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Journal of Bacteriology, June 2004, p . 3873-3881, Vol . 186,
No . 12
Vibrio fischeri LuxS and AinS: Comparative Study of Two Signal Synthases
Claudia Lupp and Edward G . Ruby*
Pacific Biomedical Research Center, University of Hawaii at Manoa, Honolulu,
Hawaii 96813
Received 25 February 2004/ Accepted 29 February 2004
Vibrio fischeri possesses two acyl-homoserine lactone quorum-sensing
systems, ain and lux, both of which are involved in the
regulation of luminescence gene expression and are required for
persistent colonization of the squid host, Euprymna scolopes .
We have previously demonstrated that the ain system induces
luminescence at cell densities that precede lux system
activation . Our data suggested that the ain system both
relieves repression and initially induces the lux system,
thereby achieving sequential induction of gene expression by these
two systems . Analysis of the V . fischeri genome revealed the
presence of a putative third system based on the enzyme LuxS, which
catalyzes the synthesis of the Vibrio harveyi autoinducer 2
(AI-2) . In this study, we investigated the impact of V . fischeri
LuxS on luminescence and colonization competence in comparison to
that of the ain system . Similar to the ain system,
inactivation of the AI-2 system decreased light production in
culture, but not in the squid host . However, while an ainS
mutant produces no detectable light in culture, a luxS mutant
expressed approximately 70% of wild-type luminescence levels . A
mutation in luxS alone did not compromise symbiotic competence
of V . fischeri; however, levels of colonization of an ainS
luxS double mutant were reduced to 50% of the already diminished
level of ainS mutant colonization, suggesting that these two
systems regulate colonization gene expression synergistically through
a common pathway . Introduction of a luxO mutation into the
luxS and ainS luxS background could relieve both luminescence
and colonization defects, consistent with a model in which LuxS,
like AinS, regulates gene expression through LuxO . Furthermore,
while luxS transcription appeared to be constitutive and the
AI-2 signal concentration did not change dramatically, our data
suggest that ainS transcription is autoregulated, resulting in
an over 2,000-fold increase in signal concentration as culture
density increased . Taken together, these data indicate that V .
fischeri LuxS affects both luminescence regulation and colonization
competence; however, its quantitative contribution is small
when compared to that of the AinS signal .
Vibrio fischeri, the bacterial light organ symbiont of the Hawaiian
squid Euprymna scolopes, utilizes at least two quorum-sensing
systems whose relative importance is dependent on cell density:
(i) the well-known lux system, consisting of LuxI, which synthesizes
N-(3-oxo-hexanoyl) homoserine lactone (3-oxo-C6-HSL), and the
transcriptional regulator LuxR (14); and (ii) the
ain system, which includes the second V . fischeri acyl-HSL
synthase AinS, generating N-octanoyl HSL (C8-HSL) (16,
23, 24) . We have previously
demonstrated that these two systems are important at different cell
densities: i.e., the ain system is the predominant inducer of
luminescence in culture (24), whereas the lux system
is necessary for luminescence expression at the higher cell densities
present in the squid light organ (44) . This
sequential induction of luminescence gene expression is accomplished
by a hierarchically regulated cascade in which the activated ain
system exerts two effects: (i) relief of a negative regulation of
gene expression of the lux system and (ii) low-level induction
of the lux system through binding of the AinS signal to LuxR,
which results in initial lux expression (24) .
The relief of gene repression is carried out through inactivation of
the transcriptional regulator protein LuxO . LuxO inactivation results
in an increased transcription of litR (32),
which encodes a positive regulator of luxR transcription (10),
thereby linking the ain and lux quorum-sensing systems
in V . fischeri (24) . Mutation of either the ain
or the lux system results in a light organ colonization defect
of V . fischeri, demonstrating the importance of
quorum-sensing-dependent luminescence and possibly other colonization
gene regulation in the Vibrio-squid symbiosis (24) .
The recently sequenced genome of V . fischeri (http://www.ergo-light.com/ERGO/)
revealed the presence of a putative third system, consisting of
LuxS, the enzyme synthesizing a molecule named autoinducer 2 (AI-2),
a furanosyl borate diester (7), and the putative AI-2
receptor proteins LuxP and LuxQ . LuxS was originally discovered
in Vibrio harveyi as part of the quorum-sensing circuit that
regulates luminescence gene expression (43) . This signal
synthase is hypothesized to serve in interspecies communication, as
it can be found in many gram-negative and gram-positive bacterial
species (29, 50) . Luminescence gene
expression in V . harveyi is coordinately controlled by both
the LuxS-derived AI-2 and N-(3-hydroxybutanoyl) HSL
(3-OH-C4-HSL), synthesized by the AinS homolog LuxM (33) .
Both signals interact with cognate hybrid two-component sensor-kinase
proteins, LuxPQ and LuxN, respectively (2,
13), which transduce information through a phosphorelay
cascade involving a protein designated LuxU (12),
leading to inactivation of the transcriptional regulator LuxO (3,
11) . Inactivation of LuxO results in increased
transcription of V . harveyi luxR (a V . fischeri litR
homolog), which positively regulates luminescence gene expression (32) .
