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Journal of Bacteriology, July 2004, p . 4350-4360, Vol . 186,
No . 13
Mutational Analysis and Biochemical Characterization of the Burkholderia
thailandensis DW503 Quorum-Sensing Network
Ricky L . Ulrich,1* Harry B . Hines,2
N . Parthasarathy,1 and Jeffrey A . Jeddeloh1,
Bacteriology Division,1 Toxinology Division, United States Army
Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases, Fort Detrick, Maryland
21702-50112
Received 15 December 2003/ Accepted 30 March 2004
Numerous gram-negative bacteria communicate and regulate gene
expression through a cell density-responsive mechanism termed quorum
sensing (QS), which involves the synthesis and perception of
diffusible N-acyl-homoserine lactones (AHL) . In this study we
genetically and physiologically characterized the Burkholderia
thailandensis DW503 QS network . In silico analysis of the B .
thailandensis genome revealed the presence of at least three AHL
synthases (AHS) and five transcriptional regulators belonging to the
LuxIR family of proteins . Mass spectrometry demonstrated that
wild-type B . thailandensis synthesizes N-hexanoyl-homoserine
lactone (C6-HSL), N-octanoyl-homoserine lactone (C8-HSL),
and N-decanoyl-homoserine lactone (C10-HSL) .
Mutation of the btaI1 (luxI) AHS gene prevented
accumulation of C8-HSL in culture supernatants, enhanced
beta-hemolysis of sheep erythrocytes, increased lipase production,
and altered colony morphology on swarming and twitching motility
plates . Disruption of the btaI3 (luxI) AHS prevented
biosynthesis of C6-HSL and increased lipase production and
beta-hemolysis, whereas mutagenesis of the btaI2 (luxI)
allele eliminated C10-HSL accumulation and reduced lipase
production . Complementation of the btaI1 and btaI3 mutants fully
restored the synthesis of C8-HSL and C6-HSL to
parental levels . In contrast, mutagenesis of the btaR1,
btaR3, btaR4, and btaR5 (luxR)
transcriptional regulators had no effect on AHL accumulation,
enhanced lipase production, and resulted in extensive beta-hemolysis
on sheep blood agar plates . Furthermore, interruption of the btaI1,
btaR1, and btaR3 genes altered colony morphology on twitching
and swarming motility plates and induced pigmentation . Additionally,
phenotypic microarray analysis indicated that QS in B . thailandensis
both positively and negatively affects the metabolism of numerous
substrates, including citric acid, formic acid, glucose 6-phosphate,
capric acid,
-hydroxybutyric
acid, and D-arabinose . These results
demonstrate that mutagenesis of the B . thailandensis QS system
affects various cellular processes, including lipase production,
swarming and twitching motility, beta-hemolysis of sheep erythrocytes,
and carbon metabolism and/or transport .
Burkholderia thailandensis is a gram-negative motile rod that
is commonly found in stagnant waters, soils, and rice paddies in the
central and northeastern areas of Thailand (5) . B .
thailandensis is genetically and physiologically similar to
Burkholderia pseudomallei, the etiologic agent of melioidosis (5,
22, 45) . Biochemically, these
two organisms have similar abilities to metabolize various carbon
sources, with the exception of L-arabinose, which only
B . thailandensis assimilates (45) . Most striking
are the virulence differences between B . thailandensis and
B . pseudomallei . Brett et al . reported that the 50% lethal dose
of B . pseudomallei in a hamster model was <10 CFU, whereas the
50% lethal dose of B . thailandensis was >106 CFU (5) .
Quorum sensing (QS) is an N-acyl-homoserine lactone (AHL) microbial
communication system that is employed by gram-negative bacteria
to regulate gene expression and has been shown to both positively and
negatively control various cellular processes (2,
4, 6, 8,
9, 11, 14,
15, 27, 28,
30, 33, 34,
37, 44) . Recent studies have
demonstrated that members of the genus Burkholderia encode
functional QS systems that regulate AHL biosynthesis and secretion of
extracellular virulence factors and contribute to the in vivo
pathogenicity of Burkholderia cepacia (3,
10, 23, 29,
30, 42) .
In this study, we both genetically and biochemically characterized
the B . thailandensis QS network and determined that at least
three functional AHL synthases (AHS) (LuxI) and five transcriptional
regulators (LuxR), two of which are orphaned (not flanked by a
luxI homologue) for a putative luxI gene (btaR4 and btaR5),
are present . The products of the B . thailandensis AHS genes
were identified as N-hexanoyl-homoserine lactone (C6-HSL),
N-octanoyl-homoserine lactone (C8-HSL), and N-decanoyl-homoserine
lactone (C10-HSL) . By creating merodiploids in each of the
B . thailandensis QS alleles, we demonstrate that QS affects
lipase production, colony morphology on swarming and twitching
motility plates, beta-hemolysis of sheep erythrocytes, and the
metabolism and/or transport of numerous carbon sources .
