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Journal of Bacteriology, June 2004, p . 3794-3805, Vol . 186,
No . 12
Quorum
Sensing Regulates Type III Secretion in Vibrio harveyi and Vibrio
parahaemolyticus
Jennifer M . Henke and Bonnie L . Bassler*
Department of Molecular Biology, Princeton University, Princeton, New Jersey
08544-1014
Received 26 November 2003/ Accepted 7 January 2004
In a process known as quorum sensing, bacteria communicate with one
another by producing, releasing, detecting, and responding to signal
molecules called autoinducers . Vibrio harveyi, a marine
pathogen, uses two parallel quorum-sensing circuits, each consisting
of an autoinducer-sensor pair, to control the expression of genes
required for bioluminescence and a number of other target genes .
Genetic screens designed to discover autoinducer-regulated targets in
V . harveyi have revealed genes encoding components of a
putative type III secretion (TTS) system . Using transcriptional
reporter fusions and TTS protein localization studies, we show that
the TTS system is indeed functional in V . harveyi and that
expression of the genes encoding the secretion machinery requires an
intact quorum-sensing signal transduction cascade . The newly
completed genome of the closely related marine bacterium Vibrio
parahaemolyticus, which is a human pathogen, shows that it possesses
the genes encoding both of the V . harveyi-like quorum-sensing
signaling circuits and that it also has a TTS system similar to
that of V . harveyi . We show that quorum sensing regulates TTS
in V . parahaemolyticus . Previous reports connecting quorum
sensing to TTS in enterohemorrhagic and enteropathogenic Escherichia
coli show that quorum sensing activates TTS at high cell density .
Surprisingly, we find that at high cell density (in the presence
of autoinducers), quorum sensing represses TTS in V . harveyi
and V . parahaemolyticus .
Many bacteria utilize a cell-cell communication process termed quorum
sensing to monitor cell population density and to regulate gene
expression in response to fluctuations in cell numbers (39) .
Quorum-sensing bacteria make, release, and respond to signaling
molecules called autoinducers (43) . Specifically,
as a population of autoinducer-producing bacteria grows in number the
extracellular autoinducer concentration increases proportionally .
When a critical threshold autoinducer concentration is reached, the
bacteria detect the signal and respond as a group by coordinately
altering gene expression . Behaviors controlled by quorum sensing are
typically ones that to be successful require the synchronized
activity of many cells . For example, quorum sensing regulates
functions such as conjugation, secretion of virulence factors,
antibiotic production, biofilm formation, and bioluminescence (for
reviews, see references 18 and 39) .
The marine bacterium Vibrio harveyi uses quorum sensing to control
the expression of bioluminescence and other target genes (31,
42) . This bacterium is found swimming freely in the
seawater, attached to abiotic surfaces, and as a constituent of
biofilm consortia in marine animals (43) . V .
harveyi is a significant marine pathogen and is known to secrete
cysteine proteases and a variety of other exotoxins that contribute
to virulence in aquatic animals, including juvenile shrimp, fish, and
lobsters (16, 32,
33, 58, 62,
63) .
The V . harveyi quorum-sensing system is composed of two parallel
two-component sensory circuits that converge to control targets
such as luxCDABE, the luciferase operon (Fig . 1) (2,
3) . System 1 of V . harveyi is comprised of
the autoinducer signal HAI-1 (for V . harveyi autoinducer 1)
and its two-component sensor LuxN . HAI-1 is the homoserine lactone
(HSL) N-(3-hydroxybutanoyl)-HSL, and its production requires
the LuxM synthase (formerly called LuxLM) (2,
10) . System 2 is made up of the signal AI-2, which
is the furanosyl borate diester 3A-methyl-5,6-dihydro-furo [2,3-D][1,3,2]
dioxaborole-2,2,6,6A tetraol, and its cognate two-component
sensor LuxQ (3, 12) . AI-2 detection also
requires the periplasmic AI-2 binding protein LuxP, which is proposed
to interact with LuxQ (3, 12) .
AI-2 is produced by the LuxS synthase (48, 55) .
Sensory information from systems 1 and 2 converges at the
phosphotransferase LuxU, and LuxU transmits the signal to the
response regulator LuxO (19, 20) .
An unidentified repressor (X) and LuxR, a transcriptional activator,
are also required for quorum-sensing regulation of luxCDABE (31,
35, 49) .
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FIG . 1 . Quorum sensing in V . harveyi . V . harveyi has two
parallel quorum-sensing systems that regulate bioluminescence (luxCDABE)
and other target genes . System 1 is composed of an autoinducer, HAI-1
(pentagons), and its cognate sensor LuxN . System 2 includes the
autoinducer AI-2 (diamonds) and the sensor LuxPQ . The HAI-1 and AI-2
synthases are LuxM and LuxS, respectively . Information from both sensors
is transduced to LuxU, and LuxU transmits the signal to LuxO . LuxO
indirectly represses luxCDABE expression through a putative
repressor we call X that appears to act at the level of luxR
expression . LuxR is a transcriptional activator required for expression
of luxCDABE . LuxR also controls TTS gene expression; however, in
this case the action of LuxR is negative . We do not know whether this
activity is direct or indirect . Details of the phosphorelay mechanism
are given in the text . H and D stand for histidine and aspartate, which
are the sites of phosphorylation . HTH denotes helix-turn-helix.
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Genetic analyses have indicated that the V . harveyi quorum-sensing
circuit functions as follows (Fig . 1) . At low cell
density, when the concentrations of HAI-1 and AI-2 are low the
sensors LuxN and LuxQ act as kinases (19) . They
transfer phosphate to the shared phosphotransferase, LuxU, and LuxU
subsequently transmits the phosphate to the downstream response
regulator, LuxO . Phospho-LuxO is active and is proposed to work in
conjunction with
54
to activate the expression of an as-yet-unidentified repressor
of Lux designated X (31) . Phospho-LuxO through an
unknown mechanism (that presumably involves X) represses expression
of luxR (40) . Because LuxR is required for
transcription of luxCDABE, under low-cell-density conditions
no light is produced . At high cell densities, interaction of the
sensors LuxN and LuxPQ with their respective ligands, HAI-1 and AI-2,
switches LuxN and LuxQ from kinase mode to phosphatase mode (21) .
The flow of phosphate in the system is reversed, which ultimately
results in dephosphorylation of LuxO (19) . In this
state LuxO is inactive, which terminates the expression of X, the
putative repressor of luxR expression . luxR is
transcribed, and LuxR binds at the luxCDABE promoter and
induces its expression (35, 40,
41) . Thus, under high-cell-density conditions,
light is produced .
