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Journal of Bacteriology, January 2008, p. 494-507, Vol. 190, No. 2
0021-9193/08/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JB.01387-07
Copyright © 2008, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.

Panatda Saenkham,1,
Kathleen Kerr,2 and
Eugene W. Nester1*
Department of Microbiology,1 Department of Biostatistics, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington 981952
Received 27 August 2007/ Accepted 25 October 2007
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Previous studies have demonstrated that the VirA periplasmic domain is required for sensing monosaccharides (sugars produced by plants) through coupling with the sugar binding protein ChvE (4, 11, 12, 22, 53), while the VirA linker domain recognizes plant-derived phenolic signals (12). Interestingly, vir regulon induction occurs only under acidic conditions, at around pH 5.5, which is typically the environmental pH of the rhizosphere (20, 28), the site of Agrobacterium infection of plant hosts. It has been found that VirA is also involved in coupling the perception of the phenolic signal with the acid signal during vir regulon induction (12, 22), although the molecular mechanism underlying this signal pathway is still a mystery. There is also evidence suggesting that phenolic compounds activate the virG distal promoter (P1), while acid conditions alone induce the virG proximal promoter (P2), thereby raising the level of VirG (13, 43). The activation of the virG P2 promoter by an acidic signal also appears to involve a chromosome-encoded two-component system, ChvG-ChvI (39, 44).
In addition to the vir regulon, a number of chromosomally encoded genes (chv genes) are also important for virulence (4, 11, 14, 44, 53). chv genes play important roles both in the physiology of the organism growing in the absence of its plant hosts and in the interaction of Agrobacterium with its plant hosts (4, 11, 14, 44, 53). One of the most interesting and important chv gene systems is the chvG-chvI system. This system is essential for tumor formation and bacterial growth under acidic conditions (14, 39, 44). None of the chv genes are induced by phenolic signals or regulated by the VirA-VirG system.
Bacteria are subject to a wide range of pHs in their environments, and extracellular pH is an important factor influencing bacterial physiology (58). During a pH shift, bacteria can rapidly mount a complex cellular response to maintain the intracellular pH near neutrality, a process referred to as pH homeostasis (21, 30). Agrobacterium has been isolated from soils in all parts of the world. The ability to tolerate and adapt to various acidic conditions is critically important for the ability of Agrobacterium to infect plants in the mildly acidic rhizosphere (8, 20, 28, 39). Genome sequencing revealed that Agrobacterium has a relatively large genome (5.67 Mb) (70), and most strikingly, it contains almost 500 regulatory genes (9% of the total predicted open reading frames), including 52 two-component regulatory systems. This large complement of regulatory elements presumably gives Agrobacterium the ability to sense, respond to, and adapt to a dynamic and changing acidic rhizosphere. In addition to their involvement in induction of the vir regulon, acidic conditions also induce other Agrobacterium determinants required for virulence, such as aopB encoding an outer membrane protein (32) and pckA encoding phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase (40). Moreover, salicylic acid, a plant signal important in regulating plant defense, activates the quormone degradation system in Agrobacterium, which also is involved in virulence. Intriguingly, salicylic acid activates this system only under acidic conditions (74). These lines of evidence highlight the fact that signal perception and exchange of Agrobacterium with its plant hosts occur primarily under mild acidic conditions, and acidic conditions play critical roles in setting in motion the entire virulence program. However, how Agrobacterium senses and appropriately responds to acidic conditions in the rhizosphere is still unclear. To gain some insight into the complex acid signaling process, it is necessary to understand how Agrobacterium modulates gene expression at a global level as a response to mild acid conditions.
In this study, we used whole-genome microarrays to obtain the transcriptional profiles of wild-type Agrobacterium cells in the exponential phase grown under acidic conditions (pH 5.5) and neutral conditions (pH 7.0). Our data revealed that 152 genes were differentially expressed approximately twofold or more under the experimental conditions tested. The extent and complexity of the Agrobacterium responses to pH 5.5 were reflected in the wide distribution of genes that play a role in the general adaptative response, Agrobacterium-plant signaling, or directly contribute to Agrobacterium virulence.
