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Journal of Bacteriology, September 2004, p . 5926-5932, Vol .
186, No . 17
Transcription Regulation of ezrA and Its Effect on Cell Division of
Bacillus subtilis
Kuei-Min Chung, Hsin-Hsien Hsu, Suresh Govindan, and Ban-Yang Chang*
Institute of Biochemistry, National Chung-Hsing University, Taichung 40227,
Taiwan, Republic of China
Received 1 April 2004/ Accepted 26 May 2004
The EzrA protein of Bacillus subtilis is a negative regulator
for FtsZ (Z)-ring formation . It is able to modulate the frequency and
position of Z-ring formation during cell division . The loss of this
protein results in cells with multiple Z rings located at polar as
well as medial sites; it also lowers the critical concentration of
FtsZ required for ring formation (P . A . Levin, I . G . Kurster, and A .
D . Grossman, Proc . Natl . Acad . Sci . USA 96:9642-9647, 1999) .
We have studied the regulation of ezrA expression during the
growth of B . subtilis and its effects on the intracellular
level of EzrA as well as the cell length of B . subtilis . With
the aid of promoter probing, primer extension, in vitro
transcription, and Western blotting analyses, two overlapping
A-type
promoters, P1 and P2, located about 100 bp upstream of the initiation
codon of ezrA, have been identified . P1, supposed to be an
extended –10 promoter, was responsible for most of the ezrA
expression during the growth of B . subtilis . Disruption of
this promoter reduced the intracellular level of EzrA very
significantly compared with disruption of P2 . Moreover, deletion of
both promoters completely abolished EzrA in B . subtilis . More
importantly, the cell length and percentage of filamentous cells of
B . subtilis were significantly increased by disruption of the
promoter(s) . Thus, EzrA is required for efficient cell division
during the growth of B . subtilis, despite serving as a
negative regulator for Z-ring formation .
Binary fission in rod-shaped bacteria entails the formation of a
transverse septum that divides a progenitor cell into two daughter
cells of equal size . In the initiation of cell division, the
tubulin-like cell division protein FtsZ polymerizes at the mid-cell
into a ring structure that is required for subsequent recruitment of
other cell division proteins and assembly of the cell division
machinery (7, 10, 29,
36, 40) . Temporally, the
division process is tightly coupled to chromosome replication,
chromosome segregation, and cell growth to ensure that both daughter
cells inherit complete genomes and are of appropriate size and shape
(12, 16, 17,
35) .
Two mechanisms, nucleoid occlusion and the Min system, are involved
in selection of the correct mid-cell site for cell division (1,
12, 17, 30) . Nucleoid
occlusion, although poorly defined, was revealed by the observation
that cell division is largely inhibited in the vicinity of the
nucleoid of cells in which DNA replication and/or segregation is
perturbed (33) . In other words, Z-ring assembly
and cell wall synthesis is inhibited in the immediate vicinity of the
actively replicating nucleoid . Since the Z ring appears to form at a
position where the DNA concentration is low compared to the wild-type
situations (9, 15,
35, 38), it is assumed that it is not the
presence of DNA per se but the concentration of DNA which determines
the position of Z-ring formation . The Min system, which inhibits FtsZ
polymerization and also division at cell poles, has been extensively
characterized for both Escherichia coli and Bacillus
subtilis . For B . subtilis, the MinCD complex is recruited
to the pole by a cell pole-associated protein, DivIVA, probably
through a direct interaction with MinD (5,
11, 23, 31) . Moreover,
the DivIVA-MinCD complex remains associated with the newly formed
pole after division, thereby preventing future division at these
polar sites (11, 31) .
The B . subtilis EzrA protein is a negative regulator for Z-ring
formation . It is able to modulate the frequency and position of
Z-ring formation during cell division . The lack of this protein
causes cells with multiple Z rings located at polar as well as medial
sites and lowers the critical concentration of FtsZ required for ring
formation (26) . The EzrA protein is homogeneously
distributed in the cell membrane and localized to the cell division
site once the Z ring is assembled, presumably via an interaction with
FtsZ (26) . A null mutation of ezrA has been found to
suppress the defects in FtsZ polymer stability associated with
minCD overexpression (27) . Moreover, the
effect of the loss of EzrA on cell division is enhanced by ZapA (a
Z-ring-associated protein) . The absence of ZapA and EzrA, but not
ZapA itself, causes a severe block in cytokinesis of B . subtilis
(14), suggesting that EzrA may play a positive
role during cell division . Furthermore, EzrA may also participate in
asymmetric division, since it is detectable in the spiral-like
structure in sporulating cells (3) . Recently, it
was reported that EzrA can be degraded by an ATP-dependent CodWX
protease in vitro (22) . However, it remains
elusive whether the intracellular level of EzrA is regulated during
the growth of B . subtilis . This work was aimed at studying the
transcription regulation of ezrA and its effect on B . subtilis
cell division .