Bacterial strains and plasmids. The bacterial strains and
cloning vectors used in this study are described in Table
1 . B . thailandensis, Agrobacterium tumefaciens
A136, and Escherichia coli were cultured in Luria-Bertani (LB)
broth or on LB agar at either 30 or 37°C . For screening of
recombinant clones, E . coli was grown on LB agar plates containing
25 µg of kanamycin (Sigma, St . Louis, Mo.) per ml and 50 µg of
5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indolyl-ß-D-galactoside
(X-Gal) (Sigma) per ml by using standard procedures (36) .
| TABLE 1 . Bacterial strains and plasmids used in this study
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Cloning of the B . thailandensis internal gene amplicons and
mutant construction. Primer design for each B . thailandensis QS
allele was performed using the B . pseudomallei K96243 luxIR
homologues recovered by blastx analysis using the B . cepacia cepIR
and Pseudomonas aeruginosa lasIR and rhlIR genes as
query sequences (http://www.sanger.ac.uk/) .
Genomic DNA for PCR amplification was purified with a MasterPure
DNA purification kit (Epicentre Technologies, Madison, Wis.) .
The PCR cycling parameters used for internal gene amplification, the
methods used for mutating each B . thailandensis QS gene, and
site-specific integration were confirmed by using the methods of
Ulrich and DeShazer (43) .
AHL reporter assays and mass spectrometry (MS). The
accumulation of AHLs by wild-type B . thailandensis and each QS
mutant was analyzed by using the bioreporter strain A . tumefaciens
A136 (19), which responds to exogenously secreted AHLs
that are of various sizes and chemical compositions . Thin-layer
chromatography (TLC) plates were overlaid with A . tumefaciens
A136 (inoculated into LB soft agar containing 50 µg of X-Gal per ml)
and incubated for 36 to 48 h at 30°C or until adequate color
development was achieved .
AHLs were purified from culture supernatants and separated on TLC
plates as described by Shaw et al . (40) . Preparative TLC
spots visually identified as containing AHLs were scraped and
extracted three times with 1 ml of methylene chloride (B&J HPLC
grade; VWR Scientific, Bridgeport, N.J.) . Residual debris was
pelleted by centrifugation at 4,000 rpm (Eppendorf 5415C) for 10 min .
Supernatants were pooled and evaporated at 50°C under a gentle stream
of nitrogen . Dried samples were reconstituted in 100 µl of 50%
acetonitrile (B&J HPLC grade; VWR Scientific) in 0.1% formic acid
(Sigma), and aliquots (20 µl) were injected onto a PepMap C18
column (150 mm by 1 mm; 5 µm; 100 Å; LC Packings, San Francisco,
Calif.) . An ABI 140B syringe pump (Applied Biosystems, Foster City,
Calif.) provided a flow rate of 50 µl/min, and a 20-min gradient of 0
to 100% solvent B (0.1% formic acid in 95% acetonitrile) was used
to elute the compounds of interest . Solvent A was 0.1% formic
acid . The column effluent was directed into an LCQ DECA ion trap mass
spectrometer equipped with an API II electrospray interface
(Finnigan, San Jose, Calif.) . The transfer capillary temperature was
350°C . Full-scan, positive-ion mass spectra were acquired by scanning
from m/z 100 to m/z 335 in 1.5 s . For identification,
extracts were fragmented by collision-induced dissociation of the
corresponding [M+H]+ ion by using a relative collision
energy setting of 19 . The spectra were acquired by scanning from
m/z 50 to m/z 335 in 1.5 s . MS-MS spectra of unknown
compounds were compared to those of standards acquired under the same
conditions in order to confirm the identities of the unknown .
Exoproduct secretion and motility analysis. Siderophore
activity was measured on CAS agar plates by using methods described
previously (38) . Briefly, wild-type B . thailandensis
and each QS mutant were replicated onto CAS agar plates and
incubated for 24 to 48 h at 37°C . Iron removal, indicating
siderophore secretion, was assayed by measuring the blue-orange halo
surrounding each inoculation site . Protease, lipase, and
phospholipase C (PLC) production (zone sizes) was determined by using
previously described methods (12) . Briefly, protease
secretion was measured on 3% skim milk agar plates, lipase production
was measured on tributyrin plates, and PLC synthesis was measured
on egg yolk agar plates . Proteolytic activity (peptide degradation),
lipase production (with polyoxyethylene sorbitan Tween 40 as
the substrate), and PLC production (lecithin cleavage) were confirmed
by measuring zone sizes 24 to 48 h postinoculation . Beta-hemolysis
was analyzed on 5% sheep blood agar plates . Positive reactions, as
indicated by clearing or lysis of erythrocytes surrounding the
bacterial colonies, were determined 48 to 72 h following inoculation .
