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Journal of Bacteriology, September 2008, p. 6217-6227, Vol. 190, No. 18
0021-9193/08/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JB.00428-08
Copyright © 2008, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.

Molecular Microbiology Laboratory, Ministry of Education Key Laboratory, Faculty of Life Sciences, Northwest University, 229 Taibai Rd., Xi'an, 710069 People's Republic of China,1 Department of Microbiology and Infectious Diseases, Faculty of Medicine, University of Calgary, 3330 Hospital Dr., Calgary, AB T2N 4N1, Canada2
Received 26 March 2008/ Accepted 8 July 2008
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Pyocyanin is the major phenazine compound produced by P. aeruginosa and functions both as an important virulence factor (28, 29) and as a signal molecule (12). Pyocyanin produced by P. aeruginosa has been shown to inhibit the ciliary function of respiratory epithelial cells in vitro (50) and can alter the host immune and inflammatory response (1, 10). Because they are bioactive secondary metabolites, the role of phenazine compounds as signal molecules has recently been explored (12, 42). It has been shown that pyocyanin acts as the final signal in the quorum-sensing system cascade and regulates at least 22 genes in P. aeruginosa PA14 (12).
Two homologous operons are involved in the synthesis of phenazine compounds in P. aeruginosa, phzA1B1C1D1G1 (phzA1) and phzA2B2C2D2G2 (phzA2) (34). The expression of phzA1 accounts for the majority of phenazine production (6, 49). In addition, the gene products of phzM, phzH, and phzS are required to convert the intermediate phenazine-1-carboxylic acid to other final products, including phenazine-1-carboxamide, 1-hydroxphenazine, and pyocyanin (33, 34, 38). Production of phenazine compounds is tightly regulated by quorum-sensing systems in P. aeruginosa. Both the PQS and rhl systems positively regulate phzA1 expression (13, 27), and the orphan LuxR-type quorum-sensing regulator QscR negatively regulates the expression of phzA1 and phzA2 as well as the elastase gene lasB (31).
Recently, another group of molecules, antibiotics, have been shown to play important roles in regulating bacterial gene expression when present at subinhibitory concentrations (9, 21, 32). Antibiotics are bioactive compounds that are generally believed to be weapons in intermicrobial interactions due to their killing or inhibitory activity toward other microorganisms. They have been used to treat bacterial infections for decades, exploiting the inhibitory and killing capability of these molecules toward pathogens. However, the ecological roles of antibiotics in natural communities have remained ambiguous (7). Only recently has their role as signaling agents emerged (7-9, 32, 53). Despite these observations, however, knowledge of the mechanisms in signaling and gene regulation is currently very limited, and the relationship of subinhibitory antibiotic signaling with other bacterial signal pathways remains unclear.
In this study we took a new approach to identify genes involved in phzA1 expression by examining the expression of P. aeruginosa virulence factors in the presence of subinhibitory concentrations of antibiotics. We identified 32 genes that influence the expression of phzA1. Among them, PA0964, encoding a protein that belongs to a conserved hypothetical protein family, was shown to be a regulator of pqs gene expression and phenazine production.
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TABLE 1. Bacterial strains and plasmids used
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Using these lux-based reporters, gene expression in liquid cultures was measured as light production (in counts per second) in a Victor3 multilabel plate reader (Perkin-Elmer). Overnight cultures of the reporter strains were diluted to an optical density at 620 nm (OD620) of 0.2 and cultivated for two additional hours before being used as inoculants. The cultures were inoculated into parallel wells on a 96-well black plate with a transparent bottom. Fresh culture (5 µl) was inoculated into the wells containing a total of 95 µl medium plus other components, and the OD620 in the wells was
0.07. Filter-sterilized mineral oil (60 µl) was added to prevent evaporation during the assay. Promoter activities were measured every 30 min for 24 h. Bacterial growth was monitored at the same time by measuring the OD595 in the Victor3 multilabel plate reader. Expression on solid medium was measured by plating the reporter strains in soft top LB agar and imaging in a LAS300 imaging system (Fuji Corp.).