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was grown in LB medium at 37°C. A. tumefaciens strain C58 was used in this study, and it bears the nopaline-type pTi plasmid. Agrobacterium was grown aerobically at 28°C with shaking (200 rpm) in MG/L complex medium or modified AB minimal medium (10). Unless otherwise indicated, acid conditions or medium refers to pH 5.5, whereas neutral conditions or medium refers to pH 7.0. The defined AB minimal medium consisted of AB salts (10), 0.02x AB buffer, 0.5 mM phosphate, and 50 mM sodium 2-(N-morpholino)ethanesulfonic acid (MES) (pH 5.5) or morpholinopropanesulfonic acid (MOPS) (pH 7.0), with 0.5% glucose as the carbon source. Antibiotics were used at the following concentrations: for Agrobacterium, 100 µg/ml carbenicillin and 50 or 100 µg/ml gentamicin; and for E. coli, 100 µg/ml ampicillin and 10 µg/ml gentamicin,. The chromogenic substrate 5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indolyl-β-D-galactopyranoside (X-Gal) was used at a concentration of 40 µg/ml. Cell growth for microarray experiments. Seven independent biological replicates of Agrobacterium sp. strain C58 picked from well-isolated colonies on MG/L agar plates were grown overnight (16 to 18 h) in 3 ml of MG/L broth at 28°C. The following day, cells from each independent biological replicate were split into two equal aliquots (1.5 ml), pelleted, and washed thoroughly (five times) in fresh and prewarmed (at 28°C) AB minimal medium at either pH 5.5 or pH 7.0. Following washing, cells were subcultured in 15 ml of fresh and prewarmed (at 28°C) AB minimal medium buffered with either MES (pH 5.5) or MOPS (pH 7.0), using an initial optical density at 600 nm (OD600) of around 0.15. After 7 h of incubation (mid-logarithmic phase of growth), the OD600 for cells growing in the acidic medium was approximately 0.7, whereas the OD600 of the culture growing under neutral conditions was approximately 0.8. Cells were then harvested for RNA isolation.
RNA isolation. Four milliliters of each of the cultures described above was mixed with 8 ml of RNA Protect bacterial reagent (Qiagen) and processed as recommended by the manufacturer. Cells were then immediately harvested by centrifugation at 4°C and 16,000 x g for 5 min, and the pellet was quickly frozen in a dry ice-ethanol bath and then stored at –70°C until it was used for RNA isolation. Total bacterial RNA was isolated using a Qiagen mini RNA isolation kit. Any contaminating DNA was removed by treatment with RNase-free DNase I (Ambion) by on-column DNase digestion. RNA integrity was checked by performing 1.5% agarose gel electrophoresis with Tris-acetate buffer, and the RNA concentration was determined spectrophotometrically at 260 nm (Beckman DU350 spectrophotometer). The absence of residual DNA was further confirmed by the lack of a product after 25 cycles of PCR with primers specific for the virG and chvA genes.
Microarray design and processing. Unique 60-mer oligonucleotides representing each of the 5,419 predicted A. tumefaciens open reading frames were selected using the Featurama program designed by the Institute for Systems Biology in Seattle, WA. All of the designed oligonucleotides were commercially synthesized in situ on glass slides (1 by 3 in.) with a total of 8,000 features by Agilent Technologies (High Point, NC). Each microarray slide contained duplicate sets of probes (i.e., two technical replicates) for 2,983 genes (55% of the 5,419 open reading frames) at different locations. Each microarray experiment reported below represented seven biologically independent replicates for each growth condition (either pH 5.5 or pH 7.0). Single-stranded cDNA was generated from 30 µg of total RNA using random hexamer primers and Superscript II (Invitrogen). Aminoallyl-modified dUTP was incorporated into the cDNA at a ratio of aminoallyl-modified dUTP to dTTP of 4:1. Indirect labeling was accomplished by incubating aminoallyl-modified cDNA with Cy3 or Cy5 monoreactive dye (Amersham). RNA from the cells grown at pH 7.0 was fluorescently labeled with Cy5, and RNA from the cells grown under acidic conditions (pH 5.5) was labeled with Cy3. The two differently labeled cDNA populations were mixed and hybridized simultaneously to the array slides, and the arrays were hybridized and washed according to manufacturer's instructions (Agilent publication G4140-90030, version 4.1, April 2004). Data acquisition was performed using an Agilent G2565AA microarray scanner, and data were extracted using Agilent's feature extraction software. Fluorescence data were processed using GenePix 6.0 image analysis software (Molecular Devices).
Microarray data analysis. Initial data handling and visualization were done with the Matlab software (The MathWorks, Natick, MA); all remaining data analysis was done in the "R" statistical computing environment using the "samr" package in Bioconductor (24). Array data were inspected for systematic intensity-dependent and spatial variation, as described by Cui and Churchill (17). This assessment yielded no indication of systematic spatial trends on the arrays and only a small amount of systematic intensity-dependent variation. Therefore, the "loess" procedure for removing systematic intensity-dependent variation (73) was used to normalize the array data. Normalized data were analyzed to identify candidate differentially expressed genes by the methodology generally referred to as "significance analysis of microarrays" (67). First, a test statistic was computed for each gene to evaluate the evidence for differential expression. This test statistic is similar to the statistic for the t test, but it has a modified denominator. Second, a reference distribution was estimated by permutation. Specifically, the labels of the pH 5.5 and 7.0 samples were shuffled, and the test statistics were recomputed with each permutation to generate a permutation null distribution. The computed test statistic for each gene was then compared against this reference distribution to get a nonparametric P value gauging the evidence that the gene is differentially expressed. For our chosen critical value of the test statistic, we estimated the proportion of "false discoveries" on the resulting gene list. The advantages of this approach include protection against false positives through the modified t-statistic and lessened reliance on parametric assumptions through permutation testing. Genes with significant P values and with log2 ratios of around 1.0 or more are reported here.
