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Journal of Bacteriology, May 2003, p . 3036-3041, Vol . 185,
No . 10
Leucines 193 and 194 at the N-Terminal Domain of the XylS Protein, the Positive
Transcriptional Regulator of the TOL meta-Cleavage Pathway, Are Involved
in Dimerization
Raquel Ruíz, Silvia Marqués, and Juan L . Ramos*
Department of Biochemistry and Molecular and Cellular Biology of Plants,
Estación Experimental del Zaidín, Consejo Superior de Investigaciones
Científicas, E-18008 Granada, Spain
Received 30 December 2002/ Accepted 27 February 2003
Members of the AraC/XylS family of transcriptional regulators are
usually organized in two domains: a conserved domain made up of 100
amino acids and frequently located at the C-terminal end, involved in
DNA binding; and an N-terminal nonconserved domain involved in signal
recognition, as is the case for regulators involved in the control of
carbon metabolism (R . Tobes and J . L . Ramos, Nucleic Acids Res .
30:318-321, 2002) . The XylS protein, which is extremely
insoluble, controls expression of the meta-cleavage pathway
for alkylbenzoate metabolism . We fused the N-terminal end of XylS to
the maltose-binding protein (MBP) in vitro and found in
glutaraldehyde cross-linking assays that the protein dimerized .
Experiments with a chimeric N-terminal XylS linked to a 'LexA protein
showed that the dimer was stabilized in the presence of
alkylbenzoates . Sequence alignments with AraC and UreR allowed us to
identify three residues, Leu193, Leu194, and Ile205, as potentially
being involved in dimerization . Site-directed mutagenesis of XylS in
which each of the above residues was replaced with Ala revealed that
Leu193 and Leu194 were critical for activity and that a chimera in
which LexA was linked to the N terminus of XylSLeu193Ala or
XylSLeu194Ala was not functional . Dimerization of the chimeras
MBP-N-XylSLeu193Ala and MBP-N-XylSLeu194Ala was not observed in
cross-linking assays with glutaraldehyde .
The TOL plasmid pWW0 of Pseudomonas putida encodes information
for the catabolism of benzoate and alkylbenzoates through a meta-cleavage
pathway . In this pathway, the aromatic carboxylic acids are first
oxidized to the corresponding catechols, which undergo meta-cleavage
fission to yield a derivative of muconic acid semialdehyde, which in
turn is further metabolized to Krebs cycle intermediates (32) .
The genes that encode the enzymes of the meta-cleavage pathway
form an operon in pWW0 . The xylS gene, which encodes the
regulator of the meta-cleavage pathway, is located at 3' end
with respect to the meta operon, and it is transcribed
convergently with this operon (10) . The XylS
protein is synthesized constitutively at a low level and becomes
transcriptionally active when a benzoate effector such as 3-methylbenzoate
(3MBz) is added to the culture medium (4,
7, 34) . However, when xylS is
overproduced, it stimulates transcription from Pm (the promoter of
the meta cleavage pathway) in the absence of effectors, albeit
at a rate lower than that achieved with 3MBz .
The XylS protein binds at the -34 to -68 region of the Pm promoter
and contacts the
subunit of RNA polymerase (6, 16,
36, 37), which uses the
32
factor for transcription in the early logarithmic phase of growth and
the
38
factor thereafter to mediate transcription from the Pm promoter (23,
36) .
The XylS protein is a member of the AraC/XylS family of positive
transcriptional regulators, which includes more than 270 different
bacterial proteins involved in the control of processes related to
carbon metabolism, stress response, and pathogenesis (3,
5, 14, 21,
24, 27, 42) . Many of
the proteins in this family are about 300 amino acids long and are
made of two domains, a nonconserved domain which seems to be involved
in effector/signal recognition and dimerization, and a conserved
domain characterized by significant amino acid sequence homology,
which extends over 100-residue stretches and contains the bipartite
DNA binding domain, made of two
-helix-turn- -helix
motifs . Some proteins in the family are extremely insoluble, although
others, such as MarA and Rob, have been purified in soluble form and
crystallized and their three-dimensional structure has been resolved
(17, 35) .
The N-terminal domain of XylS seems to be involved in effector
recognition and XylS activation, as deduced from the isolation of
XylS mutants with altered effector specificity (i.e., Arg45 Thr,
Cys41 Gly,
Asp137 Glu,
and His153 Gln)
or impaired effector recognition (i.e., Arg41 Leu
and Asp137 Leu)
(26, 33, 34) . This has
been taken as evidence that the XylS binding pocket for aromatic
carboxylic acids consists of patches along the primary sequence of
XylS .
