation, these substitution alleles also failed to promote wrinkled colony formation under conditions in which pKG63 induces dramatic wrinkling (Fig. 4). Similarly, while pKG63 induced pellicle formation within 24 h, strains carrying the H412Q and D709A substitution alleles failed to form pellicles at the air-liquid interface even after 48 h (Table 3). Finally, these strains also failed to adhere to a glass surface, as visualized by crystal violet staining (Fig. 5A and B).
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FIG. 2. Western blot analysis of RscS production by various mutant rscS1 plasmids. The position of full-length RscS is indicated by an arrow. The lower two bands present in the pKG63 lane and the other full-length RscS derivatives represent a cross-reactive species and a putative proteolytic fragment of RscS, respectively (15a). PP-large and N-term roughly comigrate with the proteolytic fragment, while PP-small is approximately the same size as the cross-reactive species.
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FIG. 3. Induction of syp transcription by RscS mutants. The β-galactosidase activity induced in the PsypA::lacZ reporter strain by a plasmid carrying a mutation was divided by the activity induced by pKG63 to derive the relative activity. The error bars represent propagation of the standard deviation.
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TABLE 3. Pellicle formation by RscS mutants
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FIG. 5. Surface adherence of strains overexpressing the indicated rscS mutant constructs. (A) Photographs of crystal violet-stained glass tubes, showing variations in surface adherence. The experiment was performed in triplicate, and representative results are shown. (B) Quantitation of crystal violet staining. The error bars indicate the standard deviations. EV, empty vector.
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RscS possesses a PAS signal detection domain critical for its activity. BLAST analysis (1) of the RscS amino acid sequence predicted that there is a PAS domain immediately carboxy terminal to TM2 (data not shown). Since PAS domains are commonly employed to detect environmental signals (44), we predicted that this domain is required to regulate RscS function. To further investigate the function of the putative PAS domain, we first generated a predicted structure. A first-approximation structural model (Fig. 6A) (SwissModel [2]) threaded the RscS PAS sequence onto the LOV1 domain of the Phot1 protein of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii (1N9L [14]), a flavin mononucleotide (FMN)-binding PAS domain. LOV (light, oxygen, or voltage) domains comprise a subset of the PAS domain family and sense blue light through formation of a covalent cysteine-flavin adduct (9, 14). The ability to model the RscS sequence onto a PAS-like structure supported the hypothesis that RscS contains a PAS domain. However, the RscS PAS domain lacks Cys residues, suggesting that it is not a canonical LOV domain. Furthermore, sequence alignment of RscS PAS, LOV1, and the related flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD)-binding PAS domain of Azotobacter vinelandii NifL (Fig. 6D) revealed that the RscS PAS domain shares homology with NifL, especially in residues predicted to be important for FAD binding (24).
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FIG. 6. RscS PAS domain. (A) RscS PAS domain sequence threaded onto the LOV1 domain of the Phot1 protein of C. reinhardtii (1N9L) (2, 14; http://swissmodel.expasy.org//). Residues subjected to mutagenesis in this study are shown in white spacefill and are labeled. (B) LOV1 domain of the Phot1 protein of C. reinhardtii (1N9L) (14). The FMN cofactor is indicated by black lines. Residues corresponding to the residues mutagenized in RscS are shown in white spacefill. (C) A. vinelandii NifL PAS domain structure (2GJ3) (24). The FAD cofactor is indicated by black lines. Residues corresponding to the residues mutagenized in RscS are shown in white spacefill. (D) Sequence alignment for the putative PAS domain of RscS, the A. vinelandii NifL PAS domain, and the LOV1 domain of the Phot1 protein of C. reinhardtii. Residues targeted for substitution in RscS and the corresponding residues in NifL and LOV1 are indicated by bold type. Crystal structures were visualized using the PyMOL molecular graphics system (http://www.pymol.org).
