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Journal of Bacteriology, June 2004, p . 3814-3825, Vol . 186,
No . 12
Regulation of Hypercompetence in Legionella pneumophila
Jessica A . Sexton and Joseph P . Vogel*
Department of Molecular Microbiology, Washington University School of
Medicine, St . Louis, Missouri 63110
Received 31 December 2003/ Accepted 10 March 2004
Although many bacteria are known to be naturally competent for DNA
uptake, this ability varies dramatically between species and even
within a single species, some isolates display high levels of
competence while others seem to be completely nontransformable .
Surprisingly, many nontransformable bacterial strains appear to
encode components necessary for DNA uptake . We believe that many such
strains are actually competent but that this ability has been
overlooked because standard laboratory conditions are inappropriate
for competence induction . For example, most strains of the
gram-negative bacterium Legionella pneumophila are not
competent under normal laboratory conditions of aerobic growth at
37°C . However, it was previously reported that microaerophilic growth
at 37°C allows L . pneumophila serogroup 1 strain AA100
to be naturally transformed . Here we report that another L .
pneumophila serogroup 1 strain, Lp02, can also be transformed
under these conditions . Moreover, Lp02 can be induced to high levels
of competence by a second set of conditions, aerobic growth at 30°C .
In contrast to Lp02, AA100 is only minimally transformable at 30°C,
indicating that Lp02 is hypercompetent under these conditions . To
identify potential causes of hypercompetence, we isolated mutants of
AA100 that exhibited enhanced DNA uptake . Characterization of these
mutants revealed two genes, proQ and comR, that are
involved in regulating competence in L . pneumophila .
This approach, involving the isolation of hypercompetent mutants,
shows great promise as a method for identifying natural transformation
in bacterial species previously thought to be nontransformable .
The phenomenon of natural transformation, also known as competence,
is defined as the ability of bacteria to take up and stably maintain
exogenous DNA . This ability is prevalent in nature, as evidenced by
the description of natural competence in over 40 different bacterial
species, which are widely distributed among taxonomic and trophic
groups (reviewed in reference 31) . Although the
purpose of natural transformation in nature remains unknown, it has
been speculated to provide a means of genetic exchange, DNA repair,
and/or nutrient acquisition (31) .
The numerous examples of naturally transformable bacteria in the
environment suggest that competence is a widely conserved trait, and
yet, surprisingly, many bacterial species seem to lack this ability .
Even closely related strains within a competent species can exhibit
profound differences in the competence phenotype . For example,
examination of a worldwide collection of Pseudomonas stutzeri
strains revealed that less than one half were competent (45) .
In a similar analysis of Actinobacillus actinomycetemcomitans
strains, only 1 of 17 was found to be transformable (52) .
Curiously, many bacteria that do not appear to be competent are known
to encode components of DNA uptake machinery (9) .
It is possible that some of these strains contain only remnants of a
once-functional uptake apparatus . Alternatively, they may actually be
competent in the environment but have lost this ability due to
passage in the laboratory . Finally, bacterial strains fully capable
of natural transformation may only appear to be noncompetent
due to the use of inappropriate assay conditions .
Consistent with the latter possibility, the ability to take up DNA
is generally not constitutive but requires the development of a
specific, genetically programmed physiological state (13) .
Moreover, development of the competent state varies greatly
between organisms, making prediction of competence-inducing
conditions difficult . For example, in Streptococcus pneumoniae
competence is expressed transiently during the exponential phase of
growth, when nutrients are plentiful, and is repressed in stationary
phase (38, 48) . In contrast, competence in
Bacillus subtilis occurs in response to starvation and does
not become apparent until the late exponential phase of growth (29) .
In each of these gram-positive species, the regulation of competence
is mediated by quorum sensing (21, 46) .
Gram-negative species such as Neisseria gonorrhoeae,
Haemophilus influenzae, and Acinetobacter calcoaceticus
also display varied relationships between transformation and growth
phase but do not use quorum sensing to induce the competent state (5,
17, 31, 40) . From these
studies, it is clear that induction of competence is highly variable,
and for this reason many bacterial species capable of natural
transformation may have yet to be recognized as such .
The gram-negative bacterium Legionella pneumophila provides
an example of a competent species in which the transformable
phenotype remained undiscovered due to a requirement for unusual
inducing conditions . For over 20 years, L . pneumophila was not
believed to be naturally competent . Recently, however, it was
discovered that the L . pneumophila serogroup 1 strain AA100
can be transformed using microaerophilic growth at 37°C (47) .
In contrast, AA100 cannot be transformed using aerobic growth at
37°C, conditions normally used to culture L . pneumophila .
While investigating methods to induce competence in the laboratory
setting, we discovered that another L . pneumophila serogroup
1 strain, Lp02, displays an unusually high level of competence
at 30°C . The phenotype of enhanced competence, termed hypercompetence,
has been described previously for bacterial mutants with defects
in regulatory factors that increase or deregulate expression of
the competence regulon (24, 28,
33, 49, 53) .
Hypercompetence can also result from mutations in components of the
uptake machinery, as seen in P . stutzeri (18) .
Finally, hypercompetence can be induced indirectly: for example, an
H . influenzae mutant with an altered peptidoglycan
biosynthesis gene causes induction of the normal competence pathway (32) .
We demonstrate here that Lp02 exhibits a hypercompetence phenotype
at 30°C that is both growth phase and temperature regulated . In
addition, we were able to recapitulate the hypercompetent phenotype
in AA100 using mutagenesis and selection . Examination of AA100
hypercompetent mutant strains revealed two genes, proQ and
comR, that normally repress natural transformation in L .
pneumophila . The identification of highly transformable L .
pneumophila strains could provide a useful tool for rapid and
efficient genetic manipulation of this pathogen .
