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Journal of Bacteriology, June 2003, p . 3278-3287, Vol . 185,
No . 11
Transcription of Bacteriophage PM2 Involves Phage-Encoded Regulators of
Heterologous Origin
Riina H . Männistö, A . Marika Grahn,
Dennis H . Bamford, and Jaana K . H . Bamford*
Department of Biosciences and Institute of Biotechnology, Viikki Biocenter,
FIN-00014, University of Helsinki, Finland
Received 18 November 2002/ Accepted 8 March 2003
Bacteriophage PM2 is the only described member of the Corticoviridae
family . It is an icosahedral dsDNA virus with a membrane residing
underneath the protein coat . PM2 infects some gram-negative
Pseudoalteromonas spp . In the present study, we mapped the viral
promoters and showed that the PM2 genome consists of three operons .
Four new virus genes were assigned based on their function in
transcription . Proteins P15 and P16 are shown to repress early
transcription, and proteins P13 and P14 are shown to activate late
transcription events . The early regulatory region, containing genes
for proteins P15 and P16, as well as the newly identified early
promoter region in PM2, has significant sequence similarity with the
Pseudoalteromonas pAS28 plasmid . P14, the transcription
activator for the structural genes, has a zinc finger motif
homologous to archaeal and eukaryotic TFIIS-type regulatory factors .
Bacteriophage PM2 is the only described member of the Corticoviridae
family (1, 15) . It was isolated,
together with its host Pseudoalteromonas espejiana BAL-31
(originally Pseudomonas sp . strain BAL-31 [16,
18]) from seawater off the coast of Chile .
Pseudoalteromonas sp . strain ER72M2, is an alternative host for
PM2 (27) .
PM2, the first bacteriophage shown to contain lipids as part of
the virion (10), has an icosahedrally organized capsid of
ca . 60 nm in diameter surrounding a membranous inner core (28) .
In this way, it resembles bacteriophage PRD1, a tectivirus,
which has the same overall structural organization (4,
5, 9) . Inside the membrane core
resides the phage genome . The genome is circular and the most tightly
supercoiled dsDNA molecule known (17,
20) . For this reason, it has been widely used as a
substrate in different enzymatic assays . The virion has nine
structural proteins (28) . Protein P1 (37.5 kDa) forms the
receptor-binding spike structure at the vertices of the virion, and
P2 (30.2 kDa) is the coat protein . Proteins P3, P4, P5, P6, P7, P8,
and P9 are associated with the membrane (reference 28
and references therein) .
The nucleotide sequence of the 10,079-bp PM2 genome has revealed
21 putative genes (33) . The genes shown to encode a protein
were given a Roman numeral, and the rest were assigned as open
reading frames (ORFs) with a lowercase letter . The genes I to
IX, coding for the structural proteins, were confirmed by comparing
the predicted amino acid sequences to the amino-terminal sequences
of the virion proteins (27, 28,
33) . Gene XII, coding for the nonstructural
protein P12, was identified based on the conserved sequence motifs
that are similar to replication initiation proteins of other
bacteriophages, such as
X174
and P2, and initiation proteins of cyanobacterial and archaeal
plasmids (24) .
Bacterial viruses express their genes in a specific time sequence,
regulated primarily by transcription . This regulation is achieved by
either covalent or noncovalent modification of the host RNA
polymerase (RNAP;
 2ßß')
or by involvement of DNA-binding proteins recognizing regulatory
elements . The need for additional protein activators appears to be
restricted to promoters exhibiting weak sequence conservation in the
-10 and -35 recognition hexanucleotides specific for the sigma
subunits . The covalent modification of the RNAP occurs, for example,
by ADP ribosylation of the
-subunit
by the phage-encoded ADPR transferase as exemplified with T4 (36),
which employs the core subunits of Escherichia coli RNAP
throughout its transcription . In another example, bacteriophage T7,
E . coli RNAP subunit ß' is the principal target for
phosphorylation during the early viral gene transcription . The
modification finally results in the inactivation of the host RNAP and
leads to degradation of the E . coli genome (14) .
This is possible since bacteriophage T7 encodes its own RNA
polymerase specific for the subsequent transcription of the phage
proteins (35) . Noncovalent modifications of the
RNAP are carried out by proteins that bind to the polymerase core .
The best-characterized members of this group are the sigma-like
initiator factors, which positively regulate gene expression by
specifically altering promoter recognition (40) .
Alternatively, transcription can be controlled by DNA-binding
proteins, which interact with and enhance the activity of RNAP (34) .
