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Journal of Bacteriology, May 2003, p . 3127-3138, Vol . 185,
No . 10
Characterization of NorR Protein, a Multifunctional Regulator of norA
Expression in Staphylococcus aureus
Que Chi Truong-Bolduc,1 Xiamei Zhang,1 and
David C . Hooper1,2*
Division of Infectious Diseases and Medical Services, Massachusetts General
Hospital,1 Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02114-26962
Received 17 December 2002/ Accepted 28 February 2003
We characterized a Staphylococcus aureus norA gene expression
regulator, NorR, initially identified from its binding to the norA
promoter . The norR gene was 444 bp in length, located
7
kb upstream from the norA gene, and encoded a predicted 17.6-kDa
protein . Overexpression of norR in wild-type S . aureus
strain ISP794 led to a fourfold decrease in sensitivity to quinolones
and ethidium bromide and an increase in the level of norA
transcripts, suggesting that NorR acts as a positive regulator of
norA expression . Overexpression of norR in sarA and
agr mutants did not alter quinolone sensitivity or levels of
norA transcription, indicating that the presence of these two
global regulatory systems is necessary for NorR to affect the
expression of norA . Insertion and disruption of norR in
ISP794 increased resistance to quinolones by 4- to 16-fold but had no
effect on norA transcription, suggesting that NorR acts as a
repressor for another unidentified efflux pump or pumps . These
mutants also exhibited an exaggerated clumping phenotype in liquid
media, which was complemented fully by a plasmid-encoded norR
gene . Collectively, these results indicate that NorR is a
multifunctional regulator, affecting cell surface properties as well
as the expression of NorA and likely other multidrug resistance
efflux pumps .
Staphylococcus aureus is a leading cause of human infectious
diseases worldwide, ranging from superficial skin lesions to systemic
and life-threatening infections, such as osteomyelitis, endocarditis,
pneumonia, and septicemia . The virulence of S . aureus has been
associated with the production of a large number of extracellular
toxins, enzymes, and cell-surface-associated proteins, encoded by
diverse genes, the expression of which is controlled by the accessory
gene regulator locus (agr) (35,
50) . The agr regulatory effector is a 510-base RNA
molecule (RNAIII) (42) . The agr locus
regulates most target genes at the level of transcription, but was
also shown to affect translation of some genes (35,
42) . sarA is the second known global regulatory
locus that was also involved in the regulation of virulence
factors in S . aureus (4, 34) . SarA
activates
-toxin
gene transcription but represses transcription of genes for serine
protease and protein A (7, 9,
10) . SarA acts partly through the agr regulatory
pathway by binding to agr promoters and stimulating the
transcription of agr (8, 11,
45) . Since agr and sarA loci play such
important roles in diverse gene regulation, they may also participate
in regulation of efflux pump expression, which causes resistance
to multiple antibiotics, including fluoroquinolones in S . aureus .
Fluoroquinolones are synthetic antimicrobial agents and have been
used for treatment of a broad range of bacterial infections (22) .
Increases in resistance to diverse antibiotics, including
fluoroquinolones, have limited the choice of antimicrobial agents in
some clinical settings . The genetics and mechanisms of bacterial
resistance to fluoroquinolones have been studied extensively .
Fluoroquinolones act on DNA gyrase and topoisomerase IV to inhibit
bacterial DNA replication (12) . Mutations in gyrA and
gyrB encoding the subunits of DNA gyrase (21,
23, 26) and grlA and grlB
encoding the subunits of DNA topoisomerase IV of S . aureus (13,
38) lead to quinolone resistance in gram-positive
and gram-negative bacteria . One of the most intriguing mechanisms
underlying resistance to fluoroquinolones as well as a range of other
antimicrobial agents involves the extrusion of a variety of
structurally unrelated compounds due to active efflux by membrane
pumps (19, 51) . On the basis of
bioenergetic and structural criteria, the multidrug transporters have
been divided into five major families (5): the
ATP-binding cassette family (ABC), the major facilitator superfamily
(MFS), the multidrug and toxic compound extrusion transporters
(MATE), the drug/metabolite transporters (DMT), and the
resistance/nodulation/division transporters (RND) (31,
44) . The S . aureus NorA protein belongs to the
MFS group frequently found in bacteria .
Overexpression of the NorA multidrug resistance (MDR) efflux pump
causes resistance to some quinolones (25, 27,
37, 39, 53) .
