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Journal of Bacteriology, September 2004, p . 5576-5584, Vol .
186, No . 17
The
LysR-Type Transcriptional Regulator VirR Is Required for Expression of the
Virulence Gene vapA of Rhodococcus equi ATCC 33701
Dean A . Russell, Gavin A . Byrne, Enda P . O'Connell, Clara A . Boland,
and Wim G . Meijer*
Department of Industrial Microbiology, Conway Institute of Biomolecular and
Biomedical Research, University College Dublin, Dublin, Ireland
Received 12 February 2004/ Accepted 29 April 2004
The virulence of the intracellular pathogen Rhodococcus equi
in foals is dependent on the presence of an 81-kb virulence plasmid
encoding the virulence protein VapA . Expression of this protein is
induced by exposure to oxidative stress, high temperatures, and low
pHs, which reflect the conditions encountered by R . equi when
it enters the host environment . The aim of this study was to
determine whether the LysR-type transcriptional regulator VirR, which
is encoded by the virulence plasmid, is required for the expression
of vapA . It was shown that the virR gene is
cotranscribed with four downstream genes, one of which encodes a
two-component response regulator . The expression of VapA, as
monitored by Western blotting, was completely dependent on the
presence of virR . Maximal expression was observed when vapA
was present together with the complete virR operon, suggesting
that at least one of the virR operon genes, in addition to virR,
is required for the expression of vapA to wild-type levels .
The transcriptional start site of vapA was determined to be
a cytidine located 226 bp upstream from the vapA initiation
codon . His-tagged VirR protein was expressed in Escherichia
coli and purified by nickel affinity chromatography . DNA binding
studies showed that purified VirR binds to a DNA fragment containing
the vapA promoter . We therefore conclude that VirR is required
for the activation of vapA transcription .
The gram-positive bacterium Rhodococcus equi is a facultative
intracellular pathogen of alveolar macrophages . Although young foals
are the primary host of this pathogen, the incidence of R . equi
infection in immunocompromised humans has increased markedly over the
past 15 years (9, 23, 46) .
Infection with R . equi leads to life-threatening
pyogranulomatous pneumonia accompanied by gross lesions such as
macroabscesses and cavitation (32) . The virulence
of R . equi in foals is dependent on an indigenous plasmid,
which varies in size between 80 and 85 kb (40,
42) . Plasmid-cured strains are unable to proliferate in
macrophages (12, 17) . A recent
analysis of the nucleotide sequences of two virulence plasmids
revealed the presence of a 27.5-kb DNA fragment characterized by a
significantly lower G+C content than the remainder of the virulence
plasmid (39) . The expression of genes located
within this region of the virulence plasmid is upregulated following
the internalization of R . equi by macrophages, suggesting that
this part of the plasmid is a pathogenicity island (33) .
One of the proteins encoded within the pathogenicity island is
VapA, a highly immunogenic, lipid-modified, surface-expressed protein
(39, 41) . A deletion of vapA
results in the attenuation and rapid host clearance of an R . equi
vapA mutant strain in mice, showing that VapA is a virulence
factor (19) . The pathogenicity island encodes six
VapA homologues, one of which (VapF) is a pseudogene (39) .
VapC, -D, and -E are secreted (4); VapG and -H
contain a signal sequence and are therefore likely to be secreted .
The expression of vapA is controlled by environmental parameters
such as temperature, pH, oxidative stress, and the concentrations
of calcium, iron, and magnesium, which reflect the conditions
encountered by R . equi when it enters the host environment (2,
33, 38) . To date, it remains unclear
how these environmental signals are transduced to the transcriptional
apparatus . The pathogenicity island contains two open reading frames
(ORF4 and ORF8) that display a high degree of similarity to genes
encoding transcriptional regulators . ORF4 encodes a protein
belonging to the family of LysR-type transcriptional regulators
(LTTR) and ORF8 encodes a response regulator which is part of a
two-component regulatory system . LTTRs are present in a wide range of
bacterial species and represent the largest family of prokaryotic
transcriptional regulators (47) . These proteins
are involved in regulating a diverse range of cellular processes,
including CO2 fixation (43), the oxidative stress
response (6), and virulence (8,
10) . The first crystal structure of a full-length
LTTR was recently reported (28) . The N-terminal DNA binding
domains of LTTRs contain a helix-turn-helix motif that is required
for binding to inverted repeats containing a thymidine and an
adenine separated by 11 nucleotides (T-N11-A) (13,
35) . The expression of LysR-encoding genes is
often autoregulated, and they are divergently transcribed from the
gene(s) that they control .