To describe the PM2 system in more detail, we investigated the
regulation of gene expression . The primer extension studies were
carried out by using mRNA molecules obtained from PM2-infected
Pseudoalteromonas cells . Due to the lack of genetic tools in
Pseudoalteromonas, a reporter gene expression system was set up
in E . coli in which it was extensively used to probe the
promoter regions and their regulation . The genome contains three
operons, which are regulated by phage-encoded factors . One of the
activators has a putative zinc finger motif similar to the eukaryotic
TFIIS, RNAP A subunit 12, RNAP B subunit 9, and their archaeal
homolog RpoM . Two identified repressors are highly homologous to
Pseudoalteromonas plasmid pAS28 gene products .
Bacteria, plasmids, and phages. E . coli HMS174 (11)
and HB101 (39) were used as cloning and expression
hosts . Cells were grown in Luria-Bertani (LB) medium (39) .
When appropriate, antibiotics were added at the following
concentrations: ampicillin (AMP) at 150 µg/ml, kanamycin (KAN) at 25
µg/ml, and chloramphenicol (CHL) at 10 µg/ml . Bacteriophage PM2 was
grown on Pseudoalteromonas sp . strain ER72M2 in SB broth (27) .
The plasmids used in the present study are listed in Table
1 . The plasmid pALHI used as an expression vector
is a derivative of pDMI,1 (12) . The 145-bp fragment from
pDS12/RBSII/ CAT
(8) containing the promoter and a multiple cloning
site was digested with HindIII and XhoI restriction enzymes
and ligated into HindIII- and SspI-digested pDMI,1 . The
resulting linear plasmid was converted into blunt-ended DNA by Klenow
treatment and then ligated into the circular form by using T4
DNA ligase . Promoter reporter vectors pMG2 and pMG3 contain a
promoterless CHL resistance gene (the CHL acetyltransferase [CAT]
gene) (19) . The CAT gene is preceded by the multiple cloning
site and is in the opposite orientation in pMG2 and pMG3 .
| TABLE 1 . Plasmids used in this study
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DNA cloning. DNA fragments of the PM2 genome containing either
ORFs a, b, c, and d or ORFs c, d, and e, along with gene XII,
were cut out from plasmids pRM50 and pRM52, respectively, and
converted into blunt-ended DNA by Klenow treatment . The fragments
were ligated into the SmaI-digested pMG2 vector, and the
orientation of the fragments in the resulting plasmids (pRM950,
pRM950.2, and pRM952, pRM952.2 [Table 1]) was
confirmed by sequencing . The DNA corresponding to the rest of the PM2
genome was cloned as eight overlapping DNA fragments in the pMG2
vector (data not shown) . The fragments were amplified by PCR with
specific primers and PM2 genomic DNA as a template .
ORF a in pRM50 was mutated by introducing an 8-bp deletion (bp 550
to 543) resulting in a frame shift, thus preventing the production of
ORF a encoded protein . In vitro mutagenesis was performed by PCR with
specific primers containing overlapping, complementary ends . Prior to
transformation into HMS174 cells, methylated template DNA was
digested with 10 U of DpnI for 2 h at 37°C . In the PCR, a new
ApaI restriction enzyme site was introduced and subsequently
used for screening the resulting clones . The fragment with the
desired deletion was recloned into pMG3 (pRM1054 [Table
1]) and used in the CHL resistance assay (i.e., the CAT assay) .
For the analysis of transcriptional regulators, ORFs were cloned
into the pALHI vector . ORFs f, g, and h were cloned both separately
and in different combinations (pRM513, pRM531, pRM533, pRM590, and
pRM591 [Table 1]) . Similarly, DNA fragments containing ORFs
a, b, and c, as well as ORFs d and e, were cloned into pALHI,
resulting in plasmids pRM595 and pRM596, respectively (Table
1) . ORF a was deleted by PCR from plasmid pRM595,
simultaneously introducing an XbaI site for screening
(pSN100) . Plasmid pSN100 (ORFs b and c) was used as a template for
PCR, where ORF b or c was deleted one at a time (and a SacI
site was created), resulting in plasmids pSN108 and pSN106,
respectively (Table 1) . Accordingly, ORFs d and e
were deleted (and an XbaI site was introduced for screening)
from plasmid pRM596 one at the time, resulting in plasmids pSN102 and
pSN104, respectively (Table 1) .
Site-directed mutagenesis. PCR was used to carry out
site-directed mutagenesis of the promoter regions . Two primers with
complementary sequences were used to produce a circular product with
desired changes . The following changes were made: the -35 consensus
sequences of P1193 (TTGACC) and P1253 (TTGGCT)
were changed to GGGCCC, resulting in an ApaI restriction site .