It is characterized by the presence of 12 transmembrane segments (37,
39) and is related to Bmr, an efflux pump of Bacillus
subtilis (1, 36,
55) . NorA protects the cell from a number of lipophilic
and monocationic compounds, such as ethidium bromide, cetrimide,
benzalkonium chloride, tetraphenylphosphonium bromide, and acriflavine,
as well as hydrophilic quinolones (25,
27) . While the physiological function of NorA as a
self-sufficient multidrug transporter was demonstrated with
cytoplasmic membrane vesicles and reconstituted proteoliposomes (54),
the regulation of the expression of the NorA efflux pump is still not
well understood .
Previous studies demonstrated that the expression of norA is
increased by mutations in the promoter region that increase
mRNA stability, reported in the case of the chromosomal quinolone
resistance locus, flqB, which is linked to fus and the transposon
insertion
1108
on the SmaI D fragment (17), and by mutation
in the arlS gene that alters the two-component regulatory system
arlRS, reported in the case of the insertion-disruption of arlS
by Tn917LTV1 in the S . aureus chromosome, but it is not
known if the effects of arlRS on norA expression are
direct or indirect (15, 16) . In
order to identify direct regulatory elements involved in norA
expression, we have purified the 17.6-kDa protein that binds to the
norA promoter, identified its gene, and characterized the
effects of its disruption and overexpression . Our data show that this
putative regulatory protein, which we have named "NorR," functions as
an activator of norA expression but is also multifunctional,
affecting cell surface properties and acting as a negative regulator
for expression of other effectors of the MDR phenotype that likely
represent other as-yet-uncharacterized MDR efflux pumps .
(This work was presented in part at the 101st General Meeting of
the American Society of Microbiology, Orlando, Fla., 20 to 24 May
2001.)
Bacterial strains, plasmids, growth media, and other materials.
The bacterial strains and plasmids used in this study are listed in
Table 1 . Staphylococci were cultivated in brain heart infusion
broth (BHI) (Difco, Sparks, Md.) at 37°C unless otherwise
stated . Escherichia coli cells were grown in Luria-Bertani (LB)
medium . Lysostaphin was obtained from AMBI Products, Inc., New
York, N.Y . Ciprofloxacin and moxifloxacin were obtained from Bayer
Corp., Westhaven, Conn . Sparfloxacin was obtained from Parke-Davis
Pharmaceutical Research Division, Ann Arbor, Mich .
2'-(4-Ethoxyphenyl)-5-(4-methyl-1-piperazinyl)-2,5'-bi-1H-benzimidazole
(Hoechst 33342), nalidixic acid, norfloxacin, ethidium bromide,
cetrimide, tetracycline, erythromycin, reserpine, and chloramphenicol
were obtained from Sigma Chemical Co., St . Louis, Mo . All primers
used in this study were synthesized at the Tufts University Core
Facility, Boston, Mass., and are listed in Table 2 .
| TABLE 1 . Bacterial strains and plasmids used in this study
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| TABLE 2 . Primers used for this study
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MIC determinations. MICs of quinolones, ethidium bromide,
cetrimide, and Hoechst 33342 were determined out by serial agar
dilution on Trypticase soy agar (TSA) . All plates were incubated at
30 or 37°C for 24 h before being read . Determinations of MICs of
quinolones and other chemical compounds for transformants containing
pSK950 and pQT4 were done on TSA containing 5 µg of erythromycin
per ml to ensure maintenance of the plasmid, with incubation at
30°C . The effect of reserpine on quinolone susceptibility was
determined by broth (BHI) dilution in the presence and absence of 10
and 20 µg of reserpine per ml .
DNA isolation. Plasmid DNA isolation was performed with the
Qiagen midiprep kit (Qiagen, Inc., Valencia, Calif.) as recommended
by the manufacturer . S . aureus was transformed with plasmid
DNA by electroporation, as previously described (39) .
Chromosomal DNA from S . aureus was prepared with the Easy DNA
kit (Invitrogen Life Technologies, Carlsbad, Calif.) as recommended
by the manufacturer .
Southern hybridization. Restriction endonuclease-digested
staphylococcal chromosomal DNA was resolved by electrophoresis at 100
V in 0.9% agarose for 8 h . The DNA was transferred to Hybond-N+ nylon
membrane by alkaline blotting (Amersham, Pharmacia Biotech, Little
Chalfont, United Kingdom) . Target genes were detected by
hybridization with a gel-purified DNA probe that was nonradioactively
labeled with the ECL (enhanced chemiluminescence) direct nucleic acid
labeling kit (Amersham, Pharmacia Biotech, United Kingdom) .
