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Journal of Bacteriology, June 2004, p . 3826-3836, Vol . 186,
No . 12
Genetic
Characterization of a Multicomponent Signal Transduction System Controlling the
Expression of Cable Pili in Burkholderia cenocepacia
Mladen Tomich
and Christian D . Mohr*
Department of Microbiology, University of Minnesota Medical School,
Minneapolis, Minnesota 55455-0312
Received 30 January 2004/ Accepted 9 March 2004
Cable pili are peritrichous organelles expressed by certain strains
of Burkholderia cenocepacia, believed to facilitate
colonization of the lower respiratory tract in cystic fibrosis
patients . The B . cenocepacia cblBACDS operon encodes the structural
and accessory proteins required for the assembly of cable pili,
as well as a gene designated cblS, predicted to encode a hybrid
sensor kinase protein of bacterial two-component signal transduction
systems . In this study we report the identification of two additional
genes, designated cblT and cblR, predicted to encode a
second hybrid sensor kinase and a response regulator, respectively .
Analyses of the deduced amino acid sequences of the cblS and
cblT gene products revealed that both putative sensor kinases
have transmitter and receiver domains and that the cblT gene
product has an additional C-terminal HPt domain . Mutagenesis of
the cblS, cblT, or cblR gene led to a block in expression
of CblA, the major pilin subunit, and a severe decrease in cblA
transcript abundance . Using transcriptional fusion analyses,
the decrease in the abundance of the cblA transcript in the
cblS, cblT, and cblR mutants was shown to be due to a block
in transcription from the cblB-proximal promoter, located upstream
of the cblBACDS operon . Furthermore, ectopic expression of either
cblS or cblR in wild-type B . cenocepacia strain BC7
led to a significant increase, while ectopic expression of cblT
resulted in a dramatic decrease, in abundance of the CblA major pilin
and the cblA transcript . Our results demonstrate that the B .
cenocepacia cblS, cblT, and cblR genes are essential for
cable pilus expression and that their effect is exerted at the level
of transcription of the cblBACDS operon . These findings are
consistent with the proposed function of the cblSTR gene products
as a multicomponent signal transduction pathway controlling the
expression of cable pilus biosynthetic genes in B . cenocepacia .
The Burkholderia cepacia complex (Bcc) is a large and diverse
group of related gram-negative bacteria, which inhabit a wide range
of environmental niches, including freshwater and soil . The Bcc
currently comprises at least nine distinct genomovars, most of which
have been reclassified as distinct species (5,
6, 43) . The Bcc genomovar I type strain was
originally identified as the etiologic agent of soft rot on onions (4) .
More recently, members of the Bcc have been associated with serious
and sometimes fatal infections of the lower respiratory tract,
primarily in compromised individuals and particularly cystic fibrosis
(CF) patients (14, 22) . While
Bcc strains belonging to all nine genomovars have been isolated from
CF patients, genomovar III strains, recently reclassified as B .
cenocepacia, are most commonly associated with respiratory
infections in CF worldwide (43) .
Cable pili are peritrichous surface-associated organelles elaborated
by certain strains of B . cenocepacia, as well as other species
of the Bcc (26, 27) . The shape of
cable pili resembles intertwined cables, from which these organelles
derive their name . Expression of cable pili by B . cenocepacia
has been correlated with increased transmissibility of strains and
adverse clinical outcome (28, 36) .
Cable pili have been proposed to facilitate binding to respiratory
epithelia and mucin (29, 31) and may also
play a role in mediating B . cenocepacia cell-cell interactions
(40) .
The cable pilus biosynthetic apparatus is encoded by four structural
and accessory genes, designated cblB, cblA, cblC, and
cblD (32) . The B . cenocepacia cblBACD
genes are predicted to encode the periplasmic chaperone, major pilin,
outer-membrane usher, and minor pilin, respectively, and were shown
to be both necessary and sufficient for heterologous expression of
cable pili in Escherichia coli (32) .
Furthermore, insertional inactivation of the cblA gene in
B . cenocepacia has been demonstrated to lead to a block in cable
pilus biogenesis (40) . We have recently initiated
a systematic analysis of the regulation of cable pilus expression and
have shown that cblBACD, along with a fifth gene, designated
cblS, are cotranscribed as an operon from a principal promoter
located upstream of cblB (41) . We have also mapped
the cblB-proximal promoter and demonstrated that its activity,
and hence the expression of the cable pilus biosynthetic operon,
is modulated by multiple environmental cues, including pH, osmolarity,
and temperature (41) .
Although the elements mediating control of cable pilus gene
expression have not been defined, the amino acid sequence analysis of
the cblS gene product revealed a possible regulatory mechanism .
The cblS gene, which is transcribed as a part of the cblBACDS
operon, is predicted to encode a new member of the sensor kinase
family of bacterial two-component signal transduction systems .
These systems allow bacteria to recognize and respond to specific
cues received from the environment, and in turn modulate the
expression of target genes (16, 35) .
Two-component signal transduction systems control a variety of
cellular processes, including metabolism, development, and virulence,
and typically consist of a membrane-bound sensor kinase and a
DNA-binding response regulator (7, 9,
35) . Upon receiving environmental signals, the
sensor kinase undergoes autophosphorylation at a conserved His
residue within a domain termed transmitter or core histidine kinase .
Autophosphorylation is followed by the transfer of the phosphoryl
group onto a conserved Asp residue in the receiver domain of the
cognate response regulator . Phosphorylation of the response regulator
activates the protein, leading to positive and/or negative modulation
of target gene expression . Transcriptional control of gene expression
is generally mediated through direct interactions of the response
regulator with target gene promoters .
A more complex variation of the two-step His Asp
signal transduction systems is the four-step His Asp His Asp
phosphorelay . Instead of only two, there are four distinct active
domains required for signal transduction in this pathway .