Plasmid pRM50 was used as a template . The sequence of the -10 region
of the promoter P1207 (TATAAT) was changed accordingly to
GGGCCC by using plasmid pRM52 as a template . Amplification was
performed in 50 µl of standard buffer with 2.5 U of native Pfu
DNA polymerase (Stratagene), 25 pmol of primers, and a 250 µM
concentration of each deoxynucleoside triphosphate . The altered
fragments were recloned into the pMG2 and pMG3 vectors (Table
1) . These plasmids were used in the CAT assay .
Promoter activity assay. Overnight cultures of cells,
carrying the PM2 genome fragments in plasmid pMG2 or pMG3, were
diluted into fresh LB medium supplemented with AMP and grown to a
density of 107 to 108 CFU/ml . Cells were plated
on LB medium, LB medium plus AMP, or LB medium plus CHL, and colonies
were counted after 20 to 36 h of incubation at 37°C . The same assay
was performed with cells containing two different plasmids: the
genome fragment in pMG2 or pMG3 containing an AMP resistance marker
and putative activator genes in pALHI containing a KAN resistance
marker . The expression of the gene products from pALHI at a density
of 105 to 106 CFU/ml was induced by the
addition of 50 µM IPTG (isopropyl-ß-D-thiogalactopyranoside) .
Growth on LB medium plus AMP plus KAN was allowed to continue
until cultures reached a density of 107 to 108 CFU/ml,
after which the cells were plated on LB medium, LB medium plus AMP
plus KAN, or LB medium plus CHL plus IPTG (100 µM) . Colonies
were counted as described above .
Isolation of total RNA from infected cells. The chemically
defined enterobacterial medium (37) was modified
to support the growth for Pseudoalteromonas sp . strain ER72M2 .
For this, the concentration of NaCl was changed from 50 to 400 mM,
and the concentration of CaCl2 was changed from 0.0005 to
10 mM, concentrations that correspond to the concentrations in the
rich SB medium used for this bacterium (15, 27) .
Similarly, based on the SB medium, MgSO4 (50 mM final) and
KCl (10 mM final) were added to the enterobacterial medium .
Pseudoalteromonas sp . strain ER72M2 was grown in the defined
medium at 28°C to a density of 6 x
108 CFU/ml, and the culture was infected with PM2 by using
a multiplicity of infection of 30 . Then, 10-ml samples were obtained
(5, 10, 15, 30, and 50 min after infection), and the RNA was isolated
as described earlier (19) and further purified by
using the Qiagen RNeasy Midi Kit . Purified RNA was stored at -80°C
until analysis .
Primer extension. The 25- to 30-nucleotide (nt) specific
oligonucleotides hybridizing to the PM2 genome were used in the
assay . Oligonucleotides were labeled at their 5' ends (39)
with [ -32P]ATP
and T4 polynucleotide kinase (both from Amersham Pharmacia Biotech),
after which the unbound label was removed by using Sephadex G25
columns (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech) . Primer extension reactions were
performed essentially as described previously (19) .
Total RNA from PM2 infected cells (15 to 30 µg) was hybridized to the
labeled oligonucleotide (1 pmol) in 40 mM PIPES (pH 6.8)-1 mM EDTA
(pH 8.0)-0.4 M NaCl-80% formamide . The mixture was heated to 65°C
for 5 min and allowed to slowly cool to the appropriate hybridization
temperature calculated from the oligonucleotide sequence . After
additional incubation at the same temperature for 60 min, nucleic
acids were precipitated and resuspended in RT buffer (Amersham
Pharmacia Biotech) supplemented with 5 mM MgCl2 and a 1 mM
concentration of each deoxynucleoside triphosphate . The reverse
transcriptase reaction was started by the addition of 30 U of avian
myeloblastosis virus reverse transcriptase (Amersham Pharmacia
Biotech), and the reaction was allowed to proceed at 37°C for 30 min .
Template RNA was digested with RNase A, and the extension products
were precipitated with ethanol . The DNA pellet was dissolved in
gel electrophoresis loading buffer (95% formamide, 20 mM EDTA, 0.05%
bromophenol blue, 0.05% xylene cyanol FF) and then analyzed in a
sequencing (7% acrylamide, 8.3 M urea) gel . DNA ladders from
sequencing reactions were used as molecular weight markers . The
sequencing reactions were performed by using PM2 genome as a
template, and the corresponding oligonucleotides for the primer
extension reactions as primers .
