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Journal of Bacteriology, September 2004, p . 5672-5684, Vol .
186, No . 17
Identification of AlgR-Regulated Genes in Pseudomonas aeruginosa by Use
of Microarray Analysis
Stephen E . Lizewski,1 Jill R . Schurr,2 Debra W .
Jackson,1 Anders Frisk,1 Alexander J . Carterson,1
and Michael J . Schurr1*
Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Program in Molecular Pathogenesis
and Immunity, Louisiana Center for Lung Biology and Immunotherapy, Tulane
University Health Sciences Center,1 Department of Genetics, Louisiana
State University Health Sciences Center, New Orleans, Louisiana2
Received 1 August 2003/ Accepted 15 April 2004
The Pseudomonas aeruginosa transcriptional regulator AlgR controls
a variety of different processes, including alginate production,
type IV pilus function, and virulence, indicating that AlgR
plays a pivotal role in the regulation of gene expression . In order
to characterize the AlgR regulon, Pseudomonas Affymetrix
GeneChips were used to generate the transcriptional profiles of (i)
P . aeruginosa PAO1 versus its algR mutant in mid-logarithmic
phase, (ii) P . aeruginosa PAO1 versus its algR mutant in
stationary growth phase, and (iii) PAO1 versus PAO1 harboring an
algR overexpression plasmid . Expression analysis revealed that,
during mid-logarithmic growth, AlgR activated the expression of 58
genes while it repressed the expression of 37 others, while during
stationary phase, it activated expression of 45 genes and repression
of 14 genes . Confirmatory experiments were performed on two genes
found to be AlgR repressed (hcnA and PA1557) and one
AlgR-activated operon (fimU-pilVWXY1Y2) . An S1 nuclease
protection assay demonstrated that AlgR repressed both known hcnA
promoters in PAO1 . Additionally, direct measurement of hydrogen
cyanide (HCN) production showed that P . aeruginosa PAO1
produced threefold-less HCN than did its algR deletion strain .
AlgR also repressed transcription of two promoters of the
uncharacterized open reading frame PA1557 . Further, the
twitching motility defect of an algR mutant was complemented
by the fimTU-pilVWXY1Y2E operon, thus identifying the
AlgR-controlled genes responsible for this defect in an algR
mutant . This study identified four new roles for AlgR: (i) AlgR can
repress gene transcription, (ii) AlgR activates the
fimTU-pilVWXY1Y2E operon, (iii) AlgR regulates HCN production,
and (iv) AlgR controls transcription of the putative cbb3-type
cytochrome PA1557 .
Pseudomonas aeruginosa is a gram-negative, opportunistic pathogen
capable of causing acute septicemia in patients with severe
burns or severe immunodeficiency and chronic pneumonia in individuals
with the genetic disease cystic fibrosis (CF) (5) . The chronic
pneumonia caused by P . aeruginosa is the leading cause of morbidity
and mortality of CF patients (24) . The mucoid phenotype
of P . aeruginosa, characterized by production of the
exopolysaccharide alginate, is almost exclusively associated with
chronic CF pneumonia (10, 15,
26, 43, 60) . Alginate,
composed of a linear copolymer of ß-D-mannuronic
and
-L-guluronic
acids (17, 30,
31), confers a selective advantage on P . aeruginosa in the CF
patient lung . Alginate insulates the bacterium from killing
mechanisms of phagocytes such as hypochlorite (52-54)
and prevents phagocytosis of P . aeruginosa by neutrophils and
macrophages (43) . Because of the selective
advantage that mucoidy confers on P . aeruginosa, the mechanism
of alginate production has been studied extensively (26) .
Alginate production is tightly controlled by a number of transcriptional
regulators (26) . One alginate regulatory system
involves the MucA, MucB, MucC, and MucD proteins (6,
36, 38, 51) and their
regulation of the sigma factor AlgU (AlgT) (27,
37, 61) . Two studies examining
clinical CF isolates from different locations found that a large
percentage of the mucoid strains had mucA mutations . The first
study, using CF isolates from North America and Europe, reported that
84% of mucoid isolates tested contained a mutation in mucA (7),
while the second study, using CF strains isolated in Australia, found
that 22 of the 50 (44%) mucoid strains tested contained mucA
mutations (4) . Mutations in mucA prevent
MucA, an anti-sigma factor, from binding to AlgU, thus allowing AlgU
to initiate transcription of algD and subsequently the
alginate biosynthetic operon (36, 51) .
Additionally, the periplasmic protein MucB (51) is
required for alginate regulation since mutations in mucB also
cause the conversion of P . aeruginosa from a nonmucoid to a
mucoid phenotype (35) .
The transcriptional regulator AlgR is also required for alginate
production (13) . AlgR is a member of the LytTR family of
two-component transcriptional regulators (12,
41) . AlgR regulates alginate production by binding
to three sites within the algD promoter, thereby activating
transcription (39, 40) . It has been
proposed that AlgR causes a looping of the algD promoter that
is required for transcriptional activation (50) .
Additionally, AlgR regulates alginate production through algC
by binding to its promoter (62, 63) .
AlgC is a bifunctional enzyme with both phosphomannomutase and
phosphoglucomutase activity (9) that is required not only
for alginate production (62) but also for rhamnolipid
production (42) and lipopolysaccharide (LPS)
expression (9) . AlgR binds to three positions
within the algC promoter region (21, 63),
yet the orientation and positioning of the AlgR binding sites
differ in the algC and algD promoters . The differences in
orientation of the AlgR binding sites and of the AlgR binding
affinities between the algC and algD promoters and
their effects on the mechanism of AlgR regulation in vivo have not
been clearly established .
More recent studies have indicated that AlgR regulates additional
genes besides those required for alginate production . AlgR has been
shown to be required for twitching motility (59), a type
of surface motility utilizing type IV pili . Recently we have
shown that AlgR is required for virulence in an acute septicemia
mouse model . This study also demonstrated that the cellular
concentrations of AlgR are critical for proper virulence since the
overexpression of AlgR in PAO1 made the organism avirulent in a
murine septicemia model (32) . Taken together, these studies
expanded AlgR's role in virulence beyond its known role as a
regulator of alginate production and implied a possible role for AlgR
in acute P . aeruginosa infections as well .