Since ORF4 is located within the pathogenicity island, it is
likely that it is required for the expression of one or more genes
located within this region of the virulence plasmid . The aim of this
study was to determine whether the LTTR encoded by ORF4 is required
for the expression of vapA . The transcriptional organization
of vapA and the gene cluster containing ORF4 and ORF8 was
determined, followed by mapping of the transcriptional start site of
vapA . It was subsequently shown that the expression of vapA
is dependent on the presence of the protein encoded by ORF4 (VirR)
and that this protein binds adjacent to the vapA promoter .
Bacterial strains and growth conditions. R . equi ATCC
33701 was obtained from the American Type Culture Collection . An
avirulent, plasmid-cured strain of R . equi ATCC 33701 (P–)
was obtained from S . Takai, Kitasato University, Towada, Japan .
Escherichia coli DH5
(Bethesda Research Laboratories) and E . coli BL21(DE3) pLysE
(Novagen) were used for general cloning procedures and for expression
of the protein encoded by ORF4, respectively, (Table 1) .
Bacterial strains were grown in Luria-Bertani (LB) broth (34) .
When appropriate, the following supplements were added: kanamycin, 50
µg ml–1 (E . coli) or 200 µg ml–1 (R .
equi); ampicillin, 50 µg ml–1; chloramphenicol, 30 µg
ml–1; 5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indolyl-ß-D-galactopyranoside
(X-Gal), 20 µg ml–1; isopropyl-ß-D-thiogalactopyranoside
(IPTG), 0.1 mM . For solid medium, agar was added to 1.5% (wt/vol) .
| TABLE 1 . Bacteria and plasmids used for this study
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DNA manipulations. Chromosomal DNA was isolated as described
previously (29) . Plasmid DNAs were isolated via
the alkaline lysis method of Birnboim and Doly (3)
or by the use of a Wizard Plus SV miniprep kit as described by the
manufacturer (Promega) . DNA fragments were isolated from agarose gels
by the use of a Genelute DNA purification kit as described by the
manufacturer (Sigma-Aldrich) . PCRs were performed with Taq DNA
polymerase (Promega) or Deep Vent DNA polymerase (New England
Biolabs) as described by the manufacturer . Other DNA manipulations
were done in accordance with standard protocols (34) .
Plasmid construction. vapA and its promoter region
were amplified with Deep Vent DNA polymerase and oligonucleotides
PR600F and Takrev (Table 2) . The product was
ligated into the EcoRV site of pRE7 (48), yielding
pR6VT .
| TABLE 2 . Oligonucleotide primers used for this study
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pForlan21 was constructed as follows . ORF8 was amplified with Deep
Vent DNA polymerase and oligonucleotides 008F and 102R (Table
2) . The resulting PCR product was digested with EcoRI
and the 736-bp fragment was ligated into SmaI-EcoRI-digested
pBluescript II KS (Stratagene), yielding pPCR-RR . A 5,988-bp
KpnI-EcoRI fragment of p33701 was ligated into KpnI-EcoRI-digested
pPCR-RR, yielding pBlueRegP1 . pBlueRegPI was digested with NotI, end
filled with Klenow DNA polymerase, and further digested with KpnI .
The resulting 6,761-bp fragment was ligated into pR6VT which had been
digested with NcoI, end filled with Klenow DNA polymerase, and
further digested with KpnI .
pRvip10 was constructed as follows . ORF4 and its promoter region
were amplified with Deep Vent DNA polymerase and oligonucleotides LYF
and LYR (Table 2) . The product was ligated into the EcoRV
site of pBlueScript II KS, yielding pBlyFR2 . The 1,867-bp NotI-NheI
fragment from pBlyFR2 was ligated into NotI-NheI-digested pR6VT
(Table 1) .
pEDAR1012 was constructed by amplifying the promoter region of
vapA with Deep Vent DNA polymerase and the oligonucleotides
PR400F and 103R (Table 2) . This product was ligated into
EcoRV-digested pBluescript II KS .
pET3bvirRhis was constructed by amplifying the coding region of
ORF4 with Deep Vent DNA polymerase and oligonucleotides LYSR-FORW and
VIR-HIS (Table 2) . This product was ligated into
EcoRV-digested pBluescript II KS, yielding pBluevirRhis . The 931-bp
NdeI-BamHI fragment from pBluevirRhis was ligated into
NdeI-BamHI-digested pET3b (Novagen) (Table 1) .