Quantification of phenazine production. Phenazine antibiotics were extracted from P. aeruginosa and quantified by a UV-visible-light spectrophotometer as described previously (5). Briefly, triplicate 5-ml cultures were grown overnight at 37°C with orbital shaking at 200 rpm/min in LB broth or LB broth with 0.625 µg/ml Tet (1/16 of the MIC) (1/16-MIC Tet). The cultures were centrifuged, and the supernatants were collected and acidified to pH 2.0 with concentrated HCl. Phenazines were extracted twice with an equal volume of benzene for 1 h. Following evaporation of the benzene under air, the phenazine was resuspended in 0.5 ml of 0.1 N NaOH, and serial dilutions were quantified by absorbance at 367 nm. The absorbance for each sample was normalized to total absorbance per initial 5-ml culture. The measurements were repeated three times, and the averaged values were reported.
Measurement of pyocyanin production. Pyocyanin was extracted from culture supernatants and measured by a previously reported method (17, 26). Briefly, 3 ml of chloroform was added to 5 ml of culture supernatant. After extraction, the chloroform layer was transferred to a fresh tube and mixed with 1 ml of 0.2 N HCl. After centrifugation, the top layer (0.2 M HCl) was removed and its absorption measured at 520 nm. Concentrations, expressed as micrograms of pyocyanin produced per ml of culture supernatant, were calculated using an extinction coefficient at 520 nm of 17.072 (26).
Transposon mutagenesis. The donor strain (E. coli SM10), containing pBT20 (25), and the recipient, PAO1(pKD-phzA1), containing the phzA1-lux reporter fusions, were scraped from overnight-incubated plates and resuspended separately in 0.2 ml of LB broth. The bacterial suspensions were adjusted to an OD600 of 40 for the donors and an OD600 of 20 for the recipient. Twenty-five-microliter portions of each donor and recipient were mixed together, spotted on an LB agar plate, and incubated for 8 h at 37°C. The mating mixtures were scraped and resuspended in 14 ml of M9 medium. A 200-µl portion of this suspension was plated on PIA plates containing Gm at 150 µg/ml and Tmp at 300 µg/ml. A transposon mutant library was constructed by picking 13,056 colonies grown on these selective plates and placing them in individual wells of 34 384-well plates.
To screen for genes involved in phzA1 expression in response to Tet, the random mutant library was cultured overnight in LB medium supplemented with Tmp at 300 µg/ml. The library was then inoculated into the appropriate medium (with or without Tet) for the screen in multiwell plates with a 384-pin plate replicator. Inoculated plates were incubated at 37°C, and luminescence was measured. In the initial screens, readings were taken at 16 h and 24 h. A subset of clones with expression differing by a factor of two or more in the presence and absence of 1/16-MIC Tet (0.625 µg/ml) were identified and collected. To eliminate false-positive clones, three additional rescreens were performed. During rescreening, the overnight cultures were diluted 1:300 in the appropriate media in 96-well clear-bottom black plates (Costar 9520; Corning Inc.) and were assayed for both luminescence and absorbance over the experimental time course. Confirmed mutant clones with altered phzA1 expression profiles in the presence of 1/16-MIC Tet were selected for further characterization.
Determination of transposon insertion site by arbitrary PCR and sequencing. The transposon insertion sites of the selected mutants were determined by arbitrary primed PCR and subsequent sequencing of the PCR product (18). Arbitrary primed PCR was performed in two steps with minor modifications as outlined below. The first-round reaction was run under the following conditions: 95°C for 5 min followed by six cycles of 95°C for 30 s, 30°C for 30 s, and 72°C for 1.5 min; 30 cycles of 95°C for 30 s, 45°C for 30 s, and 72°C for 2 min; and 72°C for an additional 5 min. Chromosomal DNA from the mutants was used as the PCR template, and the two primers used were P7-1 (5'-CTAACAATTCGTTCAAGCCG-3'), reading out from one sides of the transposon, and the arbitrary primer arb1 (5'-GGCCACGCGTCGACTAGTACNNNNNNNNNNGATAT-3'). In the second-round reaction, 2 µl of the first-round PCR product was used as a template and the PCR was carried out as follows: 95°C for 1 min followed by 30 cycles of 95°C for 30 s, 52°C for 30 s, and 72°C for 2 min; 72°C for 5 min. The primers used were P7-2 (5'-GGATGCGTCTAAAAGCCTGC-3'), a second outward transposon primer downstream to the first primer, and arb2 (5'-GGCCACGCGTCGACTAGTAC-3'), corresponding to the constant region of the original arbitrary primers. This secondary reaction specifically amplifies the products of the first PCR, which include transposon junctions. PCR products were purified using QIAquick PCR purification kits (Tiangen, Beijing, China), and DNA sequencing was performed using primer P7-2.