AraC is the best-characterized protein in this family, and its
N-terminal domain has been resolved by X-ray diffraction (38,
40) . This domain is now known to be involved in
effector recognition and dimerization . Three critical leucines
(Leu150, Leu151, and Leu161) are involved in AraC dimerization (19,
40) . UreR is another member of the AraC/XylS
family, and it also contains three conserved leucine residues in the
same relative locations with the same spatial distance relative to
each other as in AraC (Leu147, Leu148, and Leu158) (31) .
Ramos et al . (33) noticed some sequence
conservation at the N-terminal end of the XylS protein with respect
to AraC and observed that XylS also exhibited a set of leucines
conserved near the linker of the N- and C-terminal domains,
corresponding to Leu193 and 194, and Ile205 (Fig . 1) .
Given the intrinsic insolubility of XylS, it is still unknown
whether the protein is a dimer or not and, if it is a dimer, whether
these three leucines play a role in dimerization .
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FIG . 1 . Partial alignment of AraC, XylS, and UreR . Leucine residues 150,
151, and 161 in AraC are critical for AraC dimerization (39) .
Leucines 147, 148, and 157 in UreR are critical for dimerization of UreR
(30) . Leucines 193 and 194 and isoleucine 205 in XylS
align with the leucine residues of AraC and UreR that are critical for
dimerization.
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In this study, we constructed fusion proteins to determine whether
the N-terminal end of XylS also dimerizes and to determine whether
the two leucine and the isoleucine residues of XylS that align with
the leucines of AraC and UreR are involved in XylS dimerization and
activity .
Bacterial strains, culture medium, and cloning vectors. The
bacterial strains used in this study are shown in Table
1 . All strains were grown in Luria-Bertani (LB) medium at 30°C
with shaking (200 strokes per min in a Kühner incubator) .
Relevant characteristics of the cloning vectors used for subcloning
are shown in Table 1 .
| TABLE 1 . Strains and plasmids used in this study
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Construction of xylS mutants by PCR. The xylS
mutants were generated by overlap extension PCR mutagenesis (12,
13) with internal oligonucleotide primers that exhibited
one or more mismatches with respect to the wild-type sequence .
The forward and reverse primers were 5'-GCTATCTCAGTTATACTACG-3' and
5'-CGAGAAATTTATCGTTAAATTGCC-3', respectively . After DNA
amplification, the resulting DNA was digested with XhoI and
MfeI, and the 379-bp XhoI-MfeI xylS mutant fragments
were inserted between the XhoI and MfeI sites of pCMX2
(22) to yield plasmids pCMX2::xylS* (the
asterisk indicates that one or more of the amino acids in the
wild-type protein have been changed) . All the xylS mutant
alleles generated in this study were verified by DNA sequencing .
Plasmids bearing the xylS mutant alleles were digested with
EcoRI and XbaI, and the 1,609-bp EcoRI-XbaI
fragments, which contained the entire set of xylS mutant alleles,
were subcloned between the EcoRI and XbaI sites of pLOW2 to
generate plasmids pLRRA1 through pLRRA7, which encoded the mutant
XylS proteins shown in Table 2 .
| TABLE 2 . ß-Galactosidase activity of E . coli JL1436 expressing
the N-terminal domain of XylS and the XylS mutants in the LexA-based
two-hybrid systema
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Chimeric fusions of N-terminal domain of XylS* to MalE protein or LexA
protein. All cloning steps were performed in Escherichia coli
DH5
(8) . The fragment of the gene that encodes the
N-terminal half of XylS or XylS* (amino acids 1 to 213) was amplified
from plasmid pCMX2 or its derivatives generated in this study by PCR
with the forward primer 5'-GAACCGGGATCCATGGATTTTTGC-3' and the
reverse primer 5'-GAATTGGTCGACTCACTAGAAAGACG-3' . The PCR product was
digested with BamHI and SalI and ligated into the expression
vector pMAL-pV (29) cut with the same enzymes to obtain
plasmids pMAL-NXylS and pMAL-NXylS*, respectively . Alternatively, we
used 5'-GAACCGGAATTCATGGATTTTTGC-3' as the forward primer and
5'-GAATTGAACGACGGATCCGAAAGACG-3' as the reverse primer for PCR
amplification, and upon digestion of the PCR product with BamHI
and EcoRI, it was ligated into the pGB002 vector digested with
the same enzymes to produce plasmids pLRRA8 through to pLRRA15
and yield the N-XylS-LexA and N-XylS*-LexA chimeric proteins . The
identity of the insert in all resulting plasmids described above was
confirmed by DNA sequencing .