Lux is not the exclusive target of quorum-sensing regulation in
V . harveyi, as an earlier genetic screen for AI-2-regulated genes
revealed 10 additional targets (42) . Analysis of the
regulation of these 10 targets showed that the autoinducers HAI-1 and
AI-2 act synergistically and, furthermore, that both signals are
required simultaneously for proper control of the target genes .
This earlier work focused on information flow through the quorum-sensing
circuit and not on the functions of the target genes . However,
the analysis did reveal two genes with homology to components of type
III secretion (TTS) systems, suggesting that V . harveyi could
possess a quorum-sensing-regulated TTS system .
TTS systems are specialized secretion apparatuses used by many
gram-negative plant and animal pathogens (for reviews, see references
13, 14, 15, and
50) . These pathogens use TTS systems to inject
effector virulence factors directly into the cytoplasm of eukaryotic
host cells with which they are associated . TTS was first discovered
and studied in Yersinia species . The Yersinia TTS channel is
assembled from so-called Ysc (Yersinia secretion) and Lcr (low
calcium response) proteins (38) . This apparatus injects
effector proteins known as Yops (Yersinia outer proteins)
across the bacterial inner and outer membrane, past the eukaryotic
cell membrane, and directly into the eukaryotic cell cytosol (8) .
Once inside the host cell, these effector proteins perform a
range of functions that contribute to the propagation of the
bacteria . TTS systems have subsequently been identified in numerous
gram-negative bacterial pathogens, including enteropathogenic
Escherichia coli and Vibrio parahaemolyticus (27,
34) .
Over 20 proteins are generally required to form TTS channels (14) .
These proteins are highly conserved between pathogens that use TTS
systems for virulence . In contrast, the effector proteins (Yops in
Yersinia spp.) are not conserved between species . Unlike the
proteins required for the channel, the effector proteins from
different bacteria perform distinct functions . Presumably, the
arsenal of effector proteins used by each bacterial pathogen has been
optimized to aid in persistence in a specific host (reviewed in
reference 26) . Genes encoding TTS system components
are generally clustered in pathogenicity islands or on virulence
plasmids, although the organization of the clusters often differs
between species (59) .
In this report we identify and characterize three TTS gene clusters
in V . harveyi and show that they are similar in sequence,
organization, and regulation to the recently reported system of V .
parahaemolyticus (34) . We show that the V .
harveyi and V . parahaemolyticus TTS systems are functional
and capable of secretion only under conditions that simulate low cell
density and that transcription of both the V . harveyi and
V . parahaemolyticus TTS system genes is repressed by autoinducers
at high cell density . To our knowledge, this is the first report of
TTS systems that are negatively regulated by quorum sensing .
Bacterial strains and media. The relevant genotypes of all
V . harveyi strains and plasmids used in this study are listed in
Table 1 . E . coli JM109 {e14-(McrA–)
recA1 endA1 gyrA96 thi-1 hsdR17(rK– mK+)
supE44 relA1
(lac-proAB)
[F' traD36 proAB lacIqZ M15]}
(Stratagene) was used for cloning of HAI-1-regulated target genes,
and BL21(DE3) [F– ompT hsdSB (rB–
mB–) gal dcm (DE3)] (Novagen) was used
for VopD protein expression . E . coli strain JMH1123 is
BL21(DE3) containing the protein expression vector pET-21b (Sigma) .
E . coli strains were grown at 37°C with aeration in Luria-Bertani
broth (LB) . V . harveyi was grown to high cell density (early
stationary phase; optical density at 600 nm [OD600],
1) in autoinducer bioassay (AB) medium (24) at
30°C with aeration for ß-galactosidase (ß-Gal) assays . AB medium
supplemented with 5 mM EGTA was used for secretion assays . AB
HAI-1+ medium contained 10% (vol/vol) cell-free culture fluids
from the V . harveyi luxS::Tn5 strain MM30 (i.e., HAI-1+
AI-2–) . AB HAI-1– medium contained 10% V .
harveyi luxM::Tn5 luxS::Cmr strain MM77 (i.e., HAI-1–,
AI-2–) cell-free culture fluids . Cell-free culture fluids
were prepared as described previously (2) . V .
harveyi was grown in heart infusion medium for all other
experiments (19) . Antibiotics (Sigma) were used at
the following concentrations (in milligrams per liter) unless
otherwise specified: ampicillin (Amp), gentamicin (Gm), kanamycin
(Kan), and rifampin, 100; chloramphenicol (Cm) and tetracycline
(Tet), 10 . Polymyxin B was used at 50 U/liter . X-Gal
(5-bromo-4-chloro-indoyl-ß-galactopyranoside) (USB) was used at 40
mg/liter . The methods used to introduce lux mutations onto the
chromosomes of V . harveyi strains have been described
previously (2) . Cosmids pJAF822 and pJAF783 were
used for constructions involving luxO D47E and luxN D771A,
respectively (19, 21) . Cosmid
pBB154 was used for restoration of the wild-type luxMN region
(2) .
| TABLE 1 . Bacterial strains and plasmids
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DNA manipulations. DNA manipulations were performed as
previously described (47) . PCRs were conducted
using Ex-Taq (Takera) polymerase according to the
manufacturer's specifications . PCR products were purified using a PCR
cleanup kit (Qiagen) . Calf alkaline phosphatase was purchased from
Roche . T4 ligase and all restriction endonucleases were purchased
from New England Biolabs . Plasmid isolations from E . coli were
performed using a Quick Spin kit (Qiagen) according to the
manufacturer's protocol . All oligonucleotides were obtained from the
Princeton University Syn/Seq facility, which also performed all
sequencing reactions . Probes for Southern blot experiments were
labeled with [ -32P]dATP
(Amersham Biosciences) using an Amersham multiprime DNA labeling kit .
Genetic screen for genes regulated by HAI-1 in V . harveyi.
V . harveyi strain JAF633 ( luxM-Kanr)
was mutagenized with the transposon mini-MulacZ (Cmr)
as described previously (21, 35) .
Cmr colonies were arrayed on heart infusion Cm agar plates and
subsequently stamped to AB HAI-1+ and AB HAI-1–
plates containing the chromogen X-Gal to visualize ß-Gal
activity . Colonies were compared after 2 days of growth at 30°C .
Those transposon insertion mutants exhibiting differential ß-Gal
activity under the plus and minus HAI-1 conditions were further
analyzed . Transcription of reporter fusions was quantitated by
performing ß-Gal assays as previously described (42,
51), and the ß-Gal activity of strains grown to
early stationary phase (OD600
1) in AB HAI-1+ liquid medium was compared with the
activity of the strains when grown in AB HAI-1– liquid
medium . These ß-Gal units were used to calculate the HAI-1
severalfold induction or repression for each lacZ fusion
strain . Genomic DNA adjacent to the transposon insertions was
amplified by a two-round PCR procedure or by direct cloning of the
transposon fusion junctions . These procedures have been described
previously (42, 56) . The amplified or
cloned DNA fragments were sequenced to determine their identities .