Autophosphorylation of the sensor kinase within its transmitter
domain is followed by transfer of the phosphoryl group onto an Asp
residue of a receiver domain, distinct from that in the response
regulator (16, 35) . The
phosphoryl group is subsequently transferred to a His residue in a
histidine phosphotransfer domain (HPt), followed by final transfer
onto an Asp residue within the receiver domain of the response
regulator (16, 35) . In some systems, such
as the Bacillus subtilis Kin/Spo sporulation pathway, all
three modules (transmitter, receiver, and HPt) exist as individual
proteins (9), while in others, such as the Bordetella
spp . BvgAS regulatory system, the first three modules are contained
within the sensor kinase (7) . Sensor kinases
containing multiple signaling modules are known as hybrid sensor
kinases . The B . cenocepacia cblS gene is predicted to encode a
multidomain hybrid sensor kinase .
In this report we characterized the role of cblS in expression
of B . cenocepacia cable pili . The analysis of the B . cenocepacia
cbl locus was extended downstream of the cblBACDS operon,
identifying two additional genes, designated cblT and cblR .
The cblT and cblR genes are predicted to encode a
second hybrid sensor kinase and a DNA-binding response regulator,
respectively . Genetic and biochemical analyses demonstrated that the
B . cenocepacia cblS, cblT, and cblR genes are
essential for cable pilus expression and that their effect is exerted
at the level of transcription of the cblBACDS biosynthetic
operon . The results presented in this study indicate that the cblS,
cblT, and cblR genes encode a unique multicomponent
signal transduction pathway that transcriptionally regulates the
expression of B . cenocepacia cable pili .
Bacterial strains, plasmids, and media. The bacterial strains
and plasmids used in this study are listed in Table 1.
B . cenocepacia (formerly B . cepacia complex genomovar
III) strain BC7 is a cable-piliated CF clinical isolate of B .
cenocepacia (30) . E . coli strains were grown with
aeration at 37°C in Luria-Bertani (LB) broth (33)
or on LB agar plates supplemented with ampicillin (100 µg/ml),
tetracycline (12 µg/ml), chloramphenicol (30 µg/ml), or trimethoprim
(1.5 mg/ml) as necessary . B . cenocepacia strains were grown
with aeration at 37°C in LB or in M9 minimal medium (33),
supplemented with 0.2% glucose and 0.3% (wt/vol) Casamino Acids .
For propagation of B . cenocepacia strains harboring transcriptional
fusion constructs, tetracycline was added to liquid medium (25
µg/ml) and LB agar (500 µg/ml) .
| TABLE 1 . Bacterial strains and plasmids
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DNA manipulations. DNA-modifying enzymes, including restriction
endonucleases, T4 polynucleotide kinase, T4 DNA ligase, T4
polymerase, and Taq polymerase, were obtained from Roche, New
England Biolabs, Promega, and Invitrogen . Plasmid DNA was isolated by
the boiling lysis method (33) or using the QIAprep
Spin Miniprep kit (QIAGEN, Inc.) . Recombinant plasmids were
introduced into E . coli and/or B . cenocepacia by either
electroporation or conjugation, as previously described (39) .
Genomic DNA from B . cenocepacia was extracted using the
PureGene kit (Gentra) . Southern blot hybridizations were generally
performed as described by Sambrook et al . (33)
using Hybond N nitrocellulose membranes and probes labeled with [ -32P]dCTP
(Amersham Pharmacia Biotech) by the random primer method .
Cloning and sequencing of the B . cenocepacia cblT and cblR
genes. We have previously described the cloning and sequencing of the
B . cenocepacia strain BC7 cblBACDS genes (41) .
Cosmid clone p3A4, identified in these studies, was found to harbor a
portion of the cbl locus, including the cblS gene and
the DNA region further downstream . A 7.2-kb EcoRI fragment carrying
this region was cloned from p3A4 into the corresponding site of
pBluescript SK(–), generating pMT76 . For sequencing, multiple
subclones of pMT76 were generated in pBluescript SK(–), and their
sequences were determined on both DNA strands . Nucleotide sequencing
was performed by the Advanced Genetic Analysis Center at the
University of Minnesota using the dideoxy chain termination method
and an ABI 1371A DNA sequencer (Applied Biosystems) . Oligonucleotide
primers used for sequencing were standard forward and reverse (T3 and
T7) pBluescript primers or custom oligonucleotides synthesized by
Integrated DNA Technologies . Double-stranded sequences were aligned
and assembled using the EditSeq and SeqMan components of a
demonstration version of the Lasergene sequence analysis software
package (DNASTAR Inc.) . Nucleotide and amino acid sequence searches
and analysis utilized the BLASTX and BLASTP programs at the National
Center for Biotechnology Information .
Construction of B . cenocepacia cblS, cblT, and cblR
isogenic mutants. The cblS gene was inactivated by generating an
in-frame deletion in the chromosomal copy of the gene . Initially, the
cblS gene was PCR amplified, using primers cbl39
(5'-TTCTATCCCAAGCGAATCG-3') and cbl42
(5'-ATAGACGGCCCACGTTGC-3'), and cloned into the TA cloning vector
pGEM T-Easy (Promega) to generate pVN1 . A 741-nucleotide in-frame
deletion in cblS was generated by partially digesting pVN1
with PstI, followed by a religation, generating pVN4 . The resulting
1.4-kb
cblS
fragment was cloned as an EcoRI fragment into the suicide vector
pCM42, generating pCM46 . This construct was subsequently introduced
into B . cenocepacia strain BC7 by conjugation, using E .
coli S17-1 as the donor strain (39) . Single-crossover
recombinants were selected on LB agar plates supplemented with
chloramphenicol (300 µg/ml) . After a single-crossover insertion was
confirmed by Southern hybridization, the mutant strain was repeatedly
subcultured in 5 ml of LB in the absence of chloramphenicol for five
consecutive days to allow a second crossover to occur . The strain was
subcultured in fresh LB once mid- to late exponential phase was
reached . After 5 days, dilutions of the culture were plated on LB
agar plates, and approximately 1,600 of the resulting colonies were
restreaked in duplicate onto LB agar plates with or without
chloramphenicol (300 µg/ml) . Colonies that were Cms were
further analyzed and confirmed as cblS in-frame deletion
mutants by Southern hybridization, PCR, and sequencing . The BC7
cblS
strain was designated CM543 .