Genetic techniques and DNA methods. Plasmid isolation, restriction analysis, agarose gel electrophoresis, and DNA ligation were performed according to standard protocols (61). Plasmid DNA was introduced into Agrobacterium recipient cells by electroporation with a Bio-Rad Gene Pulser set at 25 RiF (capacitance), 400 fQ (pulse controller), and 2.5 kV. To generate promoter-gusA transcriptional gene fusions, each intergenic region containing the promoter of interest was PCR amplified from Agrobacterium strain C58 genomic DNA. The PCR primers are listed in Table 1. PCR-amplified promoter fragments (approximately 500 bp) were digested with appropriate restriction enzymes and then cloned into a modified pJP2 vector (54) in which the promoterless gusA (uidA) gene was replaced by the gene from pFUS1 (57). The corresponding gene fusion plasmids were verified by sequencing and subsequently introduced into Agrobacterium by electroporation.
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TABLE 1. PCR primers used in this study
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Construction of Agrobacterium null mutants. To disrupt an Agrobacterium gene, a 300- to 400-bp internal region of the gene was PCR amplified from strain C58 genomic DNA (with PCR primers listed in Table 1) and cloned into the suicide vector pUCP30T (GenBank accession number U33752; kindly provided by Herbert P. Schweizer, Colorado State University) to generate recombinant plasmids for mutagenesis. These gentamicin-resistant recombinant plasmids were introduced and recombined in Agrobacterium wild-type strain C58 by electroporation, and transconjugants were isolated, purified, and confirmed by PCR amplifying the conjunction region, followed by sequencing (data not shown).
Virulence assay with Kalanchoe daigremontiana leaves. The virulence of Agrobacterium strains was tested by inoculating wound sites on K. daigremontiana leaves as described previously (4). Wild-type strain C58 and avirulent strain A136 lacking the Ti plasmid served as controls for the tumorigenesis assay. The virulence assay was repeated at least three times for each strain using separate leaves. The tumors were assessed 14 days after inoculation.
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FIG. 1. Agrobacterium growth under acidic (pH 5.5) and neutral (pH 7.0) conditions. Cells were grown in MG/L medium overnight, washed five times with 0.85% NaCl, and inoculated into fresh AB minimal medium at the indicated pHs with an initial OD600 of around 0.05. The OD600 values are the means of three independent experiments.
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FIG. 2. Statistical analysis of microarray data. (A) Repeatability of the duplicate probes on the array. (B) Modest number of genes differentially expressed under acidic and neutral conditions.
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TABLE 2. Acid-induced genes
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TABLE 3. Acid-repressed genes
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FIG. 3. Acid-induced genes classified into nine categories.
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Experimental validation of microarray data by analysis of transcriptional gene fusions. To confirm the data obtained by microarray analyses, we examined the expression of six genes using transcriptional gene fusions (Fig. 4). Cells were grown under conditions similar to those used in the microarray experiment. Genes were chosen based on their expression levels in the microarray experiments or their known functions. virG, chvI, and aopB were chosen because they have been implicated in virulence (13, 14, 32). The chvA gene was included as a control, since microarray analysis showed that its expression was not altered under acidic and neutral conditions. Atu2160 is a conserved hypothetical gene that exhibited modest induction (log2 ratio, 1.35). impA is the first gene of the imp gene cluster that is induced under acidic conditions (Table 2). gusA transcriptional gene fusions of virG, impA, aopB, and Atu2160 were generated as described in Materials and Methods. The chvI::gusA and chvA::gusA gene fusions were constructed previously (74). In agreement with previous reports (13, 32), both microarray experiments and gene fusion analysis showed that virG and aopB were expressed preferentially in acidic conditions (Fig. 4). Gene fusion studies also confirmed that the chvI, Atu2160, and impA genes were induced by acidic conditions, while the expression of chvA was not altered (Fig. 4).
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FIG. 4. Confirmation of microarray data by using transcriptional gene fusions. The expression of plasmid-borne gusA transcriptional gene fusions in Agrobacterium grown under acidic and neutral conditions was determined as described in Materials and Methods. The data are the averages ± standard deviations of three independent determinations.