While algR mutations have been documented to impact the phenotypes
of twitching motility and reduced virulence, the genes that
AlgR regulates in these processes have not been identified . The
determination of the genomic sequence of the laboratory wild-type
strain P . aeruginosa PAO1 (55) facilitated the
development of an Affymetrix GeneChip microarray for P . aeruginosa
PAO1 . In this study, we used the P . aeruginosa Affymetrix
GeneChip array to examine the expression profiles of nonmucoid P .
aeruginosa strains grown to mid-log and early stationary phases
and used AlgR overexpression in PAO1 to identify genes regulated by
AlgR .
Genetic manipulations. P . aeruginosa strains and
plasmids used in this study are listed in Table 1 .
The algR mutation in PSL317 was generated by crossover PCR
deleting all but 30 bp of algR . Briefly, two initial PCRs were
done, the first using the primers argHF (5'-ATATATGAGCTCGGACCTGTCCGACCTGTTCC-3')
and MR5 (5'-CGTCGTATGCATCAGCTCTGA-3') and the second using the
primers MR6 (5'-GAGCTGATGCATACGACGCAGGACATTCATAAGCTCAGC-3') and hemCR
(5'-ATATATGAGCTCGGCTGGCGTAGGTGTTCGAG-3') . The products of these
reactions contain complementary sequence (the 5' end of primer MR6 is
complementary to primer MR5) that allow for their use as the template
for a subsequent crossover PCR, using argHF and hemCR as the primers .
This product was cloned into pCR2.1 (Invitrogen) and subsequently
subcloned into the suicide plasmid pCVD442 (16),
creating pRKO442 . Plasmid pRKO442 was moved into PAO1 by triparental
conjugation as previously described (28), and
exconjugates were initially selected for plasmid insertion by
carbenicillin resistance and then for plasmid recombination by
sucrose resistance . Potential recombinants were tested by PCR using
the primers argHF and hemCR, and algR deletion was confirmed
by Southern blotting (data not shown) .
| TABLE 1 . P . aeruginosa strains and plasmids
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For the complementation of the twitching motility defect, a PCR
fragment containing the operon fimTU-pilVWXY1Y2E was generated
using the oligonucleotides fimTF (5'-ATATATGAGCTCAAGTCCCGCGACCAGTGCG-3')
and pilER (5'-ATATATGAGCTCCTGGTTCGACGGTGTGCG-3') and the proofreading
polymerase Expand HiFi (Roche) . This fragment was cloned into
pCR2.1 (Invitrogen) and then subcloned into pVDtac39 (11),
creating the plasmid pVDtacPIL . The orientation of the insert
relative to the tac promoter was determined by HindIII digest .
RNA isolation and preparation for Affymetrix GeneChip analysis.
For mid-logarithmic-phase growth experiments, five independent
replicates of P . aeruginosa strains PAO1 and PSL317 (PAO1
algR)
were grown in 100 ml of Luria-Bertani (LB) broth in a 250-ml
baffled flask vigorously shaken at 37°C to an optical density at 600
nm (OD600) of 0.4 . For the AlgR overexpression experiments,
three independent replicates of PAO1 harboring the plasmid pCMR-7
were grown in the presence of 300 µg of carbenicillin/ml to an
OD600 of 0.2, at which time IPTG (isopropyl-ß-D-thiogalactopyranoside)
was added to a final concentration of 1 mM . The culture was
then grown to an OD600 of 0.4 . For the stationary-phase experiments,
three independent replicates of PAO1 and PSL317 were grown in
100 ml of LB broth in a 250-ml baffled flask vigorously shaken at
37°C to an OD600 of 0.6 . After the cultures were chilled
in a dry ice-ethanol bath to stop RNA synthesis, approximately 109
bacteria were removed (1 ml for the mid-log cultures, 0.5 ml for the
stationary-phase cultures), collected by centrifugation (8,000
x g for 5 min at 4°C), resuspended in
Tris-EDTA with 1 mg of lysozyme/ml, and incubated for 5 min at room
temperature . Total RNA was isolated using the RNeasy minikit (Qiagen)
per the manufacturer's instructions .
The quality of the RNA was assessed on an Agilent Bioanalyzer 2100
electrophoretic system pre- and post-DNase treatment (Fig .
1) . The RNA was treated with 2 U of DNase I (Ambion) for 15
min at 37°C to remove contaminating DNA . The reaction was
stopped by the addition of 25 µl of DNase stop solution (50 mM EDTA,
1.5 M sodium acetate, and 1% sodium dodecyl sulfate) . The DNase I was
removed by phenol-chloroform extraction followed by ethanol
precipitation . Ten micrograms of total RNA was used for cDNA
synthesis, fragmentation, and labeling according to the Affymetrix
GeneChip P . aeruginosa genome array expression analysis
protocol . Briefly, random hexamers (Invitrogen) were added (final
concentration, 25 ng/µl) to the 10 µg of total RNA along with in
vitro-transcribed Bacillus subtilis control spikes (as
described in the Affymetrix GeneChip P . aeruginosa genome
array expression analysis protocol) . cDNA was synthesized using
Superscript II (Invitrogen) according to the manufacturer's
instructions under the following conditions: 25°C for 10 min, 37°C
for 60 min, 42°C for 60 min, and 70°C for 10 min . RNA was removed by
alkaline treatment and subsequent neutralization . The cDNA was
purified with use of the QIAquick PCR purification kit (Qiagen) and
eluted in 40 µl of buffer EB (10 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.5) . The cDNA was
fragmented by DNase I (0.6 U/µg of cDNA; Amersham) at 37°C for 10 min
and then end labeled with biotin-ddUTP with use of the Enzo
BioArray Terminal Labeling kit (Affymetrix) at 37°C for 60 min .
Proper cDNA fragmentation and biotin labeling were determined by gel
mobility shift assay with NeutrAvadin (Pierce) followed by
electrophoresis through a 5% polyacrylamide gel and subsequent DNA
staining with SYBR Green I (Roche) .