Besides our own study of V . fischeri (24),
other recent studies have demonstrated the involvement of homologous
proteins of this regulatory cascade in colonization factor expression
in Vibrio anguillarum (8, 31),
Vibrio cholerae (30, 52), and
Vibrio vulnificus (22, 26,
39), and both Vibrio alginolyticus and Vibrio
parahaemolyticus have been reported to possess AI-2 activity (1) .
While the complete regulatory system remains to be determined for
most of these species, the accumulating data are suggesting a common
mechanism in the genus Vibrio (27,
32) .
These homologies within the genus Vibrio, as well as the fact
that the ain system is apparently conserved between V . fischeri
and V . harveyi, led us to speculate that an AI-2 system might
also operate in V . fischeri . Besides the potential impact of
AI-2 on the expression of luminescence, we were curious to learn
whether this signal is also important in light organ colonization
by V . fischeri, as AI-2 has been implicated in colonization
factor regulation in a variety of bacterial species (50) .
Furthermore, the V . fischeri ainS mutant is defective in
colonizing its squid host, suggesting that ainS regulates the
expression of genes important in symbiosis (24) .
If the AI-2 system functions in V . fischeri as it does in
V . harveyi (33), those factors might also be
coordinately regulated by luxS and ainS .
Bacterial strains and growth conditions. The strains and
plasmids used in this study are listed in Table 1 .
Medium components were purchased from Difco Laboratories, Inc .
(Sparks, Md.), and Sigma Chemical Co . (St . Louis, Mo.) . Strains of
V . fischeri were grown at 28°C in either a seawater-based
nutrient medium (SWT) containing Bacto-Tryptone (Difco), yeast
extract, and glycerol (5) or Luria-Bertani salt (LBS) medium
(17) . Escherichia coli strains were grown at
37°C in Luria-Bertani (LB) medium (37) . Media were
solidified with 1.5% (wt/vol) agar as needed . Antibiotics were added
to the media at the following concentrations when appropriate:
chloramphenicol at 2.5 µg/ml for V . fischeri and 20 µg/ml for
E . coli, kanamycin at 100 µg/ml for V . fischeri and
E . coli, and erythromycin at 5 µg/ml for V . fischeri and
150 µg/ml for E . coli . 3-Oxo-C6-HSL was obtained from Sigma
Chemical Co., and C8-HSL was obtained from Aurora Biosciences
(Coralville, Iowa) .
| TABLE 1 . Bacterial strains and plasmids used in this study
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Genetic techniques. Genomic and plasmid DNAs were extracted by
using the Qiagen DNeasy and Qiaprep Miniprep systems (Qiagen, Inc.,
Valencia, Calif.), respectively . PCR was performed according to
standard protocols (37) with AmpliTaq DNA
polymerase (Perkin-Elmer, Inc., Branchburg, N.Y.) . For plasmid
constructions, restriction enzymes and DNA ligase were obtained from
New England Biolabs, Inc . (Beverly, Mass.), and used according to the
manufacturer's protocol . Transfer of plasmids into E . coli
host strains was accomplished by standard techniques (37) .
Triparental conjugation was used to transfer plasmids into V .
fischeri strains (40) . Sequencing was carried
out on a Perkin-Elmer ABI Prism automated sequencer at the University
of Hawaii Biotechnology/Molecular Biology Instrumentation and
Training Facility .
Construction of V . fischeri mutants. To generate the
luxS and the ainS-luxS mutant strains, a 2.7-kb
fragment carrying the luxS gene was PCR amplified from V . fischeri
strain ES114 based on the genomic sequence provided by Integrated
Genomics, Inc . (Chicago, Ill.), at http://www.ergo-light.com/ERGO/ .
The fragment was cloned into the mobilizable vector pEVS79 (Table
1), generating pCL115 . Plasmid pCL115 was randomly
mutagenized with the EZ::TN <Kan-2> insertion kit (Epicentre,
Madison, Wis.) . One clone, designated pCL122, was identified that
carried the <Kan-2> cassette insertion 70 bp downstream of the
translational start site of the luxS gene . Plasmid pCL122 was
transferred into both the wild-type (ES114) and the ainS mutant
(CL21) strains of V . fischeri by triparental mating . Single
and double recombinants were selected as previously described (40),
generating the V . fischeri luxS and the ainS-luxS mutant
strains (CL39 and CL41, respectively) . Introduction of the luxS
mutation into the genome of V . fischeri was confirmed by PCR
analysis . The luxS-complementing plasmid pCL125 was generated
by subcloning a 1.1-kb BamHI-EcoRI fragment carrying the intact
luxS gene from pCL115 into the V . fischeri cloning vector
pVO8 (Table 1) .