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Motility and chemotaxis. Chemotaxis is the movement of bacteria toward or away from certain chemical signals in their environment (36). In E. coli and Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium, acidic conditions (pH 5.5) repressed cell motility (18, 30, 45). Of the 74 genes repressed by acidic conditions, 8 are involved in motility (flagella) and chemotaxis (Table 3), including flaA (Atu0545) and flaB (Atu0543) encoding the structural subunits of the flagellum. These data agree with a previous observation that wild-type strain C58 rarely produced flagella when it was grown in induction broth (pH 5.5) (16). Not only were the two genes for flagellum synthesis repressed, but six genes associated with chemotaxis were also repressed. These genes are three alleles of mcpA (Atu0387, Atu2223, and Atu6132), cheY2 (Atu0520), mcpX (Atu0373), and mclA (Atu1912). All six genes encode methyl-accepting chemotaxis proteins. Obviously, if flagella are not being synthesized, the cell has no need to synthesize proteins concerned with their function (chemotaxis). The reduced expression of flagellar genes is also consistent with the conserved energy consumption under acidic conditions, since flagellum biosynthesis is extremely energetically expensive for the cell (42).
Cellular protection and repair process. Microarray analysis showed that a number of genes that play a role in cellular protection and repair processes were upregulated under acidic conditions. One such protein was RumC (Atu0365), a regulator of homologous recombination and the SOS response (18). In addition, several genes involved in the degradation of proteins, peptides, and glycopeptides and cellular protection were also induced significantly. These genes include two genes encoding heat shock proteins (ibpA and csbD), three stress response genes (Atu0044, Atu5052, and Atu5449), and a gene encoding a putative nonheme catalase, KatN (Atu5278). It is known that in Streptococcus mutans, E. coli, and Lactococcus lactis, acidic conditions (pH 4.8 to 6.0) also increase cellular repair activities (26, 59, 66), suggesting that acidic conditions induce a conserved cellular repair response in unrelated bacteria. The elevated activities of cellular repair and protection under acidic conditions further suggest that the cells recognize pH 5.5 as a mild stress signal and modulate their gene expression pattern to adapt to these acid conditions.
Acid conditions induce Atu5278 encoding a putative nonheme catalase (KatN). Accumulating evidence suggests that the bacterial acid response is connected to the oxidative stress response (2). In Staphylococcus aureus, catalase was induced under acidic conditions (8). In E. coli and Brucella melitensis, acid stress cross protects against H2O2 challenge (45, 65). For plant-associated bacteria, the ability to defend against oxidative stress is of vital importance during bacterium-plant interactions (51, 71). Catalases detoxify H2O2, a major component of the oxidative stress imposed on a cell. In bacteria, many factors influence the levels of catalase; these factors include H2O2 (2), the stationary phase of growth (2), phosphate starvation (75), and cell density (1). In Agrobacterium, catalase (KatA) has been implicated in virulence, and katA was induced by plant tissue and acidic conditions (pH 5.5) (71, 72). However, our microarray analysis did not detect induction of katA under acid conditions. These apparently inconsistent observations could have resulted from several factors, including differences in the experimental growth conditions. In our microarray experiments, cells were grown in liquid medium, whereas the cells were grown on agar plates in the previous study (72). Instead of detecting the acid inducibility of katA, microarray analysis revealed that acid conditions induced the transcription of Atu5278 located on the At plasmid (the second plasmid in A. tumefaciens C58). The Atu5278 protein is 70% identical to the Sinorhizobium meliloti SMc00371 protein, 40% identical to Bradyrhizobium sp. KatN, and 33% identical to the Rhodopseudomonas palustris Mn catalase.
To confirm the acid inducibility of Atu5278 (putative katN), we generated a gusA transcriptional gene fusion to the promoter of Atu5278 as described in Materials and Methods. Expression assays showed that there was >threefold induction of an Atu5278::gusA fusion under acidic conditions (723 Miller units of β-glucuronidase activity at pH 5.5 and 198 Miller units at pH 7.0). To gain some insight into whether Atu5278 plays any functional role in the acid response and pathogenicity, we constructed an Atu5278 mutant as described in Materials and Methods. The Atu5278 mutant grew as well as the wild-type parent strain under acidic conditions (data not shown), suggesting that the putative katN gene is not essential for growth in acidic liquid medium. In addition, the katN mutation did not affect virulence on K. daigremontiana leaves. However, wild-type Agrobacterium pregrown in acidic liquid medium exhibited increased resistance to subsequent H2O2 challenge, whereas the Atu5278 mutant pregrown in a similar acid medium was more sensitive to subsequent H2O2 challenge (Z. C. Yuan, P. Saenkham, and E. W. Nester, unpublished data). Therefore, it appears that the oxidative stress response is one of the conserved responses to acid conditions in Agrobacterium, E. coli, B. melitensis, and S. aureus. Further study is needed to characterize the putative nonheme catalase.
Genes involved in regulation and signal transduction.