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FIG . 1 . Agilent electrophoretograms of RNA used to generate cDNA
hybridized to the Affymetrix Pseudomonas GeneChips . Shown are the
elctrophoretograms obtained from an Agilent Bioanalyzer 2100 on RNA
samples for two of the three conditions examined in this study . MW,
molecular size standards, in kilobases . Pre-DNase PAO1-1 SP, total RNA
sample from P . aeruginosa PAO1 grown to stationary phase before
treatment with DNase . PAO1-1 SP, total RNA sample from P . aeruginosa
PAO1 grown to stationary phase after DNase treatment . PAO1-2 SP and
PAO1-3 SP, independent replicates of total RNA from
stationary-phase-grown P . aeruginosa PAO1 after DNase treatment .
PSL317-1 SP, PSL317-2 SP, and PSL317-3 SP, three independent replicates
of total RNA samples from P . aeruginosa PSL317 ( algR)
grown to stationary phase after DNase treatment . PAO1-1 ML, PAO1-2 ML,
and PAO1-3 ML, total RNA samples from three independent replicates of
P . aeruginosa PAO1 grown to mid-logarithmic phase after DNase
treatment . PAO1-1 pCMR-7, PAO1-2 pCMR-7, and PAO1-3 pCMR-7, total RNA
samples from three independent replicates of P . aeruginosa PAO1
harboring the AlgR overexpression plasmid pCMR-7 grown to
mid-logarithmic phase after DNase treatment.
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Microarray data analysis. Microarray data were generated using
Affymetrix protocols . Absolute expression transcript levels were
normalized for each chip by globally scaling all probe sets to a
target signal intensity of 500 . Three statistical algorithms
(detection, change call, and signal log ratio) were then used to
identify differential gene expression in experimental and control
samples . The detection metric (presence, absence, or marginal) for a
particular gene was determined using default parameters in MAS
software (version 5.0; Affymetrix) . Batch analysis was performed in
MAS to make pairwise comparisons between individual experimental and
control GeneChips in order to generate change calls and a signal log
ratio for each transcript . These data were imported into Data
Mining Tools (version 3.0; Affymetrix) via an Affymetrix Laboratory
Information Management System . Transcripts that were absent under
both control and experimental conditions were eliminated from further
consideration . Statistical significance of signals between the
control and experimental conditions (P < 0.05) for individual
transcripts was determined using the t test . We defined a
positive change call as one in which greater than 50% of the
transcripts had a call of increased (I) or marginally increased (MI)
for up-regulated genes and decreased (D) or marginally decreased (MD)
for down-regulated genes . Finally, the mean value of the signal log
ratios from each comparison file was calculated . Only those genes
that met the above criteria and had a mean signal log ratio of
1
for up-regulated transcripts and
1
for down-regulated transcripts were kept in the final list of genes .
Signal log ratio values were converted from log2 and expressed
as fold changes . The original raw data files have been deposited
in the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation Therapeutics, Inc.-Genomax
shared workspace . These files are not publicly available .
Genome searches. The PAO1 genome sequence was obtained from
the Pseudomonas Genome Project (www.pseudomonas.com)
(55) . Sequence data were imported into MacVector
(version 7.0; Eastman Kodak) for analysis . The subsequence search of
the PAO1 genome was done using the known AlgR binding sequences
(CCGTTCGTC, CCGTTTGTC, CCGTTGTTC, or CCGTGCGTC), allowing up to two
mismatches . Gene function information was obtained from the PseudoCap
annotation project (www.pseudomonas.com) .
Twitching motility assay. Twitching motility was determined
as previously described (1) . Briefly, overnight
cultures of P . aeruginosa strains PAO1, PSL317 in LB medium,
and PSL317(pVDtacPIL) grown in LB medium with 300 µg of
carbenicillin/ml were stabbed through a twitching motility plate (1%
tryptone, 0.5% yeast extract, 1% NaCl, 1% agar) supplemented with 1
mM IPTG . The plates were incubated at 37°C for 48 h, at which time
the agar was removed, the bacteria attached to the plate were stained
with crystal violet, and the diameter of the zone of twitching was
measured .
Western blot analysis. P . aeruginosa strains PAO1,
PSL317, and PSL317(pVDtacPIL) were grown in LB medium with
aeration to mid-log phase (OD600 of 0.4) . The stains were
collected by centrifugation (6,000 x g
for 2 min), washed, resuspended in 50 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.0)-150
mM NaCl, and then lysed by sonication . Protein extracts (25 µg) were
separated on a 4 to 20% gradient polyacrylamide gel (Invitrogen) and
then electroblotted onto a polyvinylidene difluoride membrane . The
membrane was probed with an anti-AlgR monoclonal antibody (14),
detected using a horseradish peroxidase-conjugated goat anti-mouse
monoclonal antibody (Bio-Rad Laboratories), and developed using
Opti-4CN (Bio-Rad Laboratories) .
S1 nuclease protection assay and primer extension analysis.
The RNA for the S1 nuclease protection assay was isolated from
mid-log-phase-grown PAO1 and PSL317 with the use of CsCl as
previously described (37) . The S1 nuclease protection assay
was performed as previously described (37) with the
following modifications . The hcnA 354-bp promoter region
ranging from –330 to +24 (numbering relative to translational start
site) was cloned into M13mp18 . Single-stranded phage were isolated
and used as the template for the uniformly labeled ([ -32P]dCTP)
single-stranded DNA probe generated using the oligonucleotide
hcnAprimext (5'-GTGTTGACGACGTTCAAGAAGGTGCAT-3') . The probe was
digested using BglI and purified on a 5% polyacrylamide gel . The S1
nuclease reaction was performed as previously described (37)
with the use of 50 µg of RNA from each strain . The sequencing ladder
was generated using the same primer that was used to make the probe .
For the primer extension assay on the PA1557 promoter, RNA was
isolated from PAO1, PSL317, and PAO1(pCMR7) grown as described
above with the RNeasy minikit (Qiagen) . The primer extension was done
as previously described (18) with slight modifications .