To generate the luxS luxO and the ainS luxS luxO mutants, the
luxO gene carried on pCL145 (Table 1) was
mutagenized by inserting a 1.2-kb erythromycin resistance (ermR)
gene from pEVS94 (Table 1) into the NsiI site
located approximately 300 bp downstream of the luxO gene start
site . The resulting plasmid, pCL155, was transferred into V .
fischeri luxS by triparental mating, and single and double
recombinants were selected as previously described (40),
generating the V . fischeri luxS luxO mutant CL90 . Similarly,
plasmid pMU106, carrying a partially deleted ainS gene
replaced by a chloramphenicol resistance marker, was introduced into
the luxS luxO mutant to create the ainS luxS luxO
mutant strain CL91 . Using a previously described bioassay (38),
we saw no evidence that strain CL91 produces C8-HSL activity,
confirming that the ainS mutation was introduced into the genome .
The luxR mutant was constructed by subcloning a 4.1-kb HaeIII
fragment from pKV30 into the mobilizable vector pEVS79 (Table
1) . This fragment carries the luxR gene from V .
fischeri ES114, which has been inactivated by partial deletion
and insertion of an erythromycin resistance cassette (44) .
The resulting plasmid, pCL149, was transferred into the chromosome of
V . fischeri ES114 by triparental mating . Single and double
recombinants were selected as previously described (40),
generating the V . fischeri luxR mutant strain CL53 . The
introduction of the mutation into the V . fischeri genome was
confirmed by PCR analysis . Furthermore, luminescence characteristics
of strain CL53 were determined and found to be similar to the
luminescence characteristics of a previously described V . fischeri
luxR mutant strain (44) . Specifically,
luminescence in culture was decreased to approximately 10 to 20% of
wild-type levels . Similarly, whereas wild-type luminescence was
induced several 100-fold upon exogenous addition of 120 nM
3-oxo-C6-HSL, as expected, this addition produced no induction of the
luxR mutant .
Luminescence in culture. To determine their luminescence
characteristics, V . fischeri wild-type and mutant strains were
inoculated to an optical density at 600 nm (OD600) of
about 0.05 into 10 ml of SWT containing either (i) no addition, (ii)
120 nM C8-HSL, or (iii) 120 nM 3-oxo-C6-HSL . Cultures were kept
shaking at 28°C, samples were taken at various times during growth,
and luminescence and OD were measured . Maximum specific luminescence
(luminescence/OD) values were averaged for measurements made between
ODs of 1.0 and 5.0 . Growth rate and growth yield were also determined
during these experiments by measuring OD as a function of time .
Experiments were repeated at least once .
Colonization assays. Three colonization phenotypes of V .
fischeri wild-type and mutant strains were assessed .
(i) Symbiotic bioluminescence. The progress of early
colonization events was monitored as described previously (35) .
Briefly, newly hatched squids were placed into vials with 4 ml of
filter-sterilized seawater (FSSW) containing an inoculum of
approximately 1,000 CFU of the indicated strain per ml . Twenty-four
individual animals were infected per treatment group; 6 animals
served as uninoculated controls and were placed into FSSW without
added bacteria . Animal bioluminescence, an indirect measure of the
degree of squid colonization, was monitored periodically over 24 h
using a modified Packard Tri-Carb 2100TR scintillation counter
(Packard Instruments Inc., Meriden, Conn.) as a photometer .
(ii) Colonization level in the squid light organ. The number
of CFU per squid was determined at 24 and 48 h postinoculation
following a previously described method (34) . Newly hatched
squid were placed into 50 ml of FSSW containing about 1,000 CFU
of the indicated strain per ml, incubated for 12 h, and then
transferred into FSSW . Some animals were placed into FSSW without
added bacteria . At subsequent times, 15 animals per treatment group
and 2 uninoculated animals were homogenized, and the homogenate was
diluted and spread onto SWT agar . The colony number was counted after
overnight incubation, and the mean number of CFU per squid was
calculated .
(iii) Competitive phenotype. The ability of bacterial
symbionts to compete during host colonization under conditions of
coinoculation was tested for the V . fischeri wild-type and
luxS mutant strains, using a previously described approach (46)
with the following modifications . About 15 newly hatched squid were
placed into 50 ml of FSSW containing approximately 1,000 CFU of each
of the competing strains per ml and were incubated for 12 h . An
aliquot of the inoculated seawater was spread onto LBS agar to
determine the total number and exact ratio of the two strains in the
inoculum . At 48 h postinoculation, squids were homogenized and a
dilution of the homogenate spread onto LBS agar . Approximately 100
CFU from the inoculum and each of the homogenates was patched onto
antibiotic-containing or antibiotic-free LBS agar to determine the
ratio of V . fischeri wild-type (Kans) to luxS
mutant (Kanr) cells .
LuxS and AinS signal activities of V . fischeri cultures.
A modification of a previously described assay (1) was used
to determine the ability of V . fischeri to produce LuxS signal
activity . Briefly, V . fischeri strains were grown to the indicated
OD in SWT . The medium was separated from the cells by centrifugation
and subsequent filtration through a 0.2-µm-pore-size filter .