Purification of MalE-N-XylS* proteins. Overnight cultures
(10 ml) of E . coli DH5 (pMAL-NXylS)
and E . coli DH5 (pMAL-NXylS*)
were inoculated into 1 liter of LB medium supplemented with glucose
and 100 µg of ampicillin per ml and grown at 30°C . When the cultures
reached a turbidity at 600 nm of 0.6, isopropyl-ß-D-galactopyranoside
(IPTG) was added to reach a concentration of 1 mM, and incubation
was continued for 4 h . Cells were then harvested by centrifugation
(5,000 x g for 10 min) and
stored at -20°C until use .
Frozen cells were thawed and suspended in 50 ml of column buffer
(20 mM Tris-HCl [pH 7.4], 200 mM NaCl, 1 mM EDTA) supplemented with
complete mini-protease inhibitor cocktail (Roche Molecular
Biochemical) and then disrupted by passing cells at 10,000 lb/in2
through a French press . All steps were performed at 4°C . The cell
lysate was centrifuged at 9,000 x g
for 30 min, and the supernatant was collected and diluted fivefold in
column buffer and then loaded onto an XK16 column (Amersham Pharmacia
Biotech) with 15 ml of amylose resin equilibrated with column
buffer . The column was washed with 180 ml of column buffer .
MalE-N-XylS and MalE-N-XylS* proteins were eluted with column buffer
and 10 mM maltose . The procedure yielded almost homogenous proteins,
as judged by sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)-polyacrylamide gel
electrophoresis (PAGE) and staining of proteins with Coomassie
brilliant blue R-250 .
Glutaraldehyde cross-linking assays. In vitro cross-linking
assays were done as described by Lu and Abdelal (19) .
Aliquots of 300 pmol of MalE, MalE-N-XylS, or MalE-N-XylS* were
incubated for 1 h at room temperature with and without 100 µM 3MBz .
Each aliquot was then divided in two; one served as a control, and
glutaraldehyde was added to the other to reach a final concentration
of 0.005% (vol/vol) . The final volume of each sample was adjusted to
20 µl with column buffer . After 2 h at room temperature 10-µl
aliquots of the reaction mixtures were mixed with 10 µl of
loading buffer (100 mM Tris-HCl [pH 6.8], 0.4% [wt/vol] SDS, 20%
[vol/vol] glycerol and 0.001% [wt/vol] bromophenol blue) and
subjected to boiling in a water bath for 5 min . Then, the proteins
were separated by SDS-8% (wt/vol) PAGE, and the products were stained
with Coomassie brilliant blue R-250 .
ß-Galactosidase expression assays. To determine expression
from the PsulA promoter in E . coli JL1436
bearing plasmids encoding the different XylS-LexA fusions constructed
in this study (see Table 1), fresh medium was inoculated with
a single colony from LB-agar plates containing the appropriate
antibiotics and cultured at 30°C overnight . These cultures were
diluted 100-fold in the same medium supplemented or not with 1 mM
3MBz, and cell growth was monitored over time . When the cultures
reached an optical density at 600 nm of
0.4
to 0.6, IPTG was added to reach a concentration of 2 mM, and
incubation was continued for 1 h . ß-Galactosidase activity was
then determined as described by Platt et al . (30) .
To determine the induction capacity of the XylS mutants, E .
coli MC4100(pERD100) was transformed with plasmids bearing the
wild-type and mutant xylS alleles in pLRRA1 to pLRRA7 (pERD100
is an IncQ group plasmid that carries a fusion of Pm to a promoterless
'lacZ gene and encodes resistance to tetracycline [33]) .
These cells were grown overnight at 30°C in LB medium containing
the appropriate antibiotics . Cultures were diluted 100-fold in
the same medium supplemented or not with 1 mM 3MBz . After 5 h of
incubation, ß-galactosidase activity was assayed in permeabilized
whole cells . All constructs were assayed in triplicate in three or
more independent assays .
Construction of chimeric fusion proteins containing the N-terminal
domain of XylS. Based on the crystallographic data for the MarA and Rob
proteins (17, 35) and the
alignment of the 270 AraC/XylS family members (42),
the first 213 amino acids were considered to constitute the
N-terminal region of XylS (N-XylS) . On the basis of the biochemical
analysis and the crystallographic data for the N-terminal end of the
AraC protein, we deduced that the XylS stretch includes the linker
arm between the N-terminal and C-terminal domains (11,
40, 43) .
Using the appropriate primers, we amplified the segment of the
xylS gene that would give rise to the N-XylS' polypeptide by PCR .