In bacteria, acidic conditions activate a number of regulatory and signal transduction genes which appear to play roles in an acid environment. In Helicobacter pylori, acidic conditions induce the regulatory factor fur (ferric uptake regulator), which regulates iron homeostasis (6). In S. enterica serovar Typhimurium and E. coli, an external acid pH (pH 4.5 to 5.8) induces expression of the RNA polymerase
s factor encoded by rpoS (55). In Agrobacterium and in other
-proteobacteria that have been sequenced, no RpoS homolog has been identified. No sigma factors were induced by acid conditions in Agrobacterium. In S. enterica and E. coli, the phoP-phoQ two-component system was induced by acid conditions and is involved in virulence and acid tolerance (5, 23, 41). In Agrobacterium, the annotated phoP-phoQ (Atu4712-Atu4711) operon has not been characterized, but microarray analysis suggested that the expression of the phoPQ operon is not affected by mild acidic conditions. However, two functionally undefined transcriptional regulatory genes located in the linear chromosome, Atu4006 (encoding a Fis-type transcriptional regulator) and Atu4319 (encoding an AraC-type DNA binding protein), were induced by acid conditons. In addition, microarray analysis confirmed that virG, the transcriptional regulator of the VirA-VirG system, was induced by acid conditions. Further, microarray analysis revealed that the chvG-chvI system was acid inducible, which is discussed below. The acid inducibility of these regulatory genes suggests that the acid response in Agrobacterium may be more complex than we originally thought, which also implies that Agrobacterium uses distinct mechanisms to adapt to acid conditions. This may also reflect a pattern of intricate signaling between Agrobacterium and its plant hosts.
Macromolecule synthesis and degradation. Microarray analysis also revealed that several genes involved in basic cellular processes, such as amino acid and nucleic acid synthesis, were repressed (Table 3). Eight ribosomal protein genes were significantly repressed under acidic conditions (Table 3). These genes were four genes concerned with 16S rRNA synthesis (Atu0053, Atu2547, Atu3937, and Atu4180), three genes concerned with 23S rRNA synthesis (Atu0057, Atu2542, and Atu3941), and one gene concerned with 5S rRNA synthesis (Atu4186). A gene encoding RNA polymerase (Atu2109) was also repressed. No ribosomal protein-encoding gene was upregulated under acidic conditions. Moreover, genes encoding amino acid transporters were also repressed (Atu1577, Atu1717, and Atu4687). Further, three genes participating in ribonucleotide reduction were also repressed. These genes were the genes in the putative operon comprising nrdI (Atu0069), nrdE (Atu0070), and nrdF (Atu0071). These data suggest that the ability to synthesize nucleic acid and protein was decreased under acid conditions, which may be consistent with the slightly lower growth rate of cells at pH 5.5. It is noteworthy that repression of genes encoding ribosomal proteins and amino acid synthesis in response to acidic pH was also observed in other gram-negative bacteria, including Shewanella oneidensis (pH 4) (37), S. enterica serovar Typhimurium (30), and E. coli (pH 4.8 to 6.0) (66). Thus, it appears that these bacteria share some conserved features that may reflect general mechanisms used to repress macromolecule synthesis when organisms are adapting to an environmental acidic pH.
Alterations of cell metabolism and respiration in response to acid conditions. Increasing evidence suggests that, as general and conserved responses, bacterial metabolism and respiration are altered under acidic conditions (59, 66). E. coli gadA and gadB (encoding glutamate decarboxylase) are induced by acidic conditions (pH 5.5) (29, 45). However, in Agrobacterium, there is no evidence of genes with sequence similarity to gadAB, suggesting that Agrobacterium may utilize alternative mechanisms to adapt to an acidic environment. In the rhizosphere, bacteria are subjected to a wide variety of low-molecular-weight natural products produced by plants and other soil organisms (19). A recent study reported that the exudates of several unwounded plants consist primarily of organic acids of the tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle, particularly citric, malic, and succinic acids, as well as the sugars glucose and fructose and the amino acid tryptophan (35). Further, the bacteria that colonize root tips most efficiently are the bacteria that utilize citrate as a major carbon source (35). Thus, it is perhaps not surprising that many acid-induced genes are involved in the transport and metabolism of citrate and other members of the TCA cycle, including genes encoding isocitrate lyase (Atu0607), malate:quinone oxidoreductase (Atu0811), sucrose-6-phosphate hydrolase (Atu0944), the TRAP-T family transporter (Atu2470), the TctA subunit of the tricarboxylate transport family (Atu2471), the dicarboxylate MFS transporter (Atu4017), and acetyl-coenzyme A synthase (Atu4130). Consistent with the recent observation that pckA was acid inducible (40), microarray analysis revealed that transcription of pckA was induced around twofold (Table 2). In addition to the organic acids used as a source of carbon and energy, the consumption of organic acids by the TCA cycle results in alkalinization and thus may help maintain internal pH homeostasis (29).