Identification and sequencing of the V . harveyi TTS system
locus. PCR-amplified DNA adjacent to the vopN::mini-MulacZ
transposon in strain JMH70 was used to probe a V . harveyi
genomic cosmid library (2, 56) .
Cosmids that hybridized to the probe were isolated and digested with
either EcoRI or HindIII, and the digests were probed with the same
vopN-containing fragment from JMH70 . Hybridizing fragments were
subcloned and sequenced . To extend the DNA sequence, regions at the
termini of our sequenced subclones were used to reprobe the genomic
DNA contained in the cosmids following digestion with EcoRV, SaeI, or
XbaI . All hybridizing DNA fragments were subcloned into the pUC18
cloning vector (New England Biolabs) for sequencing . Overlapping
fragments of V . harveyi genomic sequence were assembled and
analyzed using Sequencher version 4.1 (Gene Codes) and NCBI Blast (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/BLAST/)
and the BLASTX program . Protein molecular masses were calculated
with Protparam (http://us.expasy.org/tools/protparam.html) .
The following primers were used to amplify V . harveyi vscF:
5'-CGA TGC GAC CAA CAG TG-3' and 5'-CAC CTT CTG CAG GAT CG-3' .
Expression, purification, and analysis of VopD. vopD
was amplified from the genome of V . harveyi with the following
primers: 5'-GCG AAG CTT ACT GGA CGC GCT GAC CTT TAC-3' and 5'-GCG CTC
GAG TAC CGT AGG GAT AGA GGC-3' . These primers introduce upstream and
downstream HindIII and XhoI sites, respectively, and were used for
cloning into the expression vector pET-21b to generate a C-terminal
VopD-6His protein fusion . The cloned product was sequenced to verify
its correct construction . The VopD-6His recombinant vector (pJMH113)
was maintained in E . coli BL21(DE3) . This strain, JMH1113, was
grown overnight in LB-Amp (200 mg/liter) at 37°C with aeration . The
culture was diluted 1:100 into fresh LB-Amp (200 mg/liter)
supplemented with 0.2% glucose and grown at 30°C with aeration to an
OD600 of 0.8, whereupon 1 mM IPTG (isopropyl-ß-D-thiogalactopyranoside)
(Sigma) was added and the culture was incubated for an additional
7 h . The cells were harvested by centrifugation, resuspended at
1:100 volume in 10 mM ß-mercaptoethanol-20 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.5)-20 mM
NaCl-5 µg of DNAse I/ml, and lysed via a French press . The sample was
subjected to centrifugation (Eppendorf model 5415C) at maximum speed
at 4°C for 1 h to pellet the lysed cells . The supernatants were
discarded, and the insoluble fraction was resuspended in 8 M urea for
10 min at 25°C . The sample was subjected to centrifugation as
described above to remove any remaining insoluble material, and the
cleared supernatant was applied to a His-affinity nickel resin column
(Sigma) . The VopD-6His fusion protein was purified according to
HIS-Select HC nickel affinity gel denaturing conditions protocols
(Sigma) . Sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis
(SDS-PAGE) was used to confirm the size of the protein fusion . To
prepare polyclonal antibodies against VopD, 400 µg of purified
VopD-6His protein was resuspended in a 1:1 volume of Freund's
complete adjuvant (Sigma) and injected into a New Zealand White
rabbit . At 2-week intervals, rabbits were given booster injections
with 200 µg of VopD-His in a 1:1 volume of Freund's incomplete
adjuvant (Sigma) . Polyclonal sera were adsorbed to JMH1123 E . coli
lysates prior to performing Western blot analyses . Purified LuxS-6His
was kindly provided by F . Hughson . Anti-LuxS polyclonal antibodies
were prepared as described above . The Princeton University Animal
Facility generated all polyclonal antibodies used in this study .
VopD secretion assays. V . harveyi cultures were grown
for 14 h in AB medium with aeration at 30°C . The cultures were
diluted 1:10 in fresh AB medium and supplemented with 5 mM EGTA .
Cultures were incubated at 30°C with shaking for an additional 6 to 7
h . Cultures were normalized to the same OD600, and
approximately 2 x 108 cells
of each strain were pelleted by centrifugation (Eppendorf Model
5415C) at maximum speed, resuspended in 75 µl of SDS-PAGE sample
buffer, and boiled for 10 min (whole-cell lysate) . The remainder of
each culture was subjected to centrifugation for 5 min at 4,000
x g (Sorvall GLC-2B) . The
supernatants were removed and filtered through 0.22-µm-pore-diameter
syringe filters (Millipore) . A total of 33 µg of bovine serum albumin
(BSA) (New England Biolabs) was added to a volume of cell-free
culture fluid containing 5 x 108
cells . Proteins were concentrated approximately 20-fold by
trichloroacetic acid (TCA) precipitation . Protein pellets were
resuspended in 50 µl of SDS-PAGE sample buffer and boiled for 10 min
(concentrated cell-free culture fluid) . Two identical 12.5% PAGE gels
were prepared; one was used for protein visualization by Coomassie
staining, and the other was used for Western blot analysis . Following
Western transfer, the nitrocellulose membranes were divided in
half; the top portion was probed with antibody against VopD, and the
lower portion was probed with anti-LuxS antibody . Specifically,
1:10,000 dilutions of the VopD and LuxS primary antisera and a
1:5,000 dilution of anti-rabbit immunoglobulin G (heavy plus light
chains)-horseradish peroxidase conjugate (Promega) were incubated
with the Western blot membranes . Enhanced-chemiluminescence ECL
Western blotting substrate and protocol were utilized for VopD and
LuxS detection (Amersham) . The BSA protein band was visualized by
high-sensitivity Coomassie staining as described previously (60) .
Nucleotide sequence accession number. The nucleotide
sequence of the V . harveyi TTS system locus and the translated
protein sequences have been deposited into the GenBank database under
the accession number
AY524044 .
Identification of quorum-sensing-regulated genes in V . harveyi.
The autoinducers HAI-1 and AI-2 are hypothesized to be used for
intracellular and intercellular communication, respectively (1),
and our initial investigations have focused on determining whether
the different autoinducer input states (no autoinducer, HAI-1 only,
AI-2 only, and HAI-1 plus AI-2) regulate identical or distinct
subsets of genes . To that end, we previously performed a genetic
screen in V . harveyi to identify genes that are controlled by
the exogenous addition of AI-2 in an HAI-1-producing strain and
discovered 10 genes, including two putative TTS homologues (42) .