Colony morphologies on twitching and swarming motility plates were
examined by using methods described by Köhler et al . and Reimmann et
al . (26, 35) .
Analysis of substrate utilization by B . thailandensis and each
QS mutant. Carbon utilization was monitored in duplicate by using
BiOLOG phenotypic microarrays (BiOLOG, Hayward, Calif.) . B .
thailandensis and each mutant derivative were cultured on R2A
agar plates (BiOLOG) for 24 h at 37°C . Cell densities (as determined
from plate scrapings) were adjusted by using IF-0 inoculating
fluid (BiOLOG), inoculating (100 µl per well) into PM1 and PM2 assay
plates (BiOLOG), and incubating at 37°C for 24 to 48 h or until
adequate color development was achieved .
B . thailandensis has multiple luxIR genes. By
using the cepIR, lasIR, and rhlIR genes as query sequences,
several luxIR genes were identified in the B . pseudomallei
K96243 genome . Incorporating the B . pseudomallei K96243 QS
genes for primer design (Table 2), the B .
thailandensis QS alleles were PCR amplified (small internal gene
amplicons for mutant construction), cloned, sequenced, and used in
silico to search the B . thailandensis genome (The Institute
for Genomic Research) for putative luxIR homologues . As with
B . pseudomallei, in silico analysis of the B . thailandensis
genome revealed the presence of at least three luxI and five
luxR transcriptional regulators (Table 3) . Database
(blastx) search results further established that B . thailandensis
encodes at least three AHSs and five putative transcriptional
regulators, two of which are orphaned (no flanking luxI gene
was identified) for cognate AHS alleles (btaR4 and btaR5)
belonging to the LuxIR family of proteins (Table 3) .
The btaIR1 and btaIR2 gene pairs are disrupted by
intergenic regions, while the btaIR3 genes are transcribed in
the same direction (data not shown) . The structural organization,
including the surrounding alleles, is identical to that reported for
Burkholderia mallei (R . L . Ulrich, D . DeShazer, H . Hines, and
J . A . Jeddeloh, submitted for publication) . The B . thailandensis
genome was also screened in silico for potential LuxS and QscR
homologues, none of which were identified, suggesting that B .
thailandensis encodes only an AHL-based communication system .
| TABLE 2 . Primers used for PCR amplification of internal gene amplicons
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| TABLE 3 . Protein homology searches for the B . thailandensis QS
genes
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Characterization and detection of the AHLs produced by B .
thailandensis. In order to characterize the AHLs synthesized by
B . thailandensis, the A . tumefaciens A136 bioreporter
strain was used, which allowed detection of multiple AHLs with
variable side chain lengths and chemical modifications (C4-HSL)
(40) . To confirm that strains BTRJ1 (btaI1),
BTRJ2 (btaI2), and BTRJ3 (btaI3) were deficient in AHL
synthesis, TLC overlays with A . tumefaciens A136 were
examined . As shown in Fig . 1, lanes 2 to 4, BTRJ1 (btaI1),
BTRJ2 (btaI2), and BTRJ3 (btaI3) failed to produce
detectable levels of C8-HSL, C10-HSL, and C6-HSL,
respectively . However, it should be noted that AHL detection in this
study was dependent on the sensitivity of the bioreporter strain, and
it is possible that B . thailandensis produces additional AHLs
at concentrations below the limit of detection with A . tumefaciens
A136 . To determine if any of the five LuxR homologues encoded by
B . thailandensis affected AHL biosynthesis, TLC overlays were
performed with AHL extracts from each transcriptional regulator
mutant . Although the A . tumefaciens A136 bioassay is only
semiquantitative, it appeared that the remaining B . thailandensis
LuxR QS mutants (BTRJ4 to BTRJ8) accumulated similar levels of C6-HSL,
C8-HSL, or C10-HSL, suggesting that these LuxR
proteins have no effect on AHL production (data not shown) . To
determine if AHL synthesis could be complemented, wild-type copies of
btaI1 and btaI3 were heterologously expressed in the
corresponding luxI mutants . Both BTRJ1 (btaI1) and
BTRJ3 (btaI3) were fully complemented, and AHL production was
restored to parental levels (Fig . 1, lanes 5 and
6) . Attempts to clone and maintain the btaI2 gene in E .
coli were unsuccessful .