In contrast to the acid-induced genes involved in selective uptake of TCA cycle intermediates, Agrobacterium repressed nine genes involved in transporting multidrugs, amino acids, and fatty acids (Atu1577, Atu1717, Atu2744, Atu3253, Atu3575, Atu3821, Atu4667, Atu4768, and Atu5268) (Table 3). The reduced uptake of multidrugs might be consistent with the reduced cell ability to detoxify these multidrugs under acid conditions. The reduced transport of amino acids and fatty acids is consistent with the slightly lower growth rate of cells under acidic conditions. The slight growth inhibition under acidic conditions is also reflected in the repression of another set of genes involved in respiration, energy metabolism, and electron transfer. These genes include fixN, fixP, fixQ, fixH, hemA, and hemN, as well as coxC (Table 3). It is noteworthy that respiration and electron transfer is one of the endogenous sources of H2O2 accumulation and oxidative stress (2, 59). Therefore, decreased respiration and electron transfer might help reduce acid-related oxidative stress.
Alterations in the cell envelope, including exoploysaccharide synthesis. The bacterial cell envelope is a partial shield against environmental stress and is also the first cell structure that interacts directly with an acidic environment (18, 31, 34, 66, 68). Further, it is the structure that likely interacts with the plant surface. Many bacteria change their envelope in response to an acid environment; these bacteria include S. oneidensis (pH 4) (37), S. mutans (pH 5.0) (26), and E. coli (pH 5.5) (30, 34, 66). Microarray analysis revealed that the expression of 17 cell envelope genes was induced in cells grown at pH 5.5; this is 24% of the total number of acid-induced genes (Fig. 3). This may reflect the fact that Agrobacterium, like other bacteria, evolved the ability to respond to mild acid conditions by synthesizing an altered cell envelope. These 17 genes are 5 genes directly involved in synthesis of the cell envelope (Atu0290, Atu1131, Atu2321, Atu2222, and Atu2611) and 12 exo genes that participate in the synthesis and metabolism of succinoglycan. Atu0290 encodes the rare compound lipoprotein A, whose function needs to be identified. Previous studies have identified Atu1131 (aopB) as an acid-inducible gene (32). Atu2321 encodes a penicillin binding protein involved in peptidoglycan synthesis and cell wall metabolism (3). Atu2222 is putatively involved in glycosyl transferase reactions which could modify the lipopolysaccharide of the cell wall. Atu2611 encodes a putative phospholipid phosphatase that may be involved in a modification of the phospholipid profile of the envelope.
Succinoglycan was initially identified in S. meliloti as a calcofluor-stained exopolysaccharide required for invasion of alfalfa roots (38). In S. meliloti, exopolysaccharide biosynthesis is influenced by a wide variety of factors, including a low phosphate concentration (76), the ppGpp-mediated stringent response (69), and the ExoS-ChvI two-component regulatory system, which is orthologous to the Agrobacterium ChvG-ChvI system (15). Nine of the acid-induced exo genes are located in a single cluster. These genes are Atu4049 (exoP), Atu4050 (exoN), Atu4052 (exoM), Atu4054 (exoL), Atu4055 (exoK), Atu4056 (exoH), Atu4057 (exoT), Atu4058 (exoW), and Atu4060 (exoU) (Fig. 3). In addition, three genes that are involved in exopolysaccharide synthesis but are far from this main cluster were also acid induced. These genes are exoQ (Atu 3325), exoY (Atu 3327), and exoI (Atu4014). To our knowledge, this is the first observation that exo genes are induced by environmental acid conditions.
Agrobacterium T6SS is induced under acid conditions. An interesting finding of this work was the observation that the imp gene cluster is induced by acid (Table 2), which was confirmed by demonstrating that acidic conditions significantly induced the expression of an impA::gusA gene fusion (Fig. 4). The imp gene cluster was first identified in Rhizobium leguminosaum as a cluster encoding secreted proteins that impair nitrogen fixation in peas (7). The imp cluster in R. leguminosarum comprises 14 genes, including genes involved in protein phosphorylation (encoding either a kinase or a phosphatase) (7). Other genes in this cluster show similarity to genes involved in bacterial type III secretion. Four proteins secreted by wild-type cells were not secreted by an imp mutant. Interestingly, the secreted proteins blocked effective nodulation on pea plants, suggesting that they participated in the interaction with plants. Recent studies with Vibrio cholerae and Pseudomas aeruginosa further established that the imp orthologous genes encode a new bacterial secretion system now designated the T6SS (47, 56). Importantly, this T6SS is required for extracellular secretion of proteins lacking canonical hydrophobic amino-terminal signal sequences (47). In P. aeruginosa, an imp cluster gene designated icmF1 encodes a protein secretion apparatus which secretes a hexameric protein that forms rings. This secretion apparatus may also function in chronic Pseudomonas infections in cystic fibrosis (47). In addition, in S. enterica, a sciS (icmF homolog) knockout mutant was hypervirulent in mice (50). Interestingly, T6SS also plays an important role in Burkholderia virulence (62).