DNA sequencing was performed by using an automated DNA sequencer (model 373; Applied Biosystems), and DNA sequences obtained were compared with the P. aeruginosa chromosome sequences (48) to localize the transposon insertion sites.
Gene replacement mutagenesis. For gene replacement, the previously described sacB-based strategy was employed (22). The suicide plasmid pKD0964K for gene replacement was constructed by inserting the BamHI-digested Gmr-lacZ cassette derived from pZ1918-lacZ (44) between two PCR fragments of PA0964 cloned in pEX18Ap. The two PCR fragments are upstream and downstream fragments of the PA0964 gene. The 596-bp upstream fragment of PA0964 was amplified using primer NH1 (5'-CGGCTGCAGTTCGGCTTCCTGCTCGAC-3'), containing a PstI restriction site, and NH2 (5'-GCCGGATCCGTCAGCGCCTTGTCCACG-3'), containing a BamHI site (restriction sites are underlined); the 617-bp downstream region of PA0964 was generated using the primers NH3 (5'-CGCGGATCC TATGAAGGTTATGCGC-3'), containing a BamHI site, and NH4 (5'-CGCGAATTCGAACGCATCAAGCGT-3'), containing an EcoRI site.
pKD0964K was transferred to PAO1 using a triparental mating procedure employing the helper vector pRK2013 (14) Briefly, overnight cultures (25 ml each) of E. coli strains containing plasmids pKD0964K and pRK2013 and P. aeruginosa PAO1 were centrifuged, and the pellets were resuspended in phosphate-buffered saline, mixed in equal proportions, and spotted onto an LB agar plate. Following incubation overnight at 37°C, bacteria were removed from the agar surface and resuspended in 1 ml of phosphate-buffered saline. Appropriate dilutions were spread on PIA plates containing Gm at 150 µg/ml. Subsequently, strains that had undergone a second crossover event were selected for by plating on LB supplemented with 5% sucrose plus Gm. A PA0964 gene replacement mutant, designated PAO1(
0964), was verified by assessing Gm resistance and Cb sensitivity and by PCR analysis.
Complementation of PA0964 knockout mutants.
To circumvent the use of antibiotic selection during the complementation experiments, the gene PA0964 was integrated into the attB site on the chromosome using the mini-CTX1 system (23). The entire gene was PCR amplified together with a 167-bp upstream promoter region and a 52-bp downstream region using the primers NH09 (5'-GCCGGATCCGTCTATCCGCGAAGTGATCG-3') and NH10 (5'-TAACTGCAGCTTGAGCA CCTTCTGCG-3'), containing a BamHI and a PstI site (underlined), respectively. The product was ligated into mini-CTX1 to generate plasmid pKD0964C, which was transferred into E. coli SM10-
pir. Transfer of pKD0964C into the PAO1(
0964) mutant was carried out by a biparental mating. Integrants were selected on PIA with Tet at 200 µg/ml plus Gm at 50 µg/ml. The CTX integrase of pKD0964C promoted integration of the vector into the attB site of the P. aeruginosa genome. The plasmid portion of pKD0964C was resolved from the chromosome using the Flp recombinase encoded by pFLP2 (23). The final resultant strain was designated as NH004.
Reverse transcription-PCR. P. aeruginosa cells at the mid-logarithmic to early stationary growth phase were collected by centrifugation at 4°C for 5 min at 10,000 x g. The supernatant was removed, and total RNA was isolated by using a Trizol Max bacterial RNA isolation kit (Invitrogen) according to the manufacturer's instructions. Residual DNA was eliminated by DNase treatment using 20 U of RQ1 RNase-free DNase, followed by phenol-chloroform extraction. The RNA was precipitated with ethanol and resuspended in RNase-free water. cDNA was synthesized from 1 µg of RNA using reverse transcriptase (Fermentas) and the primers RH (5'-ATGACCGTTCTTATCCAGG-3') and RR (5'-AACATGTTCCTCCAGGTCAT-3') for pqsH and pqsR, respectively. The 16S rRNA was used as a control with the primer 519R (5'-ATTACCGCGGCTGG-3'). Reverse transcriptase was inactivated by incubation at 70°C for 15 min, and the cDNAs were quantitatively measured using a PCR kit (Tiangen Biotech, Beijing, China). The primer pairs used for the subsequent PCR were 5'-ATGACCGTTCTTATCCAGG-3' and 5'-ACTGGAAGGCATCGACAT-3' for pqsH and 5'-AACATGTTCCTCCAGGTCAT-3' and 5'-GTTGAGATTGAAGGCGATGT-3' for pqsR. D88F (5'-AGAGTTTGATYMTGGCTCAG-3') and 519R (5'-ATTACCGCGGCTGG-3') were used for the 16S RNA.