Overnight cultures of V . harveyi strains BB170 (AI-2 sensor)
and BB886 (AI-2 sensor mutant) (Table 1), grown in autoinducer
bioassay (AB) medium (18), were diluted 1:5,000 into
fresh AB medium . Cell-free culture supernatants of V . fischeri
strains grown in SWT were added to these bioassay strains to a final
concentration of 10% (vol/vol) . The luminescence of 1-ml aliquots
of the V . harveyi bioassay cultures was periodically measured
with a TD20/20 luminometer (Turner Design, Sunnyvale, Calif.) .
SWT served as a negative control, and cell-free AB broths of an
overnight culture of either the V . harveyi wild type (BB120)
or the acyl-HSL-defective V . harveyi BB152 strain were used as
the AI-2-producing positive controls . Results are reported as a
percentage of the induction level produced by the positive control .
The concentration of C8-HSL produced by V . fischeri strains
grown in SWT was determined with the same cultures assayed above .
Supernatants of cultures at different ODs were extracted with
acidified ethyl acetate and concentrated by evaporation . The amount
of C8-HSL present in the concentrated samples was determined by using
a previously described ß-galactosidase-linked bioassay (38) .
LuxS signal and AinS signal were extracted from V . fischeri
cultures in three independent experiments . From each extraction, both
the induction of luminescence expression of the AI-2 reporter strain
and the induction of ß-galactosidase expression in the C8-HSL
reporter strain were determined in triplicate . It should be noted
that while the concentration of C8-HSL can be determined directly by
using synthetic C8-HSL standard, determination of AI-2 activity is
indirect and assumes a linear relationship between signal
concentration and induction of luminescence in the V . harveyi
reporter strain .
Transcriptional activity of luxS and ainS. Two
plasmids were generated to estimate the transcriptional activity of
the luxS and ainS genes in V . fischeri . The lacZ
gene was isolated from plasmid pKV124 (Table 1) by BamHI
restriction digestion and was blunt ended with Klenow fragment . To
obtain the transcriptional fusions ainS::lacZ and
luxS::lacZ, the lacZ gene was ligated either (i)
into the EcoRV site located approximately 200 bp downstream of the
translational start site of the ainS gene carried on pCL112
(Table 1), creating pCL152, or (ii) into the EcoRV
site located approximately 200 bp downstream of the translational
start site of the luxS gene carried on pCL125 (Table
1), creating pCL154 . Each of these low-copy-number plasmids
was introduced into V . fischeri wild-type and mutant strains
by triparental mating .
V . fischeri strains carrying in trans either pCL152 or pCL154
were cultured in either SWT plus erythromycin or SWT plus chloramphenicol,
and the relative transcriptional activity of luxS and ainS
was assayed in terms of the ß-galactosidase activity of
triplicate cultures at different times during growth with a standard
o-nitrophenyl-ß-D-thiogalactopyranoside (ONPG)
method (37) . Because these are in trans fusions,
their expression levels are used only to estimate the level of native
transcriptional activity .
LuxS signal activity in V . fischeri. To investigate
whether V . fischeri produces a LuxS-dependent signal activity,
we tested the ability of culture supernatants of the wild type and
the luxS mutant to induce luminescence in the V . harveyi
reporter strains BB170 (AI-2 sensor) and BB886 (AI-2 sensor mutant) .
Cell supernatants harvested from mid-log-phase cultures of the V .
fischeri wild type, but not of the luxS mutant, induced
luminescence in the AI-2 sensor strain to approximately 50% of the
level of culture supernatants from either wild-type V . harveyi
BB120 or the acyl-HSL mutant V . harveyi BB152 (Table
2) . Complementation of the V . fischeri luxS mutation by
providing a functional luxS gene in trans on pCL125
restored the ability to induce luminescence (Table 2) .
These results establish that V . fischeri possesses an activity
capable of inducing V . harveyi luminescence and that this
activity is dependent on a functional luxS gene . Neither the
V . fischeri wild type nor the luxS mutant induced
luminescence in the AI-2 sensor mutant, whereas medium conditioned by
wild-type V . harveyi BB120 did (Table 2), demonstrating
that the V . fischeri LuxS activity is dependent on the presence
of the AI-2 receptor protein . Taken together, these data indicate
that V . fischeri cells produce an activity in culture that is
indistinguishable from that of V . harveyi AI-2 .
| TABLE 2 . LuxS activity of V . fischeria
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Luminescence of V . fischeri luxS mutants in culture.
Having shown that V . fischeri possesses LuxS signal activity,
we investigated whether this signal contributes to light production
in V . fischeri as it does in V . harveyi . The luminescence levels
of the V . fischeri wild type, as well as the luxS, ainS,
and ainS luxS mutants, were determined in culture either with
or without the addition of C8-HSL or 3-oxo-C6-HSL (Table
3) . Because V . fischeri strain ES114
produces only very low levels of 3-oxo-C6-HSL activity in culture (5),
exogenous supplementation with this compound triggers a dramatic
response in light production (24,
44) . In contrast, C8-HSL has been previously demonstrated to
affect luminescence gene expression of V . fischeri in culture
by two means: (i) relief of lux repression through inactivation
of LuxO and (ii) direct induction of the lux system, apparently
through low-affinity binding to and activation of LuxR (24) .