The putative promoter region(s) upstream of ezrA. On
the basis of the data of sequence analysis of the DNA encompassing
ezrA and its upstream region, it was believed that ezrA
constitutes a single-gene operon with the transcription direction
opposite to that of hisJ (Fig . 1A) . To
search for the promoter(s) controlling ezrA expression, six
different DNA fragments of up to 500 bp in length and upstream of the
initiation codon of ezrA (Fig . 1A) were
first synthesized by PCR using specific sets of primers (Table
1), digested with designed restriction enzymes, inserted
into the promoter-probing vector, pWP18 (34),
transformed into B . subtilis DB430, and analyzed for AprE
activity on a skim-milk plate (Fig . 1A) . Our data
showed that both the DNA fragments containing the whole intergenic
region (ig) between ezrA and hisJ, as shown for
pEZ4 and pEZ6, were relatively high in producing the AprE activity
(Fig . 1A) . Dissection of this intergenic region
into the two 100-bp halves, as shown for pEZ1 and pEZ2, completely
eliminated the activity of each half, indicating that a putative
promoter region is located in the junction of these two halves of
DNA . However, only relatively weak AprE activity was observed for the
DNA inserted into pEZ5 . This weak activity was eliminated as the
inserted DNA was further separated into two shorter halves, as shown
for pEZ2 and pEZ3, suggesting that a second putative promoter region
is located about 200 bp upstream of ezrA .
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FIG . 1 . Localization of putative promoter region(s) upstream of ezrA
and expression of putative promoter-lacZ fusions during B .
subtilis growth . (A) Localization of the putative promoter region(s)
upstream of ezrA . The DNA fragment containing the intergenic
region (ig), hisJ coding region, or both regions was
cloned into the promoter probing vector, pWP18, to generate pEZ1 through
pEZ6 . B . subtilis DB430 harboring each of the plasmids was then
patched on the skim-milk plate (1% skim milk in 2x
SG medium) and analyzed for the halo size . + to +++ indicates the
relative size of the halo . – indicates no significant halo observed . (B)
Expression of the putative promoter-lacZ fusions in B .
subtilis . The solid lines indicate the DNA fragments inserted
upstream of lacZ . Each of the B . subtilis strains was
grown in 2x SG medium and analyzed
for lacZ expression throughout the growth . The procedure used for
ß-galactosidase assay was derived from the work of Miller (32) .
The symbol
,
,
,
or • indicates the growth curve of B . subtilis DB20, DB21, DB22,
or DB23, respectively . The symbol,
,
,
,
or
indicates the expression of lacZ in the corresponding strain of
B . subtilis.
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| TABLE 1 . Primers used in this study
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The promoter region 100 bp upstream of ezrA is responsible for
most of the expression of ezrA. To analyze whether both of the
putative promoter regions were critical for ezrA expression,
transcriptional fusions of promoter-lacZ, as shown in the left
part of Fig . 1B, were constructed . To make these
constructs, each of the promoter regions was amplified by PCR, using
the chromosomal DNA of B . subtilis DB2 as the template . The
forward, reverse, and overlapping primers are shown in Table
1 . The synthesized putative promoter DNA fragments
were digested with PstI and BamHI and cloned into the integration
vector, pCoiZA (34) . The resultant plasmids, pEZ10, pEZ8, and
pEZ11 (Table 2), as well as the vector, pCoiZA, were
integrated, respectively, into the B . subtilis DB2 chromosome
through homologous recombination at the aprE locus to generate
B . subtilis DB21, DB22, DB23, and DB20 . The expression of
lacZ in each of the strains was then measured throughout the
growth in 2x SG medium (25) .