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V. fischeri strains carrying plasmids with the four PAS domain substitutions in rscS produced full-length RscS protein (Fig. 2) but exhibited severe defects in inducing biofilm formation. Each of the four PAS domain substitutions resulted in a profound loss of syp induction, and the transcription levels were approximately 100-fold lower than the level induced by pKG63 (Fig. 3). Consistent with this result, each substitution allele also failed to induce wrinkled colony formation on solid media (Fig. 4) and pellicle formation at the air-liquid interface (Table 3). Strains expressing the H323A and L330R substitution alleles also failed to adhere to a glass surface (Fig. 5A and B), while strains with the N345A and F353A substitution alleles exhibited a moderate ability to adhere to glass (Fig. 5A).
These experiments were performed at 28°C, the optimal growth temperature for V. fischeri. Historically, however, we have observed that incubation at room temperature increases RscS-mediated phenotypes (data not shown), and thus we asked if incubation at a lower temperature would restore activity to our PAS domain substitution alleles. Indeed, this was the case for the N345A and F353A substitutions. When incubated at room temperature, the strains carrying the N345A and F353A alleles both exhibited moderate wrinkling, surface adherence, and pellicle formation and induced syp transcription to levels near pKG63-induced levels (data not shown). However, strains carrying the H323A and L330R substitutions failed to exhibit rscS1-mediated phenotypes regardless of the temperature, and the results were indistinguishable from the results for the vector control (data not shown). Thus, the PAS domain is critical for RscS function, and the severe defect observed for substitutions (H323A and L330R) predicted to disrupt FAD binding but not FMN binding suggests that RscS may bind a FAD cofactor.
A cytoplasmic RscS derivative is partially active.
Some membrane-bound sensor kinases become constitutively active when they are liberated from the membrane (6, 26), while others become nonfunctional (36). To determine what role membrane localization and/or sequences within the TMR and PP domain play in RscS function, we generated a cytoplasmic derivative of RscS lacking the putative TM helices and PP domain but retaining the PAS domain (
N-term; amino acids N3 through R257 removed [Fig. 1]) and tested its effect on RscS-dependent culture phenotypes. Western analysis showed that this deletion construct produced protein (Fig. 2). However, the deletion resulted in a loss of RscS function; the truncated protein failed to induce syp transcription (Fig. 3), wrinkled colony formation (Fig. 4), pellicles (Table 3), or surface adherence (Fig. 5A) when the assay was performed at 28°C. In contrast, incubation at a lower temperature restored partial activity, including moderate levels of syp transcription, wrinkled colony formation, thin pellicles, and moderate surface attachment (data not shown). Thus, full RscS activity may require localization to the membrane and/or essential sequences in the amino terminus.
The transmembrane domain is important for RscS function. The decrease in activity of the N-terminal deletion suggested a positive role for sequences in the PP domain and/or TMR. The TMR may directly detect environmental signals, or it may be important for transduction of the signal across the membrane from the PP domain. To determine the role of the TMR of RscS, we generated substitutions within the first putative TM helix (TM1) and determined their effects on RscS-dependent phenotypes. We focused on TM1 because modeling its sequence onto a helical wheel (data not shown) predicted the presence of a hydrophilic patch along one face of the helix. We predicted that this hydrophilic patch might serve as an interaction surface between the monomers within the RscS dimer or with another membrane protein. If it does, then disrupting this patch would alter these interactions and alter RscS function. To test this hypothesis, we replaced a hydrophilic Ser residue within the patch with a hydrophobic residue (S9A) or with another hydrophilic residue (S9T). Consistent with our hypothesis, strains carrying the S9A substitution allele exhibited an approximately twofold increase in syp transcription (Fig. 3). However, the S9T substitution also caused increased syp transcription, as did replacement of a residue outside the hydrophilic patch (I13A) (Fig. 3). The S9A, S9T, and I13A constructs each also slightly increased surface attachment (Fig. 5A) but induced the formation of wrinkled colonies (Fig. 4) and pellicles (Table 3) to an extent similar to that observed with strains carrying pKG63. Therefore, we propose that the identity of certain residues within TM1, but not their relative hydrophilicity, is important for RscS function.
The periplasmic domain negatively regulates RscS function.