Thus, a mutation in ainS results in a dark phenotype due to
repression and absence of induction of lux . Exogenous addition
of C8-HSL to wild-type V . fischeri stimulates light production
in a LuxR-dependent manner, although to a lesser extent than
3-oxo-C6-HSL addition (24, 44) .
| TABLE 3 . Luminescence of V . fischeri luxS mutantsa
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Light production by the luxS mutant was decreased to between
60 and 80% of the wild-type level (Table 3) . Addition of
C8-HSL to the luxS mutant increased light production, but not
to wild-type levels, indicating that C8-HSL cannot fully complement
the AI-2 deficiency . In contrast, when the LuxI-derived 3-oxo-C6-HSL
was supplied exogenously, the luminescence levels of the luxS
mutant and the wild type were both increased dramatically to
levels that were approximately the same (Table 3), suggesting
that the response of V . fischeri to 3-oxo-C6-HSL is not dependent
on a functional AI-2 system . Both the ainS and ainS luxS
mutants were not detectably luminous in culture (Table
3) . The addition of C8-HSL could restore light production of the
ainS and the ainS luxS mutants to nearly wild-type and
luxS mutant levels, respectively . Similarly, the luminescence
levels of luxS and ainS luxS were indistinguishable
from those of their parent strains (wild type and ainS,
respectively) when 3-oxo-C6-HSL was supplied exogenously . Because
complementation of both the luxS and ainS mutations
with functional genes in trans could restore luminescence to
wild-type levels (data not shown), these mutations are unlikely to
exert a downstream effect .
In V . harveyi, AI-2 activates a phosphorylation cascade resulting
in the inactivation of LuxO, a negative regulator of luminescence
(3, 11) . To determine whether this
pathway is conserved in V . fischeri, we compared the
luminescence of a luxS luxO double mutant to that of a luxO
mutant and found that the levels of light production by these two
strains were similar, either with or without the addition of
acyl-HSLs (Table 3) . These data are consistent with
a model in which V . fischeri LuxS produces a signal that
regulates luminescence through inactivation of LuxO, as has been
reported for the AinS signal, C8-HSL (24) .
Symbiotic luminescence and colonization competence of V . fischeri
luxS mutants. To determine whether symbiotic competence of V .
fischeri is compromised by a mutation in luxS, we
monitored the luminescence of juvenile animals colonized by the V .
fischeri wild type or the luxS, ainS, or ainS
luxS mutants during the first 24 h of colonization (Fig.
1) . As previously shown (24), ainS
mutant-colonized animals expressed between 10 and 20% of the
luminescence level of those colonized by the wild type . In contrast,
the luminescence of luxS mutant-colonized animals was
indistinguishable from that of wild-type-colonized animals (Fig.
1) . However, the luminescence levels of animals
colonized by the ainS luxS mutant were consistently 50% lower
than those of animals colonized by the ainS single mutant,
suggesting that either their specific luminescence or their
colonization levels were decreased (Fig . 1) .
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FIG . 1 . Luminescence of luxS mutants in the symbiotic light
organ . Animal luminescence was monitored during the initial stages of
E . scolopes colonization by V . fischeri wild-type (solid
diamonds), ainS mutant (solid squares), luxS mutant (solid
triangles), and ainS luxS mutant (solid circles) strains . For
each time point, mean values of 24 animals were calculated and standard
errors of the mean are indicated . The experiment was repeated with the
same outcome.
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To differentiate between these two possibilities, we compared the
number of bacterial cells that were present in the light organ
populations of animals colonized by either wild-type V . fischeri
or the luxS, ainS, or ainS luxS mutants at 24 and 48
h (Fig . 2) . While no significant difference in
colonization ability was detected between the luxS mutant and
wild-type V . fischeri, the ainS luxS double mutant
colonized the juvenile squid to only 50 to 75% of the level reached
by the ainS single mutant (Fig . 2),
indicating a synergistic effect of these two mutations, similar to
what has been shown for the effect of homologous systems on light
emission by V . harveyi (33) . Because squid
luminescence levels were similarly reduced (Fig . 1), the
levels of symbiotic light production per cell of the ainS and
the ainS luxS mutants are likely to be the same, suggesting
that colonization factors other than luminescence are cooperatively
regulated by these signals . Complementation of the ainS luxS
mutant with an intact luxS gene in trans restored
luminescence and colonization to the levels of an ainS mutant,
indicating that the combined effect is due to a mutation in luxS
and not to an unrelated defect of this strain (data not shown) . When
squid were colonized with an ainS luxS luxO triple mutant,
colonization levels were similar to wild type (Fig . 2) .
The latter result might be solely due to the reversal of the ainS
phenotype by the luxO mutation, thus restoring the essentially
wild-type phenotype of a luxS mutant . However, because the
effect of a luxS mutation can only be detected in the absence
of AinS, suggesting a synergistic effect, and AinS has been shown to
operate through LuxO (24), it is possible that
LuxS regulates colonization gene expression through LuxO as well .