Briefly, the PA1557R' primer (5'-GCGGACCACCTTGTAGTTATAGGCG-3')
was end labeled with [ -32P]ATP
with the use of polynucleotide kinase and purified through a G-25
spin column (Amersham) . The primer was hybridized to 10 µg of total
RNA in hybridization buffer (0.5 M KCl, 0.24 M Tris-HCl [pH 8.3]),
incubated at 95°C for 1 min and 55°C for 2 min, and then placed on
ice for 15 min . Superscript II (Invitrogen) was added, and the
primers were extended according to the manufacturer's protocol . The
extension reaction mixtures were loaded next to a sequencing
ladder generated using the same primer .
HCN quantification. Hydrogen cyanide (HCN) produced by P .
aeruginosa strains was quantified using the protocol of Gallagher
and Manoil (23) with slight modifications . In
brief, strains PAO1, PSL317, PAO1(pCMR7), and PSL317(pVDZ'2R) were
grown on Pseudomonas isolation agar (Difco) for 24 h at 37°C
and then enclosed without the lid in individual sealed plastic bags
that contained 1 ml of 4 M NaOH . After 4 h of incubation, the NaOH
was diluted to 0.09 M to bring it within linear range of a KCN
standard curve . Then 105-µl aliquots of the samples were mixed with
350 µl of a 1:1 mixture of 0.1 M O-dinitrobenzene (ACROS) in
ethylene-glycol monoethyl ether (ACROS) and 0.2 M p-nitrobenzaldehyde
(ACROS) in ethylene-glycol monoethyl ether . After 30 min of
incubation at room temperature, the OD578 was measured as
previously described (23) and the HCN produced by
each strain was quantified by comparison with a KCN standard curve .
Transcriptional profile of the AlgR regulon in P . aeruginosa PAO1
during mid-log growth phase. We have recently shown that AlgR is
essential for virulence of nonmucoid P . aeruginosa in an acute
murine septicemia model (32) . Since PAO1 does not
produce significant amounts of alginate and since LPS was unaffected
in the algR mutant strain PAO700 (algR::Gmr),
the known AlgR-regulated genes, algD and algC, probably
were not the reason for the differences in virulence observed between
PAO1 and PAO700 (algR::Gmr) . Furthermore, this
study also suggested that AlgR regulates genes involved in P .
aeruginosa response to oxidative stress (32) . Therefore,
in order to determine the extent of the AlgR regulon, we initiated
a microarray study using the Affymetrix P . aeruginosa GeneChip
Array . In the initial analysis, RNA was isolated from P . aeruginosa
grown in LB medium to mid-logarithmic growth phase, mimicking
the same conditions that were used in our previous virulence study (32) .
In order to identify the AlgR-regulated genes, transcripts from the
wild-type strain PAO1 were compared to those of its isogenic algR
in-frame deletion mutant PSL317 ( algR)
(see Materials and Methods) . Here, AlgR activated the expression of
58 genes (Fig . 2) that fall into 16 of the
functional classes used by the Pseudomonas Genome Project .
Most of the AlgR-activated genes in mid-log phase (15)
are categorized as hypothetical, uncharacterized, or unknown, but
AlgR also activates a number of genes involved in (i) energy
metabolism (11 genes), (ii) amino acid biosynthesis and metabolism (7
genes), (iii) cell wall-LPS-capsule production (6 genes), and (iv)
the transport of small molecules (3 genes) . These data indicate that
AlgR may be required for the global expression of genes in P .
aeruginosa and not just as a regulator for the specific pathways
of alginate production and twitching motility .
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FIG . 2 . Functional classes of AlgR-regulated genes from mid-logarithmic
growth phase . The genes were identified as either activated or repressed
by AlgR with the use of the comparison of gene expression in PAO1
compared to PSL317 ( algR)
grown as described in Materials and Methods . All genes that had a
significant difference in expression (P < 0.05 as determined by
t test) are included . Functional classes were determined using
the Pseudomonas Genome Project website (www.pseudomonas.com)
on 14 January 2004.
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A previous examination of protein expression in PAO1 and PAO700 (algR::Gmr)
by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis found that 17 proteins were
repressed by AlgR (32) . Consistent with these
results were those of the transcriptional analysis study comparing
PAO1 and PSL317 ( algR),
whereby AlgR was found to repress expression of 37 genes during
mid-logarithmic growth (Fig . 2) . Two functional
classes were identified as having the largest number of both
AlgR-activated and AlgR-repressed genes: energy metabolism (11
activated, 5 repressed) and amino acid biosynthesis and metabolism (7
activated, 4 repressed) . Table 2 includes a list of these
genes that showed the highest degree of AlgR regulation, defined
as greater-than-threefold activation or repression . Overall,
the analysis of the microarray data suggests that AlgR is capable of
affecting diverse functions in P . aeruginosa through either
activation or repression .
| TABLE 2 . Genes that had a greater-than-threefold AlgR activation or
repression in PAO1 during mid-logarithmic growth
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Transcriptional profile of the AlgR regulon in P . aeruginosa PAO1
during stationary growth phase. In P . aeruginosa the sigma
factor RpoS has been shown to regulate a number of virulence factors
in stationary phase, including two which are AlgR regulated: alginate
production and type IV pili (56) . With this in
mind, we hypothesized that AlgR acts as a regulator not only in
mid-logarithmic phase as shown in this study but also in stationary
phase . We therefore compared the transcriptional profiles from PAO1
and PSL317 ( algR)
grown to early stationary phase in LB broth . Our analysis identified
45 genes that are activated by AlgR when P . aeruginosa enters
stationary phase (Fig . 3) . These genes fell into 14
functional classes with the majority (12 genes) of the genes
categorized as hypothetical, followed by putative enzymes (6 genes),
genes encoding putative membrane proteins (6 genes), genes involved
in motility and attachment (6 genes), and genes encoding proteins
for the transport of small molecules (5 genes) .