The PCR product was analyzed on a 10% nondenaturing polyacrylamide-bis-acrylamide gel, and the bands were quantified with a LAS-3000 imaging system (Fujifilm Life Science) and its accompanying software, Multi-Gauge version 3.0.
In vitro expression and purification of PA0964 protein. PA0964 protein was expressed as a His tag fusion protein using the pProEX-HT protein expression system (Invitrogen). PA0964 was amplified by PCR with the primers 5'-GCCGGATCCATGGCTGGTCATTCTAAATG-3' and 5'-CTGAAGCTTCGAACGCATCAAGC-3'. Underlining indicates the BamHI and HindIII restriction sites, added to facilitate cloning. The 801-bp PCR product obtained was cloned between the BamHI and HindIII sites of the pProEX-HTb vector to form pProEX-0964, which was then transferred to E. coli 10B. The PA0964 sequence was verified by sequencing.
For PA0964 protein expression, E. coli carrying pProEX-0964 was grown overnight in LB broth supplemented with 100 µg/ml Ap at 37°C. Fresh LB broth (100 ml) supplemented with 100 µg/ml Ap was then inoculated with 1 ml of the overnight culture, and the culture was grown at 37°C with agitation. When the culture reached an OD600 of 0.6, IPTG (isopropyl-β-D-thiogalactopyranoside) was added at 0.6 mM to induce protein expression. The cells were harvested 2 h later by centrifugation and used immediately or stored at –70°C for later use.
The pellets from 100 ml of culture were resuspended in 10 ml LE buffer (50 mM NaH2PO4, 300 mM NaCl [pH 8.0]) with 1 mM phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride and 1 mg/ml lysozyme. Cells were ruptured by sonication using a Hielscher Sonifier. The insoluble material was removed by centrifugation (10,000 x g for 30 min). The supernatant was added to a high-affinity nickel-nitrilotriacetic acid resin column (Qiagen) equilibrated with LE buffer. The column was washed with eight bed volumes of wash buffer (50 mM NaH2PO4, 300 mM NaCl, 10 mM imidazole [pH 8.0]). Finally, the polyhistidine-tagged protein was eluted with five bed volumes of elution buffer (50 mM NaH2PO4, 300 mM NaCl, 250 mM imidazole). Collected elute was dialyzed against 10 mM Tris-HCl, 1 mM EDTA, 10% glycerol. The purified protein was stored at –70°C. The process was monitored by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The PA0964 protein preparation was also subjected to sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis to check purity. Protein concentrations were estimated by comparison to protein standards and by measurement at A280 using a U-3310 spectrophotometer (Hitachi).
Electrophoretic mobility shift assay. The promoter regions of pqsR and lasR were PCR amplified with the following primers: for pqsR, 5'-GCGGTGTGCGACTTGCGC-3' and 5'-CGATGCTCGGCGCTCTCC-3', and for lasR, 5'-CCGGGCTCGGCCTGTTCT-3' and 5'-GGATGGCGCTCCACTCCA-3'. The template used was P. aeruginosa genomic DNA. The sizes of the PCR products were 940 bp and 591 bp, respectively. The promoter regions of the other quorum-sensing genes were amplified from the respective reporter plasmids using pZE05 and pZE.06 primers (15). The 1,204-bp PCR product of PA1243 was used as a negative control. It was amplified using the primers 5'-GGAATTCGTCGCCCTGTA-3' and 5'-TTCGAACTGGTGCGGATC-3'. The PCR product (50 ng) and the PA0964 protein were incubated for 20 min at room temperature in binding buffer (40 mM Tris-HCl [pH 7.5], 0.1 mM EDTA, 70 mM KCI, 0.1 mM dithiothreitol, 4 mM MgCl2) and subjected to electrophoresis on a 6% native polyacrylamide gel. The gel was stained with SYBR green (Invitrogen) and photographed using a LAS-3000 imaging system.