Similar to that observed for the negative control strain, B .
subtilis DB20, no significant expression of lacZ was detected
for B . subtilis DB22 in which the lacZ gene was under the
control of the putative promoter region located at about 200 bp
upstream of ezrA (Fig . 1B) . These results
suggested that this putative promoter region is of no significance to
the expression of ezrA . In contrast, a significant two-peak
expression pattern of lacZ was observed when DNA fragments
containing the putative promoter region located at about 100 bp
upstream of ezrA were cloned in front of lacZ as shown
for B . subtilis DB21 and DB23 (Fig . 1B),
indicating that this putative promoter region is responsible for most
of the expression of ezrA .
| TABLE 2 . B . subtilis strains and plasmids used in this study
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Identification and characterization of promoters critical for ezrA
expression. To locate exactly the position of the promoter(s) about 100
bp upstream of ezrA, primer extension analysis of total RNA
extracted from B . subtilis DB430 harboring pEZ6 was performed .
The protocol used for primer extension was similar to that reported
previously (28) . The primer used is 22 bases long,
starting from the base immediately upstream of the initiation codon
(Table 1) . As shown in Fig . 2A,
two major transcription initiation sites, A-71 and A-96, upstream of
the initiation codon (ATG) of ezrA were found . The promoter
identified by A-96 was designated as P1; it had nice fits (four of
six and five of six, respectively) to the –35 (TTGACA) and –10
(TATAAT) consensus of the B . subtilis
A-type
promoter besides the possession of a TG motif (TGnTATAAT) immediate
upstream of the –10 consensus, indicative of an extended –10 promoter
(Fig . 2B) (2, 4,
24) . Initiation at A-71 identified another promoter,
designated P2 . This promoter had poor fits (three of six and two of
six, respectively) to the –35 and –10 consensus of the
A-type
promoters . No consensus for other
-type
promoters was found at this region . Thus, the expression of ezrA
is controlled by two overlapping
A-type
promoters, with P1 probably playing the major role (Fig.
2B) .
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FIG . 2 . Determination of the transcription initiation sites of B .
subtilis ezrA . (A) Primer extension analysis of the transcription
initiation sites of ezrA . The letter A, T, C, or G above each
lane indicates the dideoxynucleotide used to terminate the sequencing
reaction . The transcription initiation sites are indicated as +1 . The
DNA sequence shown in the right margin is read directly from the gel and
represents the sequence of noncoding strand DNA . (B) Coding-strand DNA
sequence of the two overlapping promoters of B . subtilis ezrA .
The nucleotide sequence is given in the 5'-to-3' direction . The –10 and
–35 regions of P1 and P2 are boxed and underlined, respectively . The
transcription +1 sites of the two overlapping promoters are indicated by
the shadowed letter, A . The translation initiation codon (ATG) for
ezrA is boxed and indicated by the rightward arrow.
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To confirm that P1 and P2 promoters are of the
A
type, in vitro transcription assays were performed . The procedure
used for the in vitro transcription assay was similar to that
reported previously (28) . Four different B .
subtilis
factors, including
A,
B,
D,
and
H,
were overexpressed, purified from E . coli (6,
8, 28, 39), and
reconstituted with core RNA polymerase (20) .
Subsequently, each RNA polymerase holoenzyme or a mixture of two
different RNA polymerase holoenzymes was examined for activity on
transcribing the pKM3 plasmid containing the DNA sequence
encompassing both P1 and P2 (Table 2) . As shown in Fig.
3, only in the presence of
A-RNA
polymerase holoenzyme was the promoter activity observed . Two mRNA
transcripts that were supposed to be initiated from P1 and P2,
respectively, and terminated at the T1 site of the T1T2 terminators (21)
were produced . Thus, the two promoters controlling ezrA
expression are both of the
A
type .
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FIG . 3 . Determination of the
specificity of ezrA promoters by in vitro transcription assays .
The pKM3 plasmid bearing the DNA sequence encompassing both P1 and P2
promoters upstream of ezrA was used as a template for in vitro
transcription . A single RNA polymerase holoenzyme or a mixture of two
RNA polymerase holoenzymes, as indicated by + and – signs, was used to
identify the
type of the promoters . The transcripts initiated from P1 and P2 and
terminated at the first termination site (T1) of the T1T2 terminators
are indicated by P1 and P2 with transcript length (in bases) shown in
the right margin.