The loss of the N terminus led to a decrease in RscS function, while disruption of TM1 had the opposite effect. To determine what role the PP domain may play, we constructed mutations within this domain, leaving TM1 and TM2 intact. Because the PP domain has no significant homology to other proteins, we had no information to guide mutagenesis; therefore, we elected to examine the function of the PP domain by generating two deletions within it (Fig. 1). The deletion that we designated
PP-large removed 183 amino acids (Q33 through I216), leaving an 18-amino-acid linker between the two TM helices, while the deletion that we designated
PP-small removed 42 amino acids (amino acids 85 through 127) from the central portion of the domain.
V. fischeri strains carrying plasmids with these rscS deletions produced truncated RscS protein, as detected by Western analysis (Fig. 2). Both the large and small PP deletion constructs induced syp transcription to nearly wild-type levels (Fig. 3), suggesting that the PP domain is dispensable for this phenotype. Consistent with this result, strains carrying these two plasmids also produced wrinkled colonies on solid media (Fig. 4) and thick pellicles at the air-liquid interface (Table 3) to an extent similar to that observed with strains carrying pKG63. These results suggested that the PP domain is not required for RscS function other than as a membrane tether.
However, when we examined attachment, a different story began to emerge. The loss of the PP region of RscS (
PP-large) appeared to cause an increase in cell-cell aggregation. This effect was shown by formation of stringy cell aggregates during growth in shaking liquid cultures; these aggregates formed more quickly and to a greater extent in strains containing
PP-large than in strains carrying pKG63 (data not shown). Furthermore, strains carrying the
PP-large or
PP-small deletion alleles exhibited a dramatic increase in adherence to glass (Fig. 5A and B). Thus, these data suggested that removal of the PP domain resulted in increased RscS activity.
In the assay for surface attachment, the PP domain deletions not only increased the amount of crystal violet-stained material left on the glass surface but also changed the pattern of deposition. The wild-type protein induced surface attachment in a tight ring at the air-liquid interface, while both PP domain deletion alleles induced attachment throughout the culture (Fig. 5A). This effect could be seen quite clearly in surface attachment assays performed with various culture volumes. For pKG63-containing strains, the area of crystal violet staining was limited to the top of the tube, where the air-liquid interface was. In contrast, for strains carrying the
PP-large allele of rscS, staining occurred throughout the tube (Fig. 7A).
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FIG. 7. Effect of air limitation on surface attachment. (A) Surface attachment assays performed with increasing volumes of culture. (B) Surface attachment assays performed with (i) normal airflow, (ii) airflow restricted with a cotton plug and Parafilm sealing the top, and (iii) airflow restricted by a mineral oil overlay.
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The identification of RscS as a hybrid sensor kinase suggested that after autophosphorylation the phosphoryl group progresses down the length of RscS through a phosphorelay before ultimately arriving at the target response regulator, as has been shown for the canonical hybrid sensor kinase ArcB (25). However, our results show that disruption of the Hpt domain results in only a partial loss of function. Intriguingly, the putative RscS homolog in V. shilonii has homology to V. fischeri RscS along the length of the protein but lacks a predicted Hpt domain (K. Geszvain, unpublished data). These data raise the possibility that at least some of the phosphoryl transfer along the length of RscS is independent of its Hpt domain. Thus, the phosphorelay may be branched, with some phosphoryl groups being transferred to the Hpt domain on RscS before being transferred to the response regulator and some phosphoryl groups being transferred from Rec to an unknown Hpt domain on a second protein. Such a phosphotransfer pathway is not unprecedented; in the Rcs capsular polysaccharide regulatory pathway of E. coli, the phosphoryl group is transferred from the Rec domain of the hybrid sensor kinase RcsC to the Hpt domain of another sensor kinase, RcsD (28). Alternatively, the phosphoryl group could be transferred directly to the downstream response regulator via H1 (H412), which has been shown to happen in vitro for ArcA/B (15). The syp cluster encodes three two-component regulators: two putative response regulators, SypG and SypE, and a predicted membrane-bound hybrid sensor kinase, SypF. SypG is required for all of the biofilm phenotypes induced by RscS in culture (15a, 22). Furthermore, we have found that SypG is required for biofilm formation induced by RscS(H867Q) and RscS(
PP-large) (unpublished data), suggesting that the activity of RscS is ultimately, if not directly, shuttled through SypG. SypE and SypF also play roles in RscS- and/or SypG-dependent phenotypes; however, their roles are complex and poorly understood (9a, 22). Thus, the regulatory consequences of RscS activation appear to be complex, involving interactions with multiple downstream targets.
