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Journal of Bacteriology, June 2004, p . 4019-4024, Vol . 186,
No . 12
The
Escherichia coli tppB (ydgR) Gene Represents a New Class of
OmpR-Regulated Genes
Ee-Been Goh, Dominic F . Siino, and Michele M . Igo*
Section of Microbiology, Division of Biological Sciences, University of
California, Davis, Davis, California 95616
Received 1 December 2003/ Accepted 2 March 2004
The EnvZ/OmpR two-component regulatory system plays a critical role
in the Escherichia coli stress response . In this study, we
examined the expression of a new OmpR-regulated gene, ydgR .
Our results indicate that ydgR is equivalent to the Salmonella
enterica serovar Typhimurium tppB gene and represents a new
class of OmpR-regulated genes .
The EnvZ/OmpR two-component regulatory system plays a critical role
in the response of Escherichia coli to environmental stress
(for reviews, see references 2, 3,
5, 20, 23,
33 and 35) . The transmembrane
protein EnvZ is a histidine kinase that is thought to monitor changes
in environmental osmolarity . Following autophosphorylation, EnvZ
transfers its high-energy phosphoryl group to its cognate response
regulator, OmpR . Phosphorylation changes the conformation of OmpR and
stimulates the ability of OmpR to interact with specific sites
upstream of its target genes . Some of these target genes include
ompF, ompC, tppB, fadL, flhDC, and csgD (6,
8, 11, 38,
44) . Interestingly, EnvZ also possesses a phosphatase
activity that removes the phosphoryl group from the phosphorylated
form of OmpR (OmpR-P) . The interplay between the kinase and
phosphatase activities of EnvZ in response to environmental changes
is responsible for controlling the cellular level of OmpR-P (40) .
In this study, we examined the regulation of ydgR, a gene that
we identified as part of a large-scale DNA microarray project
aimed at discovering new members of the OmpR regulon . This gene was
also identified as an OmpR-regulated gene in a recent transcriptome
study of E . coli two-component regulatory systems (29) .
Based on its putative amino acid sequence, the ydgR gene is
predicted to encode a 500-amino-acid oligopeptide permease that
exhibits sequence similarity to proteins belonging to the POT
(proton-dependent oligopeptide transport) family of peptide
transporters (30, 31) . Early
studies by Higgins and Gibson identified three different peptide
permease systems in E . coli and Salmonella enterica
serovar Typhimurium (12) . One of the systems, the tripeptide
permease encoded by the tppB gene, was found to be
transcriptionally regulated by the EnvZ/OmpR regulatory system in
serovar Typhimurium (6, 7) . The
tppB gene is located at 27 min on the serovar Typhimurium
linkage map (7) . However, its precise location on the serovar
Typhimurium chromosome is not known because the tppB gene has
not been sequenced . The functional similarity between tppB and
ydgR, as well as the dependence of ydgR transcription on
OmpR observed in our DNA microarray experiments, led us to
hypothesize that ydgR is equivalent to the serovar Typhimurium
gene tppB .
To test this hypothesis, we isolated chromosomal DNA from the
serovar Typhimurium strain CH695, which carries the tppB16::Tn10
mutation (7) . The region containing the Tn10
insertion was amplified by inverse PCR using the two sets of primers
described by Nichols et al . (27), and the
nucleotide sequence of the junction was determined as described by
Ochman et al . (28) . DNA sequence analysis revealed
that the tppB16::Tn10 insertion mapped between
nucleotide positions 1527921 and 1527922 of the serovar Typhimurium
LT2 genome . This places the Tn10 insertion within the opening
reading frame designated ydgR in the serovar Typhimurium genome .
From this result, we established that the serovar Typhimurium
ydgR gene is tppB. Since the serovar Typhimurium ydgR amino
acid sequence exhibits 89% identity and 93% similarity to the
E . coli ydgR amino acid sequence, we conclude that the E . coli
ydgR gene is also tppB .