Primer extension revealed four mRNA start sites in the PM2 genome.
Instead of using the standard rich medium prepared from extracts (SB
broth [27]), we optimized the PM2 infection in defined medium
(see Materials and Methods) to obtain a maximal amount of mRNA
for primer extension experiments .
Oligonucleotides were designed to hybridize ca . 50 bp downstream
of the initiation codon of ORFs c, d, f, g, j, and k; genes I,
II, V, VI, VII, and IX; and within gene
XII (Fig . 1) . Total RNA samples isolated at
different time points of the PM2 life cycle were combined and used as
templates . When the resulting products were analyzed in sequencing
gels, four putative mRNA start sites were resolved at positions 1157,
1243, 1303 to 1306, and 5371 to 5373 (nucleotide coordinates refer to
the PM2 genome sequence; AF155037 [33]; Fig.
1) . The corresponding putative promoter sequences
(P1207, P1193, P1253, and P5321,
respectively) are shown in Fig . 2 . All observed
start sites are appropriately positioned downstream from a sequence
region similar to that of the E . coli -10 hexameric consensus
(21), whereas the -35 region is not as
recognizable in P1207 and P5321 . In the case of
promoters P1193, and P1253, 18 bp are spaced between the
two hexameric consensus sequence motifs .
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FIG . 1 . Primer extension analysis of mRNA start sites in the PM2 genome .
The numbers refer to the nucleotide coordinates of the PM2 genome
(AF155037) . (A) PM2 genome map linearized at a unique EcoRII
site . The genes (assigned by Roman numerals) and ORFs (marked with
lowercase letters) (28, 33) are
presented with arrows indicating the direction of transcription .
Positions of the predicted hairpin structures are indicated by an open
circle upon the scale bar (33) . The genes confirmed
to code for structural proteins are shaded gray . The mRNA start sites
determined by primer extension are marked with downward arrows at the
top of the figure . (B) Results of the primer extension reactions (lane
E) analyzed parallel to the sequencing reactions in a sequencing gel.
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FIG . 2 . Alignment of the four PM2 promoter sequences revealed by primer
extension . Promoters are named with P after the nucleotide coordinate at
the -50 position . Orientation of the promoter in the PM2 genome
(presented in Fig . 1) is indicated by a solid arrow .
The +1 (mRNA start site) and -50 nt are shaded in gray . Predicted
hexameric promoter consensus sequences -35 and -10 are boxed either with
solid lines (well conserved) or dashed lines (less conserved) . Repeat
sequences in the promoter regions are indicated with arrows.
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A CHL resistance assay was used to measure promoter activity.
Since no cloning and expression system is available for Pseudoalteromonas,
the CAT assay was performed in E . coli . For this, the PM2 genome
was cloned as overlapping fragments into promoter reporter vectors
pMG2 and pMG3, where expression of the CHL resistance marker
was obtained only if the cloned insert had promoter activity . E .
coli cells carrying the plasmids were plated both on LB medium
plus AMP and on LB medium plus CHL, and the colonies were counted .
The cell count without any selection was also determined . The
promoter activity of the cloned fragments was determined as a
proportion of the number of CHL-resistant colonies of those obtained
in the presence of AMP (scoring the presence of the reporter
plasmid) .
Most of the cloned PM2 genomic fragments could not promote CHL
resistance in the initial assays . Activity was recorded only with
plasmids pRM950 (containing fragment 77-1583 from PM2 genome; Table
1) and pRM952.2 (3719-850; Table 1) . Both of
these constructs carry three of the putative promotersP1207,
P1193, and P1253determined by primer
extension . No CAT activity was observed with fragments containing the
fourth putative promoter, P5321 (data not shown) .
Activity of P1207 represses P1193. The
functionality of the three closely positioned promoters P1207,
P1193, and P1253 was analyzed by site-directed
mutagenesis . On the basis of the primer extension results, P1207
promotes leftward transcription, whereas P1193 and P1253
promote rightward transcription (Fig . 3) . Promoters
P1207 and P1193 are organized back to back so
that their -35 consensus sequences and -50 nt partially overlap .
Promoters were mutated individually as described in Materials and
Methods, and the CAT assay was performed by using the corresponding
wild-type (wt) genomic fragments as controls .