Electroporation of R . equi. R . equi was made
electrocompetent by use of the method described by Zheng et al . (48);
the pR6VT, pRvip10, and pForlan21 constructs were introduced into
R . equi ATCC 33701 (P–) by electroporation as
previously described (27) .
Overexpression and purification of VirR-his. E . coli
BL21(DE3) harboring pLysE and pET3bvirRhis was grown at 28°C and 200
rpm in 400 ml of LB medium containing ampicillin and chloramphenicol .
At an optical density at 650 nm of 0.5, IPTG was added to a final
concentration of 1 mM and growth was continued for another 4 h . The
cells were harvested by centrifugation at 4,100
x g and were resuspended in 16 ml of
binding buffer (5 mM imidazole, 0.5 M NaCl, 20 mM Tris-HCl [pH -pH pH
7.9]) supplemented with 1 mM phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride . The cells
were broken by three passages through a French press at 1,000
lb/in2 (Aminco), and the cell debris was subsequently removed
by centrifugation (25 min, 20,000 x
g, 4°C) . His-tagged VirR (VirR-his) was purified by the use of a
His-Bind purification kit as described by the manufacturer (Novagen) .
Purified VirR was desalted with a HiTrap desalting column (Amersham
Biosciences) equilibrated with electrophoretic mobility shift assay
(EMSA) binding buffer (25 mM Tris-HCl [pH 7.5], 1 mM EDTA, 0.1 mM
dithiothreitol [DTT], 50 mM KCl, 10% glycerol) .
Preparation and labeling of DNA fragment used for EMSAs. To
obtain a radiolabeled DNA fragment containing the vapA promoter
region, we digested pEDAR1012 with BglII and HindIII and labeled
the resulting 262-bp DNA fragment with [ -32P]dATP
(Perkin-Elmer) in a mixture containing 50 ng of DNA, 100 µM dCTP, 100
µM dGTP, 100 µM dTTP, 5 µCi of [ -32P]dATP,
2 U of Klenow DNA polymerase (Promega), 50 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.2),
10 mM MgSO4, and 0.1 mM DTT which was then incubated at 30°C
for 30 min . The reaction was stopped by the addition of 25 mM
EDTA . The labeled fragment was purified by use of a Qiaquick PCR
purification kit according to the manufacturer's instructions
(Qiagen) .
EMSA. Radiolabeled DNA fragments (2 ng) were incubated with
purified VirR-his at 30°C for 30 min in EMSA binding buffer, 20 µg
of bovine serum albumin, and 1 µg of poly(dI-dC) DNA (Amersham
Biosciences) in a volume of 20 µl . The samples were separated by
electrophoresis in a prerun 5% nondenaturing polyacrylamide gel
containing TBE (45 mM Tris base, 45 mM boric acid, 1 mM EDTA) and run
at 4°C and 10 V cm–1 . After drying, the gel was analyzed
by autoradiography .
RNA isolation. Total bacterial RNA was isolated from a 4-ml
culture grown to mid-logarithmic phase (optical density at 610 nm,
0.25) and harvested by centrifugation for 45 s at 20,000
x g at 4°C . The cells were
resuspended in 1 ml of RLT buffer (RNeasy mini kit; Qiagen) and added
to 0.5 ml of DEPC-treated 0.1-mm-diameter zirconia-silica beads
(BioSpec) . The samples were lysed for 2 min with a Ribolyser (Hybaid)
at a speed setting of 6.5 . Total RNA was isolated by the use of an
RNeasy RNA mini kit (Qiagen) according to the manufacturer's
instructions, except that a 60-min on-column DNA digestion with 60 U
of RNase-free DNase I (Qiagen) was performed . After elution, 4 U of
DNA-free DNase was incubated with 5 µg of total RNA according to the
manufacturer's instructions (Ambion) .
Fluorescent primer extension and DNA sequencing. A
Cy5-labeled oligonucleotide, CY5VAPA200R (Table 2),
complementary to the sequence 113 to 131 bp downstream from the
initiation codon of the vapA gene was used in primer extension
reactions . Total RNA (5 µg) and 1 µM CY5VAPA200R (Table
2) were incubated at 70°C for 5 min, followed by reverse
transcription (RT) at 42°C for 60 min with 5 U of Improm-II reverse
transcriptase in a volume of 100 µl as recommended by the
manufacturer (Promega) . After treatment of the sample with 20 µg of
RNase A at 37°C for 30 min, the cDNA was precipitated and
dissolved in 12 µl of nuclease-free water . The primer extension
product (0.5 ng) was combined with 0.5 µl of the DNA size standard
kit-600 (Beckman Coulter) and 40 µl of CEQ sample loading solution
(Beckman Coulter) and analyzed with the CEQ 8000 fragment analysis
system on a CEQ 8000 DNA sequencer (Beckman Coulter) . In addition, a
dideoxy sequencing reaction containing VAPA200R (Table
2) and 60 ng of EcoRV-digested pRvip10 (Table 1)
was performed by the use of a CEQ DCTS kit as described by the
manufacturer (Beckman Coulter) . The Cy5-labeled primer extension
product (50 pg) was added to the sample prior to analysis of the
sequence with a CEQ 8000 DNA sequencer .