In Agrobacterium, the entire imp cluster also contains 14 open reading frames, impABCDEFGHIJK-icmF-impMN (from Atu4330 to Atu4343), which are contiguous in the linear chromosome of the sequenced A. tumefaciens C58 genome (70). The acid-inducible imp genes identified by microarray analysis include impJ (Atu4334), impI (Atu4335), impG (Atu4337), impF (Atu4338), impD (Atu4340), impC (Atu4341), impB (Atu4342), and impA (Atu4343). In silico analysis revealed that in addition to the genera already mentioned, many gram-negative proteobacteria, including animal and plant pathogens, also have orthologous imp clusters. These organisms include members of the genera Bradyrhizobium, Burkholderia, Rhodobacter, Shewanella, and Xanthomonas. This imp cluster was also found in Agrobacterium strain S4, but it is not present in S. meliloti and Agrobacterium sp. strain K84. The significance of its presence in closely related genera or species is not clear. Nevertheless, the acid-induced expression pattern of the imp genes represents a novel model for transcriptional regulation of T6SS. Whether the T6SS plays any role in acid adaptation or Agrobacterium-plant interactions needs to be determined.
Functional analysis of knockout mutations of acid-inducible genes. Prior to infecting plants, Agrobacterium must survive, propagate, and interact with wounded plants in the rhizosphere. In addition, acid conditions (pH 5.5) is an essential signal for Agrobacterium vir regulon induction. We considered the possibility that certain acid-inducible genes likely contribute to growth at pH 5.5 or are involved in Agrobacterium-plant interactions in an acidic rhizosphere. To explore these possibilities, nine acid-induced genes were chosen for functional analyses. These genes were Atu0290 (rare lipoprotein A), Atu0841 (amino peptidase family protein), Atu0944 (cscA; sucrose-6-phosphate hydrolase), Atu2055 (multidrug efflux pump), Atu2224 (aldA; NAD-dependent aldehyde dehydrogenase), Atu2470 (TRAP-T family transporter), Atu3274 (RND efflux transporter), Atu4130 (acsA; acetoacetyl-coenzyme A synthetase), and Atu5278 (katN; putative nonheme catalase). Knockout mutants were constructed as described in Materials and Methods. A mutation in each of these nine genes did not affect the growth at pH 5.5 noticeably (data not shown), indicating that none of these genes is essential for growth under mild acidic conditions. Nor was the colony morphology of any of the mutants growing on solid acidic medium altered compared to the colony morphology of the wild-type strain. Moreover, when inoculated onto K. daigremontiana leaves, all of the mutants formed normal-size tumors compared to the wild-type strain tumors (data not shown). Thus, these acid-inducible genes appear not to be involved in Agrobacterium-plant interactions. However, we cannot rule out the possibility that these genes are involved in pathogenicity in the natural environment of the rhizosphere. It is also conceivable that individual mutations had no effect either on growth at pH 5.5 or virulence because other genes with redundant functions are present in the cell.
Acid-inducible genes directly involved in Agrobacterium-plant interactions. Microarray analysis revealed that not only does Agrobacterium share general and conserved responses to environmental acid conditions with other bacteria, as described above, but it also has a highly specialized response to perceive the environmental acid as an important signal dedicated to Agrobacterium-plant interactions. In addition to confirming the previously identified acid-inducible genes involved in Agrobacterium-plant interactions, such as aopB, virG, and pckA (13, 32, 40), the present microarray experiments uncovered many additional acid-inducible genes associated with Agrobacterium-plant interactions. These genes include virE0, virE1, virH1, virH2, and the chvG-chvI system (Table 2).
Agrobacterium chvG-chvI two-component system is induced under acid conditions.
The Agrobacterium chvG-chvI two-component system is of special interest because it is a global pH-sensing and regulatory system which controls acid-inducible genes involved in virulence (39). These genes include the chromosomal gene katA, which encodes a catalase detoxifying H2O2 (72), aopB (32), and pckA (40). Mutations in the chvG-chvI loci, apparently pleiotrophic, conferred a number of distinctive properties on the cell. chvG-chvI mutants cannot grow in a minimal acidic medium, a complex medium, or minimal media containing the antibiotics tetracycline, novobiocin, and carbenicillin, as well as several detergents (14). The importance of the chvG-chvI regulatory system was further underscored by its role in the interaction of other
-proteobacteria with their hosts. In S. meliloti, the synthesis of succinoglycan, which is required for the nodulation of alfalfa, is under the control of the ExoS-ChvI system, which is a homolog of the ChvG-ChvI system (15). Moreover, the S. meliloti ChvG-ChvI system is essential for viability, since neither gene could be deleted (49). In Brucella, BvrS and BvrR, the homologs of ChvG and ChvI, control the synthesis of several outer membrane proteins required for virulence (25). Although the ChvG-ChvI system plays important roles in the interactions of plant and animal pathogens with their hosts, its regulatory pattern has not been reported. Using microarray analysis, we demonstrated that the chvG-chvI system was activated by acid conditions (Table 2). The upregulation of chvI was also confirmed by transcriptional analysis of a chvI::gusA gene fusion (Fig. 4). This evidence suggests that the Agrobacterium chvG-chvI system, like most other two-component systems, is self-activated. Further identification of the regulated targets of the ChvG-ChvI system (chvI regulon) would provide more insight into to how Agrobacterium modulates its gene expression in an acidic rhizosphere and initiates the virulence program.