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FIG . 3 . Functional classes of AlgR-regulated genes from early stationary
phase . The genes were identified as either activated or repressed by
AlgR with use of the comparison of gene expression in PAO1 and in PSL317
( algR)
grown as described in Materials and Methods . All genes that had a
significant difference in expression (P < 0.05 as determined by
t test) are included . Functional classes were determined using
the Pseudomonas Genome Project website (www.pseudomonas.com)
on 14 January 2004.
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The analysis of PAO1 and PSL317 gene expression from stationary phase
also identified 14 genes that are repressed by AlgR in early
stationary phase (Fig . 3), once again indicating that
AlgR activated and repressed gene expression . These genes were
spread fairly evenly among eight functional classes . The genes from
this study which had a greater-than-threefold activation or
repression by AlgR are listed in Table 3 . All but two of
the most highly AlgR-regulated genes are activated by AlgR conditionally
in early stationary phase . Other than algR itself, only one
open reading frame (ORF), PA3472, encoding a hypothetical protein,
was identified as highly AlgR regulated in both mid-logarithmic
growth (Table 2) and early stationary phase (Table
3) . The large number of AlgR-regulated genes that
do not overlap between mid-log and stationary phases indicates that
AlgR may regulate two independent sets of genes under these
conditions .
| TABLE 3 . Genes that had a greater-than-threefold AlgR activation or
repression in PAO1 during early stationary phase
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Transcriptional profile of the AlgR regulon in P . aeruginosa PAO1
overexpressing AlgR. It is known that AlgR expression is increased
during mucoid growth due to AlgU-initiated expression (37) .
Additionally, overexpression of algR in PAO1 (the nonmucoid
background) renders PAO1 avirulent in a mouse septicemia model (32),
thus indicating that the relative amounts of AlgR may be critical for
gene regulation . In order to determine how these levels of AlgR
affect gene expression, we compared the expression profiles of PAO1
and PAO1 overexpressing algR from the plasmid pCMR7 . Our
analysis indicated that overexpression of AlgR activated the
expression of 312 genes and repressed the transcription of 573 genes
(Fig . 4) . The majority (41%) of these genes were
uncharacterized or hypothetical genes . A large number of
transcriptional regulators and two-component regulatory systems were
identified as AlgR regulated, both activated and repressed, when AlgR
was overexpressed . Thus, the large number of genes that were
identified as AlgR regulated is likely in part due to indirect AlgR
regulation through a second transcriptional regulator .
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FIG . 4 . Functional classes of AlgR-regulated genes when AlgR was
overexpressed from the plasmid pCMR7 . The genes were identified as
either activated or repressed by AlgR by use of the comparison of gene
expression in PAO1 and in PAO1 overexpressing AlgR grown as described in
Materials and Methods . All genes that had a significant difference in
expression (P < 0.05 as determined by t test) are
included . Functional classes were determined using the Pseudomonas
Genome Project website (www.pseudomonas.com)
on 14 January 2004.
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The most highly AlgR-regulated genes were identified by combining
genes whose transcription was either activated or repressed threefold
by AlgR during overexpression and in mid-logarithmic or stationary
phase (Table 4) . Only 16 genes met these criteria
(Table 4) . Only one gene, PA1048, was shared between
the lists of highly AlgR-regulated genes in stationary phase and
during AlgR overexpression . The remaining genes were highly regulated
by AlgR in mid-log growth and during AlgR overexpression . AlgR
repressed the transcription of 11 genes during both mid-log growth
and AlgR overexpression, indicating that the presence of AlgR may be
enough to repress transcription .
| TABLE 4 . Genes that had a greater-than-threefold AlgR activation or
repression when AlgR was overexpressed and in either mid-log growth or
early stationary phase
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Identification of AlgR-regulated twitching motility genes in P .
aeruginosa. AlgR regulates twitching motility (59);
however, the specific pilus gene(s) that AlgR controls has not been
identified . We compared the P . aeruginosa Affymetrix GeneChip
expression profiles of mid-log- and stationary-phase-grown PAO1 and
PSL317 ( algR)
and of PAO1 and a PAO1 AlgR-overproducing strain in order to
identify known pilus genes that may be AlgR regulated . Surprisingly,
our initial analysis comparing PAO1 and PSL317 in the mid-log growth
phase identified no known pilus genes . However, the expression
profiles of PAO1 and PSL317 grown to early stationary phase did
identify a single operon consisting of the genes fimU, pilV,
pilW, pilX, pilY1, and pilY2 as potentially
activated by AlgR (Table 5) . The fold changes
varied from 8.46 for pilX to 2.20 for fimU and pilV .
| TABLE 5 . Known pilus genes identified as activated by AlgR
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Since fimU, pilV, pilW, pilX, pilY1, and
pilY2 were identified as among the most highly activated
AlgR-regulated genes, the entire operon consisting of fimT,
fimU, pilV, pilW, pilX, pilY1,
pilY2, and pilE was cloned into the plasmid pVDtac39 (pVDtacPIL)
and tested for its ability to complement the twitching motility
defect in the algR deletion strain PSL317 . PSL317 harboring
the plasmid pVDtacPIL had approximately the same zone of twitching
motility as did PAO1 (Fig . 5A and B) . A Western blot
assay to detect AlgR in PAO1, PSL317, and PSL317 harboring pVDtacPIL
confirmed that the complementation of the twitching motility
defect was due to the genes introduced on the plasmid and not due to
an effect by AlgR (Fig . 5C) . While PAO1 did produce a
statistically larger twitching motility zone (Fig . 5B),
the near-complete complementation of the twitching motility defect
indicates that the genes included in this operon are the genes
responsible for the twitching motility defect seen in an algR
mutant .