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P1 plays the major role for ezrA expression during the growth of
B . subtilis. To examine the relative importance of each of the
two promoters for ezrA expression, two more strains of B .
subtilis, DB24 and DB25, with a mutant ezrA promoter (P1
or P2 disruption) transcriptionally fused to lacZ (Fig.
4A, upper part) were constructed using the same
strategy as described for B . subtilis DB21, DB22, and DB23 .
Then, lacZ expression was measured for these strains throughout
the growth in 2x SG medium . As shown
in the lower part of Fig . 4A, B . subtilis
DB25 with P2 being disrupted by removing the –10 region had a high
expression pattern for lacZ similar to that of the wild-type
counterpart, B . subtilis DB21, indicating that P2 plays only a
minor role in transcription of ezrA . In contrast, disruption
of P1 by removing its –35 region drastically reduced the expression
of lacZ in B . subtilis DB24, albeit with a gradual
increase in lacZ expression during growth . Thus, P1 is the
major promoter for transcriptional control of ezrA in B .
subtilis, while P2 is a supplemental promoter for the control,
especially during the later stage of B . subtilis growth .
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FIG . 4 . Effects of promoter mutations on transcription and intracellular
level of EzrA . (A) The effect of promoter mutation on transcription of
ezrA in B . subtilis . The transcriptional promoter-lacZ
fusions are shown in the upper part of the figure . The horizontal dotted
lines indicate the DNA sequences removed in the mutant promoters . Each
of them was synthesized directly by PCR or indirectly by overlapping
extension PCR (19) . Each of the B . subtilis
strains was grown in 2x SG medium
and measured for lacZ expression.
,
,
,
or • indicates the growth curve of B . subtilis DB20, DB21, DB24
or DB25, respectively, while
,
,
,
or
indicates the expression of lacZ throughout growth . (B) Effect of
promoter mutation on intracellular level of EzrA during the growth of
B . subtilis . The designs for constructing ezrA promoter
mutants by homologous recombination are shown in the upper part of the
figure . The boxed ezrA in pDPx (where x = 1, 2, or 12) indicate a
3'-truncated ezrA gene which is about 700 bp in length . B .
subtilis DB2001, DB2002, and DB2003 are strains in which the P1, P2,
and P1P2 promoters of ezrA, respectively, are disrupted . The
promoter designs are the same as those shown at the upper part of panel
A . The lower part of the figure shows the intracellular levels of EzrA
during growth of B . subtilis . The cell samples analyzed were
collected every hour throughout growth in 2x
SG medium with an initial cell density (A550) of 0.1 .
Equal amounts of total proteins were loaded for Western blot analysis of
EzrA . To prepare anti-EzrA, His-tagged EzrA was overexpressed in E .
coli BL21(DE3)/pKM1, purified with TALON resin (CLONTECH),
concentrated, mixed with adjuvant, and injected into rabbit.
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The difference in the importance of P1 and P2 to ezrA expression
indicated that the intracellular level of EzrA might be also
differentially affected by disruption of each of the promoters . To
check this idea, B . subtilis DB2001, DB2002, and DB2003, with
P1, P2, or both P1 and P2 being disrupted, respectively, were
constructed (Fig . 4B, upper part) and analyzed for relative
intracellular levels of EzrA by Western blotting (Fig . 4B,
lower part) . As expected, P1 disruption led to a substantial
reduction in the content of EzrA in B . subtilis DB2001; P2
disruption caused only a minor reduction in EzrA (see B . subtilis
DB2002) . Deletion of both P1 and P2 completely abolished EzrA in
B . subtilis DB2003 . These results were consistent with those
obtained for lacZ expression (Fig . 4A),
strongly supporting that the expression of ezrA is exclusively
controlled by the two promoters . Furthermore, a rather constant level
of EzrA was observed for each of the B . subtilis strains
throughout growth, indicating that EzrA is constitutively expressed
and that the synthesis and degradation of EzrA are maintained at
equal rates during the growth . The constitutive expression of EzrA is
consistent with the participation of EzrA in Z-ring formation in both
vegetative and sporulation phases of B . subtilis .
The intracellular level of EzrA affects the cell length and
percentage of filamentous cells of B . subtilis during growth. It
has been reported that the ezrA null mutation appears to cause
a delay in cell division, resulting in cells 20% longer on average
than the wild-type counterpart grown in minimal medium (26);
however, it remains unclear whether the difference in the
intracellular level of EzrA would have differential effects on cell
division of B . subtilis during growth . To answer this
question, the overnight culture of B . subtilis DB2, DB2001,
DB2002, or DB2003 was inoculated into 2x SG
medium to an initial cell density (A550) of 0.1 .