Cloning and overexpression of norR. To clone the
norR gene, primers based on flanking sequences (NCTC8325;
Oklahoma University) (B . A . Roe, Y . R . Tian, H . Jia, S . Li, S . Lin,
S . Kenton, H . Lai, J . D . White, A . Dorman, F . Z . Najar, S . Clifton,
V . Worrell, and J . Iandolo, Staphylococcus aureus Genome
Sequencing Project, 2002) were synthesized by the Tufts University
Core Facility (Boston, Mass.) . A 1.3-kb fragment was amplified by PCR
from S . aureus ISP794 chromosomal DNA with primers norRBa
and norRPs, which generated flanking BamHI and PstI
sites, respectively (Table 2) . The amplified
norR gene was digested with PstI and BamHI and then ligated
into the PstI and BamHI site of the plasmid pGEM3-zf(+) to
yield pQT1 and introduced into E . coli DH5 .
Plasmids extracted from ampicillin-resistant colonies were screened
for the norR fragment insertion by restriction endonuclease
digest patterns and confirmed by DNA sequencing .
To generate a plasmid for expression of norR in S . aureus, the
norR gene was subcloned in E . coli into the
temperature-sensitive shuttle plasmid pSK950 to yield pQT4 . This
plasmid was then electroporated into S . aureus RN4220 (8325 r-)
to generate transformants, and the structure of pQT4 in S . aureus
was confirmed by restriction mapping . Electrocompetent strain ISP794
and other strains were transformed with this plasmid isolated from
RN4220 . Tetracycline- and erythromycin-resistant colonies isolated at
30°C were confirmed to have intact pQT4 by restriction mapping .
Construction of a norR mutant by allelic exchange. To
generate a norR mutant, the 800-bp DNA fragment containing the
cat gene was amplified from plasmid pLI50 with primers catpvu1
and catpvu2 . The PCR product was digested with PvuII and then
ligated into an AccI site, previously blunted with Klenow fragment
enzyme and deoxynucleoside triphosphates (dNTPs), within the
putative norR coding region of plasmid pQT1 . The resultant plasmid,
containing the 2.1-kb norR::cat fragment, termed "pQT2," was
confirmed by restriction mapping and sequencing . The 2.1-kb
norR::cat fragment was subcloned into the temperature-sensitive
shuttle plasmid pCL52.2 to yield pQT3 . This plasmid was then
introduced into RN4220 by electroporation to generate chloramphenicol-
and tetracycline-resistant transformants . Putative transformants
were confirmed by restriction mapping and DNA sequencing . Electrocompetent
ISP794 was subsequently transformed with pQT3 isolated from
RN4220 . Colonies grown at 30°C that were resistant to chloramphenicol
and tetracycline were selected for the allelic exchange after
screening . ISP794 harboring pQT3 was grown in BHI broth with
tetracycline (3 µg/ml) at 30°C, diluted 1:1,000 in fresh medium, and
propagated at 42°C for 24 h . The culture was grown again at 30°C
without selection for 48 h . Chloramphenicol-resistant,
tetracycline-sensitive colonies, representing possible double-crossover
events, were screened for and tested for cat insertion into
norR by Southern hybridization, PCR, and sequencing of the PCR
fragment containing the junctional fragment .
DNA mobility shift analysis. To perform the gel shift assay,
a pair of primers based on the norA DNA sequence were
synthesized (norA1 and norA2) (Table 2)
and used to amplify a fragment from the Shine-Dalgarno sequence
extending 150-bp upstream and containing the entire norA promoter
region . One of the primers was biotinylated by Gibco BRL (Rockville,
Md.) . The gel mobility shift assay was carried out using the
LightShift Chemiluminescent EMSA (elecrophoretic mobility shift
assay) kit (Pierce, Rockford, Ill.), as recommended by the manufacturer .
The biotin-labeled DNA was incubated with the indicated amount
of purified proteins from S . aureus ISP794 in 20 µl of binding
buffer (10 mM HEPES [pH 8], 60 mM KCl, 4 mM MgCl2, 0.1 mM
EDTA, 0.1 mg of bovine serum albumin per ml, 0.25 mM dithiothreitol)
containing 1 µg of poly(dI-dC), 200 ng of sheared herring sperm DNA,
and 10% glycerol . The reaction mixture was incubated for 20 min at
room temperature and analyzed by 5% nondenaturing polyacrylamide
electrophoresis .