For insertional inactivation of the cblT gene in B . cenocepacia,
a 3.3-kb PCR product encompassing the cblR-cblT intergenic
region and the entire cblT coding sequence was amplified from
strain BC7 chromosomal DNA, using oligonucleotide primers cbl46
(5'-TCAATGCGATGCGCTCGG-3') and cbl48
(5'-AGGATCACGACACGGATC-3'), and cloned into pGEM-T Easy, generating
pMT74 . The 3.3-kb cblT PCR product was excised as a SpeI/EcoRI
fragment and cloned into the corresponding sites of pBluescript
SK(–), generating pCM48 . Plasmid pCM48 was digested with PstI, which
removed a 1.7-kb region internal to the cblT gene, and ligated
with the trimethoprim resistance cassette (tmp), which was
obtained as a PstI fragment from p34S-Tp, generating pBJ4 . Plasmid
pBJ4 was electroporated into B . cenocepacia strain BC7 as
previously described (39), and recombinants were
selected on LB agar supplemented with trimethoprim (1.5 mg/ml) . A Tpr
double-crossover mutant was confirmed by Southern hybridization and
designated CM506 .
To insertionally inactivate cblR in B . cenocepacia, the gene
was PCR amplified from strain BC7 chromosomal DNA, using oligonucleotide
primers cbl43 (5'-CGGGCGCCATTTCGAATC-3') and cbl44
(5'-TGGTGGAGAAAGACACCC-3') . The cblR PCR product was cloned
into pGEM T-Easy to generate pMT61 and insertionally inactivated with
the cat cassette, cloned as a HincII fragment into the NruI
site of cblR (pMT63) . This construct was electroporated into
B . cenocepacia strain BC7, and recombinants were selected on
LB agar supplemented with chloramphenicol (350 µg/ml) . The Cmr
colonies were further analyzed by Southern hybridization, and a
double-crossover mutant was designated CM434 .
Generation of constructs for ectopic expression of cblS,
cblT, or cblR and complementation analysis. The cblS
gene was cloned as a 2.2-kb EcoRI fragment from pVN1 into the
multiple cloning site of the broad-host-range vector pMR4, generating
construct pVN3 . Since the cblS gene does not have a promoter
immediately upstream, the gene was cloned in the same orientation as
PlacZ in pMR4 . The cblT and cblR genes
were cloned into pMR4 with their respective upstream regions,
which are likely to harbor the promoters for these two genes, given
their divergent orientation (Fig . 1) . The cblT gene was
cloned into BamHI/EcoRI sites of pMR4 as a 3.9-kb BglII/EcoRI
fragment from cosmid p3A4, generating pMT100 . The cblR gene
was cloned as a 1.3-kb EcoRI fragment from pMT61 into the corresponding
site of pMR4, generating pMT66 . Each construct was introduced
either into B . cenocepacia strain BC7 or into the corresponding
isogenic mutant by conjugation .
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FIG . 1 . Physical map of the B . cenocepacia cblBACDSTR locus . The
arrows denote the direction of transcription . The deletion in the
cblS gene in strain CM543 is indicated with the
symbol . The solid gray box denotes the site of the tmp cassette
insertion in the cblT gene in strain CM506, and the hatched box
denotes the site of insertion of the cat cassette in the cblR
gene in strain CM434 . The predicted functions of the deduced gene
products are indicated below . Abbreviations: B, BamHI; Bg, BglII; E,
EcoRI; H, HindIII; X, XhoI.
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Immunoblot analysis. For immunoblot analysis, B . cenocepacia
strains were grown in 3 ml of M9 medium for 17 h . Aliquots of the
cultures were centrifuged to harvest bacterial cells, and the pellets
were resuspended in Laemmli buffer (21) . Equal
amounts of protein from each strain were boiled, separated by 12.5%
sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, and
analyzed by immunoblotting with CblA-specific antiserum as previously
described (40) .
RNA dot blot analysis. For RNA isolation, B . cenocepacia
strains were grown in M9 medium, supplemented with 25 µg of
tetracycline/ml as necessary, to an A600 of
0.45 .
Total RNA was extracted using the Trizol reagent (Invitrogen) .
Equivalent amounts of RNA (1.25 µg) were applied on Hybond N
nitrocellulose membranes (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech) and
UV-cross-linked to the membrane using a HybriLinker HL-2000
(Ultra-Violet Products) . Membranes were hybridized with a 0.8-kb DNA
probe corresponding to the cblA gene, obtained from
EcoRI-digested plasmid pMT17, and labeled with [ -32P]dCTP
(Amersham Pharmacia Biotech) by the random primer method (33) .
Quantitative RNA dot blot analysis was performed in triplicate, with
RNA extracted from three parallel cultures for each strain analyzed .
The autoradiograms were scanned, and quantification of cblA
transcript levels was performed using NIH Image software, version
1.62 .
Electron microscopy. For transmission electron microscopy
(TEM), B . cenocepacia strains were grown in M9 medium to an
A600 of
1.0,
upon which 5-µl aliquots of each culture were applied on
formvar-coated electron microscopy grids . After a 10-min incubation,
the grids were washed and the attached bacteria were stained with
0.5% uranyl acetate, washed a second time, and dried . TEM was
performed at the University of Minnesota Characterization Facility on
a JEOL 1200 microscope at 120 kV .