Interestingly, these genes only displayed significant
induction/repression in the simultaneous presence of both HAI-1 and
AI-2 . This initial finding led us to hypothesize that the V .
harveyi quorum-sensing circuit may act as a coincidence detector
that distinguishes the presence of both autoinducers from the other
three potential input states . The requirement for both autoinducers
for the regulation of these targets was not surprising, because they
were isolated on the basis of differential expression under HAI-1+,
AI-2+conditions compared to HAI-1+, AI-2–
conditions . Here we report the results of the reciprocal screen, that
is, a screen for differential gene expression in an HAI-1–,
AI-2+ V . harveyi strain following the addition of HAI-1 .
We are currently performing a screen for genes regulated by either
or both autoinducers in an HAI-1–, AI-2– V .
harveyi strain .
To identify genes regulated by HAI-1, the
luxM
(i.e., HAI-1–) strain JAF633 was mutated with the
transposon mini-MulacZ (Cmr) (11) .
Insertion mutants were arrayed on replicate agar grids containing 10%
cell-free culture fluids prepared from the luxS::Tn5
strain (i.e., HAI-1+, AI-2–) strain MM30 or from the
luxM::Tn5 luxS::Cmr (i.e., HAI-1–,
AI-2–) strain MM77 . Of 10,000 fusions assayed, 36
exhibited differential lacZ expression in the presence and
absence of HAI-1 . As mentioned previously, in the screen by Mok et
al . for AI-2-regulated targets all of the targets identified that
depended on AI-2 also required the simultaneous presence of HAI-1 for
their regulation (42) . This was also the case in
the screen conducted in the present study; that is, all of the HAI-1
regulated targets required the simultaneous presence of AI-2 for
their control . While the screens had the potential to reveal classes
of genes regulated only by HAI-1 or only by AI-2, they were not
performed to saturation and such genes were not identified .
Importantly, these screens could not identify genes that respond to
the presence of one autoinducer in the absence of the other .
As reported previously, inverted repeats at the termini of the
mini-MulacZ transposon prevent PCR amplification of the transposon-genome
fusion junction (11, 37,
42) . Using restriction digestion of the
chromosome, we successfully cloned and sequenced eight of the
HAI-1-controlled targets . The genes encode proteins with a variety of
predicted functions, including a TTS system component, an enolase, a
54-dependent
response regulator, a hybrid sensor histidine kinase-response
regulator, a methyl-accepting chemotaxis protein, and an
uncharacterized protein containing a type 3 chitin-binding domain .
To us, the most interesting genes found in these screens are the
ones encoding putative TTS proteins because these are potential
virulence determinants . The HAI-1 screen revealed a gene with
homology to yopN and popN of Yersinia species and
Pseudomonas aeruginosa, respectively . We name this gene vopN .
In the AI-2 screen we found genes that we call vscP and
vopB . Presumably, TTS genes came out of both screens, because, as
mentioned previously, all of the genes identified to date require
both HAI-1 and AI-2 for regulation . Here we present a
characterization of the TTS system in V . harveyi . The
remainder of the genes identified in the autoinducer screens await
further analysis .
Quorum-sensing regulation of vopN. Quorum-sensing
control of the transcription of the putative TTS gene vopN is
shown in Fig . 2 . In this experiment, we quantitated
the change in expression of the vopN::mini-MulacZ fusion in
response to the presence of HAI-1 . The parent strain lacks luxM,
so it does not produce endogenous HAI-1 but does produce AI-2 .
In the absence of HAI-1, the fusion is highly expressed (Fig .
2, leftmost black bar) . Addition of exogenous HAI-1 causes a
74-fold reduction in lacZ expression (leftmost white bar) . This
result shows that HAI-1 represses the expression of vopN .
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FIG . 2 . The LuxN-LuxO circuit controls the HAI-1-regulated targets .
ß-Gal assays were performed to measure the activity from the fusion in
JMH70 (vopN::mini-MulacZ) with the following in trans
alleles: vector alone (JMH97), luxN D771A (JMH276), and luxO
D47E (JMH127) . Cultures were supplemented with 10% V . harveyi
MM77 (HAI-1–, AI-2–) cell-free culture fluids
(black bars) or V . harveyi MM30 (HAI-1+, AI-2–)
cell-free culture fluids (white bars) . All experiments were performed in
triplicate . JMH70 produces wild-type levels of AI-2.
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We wondered whether the components of Lux quorum-sensing system 1 are
required for transducing the HAI-1 signal to the vopN target .
To investigate this, we introduced dominant alleles of luxN
and luxO into the above-descrived V . harveyi vopN::mini-MulacZ
transcriptional fusion strain and determined whether these alleles
had any effect on lacZ reporter expression . To test the role
of LuxN in HAI-1-mediated repression of the target, we introduced
a luxN null mutation (luxN D771A) in trans that
eliminates both the kinase and phosphatase activity of LuxN . The
luxN D771A allele, when carried in trans in a strain
containing wild-type luxN, confers the luxN null
phenotype to the strain, presumably because it forms nonfunctional
heterodimers with wild-type LuxN . Thus, this allele of LuxN makes the
cells unresponsive to HAI-1 (21) . Following
introduction of luxN D771A, the level of activity of the
vopN-lacZ fusion remains low (<3 U) in the absence and presence
of HAI-1 (Fig . 2, middle bars) . Therefore, LuxN is
required to transduce the HAI-1 signal to the target gene . This
result shows that when LuxN does not transmit information through the
system, the fusion remains in a state mimicking high cell density . We
suggest that the input from AI-2 via system 2 is responsible for this
effect . We provide a fuller interpretation of these results in the
Discussion .
To test whether LuxO is required for regulation of the vopN-lacZ
fusion, we introduced the luxO D47E allele and assayed ß-Gal
activity in the absence and presence of exogenous HAI-1 (Fig .
2, rightmost black and white bars, respectively) . This
dominant LuxO allele mimics phospho-LuxO, and its presence "locks"
the cells into the low-cell-density (i.e., no autoinducer) condition
(19) . When LuxO D47E is present, we observe high-level
LacZ activity in the absence and presence of HAI-1, indicating that
the fusion is not responsive to HAI-1 and, furthermore, that it
is locked in a state mimicking the low-cell-density condition
(compare to vector-alone control) . This result demonstrates that like
LuxN, LuxO is an essential component of the signaling pathway
coupling HAI-1 to expression of vopN .
Identification and organization of a TTS system in V . harveyi.