Bacterial strains and media. Bacterial strains are listed in
Table 1 . Strain AA100 is a streptomycin-resistant
derivative of an L . pneumophila serogroup 1 clinical isolate
(1) . Strain Lp02 (thyA hsdR rpsL) is a derivative
of the L . pneumophila serogroup 1 clinical isolate
Philadelphia-1 (3) . All L . pneumophila
strains were cultured on N-2-acetamido-2-aminoethanesulfonic
acid (ACES)-buffered charcoal yeast extract agar (CYE) or in
ACES-buffered yeast extract broth (AYE) as described previously (15,
16) . Lp02 and Lp02 derivatives were cultured on CYE or
AYE supplemented with 100 µg of thymidine/ml . Kanamycin,
chloramphenicol, and gentamicin were used at 30, 5, and 6.5 µg/ml,
respectively .
| TABLE 1 . Bacterial strains and plasmids
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Strain and plasmid construction. Plasmids for natural
competence reporter systems were built by first cloning a region of
the Lp02 chromosome into pBluescript II KS+ to make
pJB955, then introducing drug resistance cassettes into the center of
the pJB955 insert . Plasmid pJB955 contains a 3.2-kb HincII/EcoRI
fragment of DNA adjacent to the dot/icm region II cloned into
the HincII/EcoRI sites of pBluescript II KS+ . Natural
competence reporter constructs pJB957, pJB964, and pJB1389 are pJB955
derivatives with Kanr, Cmr, or Gentr cassettes
(respectively) cloned into a HindIII site in the pJB955 insert .
Complementary strains were constructed by naturally transforming the
wild-type L . pneumophila strain Lp02 with reporter
plasmid pJB957 or pJB964 . This resulted in strains with a Kanr or Cmr
cassette inserted on the chromosome in the HindIII site adjacent to
dot/icm region II . The Kanr and Cmr strains created
were designated JV1103 and JV1160, respectively, and their phenotypes
were confirmed by Southern blotting .
The cloning vector pJB1653, used to create proQ and comR
complementing clones, is a Gentr derivative of the RSF1010
cloning vector pJB908 (43) . First, the pJB908
polylinker HindIII site was replaced with a NotI site, creating
plasmid pJB1301 . Plasmid pJB1301 was then digested with NotI, the
cohesive ends were filled in using Klenow polymerase, and the Gentr
cassette from plasmid p34S-Gm (12) was cloned into
this site on a SmaI fragment to make plasmid pJB1653 . pJB1659,
pJB1661, pJB1663, and pJB1665 complementing clones were created as
follows: the proQ or comR open reading frames were PCR
amplified from chromosomal DNA of the appropriate strain with primers
containing BamHI or SalI restriction sites . Primers were as follows:
proQ, 5'-CCCGGATCCGACTAAACACAATAAGGGTACC; proQ,
3'-CCCGTCGACGCATTTACTCTGTTGTTTCC; comR, 5'-CCCGGATCCCTTTGCTACACTTTTGCC;
and comR, 3'-CCCGTCGACTTACTCTACGTTCCTTGCG . The resulting PCR
product was digested with BamHI and SalI, cloned into the BamHI/SalI
sites of pJB1653, and confirmed by sequencing .
Plasmids used to assay the length of DNA required for homologous
recombination, pJB1199, pJB1517, and pJB1519, were created in a
similar fashion as those described above . BamHI and SalI engineered
primers were used to PCR amplify the Kanr cassette from pJB957
with 80, 250, or 500 bp of L . pneumophila chromosomal DNA
flanking either side . The resulting PCR product was digested with
BamHI and SalI and cloned into the BamHI/SalI sites of the vector
pBluescript II KS+ or pWSK29 (51) . This
produced a series of plasmids containing a Kanr cassette
flanked by variable lengths of L . pneumophila Lp02 DNA .
Plate transformation assays. A single colony was patched
onto CYE and grown at 37°C for 2 days . Bacteria from this patch were
used to make a second, dime-sized patch on CYE, to which DNA
(typically 1 µg) resuspended in a 10-µl volume of sterile water was
immediately added . DNA was carefully spread over the entire surface
of the patch, and it was incubated at 30°C for 48 h . The entire
patch was then resuspended in 1 ml of sterile water, and dilutions
were plated on media selective for transformants versus nonselective
media to obtain counts of transformed and total viable cells .
The transformation frequency represents the total number of natural
competence transformants divided by the total number of viable cells
in a given transformation patch .
Where the experimental temperature was varied, secondary patches
were incubated in the presence of 200 ng of plasmid DNA at 30, 34,
and 37°C for 2 days or at 26°C for 5 days and cells were then
resuspended and plated as described above . For the plate photograph,
cell density was normalized to an optical density at 600 nm (OD600)
of 1.0 and 10 µl of a 1/10 dilution was plated on selective media .
Where the length of flanking DNA was varied, cells were transformed
with 1 µg of DNA fragment alone or 1 µg of fragment contained in a
plasmid .
Liquid transformation assays. To assess transformation
frequency versus growth phase, a 25-ml starter culture was grown to
stationary phase at 30°C with low-speed shaking (100 rpm) and then
back-diluted into 500 ml of AYE to an OD600 of 0.02 .
Aliquots from this culture were periodically assayed for
transformation frequency as follows: 1 ml of culture was removed,
transferred to a test tube containing 1 µg of plasmid DNA, and
incubated at 30°C with shaking for 2 h . Dilutions were then plated on
media with and without antibiotics to obtain counts of transformed
and total viable cells . Transformation frequency represents the total
number of natural competence transformants divided by the total
number of viable cells in a given test tube .
To assess the kinetics of DNA uptake, 1-ml aliquots were removed
from an exponential-phase culture (grown at 30°C with shaking),
exposed to 1 µg of DNA for various lengths of time, and then
incubated with DNase I (to 0.1 mg/ml) and MgCl2 (10 mM
final concentration) at 37°C for 15 min and plated as described
above . This amount of DNase was 100-fold in excess of what was
sufficient to degrade 1 µg of plasmid DNA in the absence of cells .
To assess the effects of conditioned media, nutrient availability,
and pH on transformation frequency, 1-ml aliquots were removed from
an exponential-phase culture (grown at 30°C with shaking), gently
pelleted, resuspended in various media, and further incubated for 2 h
at 30°C with shaking . One microgram of DNA was added, and cells were
incubated for an additional 2 h (30°C with shaking) and plated as
described above . Addition of nutrients to conditioned media was
accomplished by supplementing them with 1/10 volume of 100-mg/ml
yeast extract .
To compare transformation frequencies between L . pneumophila
strains, cells from a 2-day 37°C patch were inoculated into 25
ml of AYE, to an OD600 of 0.02 . One microgram of DNA was
added, and cells were cultured at 30°C with low-speed shaking (100
rpm) to the late stationary phase of growth (68 h) and then plated to
obtain counts of transformants and of viable cells . Transformation
frequencies were calculated as described above .