|
FIG . 5 . Expression of fimT, fimU, pilV, pilW,
pilX, pilY1, pilY2, and pilE in trans
complemented the twitching motility defect in the algR mutant
PSL317 . (A) Representative photographs of the twitching motility of the
wild-type strain PAO1, the algR mutant PSL317 ( algR),
and PSL317 containing the complementation plasmid pVDtacPIL
showing the zone of twitching motility . (B) Quantified twitching
motility zones for PAO1, PSL317, and PSL317(pVDtacPIL) (n
= 5 for all strains) . No twitching motility was observed for PSL317 on
any replicate . Error bars represent standard errors . **, P <
0.01; ***, P < 0.0001 . (C) Western blot analysis of AlgR
production in PAO1 (lane 1), PSL317 (lane 2), and PSL317(pVDtacPIL)
(lane 3) . Equivalent amounts of total protein (25 µg) were separated on
a 4 to 20% gradient sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel . The
proteins were blotted and probed with an anti-AlgR monoclonal antibody
(see Materials and Methods) . MW, molecular weight standards (weights are
given at left in thousands).
|
|
AlgR regulates HCN production in P . aeruginosa. Since
our transcriptional profiling analyses revealed that AlgR may be
acting as a repressor of transcription, we chose to examine the
transcription of two genes repressed by AlgR . One of the genes
selected was hcnA, the first gene in the hcnABC operon
that encodes the HCN synthase (29) . This operon was selected
for several reasons . First, Firoved and Deretic demonstrated
that hcnA is activated in mucoid P . aeruginosa (19) .
Because AlgU increases algR expression in mucoid P .
aeruginosa (37), their results may indicate
that increased hcnA transcription in mucoid P . aeruginosa
may be due to AlgR . Second, the transcriptional regulation of hcnA
has been well studied . Two transcriptional start sites for hcnA
(T1 and T2) have been identified (45) (Fig .
6B), and a number of transcription factors including ANR (29),
LasR and RhlR (45) and the rsmA product (46)
regulate the expression of hcnA . Third, the HCN synthase
produces an assayable end product, HCN, allowing confirmation of
transcriptional expression .
|
FIG . 6 . AlgR regulates hcnA transcription and HCN production . (A)
An S1 nuclease protection analysis of hcnA promoter activity in
strains PAO1 and PSL317 ( algR)
showing AlgR repression of the two previously identified transcriptional
start sites, T1 and T2 (45) . (B) The hcnA
promoter sequence, highlighting the positions of the T1 and T2
transcriptional start sites, the previously identified ANR box (45),
and the translational start site . Arrows indicate the positions of the
previously published T1 and T2 . The underlined bases indicate the mapped
transcriptional start site seen in the S1 nuclease protection assay
(panel A) . (C) HCN production from strains PAO1, PSL317 ( algR),
PAO1(pCMR7) (AlgR overexpression), and PSL317(pVDZ'2R) (algR
complementation) correlates with the difference in hcnA
transcription . ***, P < 0.001 compared to PSL317 as determined by
the Tukey-Kramer multiple comparison test.
|
|
Analysis of our data from the Affymetrix GeneChip on PAO1 and PSL317
grown to mid-log phase indicated that AlgR repressed the
transcription of the hcnABC operon by approximately threefold
(hcnB = 3.0) . To confirm AlgR dependence of the hcnA promoter,
an S1 nuclease protection assay was performed comparing transcription
in PAO1 and PSL317 ( algR)
grown under the same conditions that were used in the transcriptional
profiling experiments . The results of the S1 nuclease protection
assay show that AlgR repressed both the T1 promoter and the T2
promoter of hcnA under these growth conditions (Fig.
6A) .
A quantitative HCN assay was performed on PAO1 and PSL317 to
determine if the difference in transcription of the hcnABC operon
corresponds to a difference in HCN production . The results of
that assay demonstrated that PSL317 produced 1,479.4 µM HCN while
PAO1 produced only 445.0 µM HCN, a 3.3-fold difference in HCN
production . Complementation of algR in trans returned
the production of HCN to near-wild-type levels (Fig . 6C) .
These data indicate that the differences in transcription caused by
AlgR repression of both hcnA promoters result in an equivalent
decrease in HCN produced by PAO1 compared to that for PSL317 .
Moreover, overexpression of AlgR eliminated HCN production in PAO1,
indicating further that AlgR repressed hcnA expression (Fig.
6C) . This series of experiments demonstrated that
AlgR repressed transcription of hcnA and that mutations in
algR resulted in increased HCN production in PAO1 .
AlgR regulates expression of PA1557, a putative cbb3-type
cytochrome. Our transcriptional profiling analyses revealed that AlgR
may be acting as a repressor . We therefore chose to examine the
transcription of a second gene, PA1557, repressed by AlgR . ORF
PA1557, followed by PA1556 and PA1555, comprises a
putative cbb3-type cytochrome oxidase operon that
shows the highest homology to the nitrogen fixation operon fixNOQP
of Bradyrhizobium japonica (47) . According
to sequence analysis (www.pseudomonas.com)
P . aeruginosa contains two operons (PA1557 to PA1555
and PA1554 to PA1552) with homology to fixNOP
with both of the P . aeruginosa operons missing fixQ . It
appears that only the PA1557 to PA1555 operon was AlgR
regulated (Tables 2 and 4) . We confirmed
AlgR dependence of the uncharacterized ORF PA1557 in two
different conditions, the PAO1 at mid-log growth phase and the AlgR
overexpression condition . A primer extension experiment was performed
to map the transcriptional start sites of PA1557, which
revealed the presence of two transcriptional starts for PA1557,
P1 and P2 (Fig . 7), with the P1 promoter of
PA1557 appearing to be the promoter that is repressed by AlgR in
both conditions . These results are in agreement with the differences
in expression observed in the transcriptional profiling experiments .
|
FIG . 7 . The P1 promoter of PA1557 is AlgR dependent . (A) The
primer extension analysis of the PA1557 promoter in PAO1, PSL317
( algR),
and PAO1 overexpressing AlgR from the plasmid pCMR7 (PAO1 pCMR7)
identified two promoters, P1 and P2 . The GATC lanes comprise a
sequencing ladder generated from the same primer that was used in the
primer extension . (B) Sequence map of the PA1557 promoter
indicating the positions of the P1 and P2 promoters relative to the
putative translational start site (underlined) in addition to the
position of two putative AlgR binding sites (ARBS-1 and ARBS-2) and a
putative ANR box.