Genes encoding TTS proteins are organized into clusters in many
bacterial species . Therefore, we predicted that genes specifying
additional TTS components in V . harveyi could be located in
close proximity to the yopN-like vopN gene . We used PCR to amplify
and clone
200
bp of V . harveyi genomic DNA adjacent to the vopN::mini-MulacZ
transposon junction in JMH70, and this PCR product was used to
probe a V . harveyi genomic cosmid library (2,
56) . Cosmids from our library that hybridized to
the vopN-containing probe from JMH70 were isolated and
sequenced (see Materials and Methods) . This analysis revealed many
more putative TTS genes . The map of this region is shown in Fig.
3 .
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FIG . 3 . Organization of the TTS loci in V . harveyi and V .
parahaemolyticus. The organizations of the loci encoding components
of TTS systems in V . harveyi (accession number
AY524044) and V . parahaemolyticus are shown . Transposon
insertions obtained in V . harveyi in TTS system genes are denoted
by black triangles and labeled as follows: KM114 (vopB::mini-MulacZ),
JMH70 (vopN::mini-MulacZ), and KM96 (vscP::mini-MulacZ) .
Three homologous TTS system gene clusters found in both Vibrio
species are indicated with black and gray shading and stripes and are
aligned in the figure . Adjacent genes in V . parahaemolyticus that
do not appear to encode TTS system components are shown with white
boxes . Boxes indicating additional V . parahaemolyticus genes that
encode proteins with homology to TTS functions that have not been
identified in V . harveyi are marked with black dots . A horizontal
arrow indicates the predicted direction of transcription of each operon.
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We find three TTS system gene clusters in the vicinity of the yopN-like
gene in the V . harveyi genome . These gene clusters are
organized identically to the recently discovered TTS system locus of
V . parahaemolyticus (34) . Table 2
lists the putative TTS system components, which we have designated
Vop, Vsc, or Vcr for Vibrio outer protein, Vibrio
secretion, or Vibrio calcium response to correspond to their
closest homologues based on TTS systems in other bacteria, most
notably Yersinia and Pseudomonas spp . We identified 20
putative V . harveyi TTS system proteins . Of note are the gene
we have called vscP on the basis of its location between
vscO and vscQ and the gene we have called hyp (for
hypothetical TSS protein) located between vcrG and vcrH .
While we predict on the basis of their locations that these
proteins are involved in TTS, apparent homologues are only found in
V . parahaemolyticus and not in any other sequenced bacterium
with a TTS system .
| TABLE 2 . V . harveyi TTS proteins
|
|
In addition to the three gene clusters corresponding to the ones we
identified in V . harveyi, V . parahaemolyticus possesses
a conserved cluster of 12 genes that are predicted to be required to
form a functional TTS apparatus (black dots in Fig . 33) (34) .
This region contains genes homologous to a putative TTS chaperone
and the yscLKJIHGF and yscDCB genes of Yersinia spp .
(44) . In V . parahaemolyticus, 11 open
reading frames of mostly unknown functions separate the fourth gene
cluster from the three contiguous clusters described above . We
sequenced roughly 4 kb upstream and 2 kb downstream of the region
shown for V . harveyi in Fig . 3, but we did
not identify any genes encoding probable TTS system components .
However, using PCR primers flanking an internal 48-codon region of
VP1694 (the putative yscF homologue in the fourth V .
parahaemolyticus gene cluster) we were able to amplify a DNA
fragment from the V . harveyi genome . Sequencing shows that
this fragment is 95% identical to the V . parahaemolyticus
VP1694 sequence (data not shown) . This result leads us to believe
that additional TTS components exist in V . harveyi and are likely
conserved with those in V . parahaemolyticus .
Quorum sensing controls the transcription of TTS genes in V .
harveyi. Our discovery that lacZ fusions to genes encoding
putative TTS system components are regulated by autoinducers
indicates that quorum sensing controls TTS . While not confirmed,
sequence analysis reveals that each of the three fusions we obtained
in our transposon mutageneses appears to reside in a different TTS
system operon in V . harveyi (Fig . 3) . Thus,
investigation of the quorum-sensing regulation of vopB,
vopN, and vscP gives us a means to examine quorum-sensing
control of the expression of all three TTS system operons . For this
analysis, we measured and compared the ß-Gal activity produced by the
three TTS system chromosomal fusions at high cell density in an
otherwise wild-type V . harveyi strain and in a V . harveyi
strain carrying the luxO D47E allele on the chromosome . As
mentioned previously, LuxO D47E mimics phospho-LuxO, so the presence
of this allele locks the cells into a state characteristic of low
cell density (19) . Therefore, this comparison
provides us a measure of the expression of the operons in the
presence and absence of autoinducer . We routinely use locked V .
harveyi mutants that mimic the low-cell-density state to measure
lacZ fusions to quorum-sensing controlled targets, because,
unlike measurements of Lux which can be reliably carried out in both
low- and high-cell-density cultures, accurately assaying LacZ
activity in low-cell-density (<5 x 106
cells/ml) cultures is not possible . Figure 4 shows
that transcription of all three TTS genes is higher in the luxO
D47E strain (black bars) than in the wild-type strain (white bars) .
Thus, we infer that the three TTS system clusters are transcribed at
low cell density in the absence of autoinducers and repressed at high
cell density by the presence of autoinducers . The minimal and maximal
activities of each fusion differ, which is expected since each fusion
reports the expression of a distinct operon .
|
FIG . 4 . Quorum-sensing regulation of TTS system genes in V . harveyi .
The activity levels of the vopN::mini-MulacZ, vscP::mini-MulacZ,
and vopB::mini-MulacZ fusions were measured in V .
harveyi containing luxO D47E on the chromosome to simulate
low cell density (black bars) and in the wild-type V . harveyi
background at high cell density (white bars) . Strains were grown 14 h in
AB medium . Experiments were performed in triplicate.
|
|
The TTS component VopD is produced and secreted at low cell density.
Although our limited sequencing allowed us to uncover many proteins
required for TTS, we predict on the basis of analysis of other TTS
systems that additional proteins must be required to assemble a
functional channel . Additionally, our sequence analysis did not
reveal genes encoding obvious TTS effectors . For these two reasons,
we questioned whether the TTS system in V . harveyi is complete
and functional or whether the locus we identified is simply a vestige
of a virulence determinant that is no longer operational . To test
whether the V . harveyi TTS system is intact and capable of
secretion, we needed a method to monitor secretion through the
channel . Importantly, our sequence analysis revealed vopD,
encoding a protein similar to YopD and PopD of Yersinia and
Pseudomonas spp., respectively . YopD and PopD are components of
their respective TTS translocation channels, and under low-calcium
conditions both are secreted into the extracellular environment (7,
23, 30, 45,
46, 57) . We hypothesized that under
low-calcium conditions, the V . harveyi protein VopD would be
released into cell-free culture fluids . If so, we reasoned that
monitoring VopD production and release would allow us to examine TTS
gene expression and protein secretion in our V . harveyi
quorum-sensing mutants . We purified VopD from recombinant E . coli
and generated polyclonal antibodies to it to monitor its production
and localization (intracellular versus extracellular) .