Isolation of hypercompetent AA100 mutants. Transposon
mutagenesis of strain AA100 was accomplished using plasmid pJK211-2,
which has a temperature-sensitive origin of replication and harbors a
mini-Tn10 transposon containing a Kanr cassette and
an R6K origin of replication . Kanr colonies (16,000) from
a single transposition reaction were collected into 10 pools . Cells
from each pool were resuspended and mixed with 12 µg of pJB964 (Cmr)
DNA, spotted onto CYE, and incubated at 30°C for 48 h . Bacteria were
then resuspended in sterile water and plated to select for Cmr
transformants .
After isolation and confirmation of hypercompetent mutants, the
location of the mini-Tn10 insertion was determined by recovering
the transposon and its flanking chromosomal DNA as a plasmid
(as follows) and then sequencing the flanking regions . Chromosomal
DNA from a transposon mutant was digested with restriction endonucleases
that do not recognize sites within the transposon . Digested DNA
was then circularized via ligation and electroporated into
Escherichia coli strain DH5 :: pir .
Transformed bacteria containing DNA with the mini-Tn10
transposon were selected for, as the R6K origin contained within the
transposon allowed replication of these circularized fragments as
plasmids, and the kanamycin resistance marker on the transposon
allowed a direct selection for such plasmids . Recovered plasmids were
sequenced using primers that hybridized to the ends of the
transposon .
Optimized protocol for transforming L . pneumophila
strain Lp02. Based on the conditions tested in this paper, we recommend
the following protocol when introducing DNA into Lp02 by natural
transformation . First, make a dime-sized patch on a CYE-thymidine
plate from a single fresh colony of Lp02 . Add 1 µg of plasmid
DNA or 1 µg of chromosomal DNA in 10 µl of water or Tris-EDTA to the
freshly patched strain . The transforming plasmids should contain at
least 500 bp of Lp02 DNA flanking a selectable marker (1 kb total) .
Incubate the transformation reaction mixture at 30°C for 48 h and
then plate it on selective media to isolate transformed cells .
Typically, one can obtain approximately 105 transformants
per µg of plasmid DNA (using 500 bp of flanking DNA) and 104
transformants per µg of chromosomal DNA .
Competence in L . pneumophila strain Lp02 is temperature
dependent. L . pneumophila was not believed to be
naturally competent until recently, when transformation was described
for the serogroup 1 strain AA100 (47) .
Transformation of this strain was found to be dependent upon
microaerophilic growth, a condition not normally used to culture L.
pneumophila, which may explain why competence went undetected
for over 20 years (47) . In addition to AA100, a
number of laboratories use derivatives of L . pneumophila
Philadelphia-1, a strain not previously described as competent .
While determining whether Philadelphia-1 derivatives could be
transformed using the conditions described for AA100, we discovered
that the wild-type laboratory strain Lp02 was able to incorporate a
marker at efficiencies comparable to those previously reported for
AA100 (data not shown) .
With the goals of facilitating genetic screens and enabling
high-throughput genomic analysis using natural transformation, we
reexamined the published transformation protocol in order to
potentially improve its efficiency . First, we generated a set of
reporter plasmids and Lp02-derived strains with which to easily assay
transformation . The reporter plasmids contained several kilobases of
Lp02 DNA interrupted with a drug resistance marker that could be
selected for in L . pneumophila (Fig . 1A) .
The reporter strains contained an insertion with a different
drug resistance marker in the corresponding region of the chromosome
(Fig . 1B) . The site of insertion is in a presumably neutral
location immediately downstream of the housekeeping gene purH,
well upstream of the virulence gene dotU (44,
50) . This system of reporters allowed DNA
transformation to be assayed not only by uptake of the marker on the
plasmid but also by the concomitant loss of the linked chromosomal
drug marker .
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FIG . 1 . Reporter plasmids and strains used to assay Lp02 competence . (A)
Reporter plasmids used for transforming L . pneumophila
were constructed by first cloning a 3-kb piece of L .
pneumophila DNA into pBluescript II KS+ to generate
plasmid pJB955 . Three pJB955 derivatives (pJB1389, pJB964, and pJB957)
were constructed by cloning a gentamicin, chloramphenicol, or kanamycin
resistance cassette, respectively, into the unique HindIII site in the
3-kb insert . (B) Two Lp02-derived reporter strains were used to assay
natural competence . JV1103, a Cmr-marked version of Lp02, was
constructed by natural transformation using plasmid pJB964 . JV1160, a
Kanr-marked version of Lp02, was constructed by natural
transformation using plasmid pJB957 . With these strains and plasmids,
successful recombination can be assessed not only by gain of a drug
resistance marker from the transforming reporter plasmid but also by
loss of a drug resistance marker from the reporter strain.
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Using these reporter plasmids and strains, we attempted to develop an
assay that would be easy to perform and would potentially yield a
higher overall frequency of transformation . We made several changes
from the published protocol based on the following observations from
the literature . First, maximal expression of the L .
pneumophila type IV pilus biogenesis genes, which are required
for natural competence, occurs at 30°C (30) .
Second, many competent species can be transformed on a solid surface
rather than in liquid broth, making manipulations simpler and less
prone to contamination . Using these observations, we developed a
plate assay for Lp02 transformation wherein the Kanr
reporter plasmid pJB957 was mixed with a small amount of the Cmr-marked
Lp02 strain JV1103 and incubated for 2 days before transformants were
selected for on media containing kanamycin .
To optimize this protocol, identical transformation reactions were
performed at various temperatures for several days until a patch of
growth was apparent . The cells were swabbed into water, serially
diluted, and plated on media selective for the reporter plasmid as
well as nonselective media to determine total numbers of bacteria . We
found that the Cmr Lp02 derivative strain JV1103 could be
transformed with 200 ng of the Kanr reporter plasmid
pJB957 at rates approaching 1 transformant per 1,000 total cells
(Fig . 2), which was equivalent to
107
transformants per µg of DNA . This level of transformation was
approximately 100-fold higher than what Stone and Abu Kwaik found for
strain AA100 (47) or what we obtained for strain
Lp02 using their published protocol (data not shown) . We found that
transformation of Lp02 required a temperature between 26 and 34°C,
with maximal transformation occurring at 26°C (Fig . 2) .