|
|
In this study we have identified four new roles for the P . aeruginosa
transcriptional regulator AlgR: (i) AlgR can repress gene transcription;
(ii) AlgR activates the fimTU-pilVWXY1Y2E operon, the expression
of which is sufficient to correct the twitching motility defect
in an algR mutant; (iii) AlgR regulates HCN production; and
(iv) AlgR controls transcription of the putative cbb3-type
cytochrome PA1557 . Additionally, this study has given some insight
into the mechanisms of AlgR regulation . AlgR regulates the
transcription of the alginate genes algD and algC by
directly binding to three sites within the algD promoter (39,
40) and the algC promoter (21,
63) (Fig . 8A) . The position of the AlgR
binding site varies greatly between the algD and algC
promoters, ranging from –476 to –37 in the algD promoter and
–99 to +402 in the algC promoter . An alignment of the
published AlgR binding sites reveals the first base to be poorly
conserved between the published sites . Removing the first base and
using only the 9-bp sequences (shown in boldface in Fig.
8A) to search for putative AlgR binding sites in
the promoter regions (defined as –873 to +402 relative to the
translational start site) of genes found to be highly AlgR dependent
(Table 4) revealed only six genes with algC
or algD AlgR binding sites within their promoter (Fig .
8B) . This result may indicate that (i) the AlgR binding
sequence may only be partially known or (ii) the activated form of
AlgR may bind to a different sequence . In support of the first
possibility, AlgR has been proposed to be a member of a family of
transcriptional regulators that may bind to imperfect direct repeats
of the sequence pattern [TA][AC][CA]GTTN[AG][TG], suggesting that
AlgR may be binding as a dimer to the promoters that it regulates
(41) . On the other hand, the affinity of AlgR for the
algC ABS3 binding site is enhanced when AlgR is phosphorylated
(61) .
|
FIG . 8 . Alignment of AlgR binding sites of AlgR-regulated genes . (A)
Alignment of the known AlgR binding sites from the algD (39,
40) and algC (21,
63) promoters . (B) Alignment of putative AlgR binding
sites within the promoter regions of lon (PA1803), ibpA
(PA3126), hslV (PA5053), PA2828, PA4625,
and PA5475 . The position of the AlgR binding site (in boldface)
is relative to the putative translational start site . (C) Alignment of
putative AlgR binding sites of PA1557, hcnA, and pilV
promoter regions . Mismatched bases in the AlgR binding site are
indicated by lowercase letters . The AlgR consensus sequence is a
composite of the known AlgR binding sequences within the algD and
algC genes . B, G, C, or T; K, G or T.
|
|
Three characterized genes with algD or algC consensus AlgR binding
sites in their promoters that showed AlgR dependence in our
transcriptional profiles were ibpA, lon, and hslV, all
potentially involved in the stress response of P . aeruginosa .
The AlgR regulation of these three stress response genes not only
increases the global relevance of the AlgR regulon but is also in
accordance with other evidence that AlgR may play a role in stress .
The expression of AlgR has been shown to be activated by the extreme
heat shock sigma factor AlgU (37) . In Escherichia
coli IbpA (along with other small heat shock proteins) works in
conjunction with the DnaK-DnaJ-GrpE and the GroEL-GroES systems to
manage environmental stress, but IbpA appears to be dispensable (57) .
It is interesting that dnaK also showed a twofold repression
by AlgR in the AlgR overexpression experiment, but the dnaK
promoter does not contain a putative AlgR binding sequence .
Since P . aeruginosa ibpA has not been characterized and has
only 67% homology with E . coli ibpA, the effects of the differing
primary structures on IbpA function in the stress response of
P . aeruginosa are unknown . It is possible that some of the genes
that showed AlgR dependence but do not have an identifiable
AlgR binding site could be regulated indirectly through proteolytic
degradation of a transcription factor . Consistent with the hypothesis
that AlgR may regulate P . aeruginosa stress genes, we have shown
previously that the algR mutant strain PAO700 (algR::Gmr)
was found to be more resistant to hydrogen peroxide, myeloperoxidase,
and human neutrophils (31) . We discovered two potential
AlgR-regulated genes, katA and katB, from our global
expression analysis that may account for the resistance phenotypes
observed . The transcriptional profile of AlgR-dependent genes
indicated that katA was repressed 1.80-fold by AlgR while
katB was activated 3.16-fold by AlgR . P . aeruginosa
contains at least three catalase genes: katA, katB, and
katC (33) . KatA is constitutively active and provides
the major catalase activity in all phases of growth (8) .
In addition, the expression of KatA can be induced by oxidative
stress (8) . The expression of KatB is low under normal
growth conditions but is activated in response to oxidative stress
(8) . Therefore, analysis of the AlgR transcriptional
profile indicates that AlgR represses the expression of KatA, the
"housekeeping" and most highly expressed catalase, which may result
in the algR mutant producing more catalase than the wild type
does . This may be one potential explanation for the observation that
PAO700 was more resistant to H2O2 than was PAO1 (32) .
Interestingly, another microarray study comparing the gene expression
of P . aeruginosa strains PAK and PAK algZ (fimS) also
identified fimU, pilV, pilW, pilX,
pilY1, pilY2, and pilE as among the most
AlgZ-dependent genes (M . Wolfgang, personal communication) . Mutations
in either algZ-fimS or algR result in elimination of
the twitching motility phenotype (59) . The fimU-pilVWXY1Y2
operon does contain two putative AlgR binding sites, although
neither is identical to the algC or algD consensus AlgR binding
sites . One putative AlgR binding site is located 79 bp from the
3' end of fimU, directly upstream of pilV (Fig . 8C) .