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FIG . 1 . Synthesis of the AHL molecules produced by B . thailandensis
and each luxI mutant . AHL extracts were spotted (10 µl) onto C18
reversed-phase TLC plates and visualized by using an A . tumefaciens
A136 overlay . Lane 1, wild-type B . thailandensis; lane 2, BTRJ1 (btaI1);
lane 3, BTRJ2 (btaI2); lane 4, BTRJ3 (btaI3); lane 5,
BTRJ9 (pBHR1-btaI1); and lane 6, BTRJ10 (pBHR1-btaI3).
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To determine the chemical structure of each AHL produced by B .
thailandensis, MS of the TLC-purified molecules was performed .
Figures 2D to F show that B . thailandensis synthesized
C8-HSL, C6-HSL, and C10-HSL . The
mass spectra for the C6-HSL extract and the standard
compound had ions at m/z 200.0 and m/z 200.2,
respectively, in addition to a product ion at m/z 102.0, which
is characteristic of the lactone ring (Fig . 2A and D) . The
spectra for the C8-HSL extract and the standard had
molecular ions at m/z 228.3 and m/z 227.9,
respectively, and also contained the AHL signature lactone ion at
m/z 102.0 (Fig . 2B and E) . Like that of C6-HSL
and C8-HSL, fragmentation of the C10-HSL standard
and extract produced ion products at m/z 102 (lactone ring)
and m/z 155 representing the acyl side chain of C10-HSL
(Fig . 2C and F) .
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FIG . 2 . Structural analysis of the AHLs biosynthesized by B .
thailandensis . (A) Synthetic C6-HSL; (B) synthetic C8-HSL;
(C) synthetic C10-HSL; (D to F) AHLs (C6-HSL, C8-HSL,
and C10-HSL, respectively) extracted from an overnight
culture of B . thailandensis.
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Mutagenesis of the B . thailandensis QS system results in altered
lipase and beta-hemolysis phenotypes. Semiquantitative plate assays for
detection of beta-hemolysis and protease, siderophore, lipase, and
PLC production were performed with each B . thailandensis QS
mutant . Disruption of the B . thailandensis QS system had no
effect on protease secretion (as measured on 3% skim milk agar
plates) or PLC activity (as assayed on egg yolk agar plates) and had
a marginal effect on siderophore production (measured on CAS agar
plates) (data not shown) .
Unlike the effects on protease, PLC, and siderophore synthesis,
mutagenesis of the B . thailandensis QS genes both positively
and negatively affected lipase production . Strains BTRJ2 (btaI2)
and BTRJ5 (btaR2) exhibited reductions in the zone radii on
lipase plates, while BTRJ1 (btaI1), BTRJ3 (btaI3), BTRJ4 (btaR1),
BTRJ6 (btaR3), BTRJ7 (btaR4), and BTRJ8 (btaR5)
exhibited zone sizes that were larger than those for wild-type B .
thailandensis (data not shown) . Table 4
summarizes the phenotypes characterized in this investigation .
Addition of exogenous AHL (C8-HSL for BTRJ1, C10-HSL
for BTRJ2, and C6-HSL for BTRJ3) at a concentration of 200
nM to lipase plates marginally complemented BTRJ2 (btaI2) and
BTRJ3 (btaI3), but not BTRJ1 (btaI1) (data not shown) . However,
trans complementation with the parental btaI1 gene in BTRJ1
(btaI1) restored the defective lipase phenotype (data not shown) .
Cloning the B . thailandensis luxR homologues in the
broad-host-range expression vector pBHR1 was problematic, and only
the btaR3 and btaR5 genes were successfully cloned and
maintained in E . coli . As a result, complementation of the
remaining mutants (BTRJ4 [btaR1], BTRJ5 [btaR2], and
BTRJ7 [btaR4]) was not pursued . The elevated lipolytic
phenotypes observed for BTRJ6 (btaR3) and BTRJ8 (btaR5)
were reduced to parental levels by expression of the functional
allele in trans (data not shown) .
| TABLE 4 . Phenotype characterization of the B . thailandensis DW503
QS mutants
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A recent study revealed that B . pseudomallei produces a heat-stable
extracellular toxin, determined to be a rhamnolipid, that is
hemolytic and cytotoxic to both phagocytic (HL60) and nonphagocytic
(HeLa) cell lines (24) . Lipid extracts from B .
thailandensis and each QS mutant indicated that these strains
synthesize a rhamnolipid that is structurally analogous to the B .