We next carried out an in-depth characterization of tppB and
compared its transcriptional regulation to that of ompF and
ompC . The ompF and ompC genes encode the outer
membrane porin proteins OmpF and OmpC, respectively, and are two of
the most studied targets of the EnvZ/OmpR regulatory system (20,
35) . OmpF predominates in the outer membrane at
low osmolarity, whereas OmpC predominates at high osmolarity .
Genetic, molecular, and biochemical experiments have established that
the differential expression of OmpF and OmpC is a direct consequence
of the cellular OmpR-P concentration and is dependent upon the way in
which OmpR-P interacts with regulatory elements located upstream of
these genes . Using similar techniques, we investigated how OmpR
and EnvZ regulate the transcription of tppB . To carry out this
analysis, we constructed a transcriptional fusion between the tppB
regulatory region and a lacZ reporter gene . This was accomplished
by cloning a 0.7-kb fragment that corresponds to nucleotide
positions 1710073 to 1710769 of the E . coli K-12 genome upstream
of the promoterless lacZ gene in the chloramphenicol-resistant
integration vector pTTW1 (T . T . Wei and M . M . Igo, unpublished
data) . The resulting plasmid, pDS3, was then integrated as a single
copy into the E . coli chromosome at the
attB site by using the method described by Platt et al . (32) .
This integration resulted in the tppB'-lacZ fusion
strain EG107, which served as the parental strain for all subsequent
strain constructions . EG107 is a derivative of MG1655, which contains
a single copy of the plasmid pDS3 at
attB, the lacIpo Z
(Mlu) mutation (36), and two markers that flank
the ompR and envZ genes, aroB– and malPQ::Tn10 .
P1-mediated generalized transductions were performed to introduce
various ompR and envZ alleles into the tppB'-lacZ
fusion strain EG107 (45), and the resulting strains
were subjected to ß-galactosidase assays (25) .
We began this analysis by examining the effect of three different
envZ mutations on the regulation pattern of tppB . These mutations
were chosen because they alter EnvZ functions that are predicted
to result in different cellular levels of OmpR-P (13,
14, 40) . We first investigated
the effect of the envZ473 mutation on tppB'-lacZ
expression (8) . This mutation results in the production
of a mutant protein that retains its kinase activity but loses
its phosphatase activity (K+ P–) and is predicted to cause
high cellular levels of OmpR-P . As shown in Fig . 1A, the
presence of the envZ473 mutation results in levels of tppB'-lacZ
fusion expression that are similar to wild-type levels . This result
suggests that increasing the cellular concentration of OmpR-P
does not result in an increase in tppB transcriptional activation .
We next studied the effect of the envZ::Tn10 mutation on
tppB transcription (46) . Cells containing this
null mutation do not contain any functional EnvZ protein . As a
result, OmpR will not be phosphorylated or dephosphorylated by EnvZ .
As shown in Fig . 1A, tppB'-lacZ
fusion expression is approximately threefold lower in the envZ
null strain than in the wild-type strain . This result supports the
idea that EnvZ plays an important role in stimulating the level of
tppB transcription . However, there is still significant
expression of the tppB'-lacZ fusion in the absence of
EnvZ . This expression could be due to the activation of tppB
transcription by the unphosphorylated form of OmpR . Alternatively,
this expression could be due to the low levels of OmpR-P produced by
nonpartner kinases or small molecule phosphodonors, such as acetyl
phosphate (14, 24) . To distinguish between
these possibilities, we examined the effect of the envZ343
mutation on tppB'-lacZ expression (14) .
This mutation results in the production of a mutant protein that
retains its phosphatase activity but loses its kinase activity (K–
P+) and is predicted to eliminate any residual OmpR-P in
the cell . As shown in Fig . 1A, the tppB'-lacZ
fusion expression is extremely low in the strain containing the
envZ343 mutation . In fact, the level of tppB'-lacZ
fusion expression is similar to that of the strain containing the
ompR101 null mutation (Fig . 1B) . Therefore,
based on our genetic analysis of tppB transcription, we conclude
that the activation of tppB transcription is dependent on OmpR-P
and that low cellular levels of OmpR-P are sufficient to activate
tppB transcription .