This amplified fragment was subcloned in different vectors to provide
either a hexahistidine tail or fusions to thioredoxin, glutathione
S-transferase, or the maltose-binding protein (MBP) . Of all these
constructions, the only one that yielded a partially soluble chimera
was N-XylS-MBP, in agreement with the finding of Kapust and Waugh (15)
that MBP is uncommonly effective in promoting the solubility of
polypeptides to which it is fused . We therefore concentrated our
efforts on characterizing the N-terminal end of XylS in this chimera .
Induction of the expression of N-XylS-MBP in E . coli(pMAL-NXylS)
yielded a 65-kDa fusion protein that represented almost 10% of the
total protein in the extract, with one-third of it being soluble
under the best production conditions described in Materials and
Methods . The soluble protein was purified to apparent homogeneity by
-amylose
affinity chromatography (not shown) .
Glutaraldehyde cross-linking in vitro. To determine whether
the chimeric N-XylS-MBP protein forms dimers, we carried out in vitro
cross-linking assays in the absence and presence of 3MBz . In the
absence of glutaraldehyde, the N-XylS-MBP protein appeared as a
single band, in agreement with the fact that MBP is a monomer (39,
41) . However, in the presence of glutaraldehyde, a
fraction of the chimeric protein was shifted, with a molecular weight
corresponding to a dimer (Fig . 2) . A control with
MBP without N-XylS did not produce dimers, which suggests that the
XylS N-terminal domain in the chimera is responsible for the
dimerization observed . The fact that the dimer formed in the absence
of 3MBz suggests that XylS may form a dimer in the absence of
effector . This has also been observed with AraC (1)
and MelR (2), two other members of the AraC/XylS family .
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FIG . 2 . Cross-linking of MBP-N-XylS . Top panel: SDS-PAGE (8% [wt/vol])
of MBP . Bottom panel: SDS-PAGE (6% [wt/vol]) of MBP-N-XylS . Lane M,
molecular size markers, with sizes shown on the left or the right (in
kilodaltons) . The concentrations of 3MBz are indicated along the top .
The + and - symbols indicate whether the samples were incubated or not
with glutaraldehyde, as described in Materials and Methods.
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Two-hybrid system confirms that the N-terminal domain of XylS dimerizes.
Transcription activation by AraC has been studied intensively (38)
and serves as a model for activation of transcription mediated by
other proteins in the family . AraC is the activator of the ara
regulon, which is essential for arabinose transport and metabolism .
In the absence of the sugar arabinose, it binds to two 16-bp sites
(denoted O2 and I1) 200 bp apart at the araBAD promoter,
forming a repression loop . In the presence of arabinose, AraC binds
to I2, which is adjacent to I1, rather than to O2 . This breaks the
repression loop, and the presence of the activator at I2 next to the
RNA polymerase activates transcription . AraC-dependent transcription
initiation at the araBAD promoter is increased by catabolite
repression protein, which binds to a single DNA site upstream of I1
and I2 (44) .
The LexA protein controls expression of the PsulA promoter
and, by binding to the promoter region, downregulates expression
(1) . Such repression requires dimerization of the LexA
DNA binding domain . Previously, chimeric proteins containing the
N-terminal domain of AraC, predicted to be involved in AraC
dimerization, were fused to the LexA DNA binding domain (1) .
The chimera was shown to behave like a full-length LexA protein,
because transcription of PsulA::lacZ was
repressed in the presence of the chimeric AraC-LexA fusion protein .
To obtain further insights on the possibility that N-XylS is a
dimerization domain for XylS, we used the system described above . We
used vector pGB002, engineered to encode only the DNA-binding domain
of LexA', and we cloned part of the xylS gene that, when
translated, will produce a chimera of the N-XylS' domain to LexA . The
construct was transformed into the E . coli JL1436 reporter
strain with a lacZ fusion under the control of PsulA
and screened for repression of PsulA::lacZ
(lower levels of ß-galactosidase) .
The pGB002 vector provides a positive control for the system, and
ß-galactosidase levels were around 4,000 Miller units (Table
2) . When we used a LexA' fusion to the N-terminal
end of XylS, activity decreased to 25% of that of the control strain
only in the presence of 3MBz in the culture medium (Table
2) . These results are in apparent contradiction with the
cross-linking assays, but differences could be attributed either to
the monomeric nature of the MBP protein versus the dimeric nature of
the LexA protein or to the fact that the dimer may be stabilized in
the presence of the effector . Another possibility is that the dimer
in the presence of effector links to the target DNA and is the
stable form of the protein in vivo .