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FIG . 3 . Functional analysis of the PM2 genome region from nt 77 to 3719
by using the CAT assay . The putative protein coding ORFs are presented
with open arrows, and promoters are indicated by bent arrows at the top
of the figure . Below are shown the genomic fragments from this region
cloned into the CAT reporter plasmid, and the corresponding plasmids are
denoted at the left . Open boxes and arrows indicate the ORFs . The
arrowhead points to the direction of transcription in the CAT fusion
construct . Mutated promoters are indicated with an asterisk after the
promoter name . On the right, the pluses and minuses represent the number
of CHL-resistant colonies in the CAT assay: the cell count on LB
medium-plus-AMP plates was compared to the cell count on LB
medium-plus-CHL plates . ++++, All colonies were CHL resistant; +++, the
number of CHL-resistant colonies was 1 order of magnitude lower; ++, the
number of CHL-resistant colonies was 2 orders of magnitude lower; +, the
number of CHL-resistant colonies was 3 orders of magnitude lower than on
the LB medium; -, no CHL-resistant colonies were obtained.
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Rightward transcription was promoted by P1193 only, since changing
the sequence of P1193 (pRM992) by site-directed mutagenesis
resulted in CHL sensitivity, whereas mutating the sequence of P1253
(pRM993) did not affect CAT activity compared to the control plasmid
pRM950 with the wt promoter (Fig . 3) . This finding suggested
that P1253 might not be a functional promoter, although it was
revealed by primer extension . The palindromic sequence centered
at the position 1290 has a potential to form a strong hairpin loop (- G
= 17.2 kcal/mol) (Fig . 1) (33), which can
cause immature termination of the extension reaction, leading to a
false-positive result in mRNA start site determination .
The function of the leftward promoter (P1207) was examined with
plasmid pRM952.2, which showed high activity in the CAT assay
(Fig . 3) . When the -10 consensus sequence of P1207
was mutated, the resulting plasmid, pRM994, lost the ability to
promote CAT activity . Interestingly, if the orientation of the wt
fragment was inverted (pRM952), signaling the activity of the
rightward promoters, no CAT activity was detected . However, the
ability of this construct to promote CHL resistance was achieved by
mutating the -10 sequence of P1207 (pRM1094, Fig .
3) . This indicated that the rightward promoter P1193
is only active when the leftward promoter P1207 is shut
down . This is not in concordance with the result obtained with
plasmid pRM950 (Fig . 3), for which the activity of
P1193 could be detected in the presence of active leftward
P1207 .
The product of ORF a is a repressor of its own promoter P1207.
The activity of the leftward promoter P1207 could not be detected
with plasmid pRM950.2 (Fig . 4A) . Further, activity could
not be restored by mutating the rightward promoter P1193
(pRM1092) . The fact that the activity of P1207 was not
dependent on the loss of function of the rightward promoter and the
inconsistent results obtained with pRM950 and pRM952 (see above and
Fig . 3) led us to hypothesize that one of the gene
products under P1207 regulation could self-regulate its
promoter activity by repression . The candidates for this repression
were ORFs a, b, and c . The first 8 nt of ORF a were deleted to make a
frameshift mutation . Indeed, knocking out the product of ORF a
(pRM1054) resulted in the activation of promoter P1207
(Fig . 4A), which indicated that the ORF a-encoded
factor is a repressor of the leftward promoter . This observation was
confirmed in a coexpression experiment, in which ORF a was expressed
from the pALHI vector and the promoter activity was recorded with the
promoter reporter vector . The CAT activity obtained with the plasmid
pRM952.2 (Fig . 3) was reduced when the ORF
a-expressing plasmid pRM521 was in the same cell (Fig .
4A) . The products of the other ORFs of the operon (b and c) did
not have any repressor function on P1207, as shown below .
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FIG . 4 . Analysis of the promoter P1207 with different
potential regulators by the CAT assay . For an explanation of the genomic
region at the top of the figure, see the legend to Fig . 3 .
(A) Promoter activity was assayed with long genomic fragments containing
several ORFs possibly coding for regulators . (B) The 230-bp promoter
region (presented by an arrowhead) was cloned into the CAT reporter
vector and the potential regulator genes (colored gray) in another,
compatible vector . The plasmid constructs are indicated at the left . For
the level of the CAT expression (plus and minus signs), see Fig.
3 legend.
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Analysis of other possible regulators for P1207. The
short, noncoding, 230-bp region between ORFs c and d containing the
promoter P1207 (and P1193) was cloned into the promoter
reporter vector pMG3 . Resulting plasmid pRM1059 showed activity
in the CAT assay (Fig . 4B) . The effect of overexpressed ORF
a, b, c, d, or e products on the promoter activity was examined
by coexpressing them individually and in different combinations with
plasmid pRM1059 . The repressor effect of the ORF a product on
promoter P1207 also was clearly seen in this experiment (pRM1059
plus pRM595 and pRM1059 plus pRM521; Fig . 4B) . The
effect was obtained both with the ORF a product alone and with the
products of ORFs a, b, and c together . ORFs b and c together and
separately (pSN100, pSN106, and pSN108, respectively) did not have
any effect on P1207 activity (Fig . 4B) .