RT-PCR. Total RNA (1 µg) was used for the synthesis of cDNA
with 0.5 µg of random hexamers (Promega) and 1 U of ImProm-II
reverse transcriptase (Promega) used according to the manufacturer's
instructions . One-tenth of the reaction mixture was used as a
template for PCR amplification with Taq DNA polymerase (Promega)
as described by the manufacturer . The oligonucleotides utilized
for PCR amplification are listed in Table 2 .
Extraction of cellular proteins. Cells were harvested in
late-logarithmic phase by centrifugation (10 min, 4,000
x g, 4°C) and resuspended in 10 mM
Tris-HCl (pH 8.0) and 1 mM EDTA . The cells were broken by three
passages through a French pressure cell (Aminco) at 1,000 lb/in2,
followed by centrifugation (10 min, 14,000
x g, 4°C) to remove cell
debris .
Western blot analysis. Cell extracts were boiled for 5 min
in a sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) solution (62.5 mM Tris-HCl [pH
6.8], 10% [vol/vol] glycerol, 2% [wt/vol] SDS, 5% [vol/vol]
2-mercaptoethanol, 0.02% [wt/vol] bromophenol blue) .
SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis was performed on a 15%
polyacrylamide gel by the method of Laemmli (26) .
After electrophoresis, the proteins were transferred to a
polyvinylidene difluoride membrane (Immobilon-P; Millipore) according
to the manufacturer's instructions . Immunoblot analysis was performed
with a chemiluminescence Western blot analysis system (Lumi-Light
Western blotting substrate; Roche) . A monoclonal antibody against
VapA (Mab103, provided by S . Takai) was used for immunoblotting
procedures .
Northern hybridization. After electrophoresis in a
denaturing formaldehyde gel (34), RNAs were
transferred to a positively charged membrane according to the
manufacturer's instructions (Roche) . The vapA probe used for
Northern blot analysis was synthesized with the oligonucleotides Vap1
and Vap2 (Table 2) and Taq DNA polymerase (Promega) in
the presence of a 0.2 mM concentration (each) of dATP, dCTP,
and dGTP; 0.13 mM dTTP; and 0.07 mM digoxigenin 11-dUTP . The reaction
mixture was incubated at 94°C for 2 min and was subsequently
subjected to 30 cycles of 94°C for 30 s, 50°C for 45 s, and 74°C for
1 min, followed by an incubation at 74°C for 7 min . Prehybridization,
hybridization, and chemiluminescent detection of the labeled probe
with DIG Easy Hyb and CDP-Star kits (Roche) were done according to
the manufacturer's recommendations .
Nucleotide sequence analysis of ORF4 gene cluster. In the
initial annotation of the pathogenicity island of the virulence
plasmid of R . equi (accession number
NC_004854), the start codon of ORF4, encoding an LTTR, is an ATG
located at position 4993 (39) . A characteristic of
LTTRs is the presence of a helix-turn-helix motif at the
amino-terminal end of the protein which facilitates DNA binding . An
inspection of the protein encoded by ORF4 reveals that half of this
DNA binding domain is missing . This strongly suggests that the
initiation codon is more likely a GTG at position 4942, located 51 bp
upstream of the annotated ATG initiation codon, because the protein
encoded by this revised ORF4 contains a complete helix-turn-helix
motif .
The spacing between ORF4 and ORF5 is 493 bp in the original
annotation of the virulence plasmid, with the initiation codon of
ORF5 being an ATG at nucleotide 6322 . However, a careful inspection
of ORF5 indicated that the true initiation codon of this ORF is more
likely to be a GTG at position 5947 . The protein encoded by the
revised ORF5 displays a high degree of similarity with transport
proteins belonging to the major facilitator superfamily, in
particular to proteins belonging to the arabinose efflux permease
family (COG2814) .