The studies that characterized pilV identified a strong
pilV promoter along with a second, weaker pilV promoter
within the coding region of fimU (2,
3) . Therefore, this putative AlgR site could be in
the promoter region of pilV, indicating that AlgR could
directly regulate pilV expression . Since the translational starts
and stops for pilV, pilW, and pilX overlap (2,
3), it is possible that all three genes are
regulated by the two potentially AlgR-dependent pilV
promoters . The other putative AlgR binding site is located 947 bp
into the coding region of pilY1 . Due to the long distance of
this site from an intergenic region, the potential function of this
site is unknown . The AlgR overexpression transcriptional profile also
identified an additional eight known pilus genes as potentially
activated by AlgR (Table 5), including nearly the
entire pilMNOPQ operon (only pilP did not show differential
expression) . Interestingly, pilMNOPQ mutants have been described
as able to produce equivalent amounts of pilin but unable to
express it on the cell surface as determined by electron microscopy
and phage PO4 sensitivity assays (34) . This is the same
phenotype reported for an algR mutant (59) .
However, there are no putative AlgR binding sites in or near the
promoter regions of most of the genes in the pilMNOPQ operon .
There is one AlgR binding site identical to the algD RB1 site
within the pilQ coding region, but it is 582 bp from the 3'
end of pilQ . The lack of AlgR binding sites near the 5' end of
this operon indicates that the pilMNOPQ operon is likely
indirectly AlgR regulated . None of the promoter regions of the other
genes, pilT, pilI, or pilC, contains a putative
AlgR binding site, again indicating indirect AlgR regulation .
Other studies have shown that P . aeruginosa produces HCN in
infected burn eschar of human patients and that HCN was detectable in
the viscera upon postmortem analysis (25) . A more recent
study has identified HCN produced by P . aeruginosa as a primary
virulence factor for the paralytic killing of Caenorhabditis
elegans by P . aeruginosa (23), and other studies
have shown HCN to be an inhibitor of fungal growth in plant leaf and
root infection (20, 58) . These
studies indicate that the HCN produced by P . aeruginosa may
affect host cells and may be important in virulence . There are two
reported promoters for the hcnA gene, T1, controlled by
quorum-sensing regulators alone, and T2, which appears to rely on a
synergistic action of LasR, RhlR, and ANR (45) .
Currently, five hcnA regulatory proteins have been identified:
GacA (48), ANR (48, 64),
LasR and RhlR (45), and RsmA (46) .
The global regulator GacA positively controls HCN synthesis as well
as other secondary metabolites and exoenzymes (48).
P . aeruginosa mutants with mutations in gacA or anr produce
very little HCN (48, 64) . LasR and
RhlR are quorum-sensing regulators required for transcription of the
hcnA promoter (45) . RsmA (regulator of
secondary metabolites) functions as a pleiotropic posttranscriptional
regulator of HCN synthesis directly and also indirectly by negatively
regulating the amounts of quorum sensing N-acylhomoserine lactones
(44) . Since our data suggest that AlgR is affecting T1
and T2 transcription, AlgR is yet another transcriptional regulator
involved with hcnA expression, indicating that AlgR and LasR
and/or RhlR and ANR coordinately regulate this promoter . In
support of this possibility, analysis of the hcnA promoter reveals
a putative AlgR binding site from –400 to –408 bp upstream of
the translational start site (Fig . 8C) . This site
(CCGTCGTTC) differs by only one base from the ABS2 site of algC
(63) (Fig . 8A and C), indicating that
AlgR may bind directly to the hcnA promoter to regulate its
transcription .
The promoter of PA1557 shares some very interesting features
with the promoter of hcnA . The first is that both promoters
contain putative AlgR binding sites (Fig . 7B and
8C) . Another similarity between the two promoters
is that they contain a putative ANR binding site (Fig .
6B and 7B) . In addition to hcnA and
PA1557, two other genes that were AlgR dependent in the
transcriptional profiling analysis (Tables 2 and
4) are known to be ANR dependent . The arcDABC operon,
which encodes the anaerobic arginine deiminase enzymes (22),
and hemN, which encodes the oxygen-independent
coproporphyrinogen III oxidase (49), are both ANR
dependent . None of the conditions that we examined by transcriptional
profiling revealed that anr was AlgR regulated . The possible
mechanism of AlgR and ANR coregulation is unknown, but the number of
promoters (hcnA, PA1557, arcD, and hemN) regulated
by both suggests more than coincidental regulation .
The fact that only 6 out of the 53 genes that show AlgR regulation
in two out of the three conditions tested possess a known AlgR
binding site indicates that the mechanism of AlgR regulation is more
complex than originally thought . A relatively small number of
AlgR-regulated genes without AlgR binding sites would have been
expected due to indirect effects through other transcriptional
regulators, but those regulators would have been expected to possess
AlgR binding sites . However, none of the transcriptional regulators
on the list of the genes most regulated by AlgR (Table
4) contain AlgR binding sites . The Lon and HslVU proteases certainly
could account for a portion of the genes indirectly regulated
by AlgR, but it is unlikely that the astounding numbers of genes that
show indirect AlgR dependence are through these two proteases alone .
The distinct possibility exists that AlgR is capable of binding to
additional sequences that have yet to be elucidated . Most of the work
describing the AlgR binding site was done in vitro using AlgR
purified from E . coli (39, 40) or
using crude cell extracts of P . aeruginosa that overexpresses
AlgR (21, 63) . Therefore, the
effects of posttranslational modification were not taken into
account . Further studies are warranted to discern the role of AlgR
posttranslational modifications and the ability of AlgR to switch
from a repressor to an activator in control of P . aeruginosa
gene transcription .
Microarray equipment and technical support were supplied by the
GeneChip Bioinformatics core at the Louisiana State University Health
Sciences Center .
The cost of the P . aeruginosa GeneChips was defrayed in part
by subsidy grant no . 024 from Cystic Fibrosis Foundation Therapeutics,
Inc . This work was supported by grants LEQSF (1999-02) RD-A-42
and HEF (2000-05)-06 from the State of Louisiana-Board of Regents and
in part by grant AI050812-01A2 (NIH) .
* Corresponding author . Mailing address: Department of
Microbiology and Immunology, Program in Molecular Pathogenesis and Immunity,
Louisiana Center for Lung Biology and Immunotherapy, Tulane University Health
Sciences Center, 1430 Tulane Ave., New Orleans, LA 70112-2699 . Phone: (504)
988-4607 . Fax: (504) 588-5144 . E-mail:
mschurr@tulane.edu .
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