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FIG . 1 . Effects of various envZ and ompR mutations on
tppB transcription . ß-Galactosidase assays were performed on cells
grown to mid-exponential phase in Luria-Bertani broth, and the
ß-galactosidase activity is expressed in Miller units for strains
containing the indicated envZ (A) and ompR (B) alleles .
All strains were assayed in duplicate in at least three independent
experiments . The values represent averages of results for three
independent cultures, with the error bars corresponding to ±1 standard
deviation from the average result for the three independent cultures.
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We next examined the effect of the three different classes of ompR
mutations on tppB transcription . These mutations are genetically
defined based on the phenotypes that they confer on OmpF and
OmpC (35, 46) . The first mutation,
ompR101 (9), belongs to the OmpR1 class . This
class of mutations, which includes all null mutations of ompR,
results in no expression of OmpF or OmpC . As shown in Fig.
1B, tppB'-lacZ fusion expression is extremely
low in the strain containing the ompR101 mutation, confirming
that the activation of tppB transcription is dependent on OmpR .
The second mutation, ompR472 (8), belongs to the
OmpR2 class . This class of mutations results in constitutive
expression of OmpF but little expression of OmpC . In the strain
containing the ompR472 mutation, tppB'-lacZ
expression is approximately two- to threefold lower than that of the
wild-type strain (Fig . 1B) . The ompR472
mutation resulted in a Val-to-Met conversion at the 203rd amino acid
of the OmpR polypeptide chain (26) . DNase I
footprinting studies indicate that this change affects the binding of
OmpR at specific sites within the ompF and ompC
regulatory regions (26) and may also cause a defect in OmpR
phosphorylation (49) . Either of these properties could
account for the observed decrease in tppB transcription . The
third mutation, ompR107 (46), belongs to
the OmpR3 class . This class of mutations results in little expression
of OmpF but constitutive expression of OmpC . In the strain containing
the ompR107 mutation, tppB'-lacZ fusion
expression is approximately fourfold lower than in the wild-type
strain (Fig . 1B) . The ompR107 mutation resulted in
an Arg-to-Cys change at the 15th amino acid of the OmpR polypeptide
chain (41) . DNase I footprinting studies with the
OmpR36 mutant protein, which contains the same amino acid
substitution, suggest that this change does not affect the
DNA-binding pattern within the ompF and ompC regulatory
region (26) . Instead, like the envZ473
mutation, this amino acid change in OmpR results in a defect in the
dephosphorylation of OmpR-P and leads to an accumulation of OmpR-P in
the cell (1) . Therefore, we predicted that the
level of tppB'-lacZ production in the strain containing
the ompR107 mutation would be similar to that of the strain
containing the envZ473 (K+ P–) mutation . However,
this interpretation is not consistent with our results . The level
of production of the tppB'-lacZ fusion in the strain
containing the ompR107 mutation is significantly lower than
the levels observed in either the wild type or the strain containing
the envZ473 mutation (Fig . 1A) . The simplest
explanation for our results is that the OmpR107 mutant protein is not
just defective in the dephosphorylation of OmpR-P but is also
defective in either tppB transcriptional activation or DNA
binding at the tppB regulatory region . Thus, the biochemical
properties of the OmpR3 mutant proteins may be more complex than
originally thought .
The results presented in Fig . 1 indicate that the
transcriptional regulation of tppB is dependent on OmpR and
EnvZ . According to the current model, the EnvZ/OmpR two-component
system regulates the expression of ompF and ompC in
response to varying osmolarity (20,
35) . Changes in osmolarity alter the cellular OmpR-P concentration,
which in turn affects the transcription of these target genes .