pseudomallei hemolytic rhamnolipid (data not shown) . To determine
if QS in B . thailandensis was involved in the beta-hemolysis
of sheep erythrocytes, each QS mutant was screened on blood agar
plates . BTRJ1 (btaI1), BTRJ3 (btaI3), BTRJ4 (btaR1),
BTRJ5 (btaR2), BTRJ6 (btaR3), and BTRJ8 (btaR5)
displayed hyper-beta-hemolytic phenotypes (Fig . 3,
panel 1) . Particularly striking were the levels of beta-hemolysis
observed for strains BTRJ6 (btaR3) and BTRJ8 (btaR5–)
on sheep blood agar plates (Fig . 3, panel 1) . In
contrast, BTRJ2 (btaI2) and BTRJ7 (btaR4) produced
zones of beta-hemolysis equivalent to those of wild-type B .
thailandensis (data not shown) . Interestingly, trans complementation
of BTRJ1 (btaI1), BTRJ6 (btaR3), and BTRJ8 (btaR5)
did not reduce beta-hemolysis to parental levels . Also, exogenous
addition of C8-HSL or C6-HSL (200 nM) to blood
agar plates inoculated with BTRJ1 (btaI1) and BTRJ3 (btaI3),
respectively, failed to reduce bacterial hemolysis to parental
levels .
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FIG . 3 . Mutations in the B . thailandensis QS system result in
hyper-beta-hemolysis of sheep erythrocytes and altered colony
morphologies on twitching and swarming motility plates . Experiments were
performed in triplicate, as described in Materials and Methods . Panel 1
shows beta-hemolytic activity, while panels 2 and 3 show the results of
twitching and swarming motility assays, respectively . DW503 represents
wild-type B . thailandensis, btaI corresponded to luxI
mutants, and btaR was disrupted luxR homologues.
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Disruption of the B . thailandensis QS system results in altered
colony morphologies on swarming and twitching motility plates. Several
studies have demonstrated that QS is involved in bacterial motility
and plays an integral role in biofilm maturation (1,
21, 35) . To determine if QS
influenced motility in wild-type B . thailandensis and each QS
mutant, bacterial strains were analyzed on a medium that promotes
swarming and twitching motility . Compared to wild-type B .
thailandensis, the QS mutants BTRJ1 (btaI1), BTRJ4 (btaR1),
and BTRJ6 (btaR3) displayed altered growth phenotypes on
twitching mofility plates (Fig . 3, panel 2) .
Wild-type B . thailandensis colonies had a mucoidal, symmetrical
morphology without visible pigmentation (Fig . 3, panel
2) . BTRJ1 (btaI1) and BTRJ4 (btaR1) exhibited a
wrinkled phenotype in which cells proliferated from the center of the
inoculation site and grew on the surface of the underlying colony
(Fig . 3, panel 2) . Interestingly, BTRJ6 (btaR3)
produced a faint orange pigment and displayed extensive wrinkling
without the glistening appearance observed for wild-type B .
thailandensis (Fig . 3, panel 2) . Furthermore,
BTRJ6 (btaR3) did not exhibit the symmetrical concentric
colony morphology of the parental strain . Heterologous expression of
the wild-type genes (btaI1 and btaR3) in BTRJ1 (btaI1)
and BTRJ6 (btaR3) and addition of C8-HSL (200 nM) to
the twitching motility plates failed to restore the defective
phenotype (data not shown) . Likewise, swarming motility was affected
by mutagenesis of the B . thailandensis QS system . On swarming
motility plates, wild-type B . thailandensis grew in an
irregular and spreading fashion at 24 h, and the colony margins were
undulating or wavy and had a glistening appearance (Fig .
3, panel 3) . Interestingly, most of the QS mutants tested in
this study on swarming motility plates resembled (in terms of
size and shape of growth) wild-type B . thailandensis, except
for BTRJ1 (btaI1), which exhibited a hyperswarming phenotype
(Fig . 3, panel 3) . Complementation of this luxI mutant
by heterologous expression of the btaI1 gene in BTRJ1 or
exogenous addition of C8-HSL (200 nM) to the swarming
motility plate was negligible .