Reactions at 37°C yielded no Kanr transformants, similar
to assays performed in the absence of transforming DNA . Because L.
pneumophila growth at 30°C is more than twice as fast as
growth at 26°C, assays were henceforth performed at 30°C .
Transformation at this temperature occurred with high fidelity, since
97% of the transformants were the result of homologous recombination
at the intended locus resulting in gene replacement . These results
suggest that transformation of the L . pneumophila strain
Lp02 occurs with high fidelity and is regulated by temperature,
consistent with the known temperature regulation of L .
pneumophila type IV pilus expression .
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FIG . 2 . Natural transformation of Lp02 is temperature dependent . (A)
Transformation frequency as a function of growth temperature . L.
pneumophila reporter strain JV1103 was grown on solid medium at
26, 30, 34, and 37°C in the presence of 200 ng of DNA from the reporter
construct pJB957 (Kanr) . After 48 h for the 30, 34, and 37°C
samples or 120 h for the 26°C sample, bacteria were plated on selective
media versus nonselective media in order to determine the number of Kanr
transformants in the total cell population . The limit of detection for
transformation frequency was 10–9; error bars indicate
standard deviations . (B) Plate photograph of Kanr L.
pneumophila transformants . Approximately 106 cells
from each transformation reaction represented in panel A were plated on
media containing kanamycin.
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Characterization of competence in strain Lp02: DNA source and minimum
length of homology. Previously it was shown that AA100 could be
transformed both by L . pneumophila chromosomal DNA and
by L . pneumophila DNA contained on a plasmid (47) .
To determine if the 30°C plate transformation assay was comparable in
this regard, the effect of DNA source and quantity on the
transformation frequency of Lp02 was examined . Similar to AA100, Lp02
could be transformed with either chromosomal DNA or plasmid DNA . For
both plasmid and chromosomal DNA, a linear relationship between DNA
quantity and transformation frequency was observed (Fig.
3), with average values of 3
x 107 transformants per µg of
plasmid DNA and 4 x 104
transformants per µg of chromosomal DNA . Transformants could be
detected using as little as 10 pg of plasmid pJB957, and frequencies
of up to 1 in 100 were obtainable with 10 µg of plasmid DNA (Fig.
3A) . Interestingly, this amount of plasmid DNA did
not appear to be saturating . Similarly, as much as 30 µg of
chromosomal DNA from the Kanr strain JV1160 was not
sufficient to saturate the reaction (Fig . 3B) . Since
comparison of the same mass of plasmid and chromosomal DNA was
equivalent to using a 1,000-fold molar excess of plasmid DNA, the
overall transformation frequencies for plasmid and chromosomal DNA
are actually quite similar . Therefore, L . pneumophila
is able to take up the two substrates with approximately equal
efficiencies .
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FIG . 3 . The frequency of Lp02 transformation is dependent on DNA source
and quantity . (A) Transformation frequency as a function of plasmid DNA
quantity . Reporter strain JV1103 was grown on solid media at 30°C in the
presence of various quantities of pJB957 (Kanr) plasmid DNA .
After 48 h, bacteria were plated on selective media versus nonselective
media in order to determine the number of kanamycin-resistant
transformants in the total cell population . (B) Transformation frequency
as a function of chromosomal DNA quantity . Transformation was assayed as
in panel A using JV1160 (Kanr) chromosomal DNA instead of
plasmid DNA . The limit of detection for transformation frequency was 10–9;
error bars indicate standard deviations.
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A second predicted parameter of transformation is the length of DNA
available for homologous recombination . In order to identify the
minimum length of homologous DNA sufficient for transformation via
natural competence, a series of constructs was made that contained
various amounts of L . pneumophila DNA flanking a selectable
marker (Kanr) . We were unable to detect transformation with
linear DNA fragments containing 80 or 250 bp of flanking homologous
sequence but could detect transformation with linear fragments
containing 500 or 1,500 bp of flanking sequence (Fig . 4) . When
the DNA fragments were present on a closed circular plasmid,
transformants were then obtainable with only 250 bp of flanking
sequence . In addition, the use of circular rather than linear DNA
increased the overall frequency of transformation 10- to 100-fold
when 500 or 1,000 bp of flanking sequence was used (Fig.
4), presumably due to increased protection of the circular
form from degradation .
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FIG . 4 . The frequency of Lp02 transformation is dependent on the amount
of homologous DNA available for recombination . The figure shows
transformation frequency as a function of the length of homologous DNA
flanking a selectable marker . Reporter strain JV1103 was grown on solid
media at 30°C in the presence of 1 µg of a DNA fragment consisting of a
Kanr marker flanked by 80, 250, 500, or 1,500 bp of L.
pneumophila DNA on either side . Fragments were used as linear
molecules (black bars) or were present as part of a plasmid (gray bars) .
After 48 h, bacteria were plated on selective media versus nonselective
media in order to determine the number of kanamycin-resistant
transformants in the total cell population . The limit of detection for
transformation frequency was 10–9; error bars indicate
standard deviations.
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Characterization of competence in strain Lp02: kinetics of DNA uptake.
Another characteristic of natural competence is that uptake of DNA is
thought to occur rapidly . DNA is first bound to the bacterial cell
and then transported across the cell wall into the cytoplasm, where
one strand is integrated onto the bacterial chromosome (20,
25) . Because incoming DNA is converted into a
DNase-protected state prior to integration, the rate of uptake can be
easily measured . To assess the rapidity with which Lp02 can bind and
protect transforming DNA, we switched to a 30°C liquid assay where a
broth-grown exponential JV1103 culture was incubated with the
reporter plasmid pJB957 for various amounts of time . The reaction was
terminated by addition of DNase I, which cleaves any free,
unprotected DNA (see Materials and Methods) . DNA uptake into JV1103
was extremely rapid since addition of DNase immediately after
exposure to DNA still resulted in detectable transformants (Fig.
5) . As expected, levels of transformation increased
linearly with time of exposure to DNA .
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FIG . 5 . Kinetics of transformation in a broth assay . The figure shows
transformation frequency as a function of time . Reporter strain JV1103
was grown in AYE at 30°C with low-speed shaking to early exponential
phase . One-milliliter aliquots were removed, and 1 µg of reporter
construct pJB957 (Kanr) DNA was added for 0, 5, 10, 20, 40,
60, or 120 min, followed by a 15-min incubation at 37°C with DNase I at
0.1 mg/ml . Bacteria were plated on selective media in order to determine
the number of kanamycin-resistant transformants in the total cell
population . The limit of detection for transformation frequency was 10–8;
error bars indicate standard deviations.