The crystal structure of AraC reveals that a set of leucines
corresponding to positions 150, 151, and 161 are important for
dimerization (40) . This arrangement of leucines has also been
shown to occur in UreR (another AraC/XylS family member) (Fig .
1), and site-directed mutagenesis revealed that these leucines
are critical for the dimerization and transcriptional activity
of these two regulators (19, 31) . A
similar organization of residues is seen in XylS except that the
furthermost C-terminal leucine is replaced by an isoleucine and the
overall length is one amino acid longer (Fig . 1) .
We therefore decided to mutate these residues and replace them with
alanine . The mutant alleles were present in the plasmid series pLRRA1
through pLRRA7 . These plasmids were transformed into E . coli
MC4100(pERD100), and ß-galactosidase was measured (Table
3) . Our results show that XylSI205A was as active
as the wild-type protein, but the replacement of leucine 193 or 194
with alanine resulted in a marked decrease in activity . In
particular, activation was not observed with XylSL194A . This suggests
that L194 is a critical residue for XylS activity .
| TABLE 3 . Induction of Pm by variants of XylS proteina
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Combination of L194A with any of the other two mutations resulted in
a mutant protein that was unable to activate transcription, as
expected . The combination of L193A with I205 yielded a mutant that
was unable to stimulate transcription, in contrast to the
single-parent mutants . This suggests that these residues in XylS
might work additively, although we cannot rule out that multiple
amino acid substitutions alter either the secondary or tertiary
structure of the protein, which would account for the loss of
activity .
To determine whether the decrease in activity of the XylS mutant
was due to dimerization defects, we used the variants of the
N-terminal end with the L193 A,
L194 A,
I205 A,
L193,L194 A,A,
L193,I205 A,A,
and L194,I205 A,A
substitutions and the triple mutant in the PsulA
system after fusion of the N-XylS* mutant ends to LexA' (Table
2) . We found that the single mutants L193 A
and L194 A,
the double mutant involving these two residues, and the triple
mutant did not inhibit expression of PsulA regardless of the
presence of 3MBz, whereas the single I205 A
mutant did inhibit expression at a level similar to that seen with
the wild type when 3MBz was added to the culture medium (Table
2) . These results suggest that residues 193 and 194
are critical for dimerization of the N-terminal region of XylS .
To further investigate the dimerization of XylS, we constructed
chimeric fusions of the N-XylS* variants to MBP, and the chimeric
N-XylS*-MBP proteins were purified as described above for glutaraldehyde
cross-linking assays . Our results revealed that the MBP-N-XylSI205A
protein dimerized (Fig . 3), but when the N-XylS domain
contained the L193 A
or L194 A
change, dimerization did not occur (Fig . 3) . This
set of results further supports the idea that these two leucine
residues are critical for dimerization or folding of the chimeric
proteins .
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FIG . 3 . Cross-linking of MBP-N-XylS* . E . coli bearing plasmids
that will produce MBP-N-XylSL193A, MBP-N-XylSL194A, and MBP-N-XylSI205A
were grown in the absence and in the presence of 3MBz . Proteins were
purified as described in Materials and Methods, and samples were
incubated in the presence (+) and in the absence (-) of 0.005% (vol/vol)
glutaraldehyde.
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Previous studies with XylS mutants revealed intra-allelic dominance
of mutations of the C-terminal domain over those in the N-terminal
domain and vice versa (25), and this led those authors to
propose that the N- and C-terminal domains of XylS interact with each
other . Recent evidence has supported the idea that transcription
from PmelAB by MelR requires both the C-terminal
DNA-binding domain and the N-terminal domain involved in melibiose
recognition (14) . Therefore, transcriptional
regulators in the AraC/XylS family involved in the control of carbon
metabolism seem to acquire a conformational form in the presence of
effectors which stabilizes dimers and facilitates subsequent contacts
with the target DNA promoter .
Work in our laboratory was supported by a CICYT grant to S.M . (BIO
2000-0964) and a grant from the European Commission (QLK3-CT-2000-0170) .
We thank Robert Schleif for supplying strains and plasmids and
José A . Paz for technical assistance . We thank Mai Fandila and Carmen
Lorente for secretarial assistance and K . Shashok for reading the
manuscript and improving the language .
* Corresponding author . Mailing address: Department of
Biochemistry and Molecular and Cellular Biology of Plants, Estación Experimental
del Zaidín, Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas, Apartado de Correos
419, E-18008 Granada, Spain . Phone: 34 958 181608 . Fax: 34 958 135740 . E-mail: jlramos@eez.csic.es .
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