We grew various V . harveyi Lux regulatory mutants in low-calcium
medium to induce secretion of VopD (see Materials and Methods) .
Western blotting was used to analyze intracellular VopD (whole-cell
extracts) and secreted VopD (concentrated cell-free culture fluids) .
Figure 5 shows that at high cell density, VopD protein
is not present in wild-type whole-cell extracts or in concentrated
cell-free culture fluids . Based on Lux phenotypes, introduction
of the luxO deletion into V . harveyi locks it into a state that
constitutively mimics high cell density (4) . Similar to
the wild-type strain at high cell density, there is no detectable
VopD in whole-cell extracts or in culture fluids prepared from
the luxO null mutant . In contrast, VopD protein is present in
cell extracts and in cell-free culture fluids prepared from all of
the V . harveyi mutant strains that are locked into a form
characteristic of low cell density (luxO D47E, luxM [HAI-1–],
luxS [AI-2–] luxM, luxS [HAI-1–,
AI-2–], and luxR) . Taken together, the results in
Fig . 5 show that the VopD protein is synthesized
and secreted under low-cell-density but not high-cell-density
conditions . These results are entirely consistent with those in Fig.
4 showing that the TTS system genes are only
transcribed at low cell density .
|
FIG . 5 . The TTS protein VopD is produced and secreted under
low-cell-density conditions . VopD present in whole-cell extracts (left
panels) and concentrated cell-free culture fluids (right panels) was
assayed by Western blotting using polyclonal antibodies directed against
VopD . The strains of V . harveyi used in this analysis were grown
in low-calcium, EGTA-containing medium and were as follows: BB120 (wild
type), BB721 (luxO), JAF548 (luxO D47E), JAF633 (luxM),
MM30 (luxS), MM77 (luxM, luxS), and KM357 (luxR) .
The nitrocellulose membranes were probed with anti-LuxS antibody as a
control for leakage of cytoplasmic protein into the cell-free culture
fluids . Gels containing identical samples of concentrated cell-free
culture fluids were stained with Coomassie blue to visualize the BSA
protein precipitation control.
|
|
To demonstrate that the released VopD is a result of secretion
through a functional secretion apparatus and not due to leakage as a
consequence of cell lysis, we monitored the constitutively produced,
cytoplasmic protein LuxS in the same preparations used for the VopD
analysis . The left panels of Fig . 5 show that the
antibody directed against V . harveyi LuxS detects LuxS protein
in all the whole-cell extracts except those made from strains lacking
luxS (lanes 5 and 6 from the left) . The right panels show that
there is no LuxS in any of the concentrated cell-free culture fluid
preparations, confirming that the presence of VopD in cell-free
culture fluids is not due to problems with the integrity of the
cells . To ensure that the absence of VopD in the cell-free culture
fluids of high-cell-density wild-type and luxO strains was not
due to improper TCA protein precipitation, we added BSA to the
culture fluid samples prior to TCA precipitation . The right panels of
Fig . 5 show these controls and that the differences
in VopD observed in the culture fluids were not a consequence of
differences in the amount of protein precipitated or loaded onto the
gels .
A functional TTS apparatus is required for secretion but not for
production of the TTS proteins. To demonstrate that VopD is secreted
through the channel we have identified and not by some other
unidentified mechanism or secretion system, we assayed secretion in
mutant strains harboring insertions in components of the TTS
apparatus . The luxO D47E mutation was transferred to the
chromosomes of the V . harveyi strains carrying the mini-MulacZ
insertions in vscP, vopB, and vopN . As described
previously (Fig . 4 and 5), the
luxO D47E strain constitutively expresses the three TTS system
gene clusters containing these genes . VopD protein is produced in the
luxO D47E strain that is wild type for the TTS locus and in
the vscP::mini-MulacZ and vopN::mini-MulacZ mutants
but not in the vopB::mini-MulacZ insertion mutant,
presumably because the transposon in vopB is polar on vopD
(Fig . 6A [whole-cell extracts] and Fig.
3) . The VopD protein is only secreted in the strain
that is wild type for all three TTS system operons (Fig.
6A [concentrated cell-free culture fluids]) . We conclude
that a functional TTS channel is not required for production of
VopD . However, because VopD is not secreted in the vscP and
vopN insertion mutant strains, which are presumably null for
vscP and vscN and polar on downstream genes in their respective
operons, we conclude that the TTS channel we have identified is
required for VopD secretion . While we have only monitored VopD, we
predict that this channel is capable of secretion of additional
proteins because the proteins contained in extracellular fluids
prepared from strains that are wild type for the TTS system are not
identical to fluids made from TTS mutants (Fig . 6B) .
Specifically, extracellular fluid of the luxO D47E strain
possessing a functional TTS apparatus contains seven bands that are
not present in fluids from the luxO D47E vscP::mini-Mu and
luxO D47E vopN::mini-Mu mutants . The luxO D47E
vopB::mini-Mu mutant shows residual secretion of some of these
proteins . Importantly, this insertion is near the end of one of the
TTS operons (Fig . 3) and it is only polar on
yopD . Some secretion occurs presumably because, as in other TTS
systems, YopB and YopD are required for protein translocation but not
for secretion per se (5, 25,
52) . Fewer bands are detected because those corresponding to
YopB (41 kDa) and YopD (36 kDa) are absent .
|
FIG . 6 . Transposon insertions in genes encoding the TTS system abolish
secretion but not production of VopD in V . harveyi . (A)
Whole-cell extracts (left panels) and concentrated cell-free culture
fluids (right panels) of V . harveyi TTS fusions in the luxO
D47E strain background were analyzed by Western blotting to visualize
VopD and LuxS protein . The strain designated the wild-type TTS system is
JAF548 (luxO D47E) . The mini-MulacZ (Mini-Mu) insertion
strains in vscP, vopB, and vopN in the luxO
D47E background are KM470, KM476, and JMH401, respectively . The
Coomassie-stained portion of the gel containing BSA is shown as a
control for protein loading and precipitation . (B) Coomassie-stained gel
containing cell-free culture fluids used for the Western blot shown in
panel A.