Interestingly, not all genes regulated by OmpR and EnvZ seem to be
sensitive to osmotic change . One notable example is the serovar
Typhimurium tppB gene . Gibson et al . conducted studies on the
environmental regulation of this gene and showed that changes in
medium osmolarity do not significantly affect tppB
transcription (6) . Our analysis of the E . coli tppB
gene revealed a similar pattern of regulation . In this experiment, we
examined the effect of osmolarity on tppB transcription by
growing the tppB'-lacZ fusion strain in glycerol-MOPS
(morpholinepropanesulfonic acid) medium at either low (50 mM NaCl) or
high (300 mM NaCl) osmolarity as previously described (43)
and then harvesting these cells for ß-galactosidase analysis . As
shown in Table 1, cells grown at low osmolarity and
high osmolarity exhibit similar levels of tppB'-lacZ
fusion expression . Moreover, this expression is dependent on the
presence of OmpR . The fact that tppB is not osmoregulated
suggests that tppB transcription is not sensitive to changes
in the cellular OmpR-P concentration . Therefore, the low cellular
levels of OmpR-P present at low osmolarity are sufficient to activate
tppB transcription, and the elevated levels of OmpR-P present
at high osmolarity have little effect on the tppB
transcription level . This interpretation is supported by our
ß-galactosidase results with the various envZ mutations (Fig.
1A), which implied that once it reaches a certain
threshold, further increases in the cellular OmpR-P concentration do
not affect tppB transcription .
| TABLE 1 . Effects of different environmental stimuli on tppB'-lacZ
production
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In addition to the observation that tppB is not osmoregulated,
Gibson et al . (6) and Jamieson and Higgins (18)
reported that tppB transcription is strongly stimulated under
anaerobic conditions . Jamieson and Higgins also reported that the
anaerobic regulation of tppB occurs through an
OmpR-independent mechanism (19) and that the
magnitude of the change in tppB transcription was dependent on
the growth medium (6, 18) . To determine if
the transcription of the E . coli tppB gene shows a similar
pattern of regulation under anaerobic conditions, the strain
containing the tppB'-lacZ fusion was grown aerobically
and anaerobically in glucose-MOPS medium as described by Stewart and
Parales (47) and subjected to ß-galactosidase
analysis . As shown in Table 1, our results differ
from the results reported for the serovar Typhimurium tppB
gene in two ways . First, our results indicate that the regulation of
tppB under aerobic and anaerobic conditions is dependent on
OmpR (Table 1) . Second, we observe only a modest
two- to threefold increase in tppB'-lacZ fusion expression under
anaerobic conditions compared to expression under aerobic conditions
(Table 1) . It is possible that the modest effect of
anaerobiosis on tppB'-lacZ expression observed in our
studies is due to the medium conditions that we used . However, in a
recent E . coli DNA microarray study examining the effect of
anaerobiosis on global gene expression (42),
tppB was not identified as an anaerobically induced gene .
Therefore, anaerobiosis may not play as important a role in the
transcription of E . coli tppB as previously predicted based on
the studies of the serovar Typhimurium tppB gene .
A major conclusion of our studies with the tppB'-lacZ fusion
construct is that the transcriptional activation of tppB is
dependent on OmpR . To gain further insights into the mechanism
involved in the OmpR-dependent regulation of tppB, we examined
the interaction between OmpR and the E . coli tppB regulatory
region . To accomplish this, we carried out DNase I footprinting
experiments using the plasmid pDS1 . This plasmid contains the
sequences between 12 and 715 bp upstream of the predicted tppB
translational start codon . The plasmid DNA was linearized with XbaI
and radiolabeled on either the template or nontemplate strand . The
labeled fragment was then incubated with different concentrations of
purified OmpR, and the OmpR-DNA complexes were subjected to DNase I
footprinting analysis as previously described (15) .