Acidic conditions alone induce five vir genes. Surprisingly, microarray analyses also identified virE0, virE1, virH1, and virH2 as acid-inducible genes, and this was confirmed by transcriptional gene fusion studies (Table 4). Previous studies showed that VirE1 and VirE2 are transferred into plant cells independent of the T-DNA and are required for virulence (48). virE0 has not been described previously, and whether it plays any role in pathogenicity is not clear. The small VirE1 protein is a chaperone which is required for exit of the VirE2 protein into the host cell (77). Why virE0 and virE1 are acid inducible is not clear, especially since neither virE2 nor virE3 is acid inducible. VirH1 and VirH2 share high homologies with cytochrome P-450 monooxygenases (9). Both genes are under the control of VirA-VirG, but mutations in either one or both have no significant effect on virulence, as determined by laboratory assays (9). In addition, the VirH2 protein can demethylate and mineralize many phenolic vir gene inducers and thereby reduce their toxic activity against bacterial growth and destroy their vir gene-inducing activity (9). The fact that acid alone induces expression of both virH1 (Atu6150) and virH2 (Atu6151) suggests that many phenolic compounds are exuded by the plant and that it behooves Agrobacterium to detoxify these compounds.
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TABLE 4. Acid-induced gene expression is VirA-VirG independenta
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Acid-induced gene expression is VirA-VirG independent. The VirA-VirG regulatory system controls the expression of the entire vir regulon, including virE0, virH1,and virA-virG itself (22, 33, 52). In addition, acid conditions alone induce many genes involved in Agrobacterium-plant interactions, including aopB, chvG-chvI, virE0, virH1, and especially virG. To explore whether acid-induced expression of these plant-associated genes was regulated by the VirA-VirG system, we compared the expression of chvI, virG, aopB, impA, virE0, and virH1 under acid and neutral conditions in wild-type and virG deletion mutants. The data indicate that the induction of these genes under acid conditions alone did not involve the VirA-VirG system, since their expression levels were similar in the wild type and the virG mutant (Table 4). This evidence, together with the fact that in the absence of plant-derived phenolic compounds other members of the vir regulon, such as virB, were not induced under acid conditions (Table 4), suggests that acid signaling occurs prior to, and is independent of, the VirA-VirG-mediated phenolic signaling during Agrobacterium-plant interactions.
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FIG. 5. Schematic diagram of the Agrobacterium response to signals (acid, phenolic compounds, and sugars) in the rhizosphere.
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This study also extended our current knowledge by demonstrating for the first time that virE0, virE1, virH1, and virH2 are induced under acid condition (Table 2 and Fig. 5). Although these four vir genes were directly activated by the VirA-VirG system to a much greater extent with plant-derived phenolic signals, their induction by an acid signal alone was not mediated through the VirA-VirG system (Table 4). Since the expression of other vir genes, such as the virB operon, was not affected by acidic conditions (Table 4), it is reasonable to believe that, parallel to the induction of virG by acidic conditions, these four vir genes may have additional unidentified roles in recognizing and responding to environmental acidic signals.
Microarray analyses also revealed that a considerable number of hypothetical genes with unidentified functions were regulated by acid conditions (Tables 2 and 3). Some of these genes may play roles in the general acid response or participate in Agrobacterium-plant interactions. However, it is possible that some of these hypothetical genes are indirectly regulated by acid conditions and correlated with the slightly lower growth rate of the cells under acid conditions.
The evidence that the plant defense signal salicylic acid modulates Agrobacterium quorum sensing only under acid conditions (74), the fact that the vir regulon is activated only under acid conditions, and the observation that acid conditions alone induce the expression of several virulence factors, including chvG-chvI, highlight the fact that signal perception and exchange during Agrobacterium-plant interactions occur predominantly under the acidic conditions of the rhizosphere. Therefore, studies aimed at understanding the molecular mechanisms underlying Agrobacterium-plant interactions should mimic the acidic conditions of the rhizosphere, although identification of the mechanism and signaling pathway(s) by which external pH is sensed by bacteria is still a lingering challenge.
This research was supported by NSF grant 9723735 and by research grant IS-3622-04R from BARD, the United States-Israel Binational Agricultural Research and Development Fund, to E.W.N.
Published ahead of print on 9 November 2007. ![]()
Present address: Seattle Biomedical Research Institute, 307 Westlake Avenue N, Suite 500, Seattle, WA 98109-5219. ![]()
Present address: Department of Biotechnology, Faculty of Science, Mahidol University, Bangkok 10400, Thailand. ![]()
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