Swarming motility assay. Swarm medium was based on M8 minimal medium (24), supplemented with MgSO4 (1 mM), glucose (0.2%), and Casamino Acids (0.5%), and solidified with agar (0.5%). Bacteria were spot inoculated onto swarm agar plates as 2.5-µl aliquots taken directly from overnight LB cultures. Swarm agar plates were incubated for 24 h at 37°C and then incubated an additional 24 h at room temperature for a total of 48 h. Photographs were taken with the LAS-3000 imaging system.
Biofilm formation assay. Biofilm formation was measured in a static system as described by O'Toole and Kolter (37) with minor modifications. Cells from overnight cultures were inoculated at 1:100 dilutions into LB medium in 96-well polystyrene microtiter plates (Costar) and grown at 30°C for 10 h. A 25-µl volume of 1% crystal violet was added to each well and stained for 15 min prior to removal by aspiration. Wells were rinsed three times by submerging the plates in distilled water, and the remaining crystal violet was dissolved in 200 µl of 95% ethanol. A 125-µl portion of this solution was transferred to a new polystyrene microtiter plate, and the absorbance was measured at 595 nm.
N-Acyl-HSL measurement. In order to measure HSL in bacterial cultures, we used methods based on an Agrobacterium tumefaciens system (4) and the rhlA-luxCDABE reporter (16) as described previously. Briefly, an overnight culture of the reporter strains was diluted 1:300 in LB medium, and 90 µl was added to the wells of a 96-well microtiter plate. A 10-µl portion of the samples or medium control was added to the wells; the luminescence and OD values were measured every half hour for a total of 24 h in a Victor3 1420 multilabel plate reader, and relative levels of HSL were calculated from the maximal values (counts per second) minus the medium control.
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A disk diffusion method was initially used to visualize response to subinhibitory antibiotic concentrations. The reporter strain carrying a specific promoter inserted upstream of the promoterless luxCDABE on a plasmid (15) was spread in top agar on a petri dish, and the test antibiotics were spotted on spaced filter discs laid on top of the agar. A positive response was observed as an increase in light emission from the reporter strain beyond the zone of inhibition. Likewise, a negative response was observed as a decrease in light production beyond the zone of inhibition. As shown in Fig. 1, phzA1 was activated by Tet, repressed by rifampin, and unaffected by polymyxin or Kn. Beyond the zone of growth inhibition, enhanced expression of the phzA1 reporter was observed with Tet. In contrast, reduced expression was observed beyond the zone of growth inhibition of rifampin. Significantly, this pattern of response was not observed with all promoters tested, indicating that the observed expression pattern was not an indirect effect of the antibiotics on the luciferase reporter system but specific to transcriptional activity of the cloned promoter.
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FIG. 1. Regulation of PhzA1 expression by different antibiotics. (A) Image of reporter strain on plate under white light; (B) light production of the reporter strain imaged in dark. Pol, polymyxin; Rif, rifampin. The reporter plasmid carries a Kn resistance gene, and therefore the effect of Kn on phzA1 is negated.
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The phzA1 operon encodes products responsible for the synthesis of phenazine compounds in P. aeruginosa (6, 34, 49). It is one of the reporters that showed the greatest activation in our assay and was selected for further investigation. As shown in Fig. 2A, phzA1 expression was activated in a dose-dependent manner and increased more than 20-fold in the presence of 1/16-MIC Tet where bacterial growth was not affected.
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FIG. 2. Activation of phzA1 expression by subinhibitory Tet. (A) phzA1expression profile and bacterial growth in the absence of Tet (triangles) and in the presence of 1/16-MIC (squares) and 1/32-MIC (diamonds) Tet. The assays were independently repeated at least three times, and the data shown are representative of comparable results. (B) Phenazine production in the absence and presence of 1/16-MIC Tet. cps, counts per second.