The cell length and filament size of each strain of B . subtilis
were then measured at mid-log (A550 = 0.9) and
stationary (A550 = 2.4) phases after fixation with
70% ethanol . The phase-contrast micrographs for each strain of B .
subtilis are shown in Fig . 5A . During mid-log phase, the
cells of B . subtilis DB2001, DB2002, and DB2003 were 21, 5,
and 25%, respectively, longer on average than the wild-type
counterpart (DB2) . During stationary phase, both B . subtilis
DB2001 and DB2003, in which the intracellular level of EzrA was
either drastically reduced or completely abolished, remained 17%
longer on average than DB2 . However, B . subtilis DB2002, with
only a minor reduction in the intracellular level of EzrA, was of
about the same size as DB2 . Moreover, higher percentages of septate
filaments were observed for all of the three mutant strains of B .
subtilis than with the wild-type at both growth stages (Fig.
5), and nonseptate filaments were clearly observed
only for B . subtilis DB2001 and DB2003 . The increase in the
percentage of filamentous cells of B . subtilis correlated with
the decrease in the intracellular level of EzrA, regardless of the
size distribution of filaments (Fig . 5B) . The increase
in both cell length and percentage of filamentous cells for
B . subtilis containing reduced levels of EzrA indicates that EzrA
is required for efficient cell division .
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FIG . 5 . The effects of ezrA promoter disruption on cell length
and filament size of B . subtilis . (A) Phase-contrast microscopy
of B . subtilis at x1,000
magnification . Bar, 10 µm . (B) The filament sizes for each strain of
B . subtilis . The overnight culture of B . subtilis was diluted
with 2x SG medium to an initial cell
density (A550 = 0.1), grown at 37°C, harvested at
mid-log (A550 = 0.9) or stationary (A550
= 2.4) phases, fixed in 70% ethanol for 2 h, and resuspended with PBS
buffer (5.4 mM Na2HPO4, 1.7 mM NaH2PO4,
137 mM NaCl, and 3 mM KCl) before measuring the cell length (x1,000)
and filament size (x400) with a
phase-contrast microscope . The measurement was repeated at least five
times, and the data are reproducible.
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The possible roles of EzrA during cell division. It has been
reported that EzrA recruited to the division site, partially
dependent on FtsA, is a negative regulator for Z-ring formation (13,
26) . However, EzrA was shown in this study to be
required for efficient cell division . How does EzrA work to fulfill
the two seemingly contradictory functions? The paradox can be partly
solved if the effect of EzrA on Z-ring formation is not restricted to
a single round of cell division: more precisely, if the negative
effects of EzrA on a round of Z-ring formation become positive for
the next . It was proposed that EzrA contributes to Z-ring remodeling
by accelerating the disassembly of Z ring (14,
37) . Thus, in the absence or deficiency of EzrA, the slow
disassembly of Z ring in a round of cell division may reduce
the concentration of free FtsZ monomers or protofilaments in the
cytoplasmic pool and therefore the efficiency of the next round of
Z-ring formation . However, Z-ring remodeling seems unable to explain
why the ezrA null mutation is capable of suppressing the
inhibition of cell division caused by overexpression of MinCD (27) .
Probably, EzrA is also able to interact either directly or indirectly
with MinC or MinCD complex to affect their functions before being
recruited to the division site . Actually, EzrA may also serve as a
membrane anchor for coordinate membrane invagination at the later
stage of cell division, since it shares similar membrane topologies
with the homologous E . coli ZipA (12) .
Thus, EzrA may be multifunctional during cell division and present in
B . subtilis all the time . The presence of a constant level of
EzrA in B . subtilis during growth (Fig . 4B) and the
requirement of EzrA for efficient cell division are consistent
with this idea .
This research was supported by the National Science Council, Taiwan,
Republic of China .
* Corresponding author . Mailing address: Institute of
Biochemistry, National Chung-Hsing University, Taichung 40227, Taiwan, Republic
of China . Phone: 886-4-2285-3486 . Fax: 886-4-2285-3487 . E-mail: bychang@mail.nchu.edu.tw.
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