Mutagenesis of the B . thailandensis QS system affects
carbohydrate metabolism. Recent studies have linked QS to numerous
physiological processes, including transcription, translation, amino
acid biosynthesis, chemotaxis, and, interestingly, carbohydrate
utilization (37, 44) . To
determine if carbon metabolism is linked to QS, wild-type B .
thailandensis and each QS mutant were assayed by using the BiOLOG
phenotypic microarray kit . Mutation of the btaR1 (BTRJ4) and
btaR3 (BTRJ6) genes negatively affected (i.e., gain of function)
citric acid catabolism (Table 4) . The substrates that
were positively affected (with a loss of function) included formic
acid (BTRJ6 [btaR3]) and glucose 6-phosphate (BTRJ8 [btaR5])
(Table 4) . Individual mutagenesis of each of the
B . thailandensis luxIR alleles positively influenced capric acid
and
-hydroxybutyric
acid metabolism (Table 4) . Furthermore, mutations in the
btaI3 (BTRJ3), btaR1 (BTRJ4), btaR2 (BTRJ5), and
btaR5 (BTRJ8) QS alleles resulted in a gain-of-function
phenotype (negatively regulated in B . thailandensis) for
D-arabinose utilization (Table 4) .
It should be noted that disruption of the B . thailandensis QS
system imposed no apparent bacterial growth phenotype (growth curve
for optical density at 600 nm) when organisms were cultured in
complex medium (LB medium) .
QS is a complex mode of intra- and interspecies communication
utilized by both gram-positive and gram-negative bacteria . Signaling
mechanisms of this type, which function in response to population
density, have been shown to regulate the transcription of various
genes associated with human and plant infections (20) . In
turn, this provides microorganisms with an ecological niche that
allows subversion of host defense mechanisms .
Recent studies have demonstrated that Burkholderia species encode
functional QS networks that direct the biosynthesis of numerous
AHL molecules, regulate virulence factor production, and contribute
to animal pathogenicity (3, 10,
23, 25, 29-31,
42) . In silico analysis of the B . thailandensis
genome revealed the presence of at least three luxI and five
luxR homologues . Using MS analysis after TLC separation, this
study demonstrated that B . thailandensis produces the
signaling molecules C8-HSL (BtaI1), C6-HSL (BtaI3),
and C10-HSL (BtaI2) . Similar findings have been reported for
B . cepacia and Burkholderia vietnamiensis (10,
29) . Although genetically related, especially with
regard to the similarity of encoded (at the DNA level) luxIR
homologues, B . pseudomallei synthesizes a wide range of
additional AHLs, including N-(3-hydroxyoctanoyl)-homoserine
lactone, N-(3-hydroxydecanoyl)-homoserine lactone, and N-(3-oxotetradecanoyl)-homoserine
lactone, which are not detected in B . thailandensis . Furthermore,
disruption of the B . pseudomallei luxI genes (three total) has
a negligible effect on AHL accumulation (Ulrich et al., submitted
for publication) . Mutagenesis of the btaI1, btaI2, and
btaI3 alleles prevented the accumulation of C8-HSL, C10-HSL,
and C6-HSL in culture supernatants, respectively (Fig.
1, lanes 2, 3, and 4) . However, it is possible that
additional signaling molecules not recognized by A . tumefaciens
A136 are synthesized . In numerous QS networks, luxI expression
has been shown to be regulated by LuxR proteins (16-18,
29, 39) . Although the results are
preliminary, disruption of the B . thailandensis luxR genes
appeared not to have an effect on AHL accumulation (data not shown) .
In B . cepacia the secretion of exoproducts (lipases, proteases,
and siderophores), which enhance microbial virulence, is regulated
at the level of transcription via QS (29,
30) . DeShazer et al . demonstrated that B .
pseudomallei produces several potential extracellular virulence
factors (12) . Because of the genetic and
biochemical relatedness between B . thailandensis and B .
pseudomallei, each QS mutant and wild-type B . thailandensis
were tested for protease, PLC, lipase, and siderophore production .
Using semiquantitative plate assays, it was found that QS in
B . thailandensis both positively and negatively regulates lipase
production (Table 4) . Similar findings have been
reported for B . cepacia K52-2 (29,
30) . Disruption of the cepR allele increased
ornibactin secretion, reduced lipase activity, and resulted in
a protease-defective phenotype (29) . Deletion of the cepI
gene also resulted in hyperproduction of ornibactin and eliminated
protease activity (29) . Interestingly, with the
multiple B . thailandensis QS mutants tested, only mutagenesis
of the btaIR2 genes resulted in a reduction in lipase
production (Table 4) . These results suggest that
the btaIR2 gene products function as positive regulators of
lipase synthesis . Unlike the results obtained with mutations in the
B . cepacia cepIR genes, which eliminated protease activity (30),
analysis of protease and PLC biosynthesis in each B . thailandensis
QS mutant suggested that these exoproducts are not regulated in a
cell density-dependent manner via QS .