Measurement of ß-galactosidase activity. The cblB
transcriptional fusion construct pMT58 was generated as previously
described (41) . B . cenocepacia strains harboring
pMT58 were grown in the presence of tetracycline (25 µg/ml) in
order to ensure maintenance of the plasmid . For measurement of
ß-galactosidase activity, cultures of B . cenocepacia strains
harboring pMT58 were grown as previously described (41),
and ß-galactosidase activities were measured as described by
Miller (23) . Assays were performed in triplicate with a
minimum of three independent experiments .
Nucleotide sequence accession number. The DNA sequence of
the cblT and cblR genes has been deposited in GenBank
under accession number
AY500852 .
Identification of the B . cenocepacia cblT and cblR genes.
We have previously described the cloning and sequencing of the B .
cenocepacia cblBACDS operon (41) . The fifth gene in this
operon, cblS, is predicted to encode a member of the hybrid
sensor kinase family of two-component signal transduction systems .
Genes encoding response regulator proteins of two-component
systems are typically linked to, and often cotranscribed with, the
genes encoding their cognate sensor kinases . To examine the
possibility that a cognate response regulator is encoded in the
proximity of cblS, we extended our analysis downstream of the
cblBACDS operon .
Sequence analysis of the region downstream of the cblBACDS operon
identified two additional open reading frames (ORFs), designated
cblT and cblR (Fig . 1) . Both ORFs are
predicted to encode proteins with significant homology to known
members of bacterial two-component signal transduction systems . Like
cblS, the cblT gene is also predicted to encode a
hybrid sensor kinase . The cblS and cblT gene products
are 43% identical on the amino acid sequence level . Both cblS
and cblT are predicted to encode proteins with cleavable
signal sequences and membrane-spanning domains, which likely direct
their translocation into the cytoplasmic membrane by a Sec-dependent
mechanism . The estimated molecular mass of the mature cblS
gene product is 74.1 kDa, while that of the mature cblT gene
product is 87.2 kDa . The second gene identified downstream of the
cblBACDS locus, designated cblR, is predicted to encode a
25.8-kDa protein with high homology to the DNA-binding response
regulators of two-component signal transduction pathways (Fig .
1) . Analysis of the DNA sequence upstream of the cblBACDS
operon, or downstream of cblR, did not identify any other
candidate ORFs encoding additional signal transduction components .
The putative gene products of cblS, cblT, and cblR
all exhibit significant amino acid sequence identity (ranging between
24 and 31%) to components of the Bordetella spp . BvgAS and
E . coli RcsBC and ArcAB two-component signal transduction
systems .
Domain architecture of the B . cenocepacia cblS, cblT,
and cblR gene products. In order to examine whether cblS,
cblT, and cblR may encode proteins with the necessary
domains and conserved amino acid residues known to be required for
signal transduction in other bacterial signal transduction systems,
the deduced amino acid sequences of the three gene products were
examined . Both cblS and cblT are predicted to encode
hybrid sensor kinases with periplasmic substrate-binding domains
(PBPb), which are required by other sensor kinases for recognition of
specific environmental cue(s) (Fig . 2) . Both the
cblS and cblT gene products are predicted to have a
transmitter domain, which contains the ATP-binding N, G1, F, and G2
boxes, as well as the conserved His residue, which serves as the
substrate for autophosphorylation (Fig . 2) .
Additionally, both the cblS and cblT gene products are predicted
to have a receiver domain, which contains a conserved Asp residue .
Interestingly, only CblT contains an HPt domain (Fig . 2),
including the highly conserved amino acid residues of the HPt module
consensus sequence (11) . The transmitter and
receiver domains of the cblS and cblT gene products, as
well as the HPt domain of the cblT gene product, all have the
highly conserved His or Asp residues, predicted to undergo
phosphorylation and facilitate signal transduction (Fig.
2) .
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FIG . 2 . Domain architecture of the predicted cblS, cblT,
and cblR gene products . The amino (N) and carboxyl (C) termini
are denoted . The conserved His (H) and Asp (D) residues in the
transmitter, receiver, and HPt domains are indicated . The locations of
the ATP-binding H, N, G1, F, and G2 boxes in the transmitter domains of
CblS and CblT are shown in black . Abbreviations: HPt, histidine
phosphotransfer domain; HTH, helix-turn-helix domain; PBPb, bacterial
periplasmic substrate-binding protein domain; SS, signal sequence.
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The cblR gene product, predicted to function as a response regulator,
has two domains characteristic of this family of proteins . Proximal
to the N terminus, a receiver domain was identified that contains
the conserved Asp residue (D60) (Fig . 2), which is the
substrate for phosphorylation in other bacterial signal transduction
systems . The second conserved domain in the cblR gene product
is a C-terminal DNA-binding helix-turn-helix (HTH) domain, which is
known to interact with target gene promoters in other phosphorelay
systems (Fig . 2) (16,
35) . Together, the cblS, cblT, and cblR
gene products appear to contain all of the necessary and highly
conserved domains, as well as the His and Asp residues, required for
signal transduction in other bacterial four-step phosphorelay
systems .
B . cenocepacia cblS, cblT, and cblR mutants are
blocked in cable pilus expression. To begin to characterize the role of
the cblS, cblT, and cblR genes in cable pilus
expression, mutations in each of the three genes were generated, as
described in Materials and Methods . Inactivation of the cblS,
cblT, or cblR gene yielded strains CM543, CM506, and
CM434, respectively . In order to examine the effects of the
individual mutations on expression of the CblA major pilin,
whole-cell extracts of the wild-type B . cenocepacia strain BC7
and the isogenic cblS, cblT, and cblR null strains
were subjected to immunoblot analysis with CblA-specific antiserum .