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|
Quorum sensing controls the expression of the TTS system of V .
parahaemolyticus. It is intriguing that we have found a functional
TTS system in V . harveyi, because while several strains of
V . harveyi are potent marine pathogens our laboratory wild-type
strain appears to be avirulent in preliminary shrimp virulence assays
(K . Burnett, unpublished data) . The recently completed genome of
V . parahaemolyticus predicts a TTS system very similar to the one
we have identified in V . harveyi (34) .
V . parahaemolyticus is a marine bacterium, strains of which are
pathogenic to humans, and TTS is proposed to be involved in virulence
(T . Iida, personal communication) . Interestingly, V .
parahaemolyticus possesses all of the Lux regulators present in
V . harveyi (i.e., LuxM [VP1967], LuxN [VP1968], LuxS [VP1967],
LuxPQ [VPA1221 and VPA1220, respectively], LuxU [VP2098], LuxO
[VP2099], and LuxR [called OpaR {VP2516} in V . parahaemolyticus])
but lacks the luciferase operon (34) . Because of
the apparent similarities between the quorum-sensing and TTS systems
of V . parahaemolyticus and V . harveyi, we tested
whether quorum sensing could also control TTS in V . parahaemolyticus .
The VopDs and LuxSs of V . harveyi and V . parahaemolyticus share
75 and 94% amino acid identity levels, respectively . We reasoned,
therefore, that we could use our antibodies to V . harveyi VopD
and LuxS to detect V . parahaemolyticus VopD and LuxS .
High-cell-density whole-cell extracts and concentrated cell-free
culture fluids were prepared from wild-type V . parahaemolyticus
and from a V . parahaemolyticus opaR transposon insertion
mutant . As mentioned previously, OpaR is homologous to LuxR, and OpaR
and LuxR are functionally interchangeable because both are capable of
proper luxCDABE regulation (36) . On the
basis of these results, we presume that OpaR functions at the bottom
of the quorum-sensing regulatory cascade in V . parahaemolyticus .
Consistent with this hypothesis, in V . parahaemolyticus, as in
V . harveyi, VopD is not made or secreted by the wild-type
strain at high cell density (Fig . 7) . However, Fig.
7 also shows that like the V . harveyi locked
low-cell-density luxR mutant, the V . parahaemolyticus opaR
mutant produces and secretes VopD . As in Fig . 5 and
6, the LuxS and BSA controls are shown in Fig.
7 to confirm that the V . parahaemolyticus
VopD protein present in cell-free culture fluids is a result of
secretion and not cell lysis or a problem with TCA precipitation .
These results strongly suggest that the V . harveyi-like
quorum-sensing circuit present in V . parahaemolyticus
regulates TTS . While V . harveyi and V . parahaemolyticus are
closely related evolutionarily, V . harveyi infects marine organisms
whereas V . parahaemolyticus is capable of colonization of the
human gastrointestinal tract . These differences make it critical
to establish whether there is a requirement for TTS and quorum
sensing in the virulence of both V . parahaemolyticus and V .
harveyi .
|
FIG . 7 . Quorum sensing controls TTS in V . parahaemolyticus .
Whole-cell extracts (left panels) and concentrated cell-free culture
fluids (right panels) prepared from the V . parahaemolyticus wild
type (strain LM5312) and the opaR null mutant (LM4437) were
analyzed by Western blotting and probed with antibodies to V . harveyi
VopD and LuxS . As described for Fig . 5 and
6A, the BSA control is shown.
|
|
This investigation focuses on the identification, organization, and
quorum-sensing regulation of a TTS system in V . harveyi . In
V . harveyi, quorum sensing regulates the expression of at least
three gene clusters encoding a TTS system (Fig . 3 and
4), and we know this secretion channel is operational
because it secretes at least the VopD protein (Fig . 5
and 6) . Several independent methods were used to
show that secretion occurs at low cell density and not at high cell
density (Fig . 2 and 4 to
6) . Additionally, a closely related marine bacterium, V .
parahaemolyticus, a human pathogen, appears similar with respect
to regulation of its TTS system (Fig . 7) . The V .
harveyi TTS is regulated via the known Lux circuitry
(specifically HAI-1, LuxN, LuxO, and LuxR), and it is repressed by
the presence of autoinducers (Fig . 2 and
5) .
The above-described results, together with the knowledge that two
quorum-sensing circuits function in parallel to control target gene
expression in V . harveyi (42), allow us to interpret
the results of the regulation experiment shown in Fig . 2 .
We suggest that the vopN fusion in JMH70 is expressed at low
cell density in the absence of autoinducers and is repressed at high
cell density by autoinducers (leftmost bars) . Because HAI-1 and
AI-2 act synergistically, both autoinducers are required
simultaneously to mimic high-cell-density conditions (42) . In
this control experiment, the strain produces AI-2, which induces
the phosphatase activity of LuxQ . However, LuxN is locked as a
kinase in the absence of HAI-1; this competing activity results in a
net phosphorylation of LuxO . This activity is sufficient to simulate
low-cell-density conditions, and so the target fusion is highly
expressed . Addition of HAI-1 converts LuxN to a phosphatase . When
both LuxN and LuxQ are phosphatases, they promote the complete
dephosphorylation of LuxO and the transition from low- to high-cell-density
mode (19) . Under this condition vopN is
repressed . When the LuxN D771A null allele is present (middle bars),
there is neither kinase nor phosphatase input from LuxN (21) .
However, the AI-2-dependent phosphatase activity of LuxQ leads to
dephosphorylation of LuxO, which locks the cells into a state
mimicking high cell density . Under these conditions the vopN
target is repressed . Finally, the LuxO D47E allele constitutively
mimics phospho-LuxO (right-hand bars) and locks the cell into
low-cell-density mode regardless of the activity of the sensors (19) .
Under this condition vopN is highly expressed .
If regulatory functions other than LuxN and LuxO were responsible
for controlling transcription of the vopN::mini-MulacZ fusion
in JMH70, we would expect that the dominant in trans luxN D771A
and luxO D47E alleles would have no impact on its expression .
However, our experiments show that both LuxN and LuxO do regulate
the lacZ fusion in JMH70 . As mentioned previously, all 36 of
the target genes we identified in this screen require LuxN and
LuxO for HAI-1-mediated regulation . Because we know that LuxU is
obligatory for the interaction between LuxN and LuxO, we infer that
LuxU is also necessary for HAI-1-regulation of lacZ expression
in JMH70 and the other fusion strains, although we did not explicitly
test this assumption (20) .