Both swarming and twitching motility are modes of bacterial
translocation that allow microorganisms to avoid inhibitory
compounds, promote nutrient uptake, and establish cell-to-cell
contact with plant and animal tissues . Several investigations have
shown that QS is involved in the regulation of bacterial motility (25,
26, 35) . In B . cepacia, swarming
motility is affected by QS, and mutagenesis of the cepIR genes
results in a pronounced reduction in swarming motility (25) .
Disruption of the B . thailandensis QS system revealed that
both twitching and swarming motility were affected (Fig.
3, panels 2 and 3) . On twitching motility plates,
BTRJ1 (btaI1), BTRJ4 (btaR1), and BTRJ6 (btaR3) produced
a wrinkled phenotype that was not apparent in wild-type B .
thailandensis (Fig . 3, panel 2) . In addition,
the appearance of the colony in the wrinkled domain was rough instead
of the characteristic smooth and glistening appearance observed for
B . thailandensis (Fig . 3, panel 2) .
Interestingly, BTRJ6 (btaR3) also produced an uncharacterized
pale orange pigment not found in wild-type B . thailandensis .
It should be noted that extensive incubation (5 to 8 days) of B .
thailandensis at 30 or 37°C resulted in altered colony
morphologies similar to the wrinkled appearance observed for BTRJ6 (btaR3) .
However, prolonged incubation of B . thailandensis (in our
laboratory) has never induced pigment biosynthesis . Subtle variations
(colony size and shape) in swarming motility were also observed for
each B . thailandensis QS mutant tested (data not shown) . The
most prominent difference on motility plates was observed for BTRJ1 (btaI1),
which exhibited a hyperswarming phenotype . The mechanisms for these
defects in twitching and swarming motility following mutagenesis of
the B . thailandensis QS system are unclear and remain to be
determined . Analysis of pilus (twitching) and flagellum biosynthesis
(by electron microscopy) in BTRJ1 (btaI1), BTRJ4 (btaR1),
and BTRJ6 (btaR3) revealed no differences compared to
wild-type B . thailandensis (data not shown) . These findings
suggest that disruption of the B . thailandensis QS system has
no effect on pilus and flagellum biosynthesis, indicating that an
additional factor(s) associated with QS contributes to the observed
twitching and swarming motility defects .
A recent study characterized a cytotoxic and hemolytic exolipid
synthesized by B . pseudomallei (24) . Elevated levels
of cytotoxicity and hemolysis were detected in supernatant extracts
of B . pseudomallei that had reached stationary phase (24) .
Considering the relatedness of B . thailandensis and B .
pseudomallei strains, we tested wild-type B . thailandensis
and each QS mutant for hemolytic activity on sheep blood agar plates .
Disruption of the B . thailandensis QS system, particularly the
luxR homologues, resulted in hyper-beta-hemolysis of
erythrocytes, suggesting that QS regulates a factor(s) that
contributes to beta-hemolysis (Fig . 3, panel 1) . The mechanism
(protein or lipid) for this hyper-beta-hemolysis is not fully
understood . However, using TLC and MS, we purified and characterized
a monounsaturated rhamnolipid from B . thailandensis that is
chemically analogous to the B . pseudomallei hemolytic rhamnolipid
(data not shown) . In addition, using semiquantitative plate
assays (egg yolk agar), we found that QS has no effect on PLC
production which could also contribute to hemolysis (Table 4) .
It is conceivable the hyper-beta-hemolytic phenotypes observed
in this study following disruption of the B . thailandensis QS
system were the result of increased rhamnolipid production . Attempts
to quantify the rhamnolipid in each B . thailandensis QS mutant
were unsuccessful, and additional studies will be necessary to
determine the mechanisms of this beta-hemolysis .
Preliminary analysis using a semiquantitative approach (BiOLOG
phenotypic array plates) suggested that QS either directly or
indirectly plays a role in the central metabolism of B . thailandensis
(Table 4) . Interestingly, mutagenesis of the btaR5
gene (BTRJ8) resulted in a positive phenotype, that is, a substrate
that was positively regulated by QS in B . thailandensis for
the metabolism of glucose 6-phosphate (Table 4) . A
similar finding, at the transcriptional level, was recently reported
by Schuster et al., who found that the P . aeruginosa QS system
regulates the NADPH-dependent glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, an
essential enzyme needed for glucose metabolism (37) .