Identification of the NorR protein from cell extracts. Cell
extracts collected from 5 liters of S . aureus cells at late
exponential phase (optical density at 600 nm [OD600] of
0.9) were used to purify the NorR protein as previously described (14) .
The 150-bp biotinylated DNA fragment described above was immobilized
on magnetic beads with covalently coupled streptavidin (Dynabeads
M-280; Dynal) according to the manufacturer's protocol . DNA bound to
beads was incubated with protein extract in binding buffer (10 mM
HEPES [pH 8], 60 mM KCl, 4 mM MgCl2, 0.1 mM EDTA, 0.1 mg
of bovine serum albumin per ml, 0.25 mM dithiothreitol) containing
herring sperm DNA (200 ng) for 20 min at room temperature . Beads were
washed twice with binding buffer containing herring DNA and twice
with binding buffer without DNA . Proteins were then eluted in binding
buffer containing 0.5 M NaCl . Eluted proteins were dialyzed against
water, concentrated, and separated by sodium dodecyl
sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) . The 18-kDa
protein was blotted onto polyvinylidene difluoride (PVDF) membrane
for N-terminal amino acid sequencing by the Edman degradation method
(Dana Farber Research Institute Core Facility, Boston, Mass.) .
Purification of NorR protein. The norR gene was
amplified by PCR from S . aureus ISP794 chromosomal DNA with
primers norRBa and norREc, which generated flanking
BamHI and EcoRI sites, respectively (Table 2) .
After digestion with EcoRI and BamHI, norR was
ligated into the EcoRI and BamHI site of the plasmid
pTrcHisA (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, Calif.) to yield pQT5 and then
introduced into E . coli BL21(DE3) . The purification of the
histidine-tagged NorR was carried out as recommended by the
manufacturer . E . coli BL21(DE3) cells harboring pQT5 were
grown to mid-log phase in LB medium, at which time, isopropyl-ß-D-thiogalactopyranoside
(IPTG) (1 mM) was added to the culture . After 3 h, the cells were
harvested by centrifugation and then resuspended in 20 mM sodium
phosphate buffer (pH 7.4) . The cells were lysed with lysozyme (0.02%)
and then centrifuged (100,000 x g)
for 90 min . The supernatant was applied to the nickel affinity column
(iminodiacetic acid [IDA]-Sepharose-Ni; Amersham Pharmacia Biotech,
Uppsala, Sweden) and then washed with start buffer supplemented with
concentrations of imidazole increasing from 10 to 60 mM . NorR protein
was eluted with 300 mM imidazole . The homogeneity of the eluted
protein was verified by SDS-PAGE .
RNA analysis. Total S . aureus RNA was prepared by
extraction from lysostaphin-treated cells grown to the
postexponential phase at 37 or 30°C, by using the RNeasy mini kit
(Qiagen, Valencia, Calif.) . The concentration of RNA was determined
spectrophotometrically as A260 . For Northern blot
analysis, 10 µg of total RNA was electrophoresed through a 0.9%
agarose-0.66 M formaldehyde gel in morpholinepropanesulfonic acid
(MOPS) and blotted onto Hybond-N+ membranes as previously described (39) .
DNA probes were amplified from the ISP794 chromosome and labeled with
psoralen for the detection of specific transcripts (norR and
norA) by using the Northern Max kit (Ambion, Inc., Austin,
Tex.) as recommended by the manufacturer . Blots were hybridized with
probes overnight at 42°C, washed, and autoradiographed with Kodak
X-Omat film .
Identification of NorR from its binding to the norA promoter.
In searching for regulatory elements that directly control the
expression of the norA structural gene, we had previously identified
in cell extracts an
18-kDa
protein that binds to the norA promoter, producing specific
band shifts of a 150-bp DNA fragment containing the entire norA
promoter region (14) .
In order to identify this protein, we first isolated the protein
from cell extracts of the wild-type strain ISP794 by using magnetic
beads coupled to the 150-bp DNA fragment as an affinity reagent (14) .
The eluted proteins were separated by SDS-PAGE then transferred to
PVDF membrane for N-terminal amino acid sequencing . The first 14
amino acids of the N terminus (XDQHNLXEQLCFSL) were then used to
search a data bank of the S . aureus genome NCTC 8325 (Roe et
al., Staphylococcus aureus Genome Sequencing Project, 2002) .