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Identification of genes involved in the Tet regulation of phzA1 by transposon mutagenesis. To identify genes involved in regulating phzA1 expression and investigate the mechanisms of the observed gene regulation by subinhibitory concentration of Tet, phzA1 was used as the reporter and transposon mutagenesis was conducted. The P. aeruginosa strain PAO1 (pKD-phzA1) was subjected to random transposon mutagenesis, and 13,056 mutants were screened. The screening was carried out in the presence of 0.625 µg/ml Tet (1/16-MIC Tet) to identify mutants exhibiting different profiles of phzA1 expression activation by Tet (more than a twofold difference) compared to the wild type. After three rounds of rescreening in 96-well plates, 32 positive clones were selected. In several of the mutants, the changes in the expression of the phzA1 operon resulted in colony color changes because phenazine compounds are the major contributors to the color of P. aeruginosa cultures. Examples of these mutants producing distinct pigments are shown in Fig. 3. P. aeruginosa produces several pigmented compounds in addition to phenazine. The final greenish color is the combination of these pigments. The loss of phenazine production changes the balance and therefore changes the colony appearance but does not necessarily lead to a nonpigmented phenotype.
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FIG. 3. Changes in pigmentation patterns of transposon mutants with altered phzA1 expression. (Top) Transposon inserted in PA0648. (Right) Transposon inserted in PA0487. (Bottom) PAO1. (Left) Transposon inserted in PA1196. The purple color in the mutants arises from the production of other pigmented compounds.
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To identify the genes mutated by transposon insertion, the insertion sites were determined by arbitrary primed PCR and DNA sequencing. The mutated genes identified are listed in Table 2. Transposon insertion in 17 genes caused increased expression of phzA1, and 13 resulted in decreased expression. Of the 32 genes identified, 13 fall into the class of hypothetical or conserved hypothetical proteins. Two of them, PA1921 and PA2372, have been identified previously as belonging to the las and rhl quorum-sensing regulon (43). Five genes belong to the membrane protein class; four are components of ABC transporters, and one is a siderophore receptor protein. Three genes encoding transcriptional regulators were identified. qscR encodes a LuxR-type quorum-sensing regulator that represses lasI (6) and directly controls phzA1 (30). PA0487 and PA1196 encode a probable molybdenum transport regulator and a putative transcriptional regulator, respectively. Interruption of PA0487 and PA1196 abolished phzA1 expression, indicating that these genes are essential for phzA1 expression. The distinctive color of these mutants (Fig. 3) is indicative of altered phenazine compound production. The remaining genes encode known or probable enzymes and cytoplasmic proteins. In this group is pqsA, which is involved in PQS synthesis, indicating that the PQS influences phzA1 regulation, in agreement with previous reports (19).
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TABLE 2. Mutated genes identified that caused alterations in phzA1 expression
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FIG. 4. Complementation of phzA1 expression in P. aeruginosa PA0964 mutant. The expression of phzA1 in PAO1( 0964) (squares), wild type PAO1 (triangles), and PAO1( 0964) complemented by an intact copy of PA0964 together with its promoter region inserted at the attB site on the chromosome (diamonds) is shown. No Tet was added to the media. cps, counts per second.
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FIG. 5. Activation of PQS quorum-sensing genes and rhlR in the PA0964 mutant. Expression profiles and corresponding growth curves are shown for pqsR, pqsA, pqsH, and rhlR. The data from the wild type are shown by triangles and those from the mutant by diamonds. The assays were independently repeated at least three times, and the data shown are representative of comparable results. No Tet was added to the media. cps, counts per second.
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FIG. 6. Binding of PA0964 at the pqsR promoter region, shown by electrophoretic mobility shift assay. PCR products containing the PpqsR and PlasR promoter regions and PPA1243 were added to the reaction mixtures at 50 ng each. PA0964 protein was added to the reaction mixtures in lanes B to D at 320 ng, 640 ng, and 960 ng, respectively. No protein was added in lane A. DNA of the PpqsR region was specifically bound by PmpR (PpqsR-PmpR).
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FIG. 7. Changed gene expression and quorum-sensing-regulated phenotypes in the PAO1( 0964) mutant compared to wild-type PAO1. (A) Expression profiles and corresponding growth curves for rhlA (A) and lasB (B). The data from PAO1 are shown by triangles and those from PAO1( 0964) by diamonds. (C) Pyocyanin production. (D) Biofilm formation. (E) Swarming mobility. The average diameter of the swarm trajectory was about 2.6 cm for PAO1 and 5 cm for PAO1( 0964). Pyocyanin production in the mutant is very significantly different from that in the wild type (P < 0.001, unpaired t test); biofilm formation is also significantly different (P < 0.005, unpaired t test).