Our sequence analysis revealed 20 genes encoding putative TTS
proteins . While we have yet to identify all of the components
required for the assembly of the TTS channel, we assume these
proteins are present in V . harveyi because the channel is capable
of secretion . Clues to their location and identities come from
the newly finished genome sequence of V . parahaemolyticus . As
in V . harveyi, three adjacent operons on the V . parahaemolyticus
large chromosome encode many of the proteins required for assembly
of the secretion channel . In V . parahaemolyticus, another two
gene clusters encoding an additional 12 TTS system proteins are
separated by roughly 9.5 kb from the three contiguous TTS system
operons (Fig . 3) (34) . We suspect that an
analogous region exists in V . harveyi, because oligonucleotide
primers made for one member of this gene cluster in V .
parahaemolyticus (the yscF homologue) were successfully
used to amplify a genomic fragment from V . harveyi . The
cosmids we isolated and used for analyzing the V . harveyi TTS
system locus do not span the intervening sequence shown in Fig.
3 . However, the vscF fragment itself can be
used to probe our genomic library for cosmids that contain this
predicted TTS system genomic region .
The TTS system region of V . parahaemolyticus depicted in Fig .
3 resides on the larger of the two V .
parahaemolyticus chromosomes . In addition to this region, the
small chromosome of V . parahaemolyticus contains a
pathogenicity island that encodes several putative effector proteins,
such as a YopP homologue (VPA1346) (34) . DNA
probes revealed that all virulent clinical strains of V .
parahaemolyticus but not environmental strains possess the TTS
system effectors on the small chromosome . The TTS system genes on the
large chromosome of V . parahaemolyticus were present in every
environmental and virulent clinical strain tested (34) .
We currently do not know whether V . harveyi possesses genes
encoding effector proteins on its small chromosome . Because our
wild-type laboratory strain of V . harveyi has a functional TTS
system yet is avirulent in a shrimp model infection, it is possible
that the strain lacks effectors . Analysis of this region of the
genome of V . harveyi, when the sequence becomes available,
could prove informative if, as in V . parahaemolyticus,
possession of effectors correlates with ability to colonize a host
and/or pathogenicity .
As a preliminary test for the presence of effectors in V . harveyi,
we used Coomassie-stained SDS gels to analyze cell-free culture
fluids prepared from various V . harveyi strains grown under
low-calcium conditions (i.e., conditions promoting TTS) . In
comparison to wild-type cells grown to high cell density and cells
with transposon insertions in vscP and vopN, cells of
strains locked in low-cell-density mode that are wild type for the
TTS system secrete at least seven additional proteins (Fig .
6B) . We suspect that these proteins are TTS effectors and/or
proteins like VopD and VopB, which are released by the channel
under low-calcium conditions . We do not exclude the possibility that
there are more than seven effectors-TTS components released because
of the insensitivity of the Coomassie staining procedure .
Quorum sensing has previously been implicated in the control of
TTS . Sperandio et al . (53, 54) reported
that induction of expression of the TTS systems of both
enterohemorrhagic and enteropathogenic E . coli requires
luxS or intestinal hormones such as epinephrine for full
activation . In both V . harveyi and V . parahaemolyticus,
quorum sensing regulates TTS in a manner that is opposite to that of
E . coli . The unexpected result that these marine bacteria
secrete putative effectors at low cell density when they are
presumably not in a community and terminate secretion when they are
at high cell density could be important for understanding
pathogenicity in clinically relevant marine bacteria such as V .
parahaemolyticus . Importantly, while it has been established that
TTS is necessary for virulence in many gram-negative bacterial
species (13) and that TTS mutants of V .
parahaemolyticus display reduced virulence (T . Iida, personal
communication), TTS has not yet been shown to be required for
pathogenicity in V . harveyi. To our knowledge, the data in the
present manuscript provide the first evidence showing that quorum
sensing negatively regulates TTS . Presumably, the differences in how
E . coli and Vibrio spp . use quorum sensing to regulate
TTS reflects optimization of a common phenomenon (cell-cell
communication) for use in distinct niches .
Interestingly, we find that all the TTS phenotypes of V . harveyi
are reciprocal to their bioluminescence phenotypes (Fig . 1) .
It has previously been observed that the V . harveyi quorum sensory
system is capable of dual positive and negative regulation (31,
42) . Reciprocal regulation of gene expression by the
same sensory cascade is highly economical, and it likely benefits
V . harveyi by facilitating the simultaneous activation and
repression of distinct sets of genes . We do not yet understand why it
is beneficial for V . harveyi to express particular traits such
as bioluminescence at high cell density and other traits such as a
TTS system at low cell density .
In V . harveyi, all the quorum-sensing-regulated targets we have
studied are jointly regulated by HAI-1 and AI-2 and control is
mediated by the known Lux circuit: LuxN or LuxPQ, together with LuxU,
LuxO, and, importantly, LuxR (J . M . Henke and K . C . Mok, unpublished
data) . It is intriguing that LuxR is involved in control of all of
the targets we have identified, because LuxR is known to be a
transcriptional activator of luxCDABE and we observe both
positive and negative regulation of the different targets . Perhaps
LuxR acts as both an activator and a repressor, similar to what has
been shown for its counterpart, HapR, in V . cholerae (28,
29) . Alternatively, LuxR-mediated repression could
be indirect and could proceed via the activation of a downstream
repressor . Experiments are under way to determine whether, at high
cell density, LuxR directly binds to the promoters of repressed
genes, such as the TTS loci identified here .
The screens we have performed thus far to identify components of
the quorum-sensing regulon have not been saturated, and additional
classes of target genes, such as genes regulated exclusively by HAI-1
or AI-2, may exist . However, our investigations have begun to provide
insight into the types of physiological processes that are under the
control of cell-to-cell communication . Our identification of putative
virulence factors such as TTS proteins that are controlled by quorum
sensing, and, importantly, the unexpected nature of this control,
could have significant consequences in the application of
antimicrobial therapies aimed at interfering with cell-cell
communication .
This work was supported by National Institutes of Health grant 1 R01
GM 065859 and National Science Foundation grant MCB004-94447 .
We thank Fred Hughson and Stephan Schauder for the purified LuxS
protein and LuxS polyclonal antibodies . Linda McCarter kindly
supplied us with the V . parahaemolyticus strains LM5312 and
LM4437 . We are grateful to Karen Burnett for performing the V .
harveyi shrimp virulence assays . We appreciate the Princeton
Syn/Seq facility for sequencing and the Princeton Animal Facility for
the VopD antibody preparation . We thank Karina Xavier, Michiko Taga,
and Kenny Mok for insightful discussions .
* Corresponding author . Mailing address: Department of
Molecular Biology, Princeton University, Princeton, New Jersey 08544-1014 .
Phone: (609) 258-2857 . Fax: (609) 258-6175 . E-mail: bbassler@molbio.princeton.edu.
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