The database contained a putative protein of 147 amino acids and a
predicted molecular mass of 17.6 kDa that contained an identical
N-terminal amino acid sequence . Analysis of this amino acid sequence
allowed the identification of a 444-bp open reading frame (ORF) on
the S . aureus genome (Fig . 1) .
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FIG . 1 . Nucleotide sequence of 851 bp of S . aureus DNA containing
the norR gene from ISP794 (complete sequence shown) . The putative
promoter regions, the Shine-Dalgarno sequence, and a putative
transcription terminator are underlined . The coding region of norR
is marked by the ATG start and TAA stop codons.
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NorR purification and promoter binding. The putative gene was
then expressed by cloning the 444-bp ORF coding region into pTrcHisA,
a His-tag expression vector (Invitrogen) . After induction with IPTG
and purification on a nickel affinity column, we isolated a protein
of
21
kDa (size includes the NorR protein [17.6 kDa] plus the His tag and
the anti-Xpress antibody epitope) . The SDS-PAGE gel shows one protein
band at
21
kDa in the first eluted fraction and an additional band at
55
to 60 kDa in the second elution fraction (Fig . 2A) .
No other protein species were identified by silver staining . We
speculate that the larger band is a multimeric form of NorR because
it as well as the 21-kDa band is immunoreactive with antibody to the
anti-Xpress antibody epitope encoded by pTrcHisA (Invitrogen) (data
not shown) . The purified 21-kDa NorR from the first eluted fraction
(fraction 1) when incubated with the 150-bp norA promoter fragment
showed a clear shift in the DNA banding pattern (Fig . 2B) .
With increasing concentrations of proteins, the intensity of the
shifted band increased, and band shifts were reduced in the
presence of 100-fold excess unlabeled 150-bp norA DNA but remained
unchanged in the presence of excess herring sperm DNA, indicating
specific binding to the norA promoter fragment . We named this
protein "NorR" because its amino acid sequence showed homology
with SarR (35% amino acid identity), a protein of the SarA family,
and with the MarR (40% identity) protein of the MarR family . The
aligned amino acid identity between NorR and QacR and BmrR was less
than 10% for both proteins . The NorR protein and its DNA sequence are
100% conserved in the genomes of the sequenced S . aureus
strains Mu50, N315, COL, and MW2 .
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FIG . 2 . (A) SDS-PAGE analysis of NorR-His purification by Ni affinity
chromatography . NorR protein in the crude cell extracts was adsorbed to
the Ni column . The column was washed with buffers containing 10 and 60
mM imidazole, and the purified protein was eluted with buffer containing
300 mM imidazole . The gel was stained with Coomassie blue followed by
silver staining . MW, molecular mass in kilodaltons . (B) Gel mobility
shift analysis of the interaction of purified by NorR-His protein with
the biotinylated 150-bp norA promoter fragment . Competing
unlabeled norA promoter DNA and herring sperm DNA were used to
determine the specificity of promoter binding . Protein and DNA
concentrations and ratios of unlabeled to labeled DNA used in this assay
are indicated in the table below the gel.
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To determine whether NorR is also involved in its own regulation via
direct binding, we amplified a 150-bp DNA fragment from the region
upstream of the norR ATG start codon that contains two
putative promoters and a putative Shine-Dalgarno region (primers are
listed in Table 2) . No band shift was found upon
incubation of NorR with this DNA fragment (Fig . 3) .
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FIG . 3 . Gel mobility shift analysis of the interaction of purified
NorR-His protein with the biotinylated norA and norR
promoter fragments . The protein and DNA concentrations used in this
assay are indicated in the table below the gel.
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norR mRNA levels in wild-type and mutant strains.
Northern blots of ISP794 (wild type), RN4220 (8325-4 r-), MT23142
(flqB), MT1222 (pleiotropic), BF16 (arlS), and RN6390 (wild
type) were probed with a biotin-labeled norR fragment to ascertain
norR expression in these backgrounds . A norR-hybridizing
transcript was found to be
500
nucleotides in length by Northern analysis . Because a putative
transcriptional termination signal was found 83 bp downstream from
the stop codon, this norR transcript is probably
monocistronic . With the same amount of total RNA, all mutant strains
showed a slight decrease of twofold in the levels of norR
transcription to that of ISP794, RN6390, and RN4220 at the
postexponential growth phase (Fig . 4A) . The decrease
in norR transcripts of these mutants suggests an additional
regulatory mechanism to regulate the level of MDR efflux pump
possibly by NorA-mediated efflux of an effector required for norR
expression .