The digested products were then separated and analyzed on a standard
8% DNA sequencing gel . Figure 2 shows the results
of the DNase I footprinting analysis for the tppB template
strand . As shown in Fig . 2A, OmpR protects a region
within the tppB regulatory region that is approximately 30 bp
in length . Based on the size of the protected region, it is likely
that the tppB regulatory region contains only a single
OmpR-binding site (4, 10, 15,
22) . Next, to examine the effect of OmpR
phosphorylation on the binding pattern, we included acetyl phosphate
in the DNase I reaction mixtures . As shown in Fig . 2B,
the binding of OmpR to the DNA is stimulated approximately twofold in
the presence of acetyl phosphate . This result, together with our
genetic analysis of tppB transcription, supports the idea that
the phosphorylation of OmpR plays an important role in the
transcriptional activation of tppB . The sequences protected by
OmpR on both the template and nontemplate strands are presented in
Fig . 2C .
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FIG . 2 . Identification of the OmpR-protected region at the tppB
regulatory region . A DNase I footprinting analysis was performed on the
template strand of the tppB regulatory region in the absence of
acetyl phosphate (A) or in the presence of 25 mM acetyl phosphate (B) .
The precise positions of the nucleotides protected by OmpR were
determined by comparison with the results of the Maxam-Gilbert G+A
cleavage reaction shown in lane 1 . OmpR was purified as previously
described (15) and used in the binding reactions at
the following concentrations: 0 µM (lane 2), 6.5 µM (lane 3), 3.3 µM
(lane 4), 1.6 µM (lane 5), 0.8 µM (lane 6), and 0.4 µM (lane 7) . (C) The
nucleotides protected by OmpR during DNase I footprinting analysis of
the nontemplate (upper) strand and the template (lower) strand of the
tppB regulatory region are indicated by the lines . Sequences
conserved among strong OmpR-binding sites are shaded in gray.
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Our DNase I footprinting analysis provides strong evidence that OmpR
binds to a specific site in the tppB regulatory region .
Examination of the region protected by OmpR revealed that it contains
a T-N-A-C-A sequence at the beginning of each half-site (Fig.
2C) . Variations of this sequence are present in many strong
OmpR-binding sites (10, 15,
20, 23, 34) .
Interestingly, computational approaches aimed at predicting
OmpR-regulated genes failed to identify any potential OmpR-binding
sites upstream of the tppB gene (37,
48) . Such computational approaches use the known binding
sites of a DNA-binding protein to establish a position-weight
matrix . Since only a small number of OmpR-binding sites were
available when these matrices were built, it is not surprising that
the tppB gene was missed in these early analyses . Therefore,
it is important to identify more OmpR-regulated genes and to define
their OmpR-binding sites . By including these additional sites when
building the OmpR consensus matrix, the reliability of these
computational approaches can be improved dramatically . This would
allow more accurate predictions of potential OmpR-regulated genes .
Finally, to determine the location of the OmpR-binding site
relative to the tppB promoter, we needed to identify the transcriptional
start site of tppB . To accomplish this, a primer extension analysis
was performed as described by Kingston (21) . A
-32P-labeled
primer that mapped between bases 30 and 49 downstream of the
predicted tppB start codon was hybridized to total RNA extracted
from the E . coli strain MG1655 . The resulting products of the
primer extension reaction were analyzed on a standard 8% DNA
sequencing gel . As shown in Fig . 3, a major band mapped to the
G residue located 102 bp upstream from the tppB start codon .
Two minor bands were also present on the gel, and the locations
of these bands are indicated in the figure . Based on the results
shown in Fig . 3, we predict that the G residue at nucleotide
1710695 in the E . coli K-12 chromosome is the major start site
of tppB transcription .
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FIG . 3 . Identification of the tppB transcriptional start site .
For this analysis, total RNA was extracted and purified from the E .
coli strain MG1655 using the protocol described at the URL
http://www.microarrays.org/pdfs/Total_RNA_from_Ecoli.pdf . Primer
extension analysis of tppB was then performed on the extracted
RNA with the primer (ydgRprimer3) that mapped between bases 30 and 49
downstream of the predicted tppB start codon . The arrow indicates
the position of the major primer extension product in the presence of 10
µg (lane 1) and 15 µg (lane 2) of total RNA . The asterisks indicate the
positions of two minor products . Another experiment using a second
primer that mapped between 27 and 47 bases upstream of the predicted
tppB start codon also gave the same three products . However, the two
minor products were more visible in this experiment (data not shown) .