An abundant 15-kDa protein, corresponding in size to the CblA
major pilin, was detected in the wild-type strain BC7 whole-cell
preparation (Fig . 3A) . In contrast, there was no detectable
CblA protein in the whole-cell extracts of the cblS, cblT,
and cblR null strains (Fig . 3A) . The absence
of the CblA protein is not due to growth defects associated with
inactivation of the cblS, cblT, or cblR gene,
since the corresponding mutant strains exhibited growth kinetics
similar to that of wild-type strain BC7 (data not shown) .
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FIG . 3 . Effects of inactivation of B . cenocepacia cblS, cblT,
or cblR on CblA major pilin and cblA transcript abundance .
(A) Immunoblot of whole-cell extracts from strain BC7 and the isogenic
cblS (CM543), cblT (CM506), and cblR (CM434)
mutants and the mutant strains with either pVN3 (carrying cblS),
pMT100 (carrying cblT), or pMT66 (carrying cblR), probed
with CblA-specific antiserum . An equal amount of protein was loaded in
each lane . The arrow indicates the position of the CblA protein band .
(B) RNA dot blot of total RNA extracted from strain BC7 and the isogenic
cblS (CM543), cblT (CM506), and cblR (CM434)
mutants, hybridized with a probe specific for cblA.
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For complementation analysis, each of the three genes was cloned into
the broad-host-range vector pMR4, which we have previously utilized
for targeted gene expression in B . cenocepacia (39) .
The constructs carrying cblS, cblT, or cblR,
designated pVN3, pMT100, and pMT66, respectively, were introduced
into the corresponding null strains . Expression of the CblA major
pilin was restored in the cblS and cblR mutant strains
by transcomplementation with plasmids pVN3 and pMT66, respectively
(Fig . 3A) . However, we were unable to restore CblA
expression in the cblT mutant by providing the wild-type
cblT gene in trans on plasmid pMT100 (Fig .
3A) . It is unlikely that the cblT mutation in strain CM506
is polar, since cblT does not appear to be a part of an operon
and is transcribed divergently from cblR and convergently with
respect to the cblBACDS operon (Fig . 1) . As will be
further discussed below, the inability to complement the cblT
mutant is likely due to a block in cable pilus expression caused by
increased cblT gene dosage and expression levels .
RNA dot blots were performed to examine if the block in CblA
expression in the cblS, cblT, and cblR null strains is
accompanied by an effect on cblA transcript abundance . Total
RNA was extracted from the B . cenocepacia wild-type strain BC7
and the isogenic cblS, cblT, and cblR null
mutants and hybridized to a cblA-specific probe . The RNA dot
blot analysis revealed that inactivation of cblS, cblT,
or cblR resulted in a dramatic decrease in cblA
transcript levels (Fig . 3B), suggesting that the corresponding
null strains were defective in transcription of cblA and/or
cblA transcript stability .
To further confirm that cblS, cblT, and cblR are
required for cable pilus expression, the wild-type and mutant strains
were examined by TEM . Examination of the wild-type B . cenocepacia
strain BC7 revealed numerous peritrichously expressed cable
pili on the bacterial cell surface (Fig . 4A) . As previously
reported, the level of cable pilus expression by wild-type strain
BC7 cells was highly variable, with some cells exhibiting numerous
cable pili on their surface while other cells had only a few
pili or lacked pili altogether (40) . Consistent with the lack
of expression of the CblA major pilin, cells of the mutant strains
CM543 (cblS), CM506 (cblT), and CM434 (cblR) were all
devoid of cable pili (Fig . 4B, D, and E) . Cable
pilus expression was restored in strains CM543 and CM434 by
transcomplementation with plasmid pVN3, harboring cblS, or
pMT66, harboring cblR, respectively (Fig . 4C and
F) . Together, our results indicate that cblS, cblT,
and cblR are essential for the expression of cable pili and
that the block in cable pilus expression in the corresponding null
strains is accompanied by a dramatic decrease in CblA pilin and
cblA transcript abundance .
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FIG . 4 . Effects of the B . cenocepacia cblS, cblT, and
cblR mutations on cable pilus expression . Transmission electron
micrographs of wild-type strain BC7 (A), the cblS null strain
CM543 (B), the cblS null strain transcomplemented with pVN3 (C),
the cblT null strain CM506 (D), the cblR null strain CM434
(E), and the cblR null strain transcomplemented with pMT66 (F)
are shown . Bars = 0.5 µm.
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The cblS, cblT, and cblR genes are required for
transcription of the B . cenocepacia cable pilus biosynthetic operon.
RNA dot blot analysis demonstrated that inactivation of the cblS,
cblT, or cblR genes results in a dramatic reduction in
the abundance of the cblA transcript . As previously demonstrated,
the cblA gene is cotranscribed with the other genes in the
cblBACDS operon from a principal promoter located upstream of
cblB (41) . Two-component signal transduction
systems are known to control the expression of target genes at the
level of transcription . To determine whether the drastic reduction in
cblA transcript abundance in the cblS, cblT, and
cblR null strains is due to a block in transcription from the
cblB-proximal promoter, the activity of the cblB-lacZ
transcriptional fusion construct pMT58 was measured in each of the
three mutant backgrounds . Construct pMT58 harbors the cis-acting
sequences required for maximal expression from the cblB-proximal
promoter (41) . Measurements of ß-galactosidase
activity were taken throughout growth in minimal M9 media—a condition
found to result in strong transcriptional activation of the cblB
promoter (41) . As previously shown, the activity
of the cblB transcriptional fusion in wild-type strain BC7
increased approximately twofold during mid- to late exponential
phase, with peak activity observed in late exponential and stationary
phases (Fig . 5A) (41) . In
contrast, the activity of the transcriptional fusion construct pMT58
in the cblS, cblT or cblR null strains was drastically
reduced, with levels similar to those measured for the vector
control pRKlac290 (Fig . 5A) . These results demonstrate that
inactivation of either cblS, cblT, or cblR leads to a
block in transcription from the cblB-proximal promoter .