Two base pairs downstream of ORF8 is a region (nucleotides 9295 to
9692) that displays similarity to genes encoding the VapA protein
family . This ORF starts at position 9295 of the virulence plasmid but
is interrupted by a stop codon at position 9544 and contains a –1
frame shift at position 9630 . It is therefore a pseudogene, similar
to vapF, which contains two frameshift mutations . Furthermore,
as is the case for vapF, the vap pseudogene downstream
of ORF8 lacks a signal sequence . When corrected for the presence of
the stop codon and the frame shift, the hypothetical protein encoded
by this pseudogene is most similar to vapE .
The ORF4-8 cluster is cotranscribed. An analysis of the
nucleotide sequence of the pathogenicity island indicated that ORF4
to ORF8 may form a polycistronic operon . These five ORFs are
transcribed in the same direction and are separated from each other
by a maximum of 136 bp (ORF5 and ORF6) and a minimum of 57 bp (ORF6
and ORF7) . To determine the transcriptional organization of this
region, we performed RT-PCRs with oligonucleotide pairs (Table
2) complementary to adjacent ORFs to span each gene
junction (Fig . 1A) . Reverse transcriptase-dependent
amplification generated products of the predicted sizes from
oligonucleotide pairs complementary to the following genes:
ORF4-ORF5, ORF5-ORF6, ORF6-ORF7, and ORF7-ORF8 (Fig . 1B) .
These results showed that ORF4 to ORF8 are transcribed as a single
message, showing that this cluster is an operon which is transcribed
from a promoter located between ORF3 and ORF4 . As expected, RT-PCR
products were not observed when we used oligonucleotide pairs
complementary to ORF3 and ORF4, nor were any observed when we used
oligonucleotides complementary to ORF8 and ORF9 . RT-PCR products were
not observed when reverse transcriptase was omitted from the reaction
mixture .
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FIG . 1 . Transcriptional organization of virR gene cluster . (A)
Genetic organization of DNA region harboring ORF3 to ORF9 . The arrow
above the map denotes the direction of transcription of the
polycistronic message . Arrows below the illustration indicate
oligonucleotide primers used for RT-PCR . (B) Results of RT-PCR analyses .
Each oligonucleotide pair was used in three amplification reactions,
with 2 µl of the reverse transcriptase-containing reaction (cDNA),
without reverse transcriptase (–RT), and with R . equi ATCC 33701
genomic DNA (DNA) . The oligonucleotide pairs used were 003R and 004R
(i), 004F and 005R (ii), 005F and 006R (iii), 006F and 007NR (iv), 007NF
and 008R (v), and 008F and 009R (vi) . The size of each band is
indicated.
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Mapping of vapA transcriptional start site. It was shown
previously that the vapA transcript is monocistronic in R .
equi 85F, a strain which contains an 85-kb virulence plasmid (2) .
To determine the transcriptional organization of vapA in R .
equi ATCC 33701, we isolated mRNAs from R . equi grown under
conditions that induce the expression of vapA (pH 6.5, 37°C)
and analyzed them by Northern hybridization, using vapA as a
probe . A single transcript of approximately 700 nucleotides was
observed, indicating that vapA is transcribed as a monocistronic
transcript, as is the case for R . equi 85F (data not shown) .
The transcriptional start site of vapA was mapped for this strain
by rapid amplification of cDNA ends (RACE) following induction
with H2O2 (2) . To determine whether both
strains employ the same transcriptional start site, we performed a
primer extension reaction using a fluorescently labeled
oligonucleotide complementary to vapA and mRNAs isolated from
R . equi grown under inducing conditions . A single 357-bp DNA
fragment was observed (Fig . 2A), indicating that
vapA is transcribed from a single promoter under these growth
conditions . Interestingly, the transcriptional start site of vapA
in R . equi ATCC 33701 is not the same as that in R . equi
85F . In the former strain, transcription starts at a cytidine (Fig.
2B) 226 bp upstream of the translational start site
of vapA, whereas the transcriptional start of vapA in
R . equi 85F was determined to be 69 bp upstream of vapA (2) .
The vapA transcriptional start site of R . equi 85F was
determined after the induction of vapA expression by exposure
to H2O2, whereas a low pH and high temperatures
were used for R . equi ATCC 33701 . To determine whether vapA
is transcribed from different promoters under these two growth
conditions, we determined the transcriptional start of vapA in
R . equi ATCC 33701 after exposure to H2O2 .