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FIG . 2 . Colonization competence of quorum-sensing mutants . Colonization
levels of the ainS mutant (A), luxS mutant (S), ainS
luxS mutant (A S), and ainS-luxS-luxO (A S O) mutant relative
to V . fischeri wild type (wt) were measured at 24 and 48 h
postinoculation . Each bar represents the mean value of 15 animals with
the associated standard errors . The experiment was conducted twice with
the same outcome.
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To ensure that the observed limitation in colonization level was not
a result of a general metabolic defect, we determined the growth
characteristics of the luxS mutant strains . The luxS
mutant exhibited both wild-type growth rate and yield in rich medium .
In contrast, the ainS luxS mutant displayed a wild-type growth
rate but was decreased in its final growth yield; however, this
decrease was comparable to that previously reported for the ainS
mutant (24) . Thus, the absence of a functional luxS
gene did not significantly impact the growth characteristics of
V . fischeri .
Mixed-inoculum colonization experiments were performed to determine
whether the luxS mutation would reduce the competitive competence
of V . fischeri . We found no detectable defect in the competitive
colonization ability of either the luxS mutant or the ainS luxS
mutant relative to their parent strains (data not shown) . Because
the ainS luxS mutant displayed a colonization defect (Fig.
2) one might expect to also observe this defect in
a mixed-inoculum experiment; however, because both LuxS and AinS
synthesize small molecules that will diffuse into the surrounding
environment (48), it is likely that the presence
of wild-type cells can complement the deficiency of the luxS
mutation .
LuxS and AinS signal synthesis during growth. To regulate
gene expression in a cell density-dependent manner, quorum-sensing
signals accumulate in the growing bacterial population until a
threshold concentration is reached that is sufficient for gene
induction (48) . To determine whether the synthesis
of either the V . fischeri LuxS signal or the AinS-derived C8-HSL
signal, which both positively influence luminescence (Table
3), correlates with light production, the levels of both
signal activities were determined during growth (Fig . 3) .
While the concentration of the C8-HSL signal increased over
2,000-fold during the course of the experiment, mirroring the
expression of luminescence in culture, AI-2 activity increased less
than 4-fold (from 40 to 150% that of the positive control) (Fig .
3) .
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FIG . 3 . Relationship between luminescence and quorum-sensing signal
activity during growth of V . fischeri in culture . The relative
level of LuxS signal activity (solid diamonds) in the culture
supernatant is given as a percentage of the level produced by the
positive control, an overnight V . harveyi BB152 culture (see
Materials and Methods) . The concentration of the AinS signal, C8-HSL
(solid circles), in the V . fischeri culture was determined with
synthetically produced C8-HSL as standard . Luminescence of the culture
(crosses) is presented for comparison . Shown is a representative
experiment; standard deviation bars are indicated.
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Transcriptional activity of luxS and ainS. The
transcriptional autoregulation of a quorum-sensing signal synthase
gene, as occurs in the V . fischeri lux system (15),
provides a mechanism to rapidly induce gene expression once a
threshold concentration of the signal is reached . To investigate
whether the expression of either ainS or luxS is similarly
autoregulated, we determined the relative transcriptional activities
of these two genes throughout culture growth by using lacZ
transcriptional fusions . The rate of ainS transcription
changed significantly during growth, increasing exponentially until
the culture reached an OD of approximately 2.0 (Fig . 4) .
This pattern coincided with the increase in both C8-HSL signal
production and luminescence (Fig . 3) . In contrast,
the rate of increase in luxS gene transcription was much lower
and did not change throughout the experiment (Fig . 4),
correlating with the relatively constant production of the signal
(Fig . 3) and consistent with a constitutive expression
of this gene .
|
FIG . 4 . Transcriptional activity of luxS and ainS in
culture . ß-Galactosidase activity of V . fischeri wild-type cells
carrying either a luxS::lacZ fusion (solid diamonds) or an
ainS::lacZ fusion (open diamonds) in trans on
low-copy-number plasmids pCL152 and pCL154, respectively, was measured
during growth . Shown are the cumulative data of three cultures; standard
deviation bars were smaller than the symbols.
|
|
To determine whether proteins involved in the three V . fischeri
quorum-sensing systems: lux (i.e., LuxR and LuxI), ain
(i.e., AinS, LuxO, and LitR), and/or LuxS, regulate transcription of
luxS and ainS, we measured the relative transcriptional
activity of these two genes in a variety of quorum-sensing mutants .
Because in several cases we were interested in the effect of the
presence of the genes on their own transcription, the lacZ
fusions had to be carried in trans . The inactivation of
neither of these genes influenced luxS transcription (Table
4), providing further evidence for a constitutive
transcription of this gene . In contrast, ainS gene
transcription was decreased almost 10-fold in an ainS mutant,
and transcription levels could be restored to wild-type levels either
by supplying C8-HSL exogenously or by introducing a luxO
mutation into the ainS mutant background (Table 4) .