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PA0964 belongs to a large group of widespread conserved hypothetical proteins, the YebC protein family (Pfam family DUF28). Neither predicted biological functions nor biochemical clues exist for this widespread family of the "unknown unknowns" (20). However, this group of proteins has been characterized from a structural perspective. The X-ray structures of YebC proteins from Aquifex aeolicus (45), E. coli, and Helicobacter pylori have been solved (Protein Data Bank entries 1lfp, 1kon, and 1mw7, respectively). Structural analysis revealed a large cavity with a predominance of negatively charged residues on the surface of this protein (45). Intriguingly, all three crystal structure solved proteins have a putative DNA binding function and a domain sharing topological similarity with the Tet repressor class D variant (Protein Data Bank [http://www.rcsb.org/pdb]). The results presented here indicate that the YebC class protein PA0964 in P. aeruginosa negatively regulates phzA1 through binding to the promoter region of the pqsR gene. This result should provide useful information on the functions of proteins of this conserved family as a whole.
The search for mutants in which the activation of phzA1 by subinhibitory concentrations of Tet was eliminated was, however, not conclusive. The abolition of subinhibitory Tet regulation in PA0487 and PA1196 mutants is complicated by their role as an activator in phzA1 expression under the experimental conditions. It was not possible to determine whether the regulation of phzA1 by subinhibitory antibiotic concentrations was mediated through these regulators. The test of phzA1 expression in PAO1(
0964) indicate that Tet regulation was unaffected (data not shown), suggesting that pmpR was not part of the regulatory pathway. In agreement with this observation, the binding of PmpR to the pqsR promoter region was not affected by the presence of Tet (data not shown).
The results also add another layer of regulation in the complex quorum-sensing networks in P. aeruginosa. There is a complex regulatory network that controls the quorum-sensing systems at both the transcriptional and posttranscriptional levels. Multiple signals, such as temperature, pH, stress, and nutrient depletion, are integrated into the important global regulatory systems through these regulators. Bacteria integrate multiple stimuli to orchestrate optimal responses and survival strategies. We suspect that all the major regulatory pathways in bacteria are connected in some way (16). These regulators are known to regulate the las or the rhl system either positively or negatively. A hierarchy in which the las system controls the rhl system is believed to exist within the acyl-HSL-based quorum-sensing system; however, this is dependent on specific growth conditions (16). The PQS system is intricately connected to the AHL systems. The rhl and las systems, respectively, place negative and positive regulation on the PQS while the PQS positively influences the rhl system. PqsR (MvfR) is the response regulator of the PQS system. The binding of PA0964 to the pqsR promoter region indicates that the effect of PA0964 on phenazine production and swarming motility was through the PQS, thus adding to a new repressor to the list of regulators of quorum-sensing systems in P. aeruginosa.
Antibiotics are bioactive compounds that can serve as weapons in microbial communities at high concentrations due to their inhibitory activity toward other microorganisms. In ecological environments, antibiotics may be at lower concentrations and likely play additional roles as signaling molecules (7, 53). Phenazine compounds, such as pyocyanin produced by P. aeruginosa, are antibiotics in their own right that can function as competitive agents in microbial communities. The regulation of phenazine compound synthesis and exoenzyme and protease expression by subinhibitory concentrations of Tet suggests that in a microbial community, the antibiotics secreted by other microorganisms could serve as a signal to alert P. aeruginosa to the existence or aggression of other bacteria, and the subsequent increased pyocyanin production would help P. aeruginosa to compete with the other microbes. It has been estimated that 0.1% of soil actinomycetes produce Tet; it is therefore a prevalent antibiotic in this community (2). As a soil microbe, P. aeruginosa would have been exposed to these compounds throughout its evolution and not only recently because of the clinical use of Tet. Genes such as efflux pumps were also upregulated by subinhibitory concentrations of Tet (unpublished data), probably to expel toxic compounds in this competitive polymicrobial environment. All of these intrinsic regulatory systems contribute to the effectiveness of P. aeruginosa as an opportunistic pathogen.
Published ahead of print on 18 July 2008. ![]()
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