Transcription initiated at the same nucleotide (226 bp upstream of
vapA), indicating that R . equi ATCC 33701 employs the same
promoter under high-temperature, low-pH growth conditions as it does
after exposure to H2O2 (data not shown) . Interestingly,
the –10 and –35 regions (Fig . 2C) of the vapA
promoter are similar to the consensus
hrdB
promoter (–10, TAGART; –35, TTGaCA) of Streptomyces coelicolor
(21, 36) .
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FIG . 2 . Determination of vapA transcriptional start site in R .
equi ATCC 33701 . Fluorescent primer extension was performed with the
Cy5-labeled primer CY5VAPA200R and 5 µg of total cellular RNA extracted
from R . equi grown under vapA-inducing conditions (37°C,
pH 6.5) . CY5VAPA200R is complementary to a sequence 131 bp downstream
from the vapA initiation codon . (A) Cy5-labeled primer extension
product combined with DNA size standards and analyzed with the CEQ 8000
fragment analysis system . (B) Nucleotide sequence obtained by using
VAPA200R . A dideoxy sequencing reaction mix was spiked with the
Cy5-labeled primer extension product . The arrow indicates the
transcriptional start site where the Cy5-labeled cDNA and the sequencing
product overlapped . (C) Sequence of vapA promoter region . The
transcriptional start site (+1) and putative –10 and –35 regions are
boxed, and putative LysR motifs (T-N11-A) are indicated with
brackets.
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ORF4 is required for expression of vapA. The expression
of vapA is controlled by a range of environmental parameters,
including temperature and pH (38) . In order to determine
whether regulatory proteins encoded on the virulence plasmid
are required for the expression of vapA, we introduced a plasmid
(pRTOsm) containing vapA and the vapA promoter into a
virulence plasmid-free strain of R . equi . The inserted plasmid
contained a transcriptional terminator between the vector and the
insertion site of the DNA fragment containing vapA, preventing
readthrough from vector-borne promoters into the vapA gene .
Expression of vapA was not observed under inducing conditions
(pH 6.5, 37°C) (data not shown) . This shows that expression is at
least partly dependent on virulence plasmid-encoded transcriptional
regulators . The pathogenicity island contains two genes encoding
proteins similar to transcriptional regulators, suggesting that these
may be required for vapA expression . To determine whether vapA
expression is dependent on the LTTR encoded by ORF4, we introduced
a plasmid containing ORF4 and vapA (pRvip10) into R . equi
ATCC 33701 (P–) . In contrast to a strain harboring only
vapA, the presence of ORF4 in addition to vapA resulted in
the expression of the latter, as detected by Western blotting (Fig.
3A) . This shows that ORF4 is required for the
expression of vapA and represents a functional gene (virR) .
Interestingly, the expression of vapA was increased under
inducing conditions (pH 6.5, 37°C) relative to noninducing conditions
(pH 8.0, 30°C) . However, the expression level of vapA was
lower than that of the wild-type strain (Fig . 3A),
suggesting the involvement of additional transcriptional regulators .
A plasmid (pForlan21) harboring the virR-ORF8 operon in
addition to vapA was introduced into R . equi ATCC 33701 (P–),
followed by incubation under inducing and noninducing conditions .
A Western blot analysis of the proteins extracted from this
strain showed that wild-type vapA expression levels were restored
under inducing conditions (Fig . 3B) . Furthermore, the
regulation of vapA expression under inducing and noninducing
conditions was comparable to that in the wild-type strain, indicating
that the virR-ORF8 operon harbors all of the virulence plasmid
genes that are required for the normal expression and regulation of
vapA .
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FIG . 3 . Effect of virR and the virR operon on expression
of vapA . The expression of VapA was determined by Western
blotting with VapA monoclonal antibodies . (A) Lanes 1 and 2, R . equi
wild-type strain grown at 37°C and pH 6.5 (lane 1) and at 30°C and pH
8.0 (lane 2); lanes 3 and 4, R . equi (P–) harboring
pRvip10 (virR vapA) grown at 37°C and pH 6.5 (lane 3) and at 30°C
and pH 8.0 (lane 4); lane 5, R . equi (P–) grown at
37°C and pH 6.5 . Each lane was loaded with 2 µg of protein . (B) Lanes 1
and 2, R . equi wild-type strain grown at 37°C and pH 6.5 (lane 1)
and at 30°C and pH 8.0 (lane 2); lanes 4 and 5, R . equi (P–)
harboring pForlan21 (virR operon and vapA) grown at 37°C
and pH 6.5 (lane 4) and at 30°C and pH 8.0 (lane 5); lane 3, R . equi
(P–) grown at 37°C and pH 6.5 . Each lane was loaded with 2 µg
of protein.