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Characterization of competence in strain Lp02: growth phase regulation.
To further understand the requirements for transformation of Lp02 at
30°C, we tested whether the growth phase of the bacteria was
important . A relationship between transformation frequency and growth
phase has been described for many naturally competent bacteria (4,
37, 39, 48) . To broadly
assess whether such a relationship exists in L . pneumophila,
we performed a variation on the standard plate assay, letting the
bacteria grow at 30°C for 24 to 96 h before adding pJB957 DNA for
4 h followed by plating on selective media . Typically, L .
pneumophila streaked heavily onto a plate will form a light patch
after 24 h of incubation that roughly corresponds to an exponentially
growing culture . In contrast, 48 h of growth will result in a
dense patch that is close to saturation . By varying the time prior to
addition of DNA, we observed that a 24-h patch could be transformed
several logs more efficiently than a 48-h patch . In contrast,
transformation was not detectable when DNA was added to a 72- or a
96-h patch (Fig . 6A) . Thus, competence for DNA
uptake on plates appears to occur during early rather than late
stages of L . pneumophila growth .
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FIG . 6 . The frequency of Lp02 transformation is dependent on bacterial
growth phase . (A) Transformation frequency as a function of patch age .
Reporter strain JV1103 was grown on solid media at 30°C for 24, 48, 72,
or 96 h . One microgram of reporter construct pJB957 (Kanr)
DNA was added and incubated for an additional 4 h, and then cells were
plated on selective versus nonselective media in order to determine the
number of kanamycin-resistant transformants in the total cell
population . The limit of detection for transformation frequency was 10–9;
error bars indicate standard deviations . (B) Transformation frequency
and growth phase as a function of time . Reporter strain JV1103 was grown
to stationary phase, back-diluted into fresh AYET medium, and cultured
at 30°C with gentle shaking to stationary phase . Periodically, 1-ml
aliquots were removed, the optical density was measured, and a portion
of the cells were incubated for 2 h with 1 µg of reporter construct
pJB957 DNA . These bacteria were then plated on selective versus
nonselective media in order to determine the number of transformants in
the total cell population . The optical density of the culture at a given
time is indicated by open squares connected by a gray line, and the
scale is shown on the right-hand y axis . The log transformation
frequency of the culture at a given time is indicated by filled squares
connected by a black line, and the scale is shown on the left-hand y
axis . The limit of detection for transformation frequency was 10–8;
error bars indicate standard deviations.
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To gain a more precise representation of the relationship between
growth phase and transformation frequency, assays were performed
using a liquid culture . Fresh medium was inoculated with cells from a
stationary-phase culture of JV1103 and incubated at 30°C with gentle
shaking . Periodically, cells were removed, the optical density of the
culture was measured, and 1 µg of DNA was added . The cells and DNA
were incubated for 2 h at 30°C with shaking prior to plating on
selective medium to assay competence . Consistent with the previous
experiment, the frequency of transformation steadily increased during
the early exponential phase of growth, peaking at mid-exponential
phase . It then dropped precipitously, decreasing to below detectable
limits upon entrance into stationary phase (Fig . 6B) .
Thus, Lp02 competence is not only temperature but also growth phase
regulated in both the plate and liquid assays .
Growth phase regulation of natural competence in Lp02 is not due to
quorum sensing. Lp02 is maximally competent during early exponential
phase and completely nontransformable in late exponential and
stationary phase . This growth phase regulation would be consistent
with a quorum sensing mechanism, which is commonly used by
microorganisms . For example, B . subtilis and S.
pneumoniae regulate competence in a growth phase-dependent
manner by sensing the presence of secreted peptide pheromones in the
medium (21, 46) . To determine
if L . pneumophila is regulating competence via quorum sensing,
cells were removed from an exponential-phase liquid culture,
gently pelleted, resuspended in fresh medium or in conditioned medium
from a stationary-phase JV1103 culture, and exposed to pJB957 DNA and
the transformation frequency was determined . Addition of fresh medium
had no effect on the transformability of exponential cells, whereas
addition of conditioned medium completely abolished transformation,
consistent with the presence of a factor used for quorum sensing
(Fig . 7A) .
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FIG . 7 . Frequency of transformation versus pH and nutrient availability .
(A) Transformation frequency as a function of medium source . Repression
of competence by conditioned media can be reversed by addition of
nutrients and adjustment of pH . Reporter strain JV1103 was grown in AYET
at 30°C with shaking to early exponential phase . One-milliliter aliquots
were removed, and cells were pelleted and resuspended in 1 ml of the
original medium (pH 6.8), fresh medium (pH 6.8), conditioned medium (pH
7.2), conditioned medium with the pH adjusted (pH 6.8), conditioned
medium supplemented with nutrients (pH 7.2), or conditioned medium with
the pH adjusted and supplemented with nutrients (pH 6.8) and incubated
at 30°C with shaking for 2 h . One microgram of pJB957 (Kanr)
DNA was added, and cells were further incubated for 2 h . Bacteria were
plated on selective media in order to determine the number of
transformants in the total cell population . (B) Transformation frequency
as a function of medium pH . Strain JV1103 was grown in AYE at 30°C with
low-speed shaking to early exponential phase . One-milliliter aliquots
were removed, and cells were gently pelleted and resuspended in 1 ml of
AYET at pH 6.0, 6.3, 6.6, 6.9, 7.2, 7.5, 7.8, 8.1, or 9.0 or in
conditioned AYET (pH 7.4) and incubated at 30°C with shaking for 2 h .
One microgram of reporter construct pJB957 (Kanr) DNA was
added, and cells were further incubated for 2 h . Bacteria were plated on
selective media in order to determine the number of kanamycin-resistant
transformants in the total cell population . The limit of detection for
transformation frequency was 10–8; error bars indicate
standard deviations.
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However, the inhibitory effect of conditioned medium could also be
due to changes caused by bacterial growth . To examine whether pH
changes in the medium could alter the transformability of L.
pneumophila, cells were removed from an exponential-phase
liquid culture, gently pelleted, resuspended in fresh medium varying
from pH 6.0 to 9.0 for 2 h, and then assayed for competence . Normal
AYE-thymidine (AYET) is buffered to a pH of 6.9, and Lp02 was seen to
be maximally transformable at this pH (Fig . 7B) .