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FIG . 4 . (A) Northern hybridization of RNA extracted from S . aureus
strains in the late exponential phase of growth (OD600 = 0.9)
and probed with the norR gene, to observe the transcription level
of norR in wild-type and mutant strains . (B) norR
transcripts in agr sarA mutants with and without pQT4 (norR
overexpressed).
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Effects of norR overexpression . (i) Resistance to quinolones and
other compounds. To address the effect of norR overexpression in
vivo, we transformed a series of wild-type and mutant strains with
plasmid pSK950 into which we had cloned the norR gene (pQT4),
and then we determined the MICs of quinolones and ethidium bromide
for strains with the norR plasmid pQT4 . The MIC determinations
were carried out at 30°C in the presence of erythromycin (5 µg/ml)
to ensure the stability of plasmid pQT4 . In order to detect any
artifact caused by erythromycin in the MIC determinations, strains
with the vector plasmid pSK950 were also included in the experiment
and tested in the presence of erythromycin . Strains with and without
pSK950 showed no change in susceptibility to the drugs tested .
Fourfold increases in the MICs of norfloxacin and ethidium bromide,
which are known substrates of NorA, were seen with ISP794(pQT4) . We
also found a twofold increase in the MIC of ciprofloxacin, but no
change in MICs of sparfloxacin, moxifloxacin, and nalidixic acid for
ISP794(pQT4) . ISP794(pQT4) also showed slight (twofold or less)
increases in the MICs of the nonquinolone NorA substrates cetrimide
and Hoechst 33342 (Table 3) . To evaluate the
contribution of norA overexpression to the resistance
phenotype when norR was overexpressed, we used a norA
knockout strain, KL820, into which we introduced plasmid pQT4 . Only a
slight increase in the MICs of norfloxacin, ciprofloxacin, and
ethidium bromide was found in contrast to the fourfold changes in the
ISP794 (norA+) background, indicating that norA
overexpression accounts for most of the resistance associated with
norR expression from pQT4 (Table 3) . Thus, although
norR could have additional positive regulatory effects on genes
encoding other MDR transporters, its major effect on resistance
when overexpressed appears to be mediated through norA . Mutants
that overexpress norA by other mechanisms, such as BF16, MT1222,
and MT23142, did not demonstrate an additional increase in the
MICs of quinolones and dyes when pQT4 was introduced (Table
3) .
| TABLE 3 . Susceptibilities of strains to quinolones and other agents
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To assess a possible interaction of norR overexpression with
the agr and sarA global regulatory loci, we introduced pQT4
into sarA and agr single- and double-mutant backgrounds . In
contrast to the findings with the agr+ sarA+
background, norR expression from pQT4 in the agr and
sarA mutants caused no increase in the resistance phenotype
(Table 3), suggesting that the resistance phenotype
of norR overexpression is dependent on intact agr and
sarA loci . Increased norR expression from pQT4 was maintained
in these strains (Fig . 4B), and thus the dependence of
the norR-overexpression resistance phenotype on intact agr
and sarA cannot be explained by a dependence on these loci for
norR to be expressed from pQT4 .
(ii) Effect on norA transcription. Northern blots of
RNA from ISP794 with and without pQT4 and from MT23142 were probed
with biotin-labeled norA and also separately with
biotin-labeled norR to assess the effect of overexpression of
norR on norA expression . RNA levels of norR were documented
to be higher in ISP794(pQT4) than in ISP794, as expected (Fig .
5A) . Notably, norA expression in ISP794(pQT4) was
increased substantially to a level as high as that observed in the
mutant MT23142, which carries the flqB promoter mutation
responsible for the overexpression of norA in this strain
(Fig . 5A) . Thus, norR behaves as a positive
regulator of norA transcription . Since ISP794 is a
B
mutant, we also checked the effect of an overexpression of norR
on norA expression by using a
B
wild-type strain (SH1000) (24) . The results
obtained with strain SH1000 were similar to those with ISP794 (data
not shown), indicating that these effects are not modulated by
B .
In addition, in the agr and sarA mutants, the presence
of pQT4 produced increases in norR transcripts (Fig.
4B) but no increase in norA transcripts
(data not shown), further supporting the interactions of norR
with the agr and sarA global regulatory systems in its effects
on norA overexpression .