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Purification of VirR-His. To facilitate the purification of
VirR, we constructed an efficient expression system by replacing the
GTG initiation codon of virR with ATG and by placing the
virR gene downstream of the T7 promoter carried on pET3b . In
addition, six histidine codons were added to the 3' end of virR
to create a histidine tag . After the induction of the T7 RNA
polymerase in E . coli BL21(pET3bvirRhis), an abundant protein
representing VirR-His which was absent from E . coli BL21 grown
under the same conditions was observed in the cell extract . The
molecular mass of this protein (31 kDa) corresponds to the predicted
molecular mass of VirR (32,667 Da) . VirR-His was subsequently
purified by Ni2+ affinity chromatography; the resulting
preparation was shown to be homogeneous by SDS-polyacrylamide gel
electrophoresis (Fig . 4) .
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FIG . 4 . Coomassie brilliant blue-stained denaturing polyacrylamide gel
showing cell extracts of E . coli BL21 harboring pET3b (lane 1) or
pET3bvirRhis (lane 2) . VirR-His was purified by Ni2+ affinity
chromatography (lane 3) . The sizes of the molecular mass standards are
shown in kilodaltons (lane 4).
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VirR binds to the vapA promoter region. Although VirR
was required for the expression of vapA, it was not clear
whether this regulator interacts with the vapA promoter or
whether the stimulatory effect of VirR on vapA expression was
mediated through another transcriptional regulator . To determine
whether VirR binds to a 262-bp DNA fragment containing the vapA
promoter, we performed a band shift experiment . After being
radiolabeled, the DNA fragment harboring the vapA promoter was
incubated with increasing concentrations of purified VirR-His . With
increasing concentrations of VirR-His, two protein-DNA complexes were
observed (Fig . 5) . The high-mobility protein-DNA
complex was present at all concentrations of VirR-His, whereas the
second, low-mobility complex was only observed at high concentrations .
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FIG . 5 . EMSA analysis of VirR binding to the vapA promoter
region . Various concentrations of VirR were incubated with 2 ng of
radiolabeled DNA (262 bp) containing the vapA promoter region .
The amount of protein added to each lane was as follows: lane 1,
radiolabeled DNA fragment only; lane 2, 50 ng; lane 3, 100 ng; lane 4,
200 ng; lane 5, 300 ng; and lane 6, 400 ng . Protein-DNA complexes are
indicated with black arrows . Nonbound DNA is indicated with a gray
arrow.
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To rule out the possibility that the observed band shifts were due to
the presence of contaminating E . coli proteins in the purified
VirR-His preparation, we performed a band shift assay with 20 µg of
soluble protein from E . coli BL21 harboring either
pET3bvirRhis or pET3b . A band shift was only observed for the cell
extract of E . coli expressing VirR-His (pET3bvirRhis), not for
E . coli BL21(pET3b), showing that the observed band shifts are
due to an interaction of VirR-His with DNA (results not shown) .
LTTRs generally bind to degenerate inverted repeats that have a
T-N11-A motif at their core (35) . An inspection of
the sequence upstream of the vapA transcriptional start site
revealed six T-N11-A motifs . Two of these which are on the
same side of the DNA helix and are centered at –43 and –64 occur
adjacent to the –35 region (Fig . 2C) .
It is well documented that the expression of the virulence gene
vapA is regulated by environmental parameters that signal that
R . equi has entered the host environment . These include high
temperature, low pH, low iron concentrations, and oxidative stress .
However, a transcriptional regulator that is required for the
expression of vapA and that may be involved in transducing
some of these environmental signals to the transcriptional apparatus
has not yet been described . This study shows that the LTTR VirR,
encoded by ORF4 of the virulence plasmid, is required for the
transcription of vapA . LTTRs are frequently transcriptional
activators, although there are some that control gene expression by
repression (15, 22) . LTTRs control a wide
range of biological processes, including virulence . The SpvR protein
in Salmonella enterica serovar Dublin induces the expression
of the spvABCD operon during the stationary phase of growth (14) .
The plasmid-encoded spv locus is essential for growth in the
liver and the spleen (16) . The AphB protein of
Vibrio cholerae is required for the activation of the ToxR
virulence cascade by transcriptionally activating the tcpPH
operon (24) .
The majority of LTTR-encoding genes are monocistronic and are
transcribed divergently from the genes under their control (18,
25, 30) . In contrast, the virR
gene is cotranscribed with four other genes located downstream from
virR . Although this is an unusual configuration, it is not
unprecedented . CatR, an LTTR of the actinomycete Streptomyces
setonii, was shown to be translationally coupled to two
downstream genes required for the metabolism of aromatic compounds (31) .