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FIG . 5 . Effects of the B . cenocepacia cblS, cblT, and
cblR mutations on activity of the cblB promoter . The
ß-galactosidase activities of the pRKlac290 vector control in wild-type
strain BC7 or the cblB transcriptional fusion construct pMT58 in
the wild-type strain BC7 and the cblS, cblT, or cblR
mutants, grown in minimal M9 medium, were measured throughout the growth
phase at 2-h intervals . (A) ß-Galactosidase activity measurements in
Miller units on the y axis and time on the x axis . The
corresponding growth curves are shown in panel B.
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Ectopic expression of cblS, cblT, or cblR modulates
cable pilus expression. To further characterize the role of the B .
cenocepacia cblS, cblT, and cblR genes in cable
pilus expression, each of the three genes was ectopically expressed
in the wild-type strain (BC7) background . Whole-cell extracts from
the wild-type strain, BC7, with or without pVN3 (cblS), pMT100
(cblT), or pMT66 (cblR) were prepared and analyzed by
immunoblotting with CblA-specific antiserum . Introduction of the
plasmid vector pMR4 into B . cenocepacia strain BC7 had no
effect on CblA expression (Fig . 6A) . Ectopic
expression of either cblS, encoding a hybrid sensor kinase, or
cblR, encoding the response regulator, resulted in an approximately
twofold increase in the abundance of the CblA major pilin (Fig .
6A) . Surprisingly, ectopic expression of cblT,
predicted to encode a second hybrid sensor kinase, led to a block in
CblA expression . These findings demonstrate that ectopic expression
of the cblS, cblT, or cblR gene product can
significantly modulate cable pilus expression . Furthermore, the block
in cable pilus biogenesis resulting from increased cblT
expression in the wild-type strain suggests that the lack of
complementation in the cblT null strain harboring pMT100 (cblT)
is also likely to be a consequence of overexpression of the
plasmid-borne cblT .
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FIG . 6 . Effects of ectopic expression of cblS, cblT, or
cblR on CblA major pilin and cblA transcript abundance in
wild-type B . cenocepacia strain BC7 . (A) Immunoblot of whole-cell
extracts from strain BC7 with or without pMR4 (vector control), pVN3
(carrying cblS), pMT100 (carrying cblT), or pMT66
(carrying cblR), probed with the CblA-specific antiserum . Equal
amounts of protein were loaded in each lane . The arrow indicates the
position of the CblA protein band . (B) RNA dot blot of total RNA
extracted from strain BC7 with or without pMR4 (vector control), pVN3
(carrying cblS), pMT100 (carrying cblT), or pMT66
(carrying cblR), hybridized with the cblA-specific probe .
(C) Quantification of cblA transcript levels . The levels of the
cblA transcript in each strain were normalized to the level of
the cblA transcript in wild-type strain BC7, which was
arbitrarily set to 100% . The asterisks denote P values of <0.04.
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RNA dot blots were performed in order to examine whether the effects
of ectopic expression of cblS, cblT, or cblR on CblA
pilin abundance in B . cenocepacia are also manifested at the
level of cblA transcript abundance . The levels of cblA
transcript in the wild-type strain BC7 with or without the pMR4
vector were similar (Fig . 6B and C) . However, when
either plasmid pVN3, carrying the cblS gene, or pMT66,
carrying the cblR gene, was introduced into B . cenocepacia
strain BC7, the level of cblA mRNA increased by approximately
twofold . In contrast, when plasmid pMT100, harboring the cblT
gene, was introduced into the wild-type strain BC7, the abundance of
cblA mRNA was dramatically reduced (Fig . 6B and
C) . The RNA dot blot analysis of strains ectopically expressing
cblS, cblT, or cblR correlates with the immunoblot
analysis, together demonstrating that overexpression of either
cblS or cblR in B . cenocepacia strain BC7 leads to an
increase in CblA expression, whereas overexpression of cblT
leads to a dramatic decrease in the expression of CblA (Fig.
6A to C) .
To further confirm the effects of ectopic expression of cblS,
cblT, or cblR on cable pilus biogenesis, the wild-type B .
cenocepacia strain BC7 with or without plasmid-borne copies of
each of the three genes was examined by TEM . Ectopic expression of
the cblS or cblR gene appeared to result in a
significant increase in the number of heavily piliated cells, with
virtually every cell expressing numerous cable pili (Fig.
7B and D) . In addition to being more numerous, the
cable pili expressed by these strains also appeared increased in
length (Fig . 7A, B, and D) . Both of these
observations are consistent with increased amounts of the CblA major
pilin expressed by these strains, compared to wild-type B .
cenocepacia strain BC7 . In contrast, cable pili were not observed
on cells of the wild-type strain BC7 ectopically expressing cblT
(Fig . 7C), confirming that overexpression of
cblT in B . cenocepacia strain BC7 leads to a block in cable
pilus biogenesis .
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FIG . 7 . Effects of ectopic expression of cblS, cblT, and
cblR in the wild-type B . cenocepacia strain BC7 on cable
pilus expression . Transmission electron micrographs of wild-type strain
BC7 (A) or BC7 with pVN3 (carrying cblS) (B), pMT100 (carrying
cblT) (C), or pMT66 (carrying cblR) (D) . Bars = 0.5 µm.