Not surprisingly, extreme pHs of above 8 or below 6.3 had a
pronounced inhibitory effect on transformation . However, conditioned
medium had an average pH of 7.4, and this pH was not significantly
inhibitory when fresh medium was used (Fig . 7B), suggesting
that changes in medium pH due to bacterial growth were not primarily
responsible for the inhibitory effect of conditioned medium .
Moreover, adjusting the pH of conditioned medium from 7.4 to 6.9 was
not sufficient to eliminate competence repression (Fig .
7A), suggesting the presence of another factor in conditioned
medium which regulates competence .
In addition to changes in pH, conditioned medium is significantly
different from fresh medium due to a depletion of nutrients . To
determine whether a decrease in nutrient availability might also
contribute to competence regulation, we exposed exponential-phase
bacteria to conditioned medium versus conditioned medium supplemented
with yeast extract (see Materials and Methods) . The addition of
nutrients greatly reduced the effects of conditioned medium on
competence, though it did not completely eliminate them (Fig .
7A) . However, when the pH of conditioned medium was also
adjusted, the frequency of transformation for bacteria exposed to
this medium was very similar to that of bacteria exposed to fresh
medium . Thus, growth phase-dependent regulation of competence
in L . pneumophila strain Lp02 is not due to the presence of
a secreted factor detected by quorum sensing . Instead, it is
most likely due to changes in nutrient availability and pH .
Lp02 is unique among several serogroup 1 strains in its ability to be
transformed on solid medium. To determine if the ability to be
transformed on plates at 30°C was specific to Lp02, a number of
commonly used L . pneumophila strains were examined
under these conditions . In contrast to our findings with strain Lp02,
no transformants could be detected with the serogroup 1 strain AA100
(Fig . 8B), even though it was previously shown to
be competent at 37°C under microaerophilic conditions (47) .
JR32, a strain closely related to Lp02, also did not appear to be
competent by the plate assay . Even L . pneumophila
Philadelphia-1, the progenitor strain for both Lp02 and JR32, was not
transformed via the plate assay (Fig . 8B) . Nevertheless,
each of these strains was capable of being transformed when
assayed for competence by a 30°C liquid assay (Fig . 8C),
although Philadelphia-1, JR32, and AA100 were transformed at
frequencies reduced by at least 10,000-fold compared to that for
Lp02 . Thus, strain Lp02 possesses enhanced transformability in these
assays and can be described as hypercompetent .
|
FIG . 8 . Lp02 is significantly more competent than other L .
pneumophila serogroup 1 strains . (A) Relationship among the three
commonly studied L . pneumophila serogroup 1 strains Lp02,
JR32, and AA100 . Strains Lp02 and JR32 are derivatives of the same
parent strain, L . pneumophila Philadelphia-1 . AA100 is a
derivative of an unrelated serogroup 1 strain, L . pneumophila
Wadsworth . (B) Transformation frequency (plate assay) as a function of
strain origin . Four L . pneumophila serogroup 1 strains
were assayed using the 30°C plate assay . Strains were grown on solid
media at 30°C in the presence of 1 µg of reporter construct pJB957 (Kanr)
plasmid DNA . After 48 h, bacteria were plated on selective versus
nonselective media in order to determine the number of
kanamycin-resistant transformants in the total cell population . The
limit of detection for transformation frequency was 10–9;
error bars indicate standard deviations . (C) Transformation frequency
(broth assay) as a function of strain origin . Four L .
pneumophila serogroup 1 strains were assayed using the 30°C liquid
assay . The four strains were inoculated into AYET broth to an OD600
of 0.02 and cultured at 30°C with low-speed shaking (100 rpm) in the
presence of 1 µg of reporter construct pJB957 (Kanr) plasmid
DNA . After 72 h, bacteria were plated on selective versus nonselective
media in order to determine the number of kanamycin-resistant
transformants in the total cell population . The limit of detection for
transformation frequency was 10–9; error bars indicate
standard deviations.
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Identification of regulators of competence. Since Lp02
originated from L . pneumophila Philadelphia-1, and
neither Philadelphia-1 nor its derivative JR32 displays the level of
competence that Lp02 does, we reasoned that the hypercompetence
phenotype might have been fortuitously acquired during the derivation
of Lp02 from Philadelphia-1 . Lp02 was generated by isolating three
independent mutations sequentially in L . pneumophila
Philadelphia-1 . These include spontaneous mutations conferring
resistance to streptomycin, a dependence on thymidine
supplementation, and a lack of a functional restriction-modification
system (3) . It is possible that Lp02 acquired
mutations in addition to the desired ones while the strain was being
passaged . For instance, Lp02 might have lost a factor that normally
regulates competence under laboratory conditions, resulting in the
hypercompetence phenotype .
To test this possibility, we attempted to identify an inhibitor of
natural competence by mutagenizing AA100 with a mini-Tn10
transposon and then selecting for mutant strains that exhibited
competence at 30°C on plates (see Materials and Methods) . By this
approach, two independent mutants, JV1729 and JV1727, were isolated
that rendered AA100 amenable to plate transformation although at
frequencies 100-fold lower than that of Lp02 (Fig . 9) .
The first mutant, JV1729, was found to contain an insertion in a gene
with homology to the proQ gene of E . coli . E .
coli ProQ has been proposed to be a regulator of the
osmoprotectant pump ProP (11, 26) .
The second mutant, JV1727, contained an insertion in a gene which
encodes a protein predicted to contain a helix-turn-helix, raising
the possibility that it might be a transcriptional regulator . We have
named this second gene comR, for competence regulator . In both
cases, the transposon insertions were solely responsible for the
hypercompetence phenotype, since movement of the insertion into an
unmutagenized version of AA100 recapitulated the hypercompetence
phenotype in the original strain (data not shown) .
|
FIG . 9 . Inactivation of proQ or comR induces competence of
strain AA100 . (A) Transformation frequency and complementation of strain
AA100 containing a proQ mutation . AA100 containing the empty
vector pJB1653 (AA100 + vector), AA100 proQ::mini-Tn10kan
(JV1729) containing the empty vector pJB1653 (Q– + vector),
JV1729 containing the AA100 proQ complementing clone pJB1659 (Q–
+ QAA100), and JV1729 containing the Lp02 proQ
complementing clone pJB1661 (Q– + QLp02) were
assayed for the ability to take up pJB964 (Cmr) DNA by the
30°C plate assay . (B) Transformation frequency and complementation of
strain AA100 containing a comR mutation . AA100 containing the
empty vector pJB1653 (AA100 + vector), AA100 comR::mini-Tn10kan
(JV1727) containing the empty vector pJB1653 (R– + vector),
JV1727 containing the AA100 comR complementing clone pJB1665 (R–
+ RAA100), and JV1727 containing the Lp02 comR
complementing clone pJB1663 (R– + RLp02), were
assayed for the ability to take up pJB964 DNA by the 30°C plate assay .