The Mycobacterium tuberculosis genome contains five LTTR
genes; one of these, Rv3678c, is transcribed in the same direction as
the downstream Rv3677c gene (7) . Since the spacing
between these genes is only six nucleotides, it is extremely likely
that these too are cotranscribed . In both instances, the first gene
of these putative operons is the LTTR gene, as is the case for
virR . The significance of this, if any, remains to be
established .
The transcriptional start site of vapA in R . equi ATCC 33701
was determined to be 226 bp upstream of the initiation codon of
vapA . The induction of vapA transcription either by incubation
at a high temperature and a low pH or by exposure to H2O2
gave rise to the same transcriptional start site, indicating that
vapA is transcribed from a single identical promoter under these
conditions . The long 5' untranslated region (5'-UTR) of vapA
may serve several functions . 5'-UTRs are frequently involved in
stabilization of the downstream mRNA, as is the case for the
cryIIIA toxin gene of Bacillus thuringiensis (1)
and ompA of E . coli (5) . The prfA
gene of Listeria monocytogenes encodes a transcriptional
regulator that activates the transcription of virulence genes .
Similar to the case for vapA, the expression of virulence
genes in L . monocytogenes is controlled by temperature, with
high expression levels at 37°C, not at 30°C . It was recently shown
that this temperature-dependent expression of virulence genes is
controlled by the 5'-UTR of prfA . At 37°C, the structure of
the 5'-UTR of prfA unfolds, exposing the ribosome binding site
of this gene and allowing translation to initiate (20) .
The function of the 5'-UTR of vapA remains to be established .
The fact that purified VirR binds to a DNA fragment containing the
vapA promoter strongly suggests that this protein activates
vapA transcription by a direct interaction with RNA polymerase
bound to the vapA promoter . At lower VirR concentrations, a
single band shift was observed in band shift assays, whereas a second
band shift became apparent at higher VirR concentrations . This has
been observed in DNA binding studies of other LTTRs . For example,
CbbR, an LTTR that controls the expression of CO2 fixation
genes in Xanthobacter flavus, binds as a dimer to a
promoter-distal high-affinity binding site, giving rise to a band
shift with a high mobility . A second CbbR dimer is subsequently
recruited by cooperative binding to a promoter-proximal low-affinity
binding site, leading to the formation of a second DNA-protein
complex with a lower mobility (44, 45) .
Whether a similar scenario is true for VirR remains to be
established .
Although VirR is required for vapA expression, it is not sufficient
to express vapA to wild-type levels . The introduction of the
complete virR operon, together with vapA, in a virulence
plasmid-free strain did lead to wild-type levels of VapA protein, as
judged by Western blotting . The VirR operon contains four additional
genes . One of these, vapH (ORF6), is a vapA homologue . The
observed increase in vapA expression was not due to a cross
reaction of the VapA monoclonal antibody, which is specific for VapA,
with VapH (4) . The most likely explanation for the
increased expression of vapA is the presence of ORF8, which
encodes a two-component response regulator . The virulence plasmid
does not encode a sensor kinase, suggesting that the response
regulator encoded by ORF8 interacts with a chromosomally encoded
sensor kinase . In recent years, there have been several reports of
genes regulated by both LTTRs and response regulators . In E .
coli, the LTTR NhaR and the response regulator RcsB were shown to
directly but independently regulate the osmC gene (37),
while LhrA, a LysR homologue, was found to be involved with the
response regulator SprE in a pathway promoting the degradation of the
global regulator RpoS (11) .
The present study shows that the LTTR VirR is required for transcription
of the vapA gene . Whether this protein is also required for
the expression of other genes located in the pathogenicity island
and whether the response regulator is indeed involved in controlling
the expression of vapA are currently being studied in our
laboratory .
This study was supported by grants from the Health Research Board
(RP55/2001) and Enterprise Ireland (SC/00/442) .
We thank Shinji Takai for providing R . equi ATCC 33701 (P–)
and VapA monoclonal antibodies and John Prescott for making
pRE7 available .
* Corresponding author . Mailing address: Department of
Industrial Microbiology, University College Dublin, Dublin 4, Ireland . Phone:
353-1716-1364 . Fax: 353-1716-1183 . E-mail:
wim.meijer@ucd.ie .
Present address: Forensic Science Laboratory, Department of Justice
Equality and Law Reform, Garda Headquarters, Dublin 8, Ireland .
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