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This study describes the identification and characterization of the
B . cenocepacia cblT and cblR genes, which, along with
the previously identified cblS gene, are predicted to encode a
multicomponent signal transduction system controlling the expression
of cable pili . Inactivation of the cblS, cblT, or
cblR gene led to a block in cable pilus expression and a severe
decrease in cblA transcript abundance . The block in cable pilus
expression in the cblS, cblT, and cblR null strains
was manifested at the level of transcription from the cblB-proximal
promoter . The lack of transcription from the cblB-proximal
promoter in these mutants lends further support to the hypothesis
that cblS, cblT, and cblR encode a signal
transduction system controlling transcription of the cable pilus
biosynthetic operon . In addition to the requirement of cblS,
cblT, and cblR in cable pilus expression, we have also
demonstrated that ectopic expression of each of the three genes in
the wild-type B . cenocepacia strain has a profound effect on
cable pilus expression . Ectopic expression of the cblS and
cblR genes led to an increase, while ectopic expression of
cblT resulted in a severe reduction in abundance of the CblA
major pilin . The levels of the CblA protein were directly
proportional to the cblA transcript abundance in the
corresponding strains . To our knowledge, this is the first report to
identify and characterize members of bacterial two-component signal
transduction systems in B . cenocepacia .
The cblS gene, predicted to encode a hybrid sensor kinase, is
cotranscribed with the cblBACD biosynthetic genes . The organization
of the cbl locus is highly unusual, since bacterial regulatory
genes, particularly those encoding members of two-component
signal transduction pathways, are typically organized into independent
monocystronic or polycistronic genetic units . This study has
demonstrated that increased expression of the cblS gene in B .
cenocepacia leads to a significant increase in cable pilus expression .
It is possible that accumulation of the CblS sensor kinase in
B . cenocepacia would result in a positive feedback mechanism,
leading to a further increase in cable pilus expression, as well as
the expression of the CblS sensor . This positive feedback mechanism
may, at least in part, explain the growth-phase-dependent
transcriptional activation of the cblB-proximal promoter during
mid-exponential growth phase .
The B . cenocepacia cblS and cblT genes are both predicted to
encode hybrid sensor kinases, while the cblR gene is predicted
to encode a cognate DNA-binding response regulator . Amino acid
sequence analysis of the cblS and cblT gene products revealed
a key difference in domain architecture between the two putative
sensor kinases . While transmitter and receiver domains were
identified in both gene products, only CblT is predicted to have an
HPt domain, known to be required for the transfer of phosphoryl
groups to the receiver domain of the cognate response regulators in
other phosphorelay pathways (Fig . 2) (3,
11, 20, 42) .
The lack of an HPt domain in CblS suggests that the potential
transfer of phosphoryl groups from CblS to CblR must occur through an
intermediate protein, which has a functional HPt domain . It is
therefore possible that CblS, upon initial phosphorylation, transfers
phosphoryl groups onto CblT, which in turn would phosphorylate CblR
(Fig . 8) . Phosphorylation of the CblR response regulator
would lead to its activation and transcription of the cblBACDS
cable pilus biosynthetic operon (Fig . 8) . Preliminary
studies in our laboratory support this model, since we have found
that cblT is essential for cable pilus biogenesis (Fig.
3 and 4), while ectopic
expression of the CblS putative sensor kinase in the cblT null
strain is not sufficient for induction of cable pilus expression
(data not shown) .
|
FIG . 8 . A working model for the CblSTR signal transduction pathway . (i)
Upon receiving a signal from the environment via their periplasmic
domains, the CblS and/or CblT hybrid sensor kinases undergo
autophosphorylation at the histidine H322 or H344 residues,
respectively, catalyzed by hydrolysis of ATP by the transmitter domain .
It is also possible that CblS and CblT form homodimers and/or
heterodimers, which may lead to cross-phosphorylation . (ii)
Phosphotransfer reactions (indicated by arrows and circled P) are
carried out between the transmitter, receiver, and HPt domains of CblS
and CblT . The transfers of phosphoryl groups may occur intramolecularly
and/or intermolecularly . (iii) The aspartate D60 in the receiver domain
of the CblR response regulator is phosphorylated through interactions
with the CblT HPt domain, leading to activation of CblR and
transcription of the cblBACDS operon, possibly by directly
binding the cblB promoter . Abbreviations: HPt, histidine
phosphotransfer domain; HTH, helix-turn-helix domain; PBPb, bacterial
periplasmic substrate-binding protein domain; Cp, cytoplasm; CM,
cytoplasmic membrane; Pp, periplasm; OM, outer membrane.
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Hybrid sensor kinases, including Bordetella spp . BvgS and E .
coli ArcB, typically function as dimers (7,
15) . Homodimerization of sensor kinases results in
cross-autophosphorylation of the monomers within their transmitter
domains . It is possible that CblS and CblT form homodimers and/or
heterodimers, leading to intramolecular and/or intermolecular
phosphotransfer reactions, respectively . Such a mechanism would allow
CblS to facilitate the flow of phosphoryl groups to the CblR response
regulator through the HPt domain of CblT (Fig . 8) .
The regulatory pathway controlling the expression of cable pili in
B . cenocepacia is unusual for bacteria, since it appears to
contain two distinct sensor kinase proteins, encoded by the cblS
and cblT genes . Although cross talk between components of
certain distinct two-component systems is known to occur (10,
44), most signal transduction systems of this type are
comprised of a single sensor kinase and its cognate response
regulator . A notable exception to this paradigm is the Kin/Spo signal
transduction system controlling sporulation in B . subtilis . In
this system, five distinct sensor kinase proteins, designated KinA,
KinB, KinC, KinD, and KinE, phosphorylate the receiver domain of
Spo0F, which can subsequently phosphorylate the HPt-containing Spo0B
protein (18) . Phosphorylation of Spo0B leads to the transfer
of the phosphoryl group onto the Spo0A response regulator, which
activates transcription of the target genes (3) . Each of
the five B . subtilis sensor kinases is capable of
phosphorylating Spo0F, albeit with various efficiencies (18) .