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FIG . 5 . (A) Effects of norR overexpression on norA
expression . Northern blots of RNA extracted from S . aureus
strains MT23142, ISP794 (with and without pQT4), and RN4220 in the late
exponential phase and probed with either the norR or norA
gene . (B) norR transcripts in QT1 with and without pQT4 . The
norR::cat transcript is larger than norR as expected.
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Properties of a norR mutant. In order to assess further
the role of NorR as a regulator, we generated a norR mutant .
We first transformed the wild-type strain ISP794 with a
temperature-sensitive plasmid (pCL52.2) that contained a cat
gene cassette within the norR coding region (plasmid pQT3),
and then transformants were first selected for resistance to
chloramphenicol and tetracycline at permissive temperature (30°C) .
After successive growth at 42°C with tetracycline and 30°C without
tetracycline to enrich for the insertion-excision event of the
plasmid pQT3 in the norR gene, we screened for and identified
tetracycline-sensitive, chloramphenicol-resistant colonies . All
candidate norR::cat mutants were confirmed by PCR,
Southern blotting, and DNA sequencing .
The presence of the cat gene in norR and the correct
insertion-excision of the plasmid pQT3 were verified by PCR
amplification with primers that flanked the norR gene . The
size of the PCR fragment as well as direct sequencing of the PCR
fragment confirmed that a double-crossover event had taken place
between the plasmid and the chromosome . Southern hybridization of
DraI chromosomal digests with fluorescently labeled norR
revealed that norR mutants QT1 and QT2 carried a single
norR::cat insertion in the chromosome, while QT3 resulted
from a single crossover that left two copies of the norR gene
(norR and norR::cat) in its chromosome (Fig .
6) .
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FIG . 6 . Southern hybridization of DraI restriction digests of
chromosomal DNA from the S . aureus wild type and mutants . Changes
occurred in the band size, and the numbers of the putative insertion
mutation relative to the parental type indicate potential insertion of
cat into norR . DraI cleaves both norR and cat
genes (once inside each gene) . The 0.7-kb norR DNA probe
hybridizes with 0.64- and 0.1-kb fragments of norR gene in ISP794
DNA, while the same 0.7-kb probe hybridizes with 1.02-, 0.62-, and
0.32-kb fragments of norR::cat in DNA of mutants QT1 and
QT2 . The 1.2-kb fragment seen in ISP794 DNA came from incomplete enzyme
digestion . QT3 resulted from a single crossover between the plasmid and
the chromosome, leading to a combined hybridization pattern of wild-type
and mutant norR.
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The norR mutants QT1 and QT2 exhibited a resistance phenotype,
with 16-fold increases in the MICs of sparfloxacin (2 µg/ml); 8-fold
increases in the MICs of norfloxacin (4 µg/ml), ciprofloxacin (2
µg/ml), and moxifloxacin (0.5 µg/ml); 4-fold increases in the MICs of
cetrimide (2 µg/ml) and ethidium bromide (4 µg/ml); a 2-fold increase
in the MIC of nalidixic acid (400 µg/ml); and no change in MIC of
Hoechst 33342 (2 µg/ml) (Table 3) . The level of
resistance of norR mutants to quinolones was similar to those
of flqB (MT23142) and arlS (BF16) mutants that
overexpress norA (Table 3), except for the
MICs of sparfloxacin and moxifloxacin, which showed 16- and eightfold
increases in MICs for QT1 and only a 4-fold increase and no increase
in the respective MICs for MT23142 (flqB) (Table
3) . In the presence of reserpine, the norR mutants QT1 and
QT2 both became less resistant to quinolones and ethidium bromide . We
observed a fourfold decrease in the MICs of norfloxacin,
ciprofloxacin, moxifloxacin; an eightfold decrease in the MIC of
sparfloxacin; and a twofold decrease in the MICs of ethidium bromide
when these mutants were tested in the presence of reserpine (Table
3) . The level of norA expression in Northern blots in
QT1 and QT2, however, did not differ from those of wild-type
strain ISP794 (data not shown), for which the level of susceptibility
to quinolones and ethidium bromide was not affected by reserpine .
Thus, these findings further suggest that norR also serves as
a negative regulator of other effectors of multidrug resistance,
likely representing as-yet-undefined MDR efflux pumps . In order to
detect any effect of NorR on the transcription of arlS, we
performed Northern hybridization with strains with and without
norR . No change in the level of arlS transcripts was found among
all strains tested (data not shown) .