(C) Transformation frequency of strain Lp02 in the presence of proQ
complementing clones . Lp02 containing either the empty vector pJB1653
(Lp02 + vector), the AA100 proQ complementing clone pJB1659 (Lp02
+ QAA100), or the Lp02 proQ complementing clone
pJB1661 (Lp02 + QLp02) was assayed for the ability to take up
pJB964 DNA by the 30°C plate assay . (D) Transformation frequency of
strain Lp02 in the presence of comR complementing clones . Lp02
containing either the empty vector pJB1653 (Lp02 + vector), the AA100
comR complementing clone pJB1665 (Lp02 + RAA100), or the
Lp02 comR complementing clone pJB1663 (Lp02 + RLp02)
was assayed for the ability to take up pJB964 . In each transformation
reaction, bacteria were exposed to 1 µg of reporter plasmid DNA for 48 h
and then plated on selective versus nonselective media in order to
determine the number of chloramphenicol-resistant transformants in the
total cell population . The limit of detection for transformation
frequency was 10–9; error bars indicate standard deviations.
|
|
Comparison of AA100 and Lp02 proQ. As proQ
appears to be a repressor of the competent state in AA100, we
reasoned that Lp02 hypercompetence might be due to its inactivation .
To test whether the Lp02 proQ gene is functional, we
constructed proQ complementing clones from both Lp02 and AA100
DNA, where proQ gene expression is driven by an exogenous
promoter . Each clone was transformed into strain JV1729 (AA100
proQ::mini-Tn10kan) in order to check its ability to repress
competence . We found that the presence of either Lp02 or AA100
proQ resulted in nearly full repression of JV1729 competence,
indicating that each gene could complement the loss of proQ
and restore competence inhibition (Fig . 9A) . Thus, both Lp02
and AA100 proQ complementing clones appear to encode functional
proteins .
Although the Lp02 proQ gene can encode a functional protein
in our complementation studies, it is possible that Lp02 does not
express sufficient levels of ProQ . For example, Lp02 may contain a
proQ promoter mutation or may have lost a positive regulatory
factor . To determine if the presence of the proQ complementing
clones inhibits Lp02 hypercompetence, we introduced them into this
strain and assayed competence . In contrast to JV1729, complete loss
of Lp02 hypercompetence in the presence of either clone was not
observed (Fig . 9C), suggesting that hypercompetence
is not simply due to loss of ProQ activity .
Comparison of AA100 and Lp02 comR. Similar to the
case for proQ complementation, the comR insertion
strain JV1727 (AA100 comR::mini-Tn10kan) transformed with comR
from either Lp02 or AA100 exhibited full competence repression,
indicating that both comR complementing clones are functional
(Fig . 9B) . The presence of comR in strain Lp02 did not
fully repress its ability to take up DNA, indicating that Lp02
hypercompetence is not solely due to loss of comR (Fig.
9D) . However, a partial decrease in Lp02
transformation frequency was observed in the presence of both comR
complementing clones, consistent with a regulatory role for this gene
in both AA100 and Lp02 strains .
While examining the competence phenotype of the Philadelphia-1
derivative strain Lp02, we discovered that it displays hypercompetence
under certain laboratory conditions . Transformation experiments
were initially based on previous work demonstrating that a different
L . pneumophila serogroup 1 strain, AA100, was able to take up
DNA at 37°C under microaerophilic conditions (47) . By
varying the published protocol, we discovered that Lp02, in contrast
to AA100, was highly competent at 30°C with aerobic growth . In
an attempt to identify the genetic basis of hypercompetence, we
isolated mutant strains of AA100 that exhibit enhanced DNA uptake .
Characterization of these mutants revealed two genes, comR and
proQ, that repress competence in L . pneumophila .
One striking characteristic of Lp02 hypercompetence is the effect
of temperature . Transformation occurs during aerobic growth on agar
plates at 30°C, whereas no transformation is observed when the same
assay is performed at 37°C . This temperature dependence is consistent
with expression studies showing that genes encoding components of the
L . pneumophila type IV pilus, which is required for
transformation, are transcribed at 30 and not at 37°C (30,
47) . It is curious that the transformation assays
described by Stone and Abu Kwaik were performed at 37°C but clearly
depended on the presence of type IV pili (47) . A
likely explanation for this is that the microaerophilic conditions of
their assay induced pilus expression sufficient for transformation .
Thus, oxygen availability and temperature are two factors that appear
to regulate competence in L . pneumophila .
A linear relationship between plasmid DNA quantity and transformation
frequency was observed for both Lp02 and AA100 (47) .
Whereas we were unable to identify saturating amounts of DNA for Lp02
transformation, Stone and Abu Kwaik found that 8 µg or more was
sufficient to saturate AA100 transformation (47) . In
addition, we noted a correlation between transformation frequency
and the length of the DNA substrate . Successful Lp02 transformation
depended on the presence of at least 250 bp of flanking DNA and
increased proportionally with the length of DNA .
We also discovered that Lp02 competence appears to be controlled
by growth phase, with transformation being maximal during exponential
growth and completely absent by the beginning of stationary phase . A
number of other bacteria exhibit competence during exponential
growth, including N . gonorrhoeae, Deinococcus radiodurans,
Synechococcus species, and Chlorobium species (31) .
However, growth phase regulation of Lp02 competence most closely
resembles that of A . calcoaceticus, which is maximally
transformable in exponential phase and loses competence upon entry
into stationary phase (39) .
Repression of Lp02 competence during stationary phase results from
nutrient depletion and an increase in pH, as the inhibitory effect of
conditioned medium can be totally abolished by the addition of yeast
extract and lowering of the pH . These data suggest that L .
pneumophila does not rely on an extracellular signal molecule
such as a quorum sensing autoinducer to regulate the competent state .