These data are consistent with a model in which the ainS gene
induces its own transcription through the synthesis of the AinS
signal and this regulation involves inactivation of LuxO (Fig.
5) . A similarly decreased level of ainS
transcription was also observed in a litR mutant, but not in
either a luxR or a luxI mutant, implying that the
ain quorum-sensing system is autoregulated independently of the
lux system . Mutations in neither luxS nor luxO
changed transcription levels of ainS significantly (Table
4) .
| TABLE 4 . Transcriptional activity of V . fischeri luxS and ainS
|
|
|
FIG . 5 . Conceptual model for the regulation of luminescence and
colonization genes by V . fischeri LuxS and AinS . Arrows indicate
positive, inducing effects, and bars indicate negative, inhibitory ones .
(See Discussion for explanation.)
|
|
Previous studies have identified two acyl-HSL-based signaling systems
in V . fischeri, designated lux and ain (14,
24) . The activation of the lux system is
dependent on ain induction, thereby providing a genetic
mechanism to sequentially induce gene expression with increasing cell
density (24) . In this study, we investigated the
impact of a putative third system, based on the enzyme LuxS, on
luminescence and colonization ability in comparison to AinS . Our
results suggests that (i) V . fischeri LuxS synthesizes a
compound that is indistinguishable from V . harveyi AI-2; (ii)
both V . fischeri AinS and LuxS signals exert their regulatory
effects on gene expression through the same pathway, which is likely
to operate through LuxO (Fig . 5); and (iii) ainS
transcription and C8-HSL signal concentration are regulated by a
positive feedback loop, whereas rates of luxS transcription
and LuxS signal production appear to be relatively constant (Fig.
5) .
Regulation of luminescence and colonization gene expression by LuxS.
In V . harveyi, both the LuxM-derived 3-OH-C4-HSL and the LuxS-derived
AI-2 regulate the expression of luminescence and other gene
products through the inactivation of the transcriptional regulator
LuxO (3, 11, 33) .
Similarly, our results demonstrate that the inactivation of the V .
fischeri luxS gene causes a defect in luminescence expression in
culture and that this defect could be relieved by the mutational
inactivation of LuxO (Table 3) . Furthermore, while
a mutation in luxS did not affect colonization competence of
V . fischeri, introduction of a luxS mutation into an
ainS mutant background further decreased colonization levels
(Fig . 2) . These data, together with our previous finding that
the signal synthesized by the LuxM homolog, AinS, operates through
LuxO (24), suggest that these two systems regulate gene
expression synergistically through the same downstream LuxO-mediated
cascade (Fig . 5) that has been described in V .
harveyi (3) .
In contrast to V . harveyi (33), however, the effect
of the V . fischeri LuxS-synthesized signal on luminescence and
other colonization gene expression (Table 3)
appears to be considerably smaller than that of the AinS signal (24) .
These findings are similar to the results of a recent study on the
V . cholerae quorum-sensing circuit (30) . V .
cholerae possesses a regulatory cascade resembling that of V .
harveyi (and now V . fischeri), with at least two signal
inputs: the LuxS-derived AI-2 and a yet unidentified signal
synthesized by an enzyme designated CqsA . While a mutation in cqsA
abolished the ability of V . cholerae to express luminescence
from V . harveyi lux genes carried in trans, a mutation in luxS
did not have a significant effect . Similarly, the LuxO-regulated
phenotype of biofilm formation by V . cholerae is under the control
of CqsA, but the LuxS signal is largely dispensable (51) .
Taken together, these data suggest that although a regulatory circuit
involving LuxO appears to be conserved in Vibrio species (32),
the relative importance of each of the involved signals may
vary widely among bacterial species .
Regulation of LuxS and AinS signal production. We determined
the activity of the LuxS- and AinS-derived signals and estimated the
transcriptional activity of the signal synthase genes, luxS
and ainS, during growth in rich medium . Although AI-2 is
produced in a growth phase-dependent manner in several bacterial
species (6, 9, 21,
22, 42), the nutrient composition
of the medium and other physiological factors appear to impact
AI-2 production more than cell density (6, 19,
22, 43) . We did not investigate
the environmental conditions under which V . fischeri produces
AI-2, but instead chose growth conditions that resulted in a
>1,000-fold difference in luminescence output, a phenotype regulated
by luxS (Table 3) . Under these conditions,
LuxS signal concentration and luxS transcription did not
reflect the magnitude of change that occurred in bacterial
luminescence (Figs . 3 and 4) . Significantly,
even at cell densities that preceded luminescence induction (i.e., OD
of <0.5), both measures of LuxS activity were comparably high (Fig.
3 and 4), suggesting the absence
of a characteristic signal dose response . As expected by the
relatively constant transcription levels throughout growth (Fig.
4), luxS transcription apparently was not
affected by mutation of any of the known V . fischeri
quorum-sensing proteins (Table 4) .