A second repressor effect on P1207 was recorded with the
ORF e-encoded product (pSN102) . The activity of P1207 was
reduced when coexpressed with pRM1059 . However, this result could not
be confirmed with a longer DNA fragment expressing ORFs d and e
together (pRM596; Fig . 4B) .
The product of ORF a has also an effect on rightward promoter P1193.
First, plasmid pRM952 (signaling the functionality of the rightward
promoter P1193), which showed no activity in the CAT assay (Fig .
3), was tested together with ORF a, but this did not
result in activation of P1193 (Fig . 5A) .
The effect of other possible regulators on P1193 was
studied with the coexpression experiments (Fig . 5B) .
It was shown, surprisingly, that the product of ORF a also had
repressive effect on P1193, strongly diminishing its
activity (pRM958 plus pRM595 and pRM958 plus pRM521; Fig .
5B) . The effect of the ORF a product on P1193 was
unexpected and might indicate that it is a DNA-binding protein . The
close packing of the two early promoters might result in repression
of both promoters upon binding of the ORF a product .
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FIG . 5 . Analysis of the promoter P1193 with potential
regulator proteins . For the explanation of the genomic region at the top
of the figure, see the legend to Fig . 3 . (A) Promoter
activity is assayed with long genomic fragments containing several ORFs
possibly coding for regulators.(B) The 230-bp promoter region (indicated
by an arrowhead) was cloned into the CAT reporter vector, and the
potential regulator genes (shaded gray) were cloned into another,
compatible vector . The plasmid constructions are indicated at the left .
For the level of the CAT expression (plus and minus signs), see the
legend to Fig . 3.
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In contrast to the result obtained with P1207, overexpression
of ORF c with P1193 resulted in a clear decrease in promoter
activity (pRM958 plus pSN108; Fig . 5B) . ORFs a and c
were classified as genes XV and XVI, respectively, and
the corresponding proteins were named P15 and P16 . As in the case of
P1207 (see above), the product of ORF e somewhat repressed
the activity of P1193 when tested as a single gene in the
coexpression experiment (pRM958 plus pSN102) . Similar to the results
obtained with P1207, this could not be confirmed with a
construct carrying both ORFs e and d (pRM958 plus pRM596; Fig.
5B) . ORF e might have repressor activity on both P1207
and P1193, but since the results were obtained with the
one plasmid system only, we do not yet give a gene status for ORF e .
The early regulation region encoding repressor proteins P15 and P16
is similar to a Pseudoalteromonas plasmid. Alignment of the
maintenance region sequence of plasmid pAS28, isolated from
Pseudoalteromonas sp . strain A28 (AB009311 [26])
with the PM2 early region revealed similar genome organization
(Fig . 6) . The 1.2-kb region containing genes XV and
XVI and ORF b is highly homologous to pAS28 (33) .
The identities of proteins P15 and P16 and the product of ORF b (at
the amino acid level) to the corresponding gene products in pAS28
were 76, 72, and 57%, respectively . The intergenic regions were less
similar, but the putative -10 and -35 consensus sequences of
promoters also can be found in pAS28 matching the position of those
in PM2 (data not shown) . Even a palindromic sequence, which can cause
a hairpin structure similar to the sequence found in PM2 P1253,
is found in pAS28 . The homology between PM2 and pAS28 might extend
even further . The PM2 ORF d product has some similarity (28%
identity) to the centrally located small ORFs transcribed rightward
in pAS28 . Deletion of ORF 1 (coding for an 81-kDa protein; the
counterpart of PM2 gene XII) from pAS28 prevents plasmid
replication (26) . On the basis of this
observation, the ORF 1 product has been classified as a replication
protein, although it does not possess any sequence similarity to
proteins in the data bank (26), even to PM2 P12 .
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FIG . 6 . Alignment of the PM2 genome region from nt 77 to 3719 with the
maintenance region from Pseudoalteromonas plasmid pAS28
(accession no.
AB009311) showing similar organization . Genes and ORFs are denoted
by open arrows indicating the direction of transcription . The two
promoters (bent arrows) and the possible secondary structure ( )
in the noncoding region of PM2 are marked . The gray shaded areas in PM2
and pAS28 are homologous to each other.