Alternatively, as proposed for A . calcoaceticus,
control of L . pneumophila competence may be under a growth
phase-regulated promoter . Another striking example of growth phase
regulation in L . pneumophila is the induction of
virulence by entry into stationary phase (7,
19) . Hammer and Swanson have shown that the
stationary-phase induction of virulence traits can be mimicked by
artificial expression of the stringent response gene ppGpp synthetase
(relA) during exponential phase (19) . Furthermore,
they have shown that ppGpp production in L . pneumophila is
stimulated by conditions of nutrient depletion—the same conditions
seen to repress natural competence in this work . It will be
important to determine if relA expression might repress competence
and/or expression of the type IV pilus while inducing virulence .
An initial concern in using natural competence as a genetic tool
was the fidelity of the recombination event, particularly because the
transformation substrate was often uncut plasmid DNA . In B .
subtilis and S . pneumoniae, incoming substrate DNA
is cleaved, on average, into
13.5-
or 6-kb fragments (14, 36) of
which a single strand is transported across the bacterial membrane
while its complement is degraded (14, 27,
34) . Similar degradation is thought to occur in
the gram-negative species N . gonorrhoeae and H.
influenzae (8, 22), and it is likely
that L . pneumophila modifies incoming DNA in the same
fashion . Despite these modifications, however, reconstitution of
plasmids taken up by competence machinery has been shown to occur (2) .
Though none of the plasmid substrates used in these studies can
replicate in L . pneumophila, the possibility of
generating plasmid integrants was a concern . Another concern was the
possibility of spontaneous mutation resulting in a strain that might
be falsely classified as a transformant . To address these issues, we
developed a reporter system with which transformants could be quickly
and easily checked for the appropriate recombination event . By this
system, the percentage of true transformation for a range of
experiments was calculated and found to average 97% . These findings
are consistent with those of Stone and Abu Kwaik, who observed a
high percentage of homologous transformation with strain AA100
(47) . Judging from these results, it is reasonable to
conclude that the fidelity of L . pneumophila
transformation reactions is high and that the vast majority of
natural competence transformants are legitimate .
The discovery that Lp02 is hypercompetent at 30°C compared to its
progenitor strain Philadelphia-1 was surprising . The most likely
explanation for this observation is that Lp02 was altered during its
derivation and rendered hypercompetent . For example, it could have
sustained a mutation in a competence regulatory gene resulting in
up-regulation of an inducer of competence or loss of a repressor of
competence . We favor the latter model since it is more likely and
since Lp02 is already known to have sustained at least one deletion
during its derivation, resulting in loss of the lvh locus (6,
42) .
Based on this idea that competence is normally repressed in L.
pneumophila, we attempted to mimic the hypercompetence phenotype
of Lp02 in AA100 via gene disruption . The strain was mutagenized,
and hypercompetent mutants were selected for, resulting in the
identification of two potential L . pneumophila competence
regulator genes, comR and proQ . The comR gene is
predicted to encode a novel protein that contains a putative
helix-turn-helix motif but has no significant homologies by BLAST
search . The presence of a DNA binding motif suggests that this
protein may be a novel transcriptional regulator controlling
competence in L . pneumophila . The proQ gene
encodes a protein with homology to the E . coli ProQ
protein (26, 35), which functions as a
positive regulator on the solute transporter protein ProP (10,
11, 26, 35) . E .
coli ProP functions in osmoprotection by transporting certain
organic solutes such as proline and glycine betaine into cells
to maintain a balance of osmotic pressure (reviewed in reference
54) . In E . coli, proline uptake by ProP in
response to a hypotonic environment is greatly impaired in a proQ
mutant (10, 11, 26,
35) . The fact that disruption of the L .
pneumophila AA100 proQ homologue results in increased
transformation frequencies suggests a possible relationship between
osmolarity and competence regulation .
In order to determine if Lp02 hypercompetence was due to inactivation
of proQ, we first tested whether the Lp02 version of this gene
could complement the AA100 proQ mutant . The fact that the Lp02
proQ gene could complement indicates that it does not contain
a mutation that destroys its activity . Furthermore, expression
of proQ from either strain in Lp02 did not fully repress competence,
suggesting that Lp02 is not a proQ mutant . Similar to the case
with proQ, the comR gene from Lp02 could complement the
corresponding AA100 mutant but could not fully repress Lp02
competence, indicating that Lp02 is also not a comR mutant .
However, the presence of comR in Lp02 partially inhibited
transformation, consistent with its functioning as a competence
repressor . Thus, the hypercompetence phenotype of Lp02 does not
appear to be due solely to a lesion in one of these regulatory
factors and is instead likely caused by a mutation in some third, as
yet unidentified, factor .
Natural competence for DNA transformation is an intriguing phenomenon
which also has useful genetic applications . Considering that no
transducing phage have been discovered for Legionella species,
the addition of natural transformation to the genetic armament has
been very beneficial . The wild-type laboratory strain Lp02 can be
transformed very simply and efficiently, at rates of 107
transformants per µg of DNA . Although other commonly used L.
pneumophila strains are not naturally competent under the
conditions described here, inactivation of the proQ or comR
gene could provide an easy method for increasing the competence
of AA100, and possibly that of other L . pneumophila species .
Further study of strain Lp02 and proQ and comR is likely to
lend insight into the complex control pathways for expression
of the competent state . Finally, our findings provide further
evidence that the competent state is highly regulated and demonstrate
that hypercompetence can be easily induced as the result of a single
genetic lesion .
We thank Petra Levin, Patrick Bardill, and Carr Vincent for critical
analysis of the manuscript; Steve DeLira and Jennifer Miller for
construction of several plasmids and strains used in this study; and
James Kirby for the generous gift of the mini-Tn10 plasmid
pJK211-2 .
J . A . Sexton was supported by the Washington University, Department
of Internal Medicine, Infectious Diseases Training Grant #5 T32
AI07172-22 . J . P . Vogel was supported by the Whittaker Foundation,
the American Lung Association, and NIH grant AI48052-02 .
* Corresponding author . Mailing address: Department of
Molecular Microbiology, Washington University, Campus Box 8230, 660 S . Euclid
Ave., St . Louis, MO 63110 . Phone: (314) 747-1029 . Fax: (314) 362-3203 . E-mail: jvogel@borcim.wustl.edu.
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