In contrast, the patterns of both C8-HSL concentration and ainS
transcriptional activity correlated well with light emission;
i.e., both were highest at cell densities at which luminescence is
induced and reached saturation thereafter (Fig . 3 and
4) . Because the changes in both the rate of C8-HSL
signal production and the apparent transcriptional activity of
ainS correlated, it is likely that ainS transcription rate
directly determines signal concentration . The observation that
ainS transcription was decreased considerably in the absence of
C8-HSL (Table 4) suggests that the cell
density-dependent increase in C8-HSL concentration is accomplished by
an autoregulatory mechanism of the ainS gene . The inactivation
of the transcriptional regulator LitR decreased the activity of the
ainS transcriptional reporter as well, supporting the
hypothesis that LitR positively regulates ainS gene
transcription either directly or through another transcriptional
protein (Fig . 5) . The notion that C8-HSL activates a
phosphorelay cascade resulting in the inactivation of LuxO, a
negative regulator of litR transcription (24,
32), predicts that mutation of luxO should
result in increased levels of litR and, therefore, increased
levels of ainS . However, ainS reporter levels were
indistinguishable between the wild type and the luxO mutant
(Table 4) . While this result might suggest an
effect of ainS on litR that is independent of LuxO, a
simpler explanation is that the positive effect of LuxO on ainS
in this assay is below our detection levels . This idea is supported
by the observation that ainS reporter levels were
indistinguishable from those of the wild type when measured in an
ainS luxO mutant background (Table 4) . Mutations in
neither luxR nor luxI affected ainS gene
transcription, indicating that the regulation is independent of the
lux quorum-sensing system (Fig . 5) . Because
our data suggest that LuxS and AinS operate through the same pathway,
one would expect decreased ainS transcription levels in a
luxS mutant as well . However, ainS transcription levels
were indistinguishable in the luxS mutant and wild type (Table
4), providing additional evidence that the relative effect
of the LuxS signal in this regulatory cascade is much lower
than that of the AinS signal (Fig . 5) .
LuxS signal synthase or a metabolic enzyme? Since the
discovery of AI-2 activity in V . harveyi, the question of why
a bacterium would utilize two inputs into the same regulatory cascade
has led to much speculation . It was originally proposed that the
acyl-HSL signal senses an individual species' cell density, whereas
the nonspecific AI-2 senses the cumulative cell density of the
bacterial community (1) . The discovery that AI-2
signal production is dependent on the growth conditions rather than
cell density per se has led to the alternative hypothesis that AI-2
reflects a change in environmental conditions through a change in the
metabolic activity of the bacterial community (4,
43) . These findings, together with the fact that LuxS has
a role in central metabolism, led to the proposal that in most
bacteria AI-2 is not a specific signal but a metabolic by-product of
a common detoxifying pathway (49) . On the other hand, the
regulation by LuxS of niche-specific genes has been demonstrated
for several pathogens (50), suggesting that this signal
synthase has a specific role in host colonization . However,
colonization competence of luxS mutants has been investigated
in only a few bacterial species, and the observed defects were in
many cases either small or not detectable (28),
implying that other regulatory factors might be more important than
the LuxS signal .
Our study does not definitively determine the role of LuxS in
V . fischeri . The inactivation of luxS did not result in a growth
defect either in culture (data not shown) or in symbiosis (Fig .
2), suggesting that the absence of LuxS activity does not
significantly affect metabolic processes, at least under our
experimental conditions . Instead, our data demonstrate that a luxS
mutation has an effect on luminescence and that this effect can be
relieved by a luxO mutation (Table 3 and
Fig . 2), thereby providing evidence for a signal
function exerting its effect through a transduction cascade common in
Vibrio species . Although this putative signal alone did not
appear to be important for the symbiotic lifestyle of V . fischeri
cells in the environment of the squid light organ, inactivation of
luxS had a significant effect on colonization competence in an
ainS mutant background (Fig . 2) . Thus, one
might speculate that in environments in which the ain system
is not active, the AI-2 system becomes an important player in the
regulation of colonization factors . In addition to its monospecific
light organ associations, V . fischeri is part of the multispecies
bacterial community present in the enteric tracts of fishes and
marine invertebrates (20, 25,
36) . It is possible that the V . fischeri
AI-2 system in these associations is important and/or that AI-2
produced by other bacteria might have an impact on colonization
competence .
B . L . Bassler kindly provided V . harveyi reporter strains . D .
S . Millikan, P . M . Fidopiastis, and J . R . Graber provided helpful
comments on the manuscript . Integrated Genomics Inc., Chicago, made
V . fischeri ES114 genomic sequence information available .
This work was supported by the National Institutes of Health grant
RR12294 to E . G . Ruby and M . J . McFall-Ngai; National Science
Foundation grant IBN0211673 to M . J . McFall-Ngai and E . G . Ruby; and
a W . M . Keck Foundation grant to E . P . Greenberg, E . G . Ruby, M . J .
McFall-Ngai, and others .
* Corresponding author . Mailing address: Pacific Biomedical
Research Center, University of Hawaii at Manoa, 41 Ahui St., Honolulu, HI 96813 .
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