In contrast, we have shown that both the cblS and cblT
genes are essential for transcription of the cblBACDS operon
and cable pilus expression, suggesting that the function of the CblS
and CblT putative sensor kinases is exhibited at the level of
activation of the CblR response regulator .
Another system which may be analogous to the proposed B . cenocepacia
CblSTR pathway is the RcsC/YojN/RcsB signal transduction system,
which modulates the expression of the capsular polysaccharide (cps)
biosynthetic operon in E . coli . The RcsC and YojN proteins are
both members of the hybrid sensor kinase family . The phosphorelay is
thought to be initiated by autophosphorylation of the transmitter
domain of RcsC, followed by transfer of the phosphoryl group onto the
conserved Asp residue within the receiver domain of RcsC (38) .
The phosphoryl group is then transferred onto a conserved His residue
in the HPt domain of YojN, which serves as a bridge component for the
phosphorylation of the RcsB response regulator, leading to
transcriptional activation of cps gene expression . The
function of the YojN protein is similar to the proposed function of
the B . cenocepacia CblT, whose HPt domain may act as an
intermediate in transfer of phosphoryl groups from CblS to CblR .
However, in addition to lacking a receiver domain, YojN does not
appear to have a functional transmitter domain, suggesting that it
may serve solely as a bridge component in the phosphorelay, rather
than being able to independently sense and respond to environmental
stimuli (38) . In contrast, both the CblS and CblT
putative sensor kinases of B . cenocepacia appear to have
complete transmitter domains, indicating that they are capable of
initiating the phosphorelay . Future studies will examine the ability
of cblS and cblT gene products to autophosphorylate, as
well as precisely mapping the potential flow of phosphoryl groups
between components of the B . cenocepacia CblSTR signal
transduction pathway .
The putative sensor kinase encoded by the cblT gene appears
to be required for the expression of cable pili . However, cblT
can also block cable pilus expression when it is expressed at
increased levels . These results suggest that the relative levels of
CblT sensor kinase need to be within a defined range in order for
cable pilus expression to occur . Increased levels of CblT may block
expression of cable pili by favoring homodimerization and
self-sequestration from CblS . Additionally, it is known that
phosphotransfer reactions in bacterial four-step phosphorelays can be
reversible . It has been shown that reversal of the flow of phosphoryl
groups can lead to dephosphorylation, and thus inactivation, of
response regulators by their cognate hybrid sensor kinases (1,
12) . The CblT protein, under the conditions
examined, may preferentially act as a phosphatase in the absence of a
sufficient level of CblS, resulting in dephosphorylation of the CblR
response regulator and a block in cable pilus gene expression .
The expression of certain pilus genes in other bacterial species
is known to be controlled by two-component signal transduction
systems . Expression of E . coli P pili is modulated by the CpxAR
two-component system (17), while expression of the type
IV pili of Neisseria gonorrhoeae and Pseudomonas aeruginosa
is controlled by homologous two-component systems designated PilAB
and PilRS, respectively (2, 37) .
However, the signal transduction system encoded by the cblS,
cblT, and cblR genes represents a novel, and thus far
unique, mechanism for transcriptional regulation of a pilus gene
cluster belonging to the CS1 family . The expression of other CS1
family pilus gene clusters is positively regulated by AraC-like
proteins, termed Rns or CfaD, which relieve H-NS-mediated gene
repression (19, 24) . The cblS,
cblT, and cblR genes are a unique feature of the B .
cenocepacia locus, which suggests that they have been acquired
and/or employed by the pathway after the emergence of the ancestral
CS1 pilus biogenesis locus, encompassing orthologs of cblBACD .
It is also possible that either the cblS or the cblT
gene arose through a duplication event . However, given the
significant sequence divergence between cblS and cblT,
with the amino acid sequence identity between their respective gene
products of 43%, a gene duplication event is unlikely to have
occurred in recent evolutionary history .
Cable pilus expression appears to be tightly controlled, since
inactivation of either cblS, cblT, or cblR leads to a block
in transcription of the cblBACDS biosynthetic operon and cable
pilus biogenesis . It is possible that the postulated B . cenocepacia
CblSTR signal transduction system responds to changes in osmolarity,
pH, and/or temperature, which have been shown to affect transcription
of the cblBACDS biosynthetic operon (41) .
Moreover, certain two-component signal transduction systems,
including Bordetella spp . BvgAS and E . coli CpxAR,
control the expression of multiple, functionally diverse target genes
(7, 25) . It will be of interest
to examine whether the putative signal transduction system encoded by
the B . cenocepacia cblSTR genes also controls the expression
of additional B . cenocepacia genes, including both known and
unknown virulence factors . Future studies will continue to elucidate
the signal transduction pathway of the CblSTR system, its role in
cable pilus expression, and its potential control of a larger subset
of target genes in B . cenocepacia .
This work was supported by grant MOHR02G0 from the Cystic Fibrosis
Foundation . M . T . was the recipient of a Student Traineeship grant
(03H0) from the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation .
We thank Victoria Nichols and Bridget Johnson for assistance with
generating subclones, Tim Leonard for technical assistance, and Chris
Frethem for assistance with TEM, and Gary Dunny for critical reading
of the manuscript .
* Corresponding author . Mailing address: Department of
Microbiology, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN 55455-0312 . Phone: (612)
625-7104 . Fax: (612) 626-0623 . E-mail:
mohr@mail.ahc.umn.edu .
Present address: Department of Microbiology, College of Physicians
and Surgeons, Columbia University, New York, NY 10032 .
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