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P5321, silent in the CAT assay, can be activated by
phage-encoded factors. Promoter P5321, which is located in
the middle of the linearized genome map preceding the genes for the
phage structural proteins, was not active in the CAT assay (pRM984;
Fig . 7) . The possible regulatory effect of the
nearby ORFs was tested by coexpression experiments . For this, the
candidate genes (ORFs f, g, and h) were cloned separately and in
different combinations into the pALHI expression vector, and the
resulting constructs were expressed with pRM984 (Fig . 7) .
None of these putative gene products alone was able to activate the
promoter . However, coexpression of ORFs f and g (pRM590) or ORFs f,
g, and h (pRM591) with plasmid pRM984 resulted in increased colony
count on plates containing LB medium plus CHL (Fig . 7) .
The result that ORFs f and g together but not separately are able to
activate P5321 was confirmed by using the 134-bp promoter
fragment (pRM975; Fig . 7) . Consequently, ORFs f and
g were classified as proteins P13 and P14, respectively, and the
corresponding genes were named XIII and XIV .
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FIG . 7 . Analysis of the promoter P5321 with the potential
activators by the CAT assay . The PM2 genome region from nt 3716 to 6332
is illustrated at top of the figure . Genes and ORFs are depicted with
open arrows indicating the direction of transcription . The location of
the promoter P5321 in the genome is indicated with a bent
arrow . Below are indicated the genomic fragments, which were used in the
promoter activity assay . ORFs and genes are marked with boxes, and an
arrowhead points to the direction of transcription in the CAT fusion
construct . The plasmids are denoted on the left . The assay was performed
with either a long genomic fragment or the 134-bp promoter region cloned
into the CAT reporter vector (pRM984 and pRM975, respectively) . The
possible regulators (shaded gray) were cloned into another compatible
vector . For the level of the CAT expression (plus and minus signs), see
the legend to Fig . 3.
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A database search (2, 3) revealed that P14
contains a putative zinc finger motif similar to archaeal and
eukaryotic transcription factors (Fig . 8) (41) .
The closest amino acid sequence similarity was detected between the
N-terminal region of P14 and the C-terminal domain of archaeal
Thermococcus celer transcription-associated protein (PSI-BLAST
e-score of 5e-10) (25) . Other proteins containing
this conserved zinc finger motif are small subunits of eukaryotic RNA
polymerases I (A12) and II (B9), as well as the eukaryotic
transcription factor TFIIS . Transcription initiation factor TFIIB
also contains an analogous zinc finger structure (42) .
A database search revealed no sequence similarities for protein
P13, which together with P14, was shown to activate promoter P5321 .
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FIG . 8 . Comparison of PM2 protein P14 with some archaeal and eukaryotic
transcription regulators with zinc finger motifs . (A) The polypeptides
are aligned (horizontal lines) so that the cysteine residues match
(vertical lines) . Aligned proteins PM2 P14, as well as HsTFIIS and
ScTFIIS, have only one zinc finger domain (indicated by two cysteine
pairs), whereas the others contain two . (B) The amino acid (aa) sequence
from the shadowed area in panel A is shown . Identical amino acids
between P14 and related sequences are shaded gray, and the cysteines of
the zinc finger domain are boxed . Note that there is an alternative way
to align the second cysteine pair in P14 . Abbreviations: Tc,
Thermococcus celer; Sa, Sulfolobus acidocaldarius; Sc,
Saccharomyces cerevisiae; Hs, Homo sapiens; RpoM, archaeal
RNA polymerase subunit M; RPA12 and RPB9, eukaryotic RNA polymerase I
and II subunits, respectively, TFIIS, eukaryotic general transcription
factor . Accession numbers:
AAD43545 (PM2 P14),
Q56254 (TcRpoM),
CAA50073 (transcription-associated protein from Sa),
AAA34992 (ScRPA12),
AAG50159 (HsRPA12),
P27999 (ScRPB9),
P36954 (HsRPB9),
P07273 (ScTFIIS), NP_006747
(HsTFIIS).
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The genetic approach to reveal the transcription regulation system of
PM2 used (i) primer extension results obtained from PM2 infection in
the native host and (ii) extensive promoter activity experiments
carried out in E . coli since there are no genetic tools
available for the Pseudoalteromonas-PM2 system . Although the
CAT reporter assay can be considered a qualitative method, the
results obtained were in good agreement with those obtained in primer
extension experiments . In addition, the reporter assays were always
carried out with a number of control experiments verifying the
qualitative results obtained . For quantitative promoter activity
measurements, a different experimental setup is required, but this is
outside the scope of this investigation .