Another interesting phenotype affected by QS in B . thailandensis
is D-arabinose utilization (Table
4) . Although L-arabinose is
structurally different, L-arabinose
utilization is one of the assays used to distinguish B .
thailandensis, which assimilates L-arabinose,
from B . pseudomallei, which cannot use L-arabinose
as a primary carbon source (45) . Disruption of the
btaI3 (BTRJ3), btaR1 (BTRJ4), btaR2 (BTRJ5), and
btaR5 (BTRJ8) genes resulted in a positive phenotype for
D-arabinose utilization; that is, disruption conferred
the ability to use this substrate as a sole carbon source (Table
4) . However, neither BTRJ4 (btaR1), BTRJ5 (btaR2),
nor BTRJ8 (btaR5) grew in M9 minimal broth (36)
with D-arabinose as the primary substrate
(data not shown) . These results were likely concentration (D-arabinose)
dependent and will require further analysis . Also, considering the
results of Schuster et al . (37), it is possible
that QS regulates the biosynthesis of an additional factor(s) needed
to support the growth of B . thailandensis in D-arabinose
minimal medium . However, these findings suggest that QS affects
carbon metabolism in B . thailandensis . The mechanisms for
these differences in carbon utilization remain to be determined, but
it is plausible that B . thailandensis employs QS in the
environment to prevent excess energy expenditure for carbon
acquisition and metabolism when adequate substrates are present in
situ .
Complementation of the numerous defective phenotypes observed in
this study was unsuccessful . Similar results have been reported for
B . cepacia, in which lipase activity was not restored to
parental levels by heterologous expression of the cepR and cepIR
genes in trans (29) . The disruption cassettes
used in this investigation were not designed to create in-frame
mutations within the target gene . It is possible that the
complementation difficulties are the result of polar effects on
downstream alleles (i.e., transcriptional regulators) that are
required for normal swarming and twitching motility in addition to
lipase production . Furthermore, the relative copy number of the gene
being transcribed and translated could result in complementation
problems, especially when the hypothesis described by Schuster et al .
(37), which stated that LuxR levels are essential
for activation of QS-controlled genes, is applied to B .
thailandensis . Another possibility is that the B .
thailandensis QS system forms a hierarchy; that is, there is
cross- regulation of the luxI and luxR genes, and overexpression
of these genes disrupts this regulatory cascade . However, full
restoration of C8-HSL and C6-HSL accumulation in BTRJ1 (btaI1)
and BTRJ3 (btaI3) was achieved by trans expression of the
btaI1 and btaI3 genes, respectively . The latter finding
suggests that the relative concentration of the signaling molecule is
essential for effective complementation of defects in swarming
motility (BTRJ1 [btaI1]) and lipase production .
Extensive genetic analysis will be required to determine the
functional relationship between QS and the environmental survival of
B . thailandensis . As in B . cepacia, mutations in the B .
thailandensis QS system resulted in both positive and negative
regulation of numerous phenotypes (Table 4) . With
regard to the multiple B . thailandensis luxR mutants assayed
for phenotypic variations in this investigation and the findings of
Medina et al . (32), who demonstrated that the
rhlR transcriptional regulator is both an activator when it is
associated with the signaling molecule C4-HSL and an
antiactivator when it is not bound to C4-HSL, we
hypothesize that the B . thailandensis LuxR transcriptional
regulators have dual functions for modulation of twitching and
swarming motility, lipase production, and substrate utilization
(Table 4) . Similar to data obtained for P . aeruginosa,
B . cepacia, and B . thailandensis, disruption of the
solIR QS system in Ralstonia solanacearum resulted in a
1.7-fold increase in polygalacturonase synthesis (18) .
Negative gene regulatory mechanisms of this type may provide bacteria
a way to reduce energy expenditure for protein synthesis in
environments that contain adequate substrates and cofactors . With the
multiple phenotypes altered by mutagenesis of the B . thailandensis
QS system, it is apparent that extensive molecular analysis, likely
by expression profiling studies with whole-genome DNA microarrays,
will be required to unravel the complex regulatory circuits encoded
by the QS network .
Special thanks are extended to Ernst Brueggemann for performing the
extensive MS analysis and to William Nierman at The Institute for
Genomic Research for providing access to the B . thailandensis
genome project . We also thank Melanie Ulrich, Chris Cote, Erica
Wargo, and Katheryn Kenyon for critically reviewing the manuscript .
We also thank David DeShazer for his excellent technical assistance .
The opinions, interpretations, conclusions, and recommendations in
this paper are those of the authors and are not necessarily endorsed
by the U.S . Army .
* Corresponding author . Mailing address: Bacteriology Division,
USAMRIID, 1425 Porter St., Fort Detrick, MD 21702 . Phone: (301) 619-8332 . Fax:
(301) 619-2152 . E-mail:
Ricky.Ulrich@AMEDD.ARMY.MIL .
Present address: Orion Genomics, St . Louis, MO 63108 .
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