While substitutions and deletions within the TMR and PP domain resulted in increased RscS activity, deletion of both domains together (
N-term allele) resulted in impaired function. Thus, while the TMR and the PP domain may detect or transmit a negative signal, there appears to be a positive role either for the TMR or the PP domain or for membrane localization itself. Possibly, membrane localization is required for activation of RscS through its PAS domain via a signal located predominately there, in much the same way that ArcB is proposed to be negatively regulated by quinones in the membrane (29). However, it is formally possible that the increased activity displayed by the TMR and PP domain mutant alleles is simply due to increased protein levels. This seems unlikely to be the case at least for the PP domain deletion alleles since they do not increase all RscS activities. For example, these alleles greatly increase surface attachment, yet they have little effect on syp transcription. Therefore, our data support a model in which the PP domain negatively regulates RscS function with residues in TM1 involved in transduction of this signal to the cytoplasmic domain, while the PAS domain located at the inner membrane positively regulates RscS activity.
Our results show that the PAS domain is critical for RscS function and support the hypothesis that there is a FAD cofactor bound to the domain. Replacement of H323 and replacement of L330 both resulted in a complete loss of RscS function, while the N345A and F353A substitutions both dramatically reduced activity at higher temperatures. A key difference between the FMN and FAD cofactors is the presence of the adenine base in the FAD cofactor. In NifL, a Trp residue (W87) base stacks with this adenine, stabilizing the interaction of the cofactor with the PAS domain (24). The corresponding residue in the FMN-binding LOV1 is a positively charged Arg (R74) (14), while in RscS it is a Leu residue (L330) (Fig. 6A). Replacement of L330 with Arg resulted in a complete loss of activity, consistent with the hypothesis that this positively charged residue repels binding of the hydrophobic adenine base of a FAD cofactor. The interaction between a positive residue and the phosphate group of FAD is thought to make a major contribution to the stability of FAD binding in flavoproteins (20). In NifL, this residue is R80 (24); the corresponding residue in RscS is H323, while in LOV1 it is P67 (14). Removing this positive residue from RscS (H323A) resulted in a complete loss of activity. Taken together, our data support the hypothesis that a FAD cofactor binds to the RscS PAS domain.
Can our data reveal anything about the nature of the signal(s) detected by RscS? FAD-binding PAS domains commonly act as redox sensors (43). For example, the oxidation state of the FAD cofactor bound in the E. coli aerotaxis sensor Aer is proposed to regulate the response of the protein to oxygen gradients and redox potential (38). Thus, RscS may sense the redox state of the cell through its PAS domain. At the same time, removal of the PP domain resulted in an apparent loss of sensitivity to low O2 concentrations, as shown by increased surface attachment below the air-liquid interface of strains carrying the deletion alleles. This raises the intriguing possibility that a repressive O2/redox state detected by the PP domain and an activating O2/redox state detected by the PAS domain collaborate to limit RscS activity to a narrow window of optimal signal concentration. This is an attractive hypothesis because reactive oxygen species are present in the squid-secreted mucus that V. fischeri cells encounter early in the symbiosis (5, 10). Thus, RscS may detect a change in the redox state of the cell as the bacteria move from the relatively reducing environment of the seawater to the oxidizing environment of the squid.
This work was supported by NIH grant GM59690 awarded to K.L.V. and by the NIH through Ruth L. Kirschstein National Research Service Award 1 F32 G073523 from the NIGMS awarded to K.G.
Published ahead of print on 25 April 2008. ![]()
Present address: Department of Environmental and Biomolecular Systems, Oregon Health and Sciences University, 20000 NW Walker Rd., Beaverton, OR 97006-8921. ![]()
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