The leftward transcribing early operon (OEL, under P1207) was
shown to code for two transcriptional repressors (Fig . 9) .
Protein P15 controls its own promoter and P16 controls the rightward
early operon (OER, under P1193) . These two functional promoters
could be narrowed to a 230-bp DNA fragment . Primer extension
results revealing the third early promoter P1253 have not been
verified but are explained by the presence of a strong palindromic
DNA structure centered at this position . Expression of the late
operon (OL) for the structural proteins is controlled by proteins P13
and P14 (Fig . 9) . The late promoter region was mapped to
a 134-bp DNA fragment .
|
FIG . 9 . Proposed temporal sequence of PM2 transcription . The three
functional promoters are depicted . Promoter P1207 controlling
the early genes (operon OEL) is repressed by protein P15 . The genes for
the DNA replication proteins (operon OER) are under the control of P1193 .
Proteins P15 and P16 have repressor effects on this promoter .
Transcription factors P13 and P14 are needed to switch on the late
promoter P5321 for the production of the structural
components of the virus particle (operon OL) . Homology to the
Pseudoalteromonas plasmid pAS28 is indicated with a bar.
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We previously reported that an
1.2-kb
region in the PM2 genome is homologous to the Pseudoalteromonas
plasmid pAS28 regulatory region (26,
33) (Fig . 9) . A more detailed comparison
revealed high homology in the coding regions of genes XV and
XVI and somewhat less homology in ORF b . The noncoding regions
do not have clear sequence similarity . However, the consensus
sequences of promoters could be observed in pAS28 in the area
corresponding to the positions of the PM2 early promoters . Gene
XII for the replication initiation protein does not seem to be
related to that of pAS28 . Although the accurate borders of
recombination events are difficult to define, it appears that the
early autoregulated operon in PM2 might be a moron (for the
definition, see reference 23) sharing the same
origin with pAS28 .
The operon OL is positively regulated (activated) by proteins P13
and P14 encoded from the early operon (OER) . These proteins work in
concert since they had no effect when tested alone . Intriguingly,
data bank searches revealed that P14 has a zinc finger motif similar
to the transcription factors of eucaryal and archaeal origin, more
closely resembling the archaeal counterparts (Fig . 8) .
Several eukaryotic transcription initiation factors have been
identified from archaeal species (32), TFIIB from
Pyrococcus woesei being the first one (38) . In
addition, bacterial transcription regulators also have been described
from Archaea (13, 29,
30) . By comparing the sequences of known
transcription-associated proteins from Eucarya and Bacteria
with the sequenced archaeal genomes, it was shown that, among the 280
predicted transcription-associated proteins, 51 had homologs only in
Eucarya, 168 had homologs only in Bacteria, and the
remaining 61 had homologs in both domains representing the group of
universal transcription factors . The archaeal factors present only in
Eucarya included, among others, the RNAP A subunit 12 and RNAP
B subunit 9 and the general transcription factor TFIIS . These are
thought to be the homologs of the archaeal polymerase subunit M
(RpoM) (31) . We report here, for the first time, a
TFIIS-type factor from a virus replicating in Bacteria .
Whether gene XIV, coding for this factor, has been acquired by
PM2 via horizontal gene transfer or whether the transcription
machineries operating in the three domains of life are more related
than previously expected remains to be evaluated .
The analysis of the genome structure and function of PM2 revealed
a mosaic arrangement and clearly indicated horizontal gene transfer
events between Pseudoalteromonas phages and plasmids . This finding
is in line with the observations made when tailed double-stranded
DNA phage genomes were compared (22, 23) .
The homology revealed between bacterial, archaeal, and eucaryal
transcription factors not previously observed could point to more
uniform transcription mechanisms than are presently considered .
This work was supported by a research grant 172904 (J.K.H.B.) and
research grants 162993 and 164298 (D.H.B.; Finnish Centre of
Excellence Programme [2000-2005]) from the Academy of Finland . R.H.M .
is a fellow of the Viikki Graduate School in Biosciences .
The technical assistance of Sara Nummi is gratefully acknowledged .
* Corresponding author . Mailing address: Viikki Biocenter, P.O .
Box 56 (Viikinkaari 5), FIN-00014, University of Helsinki, Finland . Phone:
358-9-191-59101 . Fax: 358-9-191-59098 . E-mail: jaana.bamford@helsinki.fi.
Present address: Roal Oy, FIN-05201 Rajamäki, Finland .
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