Lanes A, T, G, and C show the results of the dideoxy sequencing reaction
of tppB with the same primer (ydgRprimer3).
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Examination of the region upstream of the transcription start site
revealed –35 and –10 elements that resemble a sigma-70 promoter (Fig.
4) . This places the OmpR-binding site immediately
upstream of the –35 element of the tppB promoter . At ompF
and ompC, the OmpR-binding sites required for transcriptional
activation are also located upstream of the –35 promoter element . The
binding of OmpR to these sites facilitates the interaction between
OmpR and the C-terminal domain of the
-subunit
of RNA polymerase and results in transcriptional activation (39) .
Based on these properties, OmpR has been classified as a class I
transcription factor (16, 17) . Given the
position of the OmpR-binding site relative to the identified
transcription start site of tppB, it is likely that OmpR
activates tppB transcription through a similar mechanism .
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FIG . 4 . Key regulatory elements of the tppB gene . The figure
shows sequences of the tppB nontemplate strand . The arrow labeled
+1 indicates the location of the major start site of transcription, and
the asterisks indicate the locations of the two minor products that were
present in our primer extension experiments . Based on the major start
site of transcription, a putative tppB promoter was mapped, and
the –35 and –10 elements of this promoter are highlighted with gray
shading . The squiggly line indicates the OmpR-protected region, which is
located approximately 30 to 60 nucleotides upstream of the
transcriptional start site . The box around the three nucleotides (GTG)
indicates the putative start codon of the tppB gene.
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The distinctive binding pattern of OmpR at the tppB regulatory
region provides further insights into why the transcriptional
regulation of tppB is not osmoregulated like that of ompF and
ompC . Our DNase I footprinting studies revealed that the tppB
regulatory region contains a single OmpR-binding site . In contrast,
the ompC regulatory region contains three OmpR-binding sites
and the ompF regulatory region contains four OmpR-binding sites
(20, 35) . According to the current
model, the presence of multiple sites with different affinities for
OmpR-P is responsible for the osmoregulation of ompF and
ompC . At low osmolarity, low cellular concentrations of OmpR-P
are present . These levels are sufficient for OmpR-P to bind to the
strong sites of ompF that are responsible for activating
ompF transcription . At high osmolarity, higher cellular levels of
OmpR-P are present . These higher levels result in the occupancy of
both strong and weak sites, which allows the activation of ompC
transcription and the repression of ompF transcription . In the
case of tppB, only a single OmpR-binding site is present . Our
experiments suggest that this site is occupied at low cellular OmpR-P
concentrations and remains occupied at high cellular OmpR-P levels .
As a result, the transcription of tppB is not sensitive to
changes in medium osmolarity .
Based on these distinctive characteristics, tppB may represent
a new class of OmpR-regulated gene . We are currently conducting
a series of DNA microarrays aimed at identifying new OmpR regulon
members . We predict that some of the identified genes will be
regulated through a single OmpR-binding site and that some of these
genes will not respond to changes in osmolarity . The identification
and characterization of new OmpR-regulated genes will be valuable for
uncovering the general mechanism by which OmpR controls the
transcription of its regulon members and for discovering the global
role of OmpR in the E . coli stress response .
We thank Andrei Lita and Alex Chern for their technical support and
assistance in the initial stages of this project . We thank Glenn
Young for his assistance in isolating genomic DNA from serovar
Typhimurium . Finally, we are grateful to Valley Stewart and Mitchell
Singer for many useful discussions and their critical reading of the
manuscript .
This study was funded by the California Agricultural Experimental
Station, project CA-D*-MIC-6042-H .
* Corresponding author . Mailing address: Section of
Microbiology, Division of Biological Sciences, University of California, Davis,
One Shields Ave., Davis, CA 95616 . Phone: (530) 752-8616 . Fax: (530) 752-9014 .
E-mail: mmigo@ucdavis.edu.
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