Further supporting the multiple regulatory roles of norR, the
mutation in norR mutants (QT1 and QT2) also strikingly modified
the growth of these strains in liquid media without a perceptible
change in colony morphology on solid media . Figure 7
illustrates the clumping of the mutant in BHI broth after overnight
growth .
|
FIG . 7 . Overnight cultures of wild-type and mutant S . aureus
strains, with and without complementation by plasmid pQT4 containing the
norR gene.
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|
In order to assess whether the disruption of norR itself or a
polar effect of the cat insertion was responsible for the
norR::cat mutant phenotype, we transformed the strain with plasmid
pQT4 . Expression of norR from pQT4 in strain QT1 was documented
by Northern hybridization (Fig . 5B) . Complementation
with plasmid-encoded norR completely reversed the clumping
phenotype (Fig . 7) and resulted in a change in a
resistance phenotype pattern to one similar to that of ISP794(pQT4)
(Table 3) . For drugs that are good NorA substrates
(e.g., norfloxacin) complementation resulted in little change in
resistance, likely due to increased norA expression upon
restoration of norR . In contrast, for sparfloxacin and
moxifloxacin, which are poor NorA substrates, norR complementation
resulted in increases in drug susceptibility . Thus, disruption
of norR itself is responsible for both the cell-clumping phenotype
and for resistance to sparfloxacin, moxifloxacin, and likely
other quinolones and other drugs with increased MICs in QT1 .
NorR is a DNA-binding protein. The regulation of expression of
norA encoding a major multidrug efflux transporter in S .
aureus is little understood . In our effort to identify new
elements that regulate norA expression, we identifed NorR, a
putative regulatory protein that has homology with SarR and MarR, two
known regulators of gene expression . Purified NorR protein binds
specifically to the norA promoter region, thus suggesting a
direct role for NorR in expression of the norA gene . In
contrast, gel mobility shift assays showed no evidence that NorR
binds to its own promoter, thus suggesting that the norR locus
is not directly autoregulatory .
NorR functions as an activator of norA expression. To
study further the effect of norR on norA expression, we
overexpressed the norR gene from a plasmid and observed
changes in the level of norA expression in S . aureus
strains with different genetic backgrounds . By Northern
hybridization, we found an increase in the level of norA
transcripts in the wild-type strain, ISP794, harboring norR
cloned on a plasmid . This increase in norA transcripts
correlated with a fourfold increase in the MICs of norfloxacin and
ethidium bromide, suggesting that NorR is a direct transcriptional
activator of norA expression . Thus, norR is the first regulatory
locus identified to act directly on the norA promoter in S .
aureus .
Although there was a slight resistance phenotype in a norA knockout
strain in which norR is overexpressed, the major effect of norR
overexpression appears to be attributable to overexpression of
NorA . This finding (i.e., the level of increased susceptibility) also
implies that the additional role of NorR as a repressor of other
efflux pumps (discussed below) appears to be maximal at basal levels
of expression and is not further augmented by NorR overexpression .
norR mutants and other possible roles of NorR in the bacterial
cell. norR mutants also exhibited a resistance phenotype and a
cell-clumping phenotype in liquid media, suggesting that norR
has a complex regulatory role involving cell surface properties and
likely other MDR pumps . The pleiotropic nature of the norR
resistance phenotype and the reduction in resistance in the presence
of reserpine argue that resistance is likely due to MDR pumps .
Additional studies are ongoing to identify the specific effectors
of MDR in norR mutants . The absence of increased levels of norA
transcripts and some noteworthy differences in the resistance
profile (resistance to sparfloxacin and moxifloxacin) of the norR
mutants relative to strains overexpressing norA also argue for
norR as a negative regulator of MDR pumps other than NorA that
may have these more hydrophobic quinolones as substrates .
For regulatory genes in which overexpression and reduced expression
both have similar phenotypes, reversal of mutant phenotypes
with plasmid-encoded complementing genes may be difficult because of
the precise titration of the complementing gene product needed to
restore the wild-type phenotype . In this study, complementation of
norR mutant QT1 with pQT4 (norR overexpressed) changed the
antibiotic resistance pattern to that of ISP794(pQT4), which
overexpresses norA . We propose that the resistance phenotype
of norR mutants is in fact due to the disruption of NorR itself
for three reasons . First, norR complementation of pQT1 reversed
the mutant-clumping phenotype completely . Second, norR has a
transcriptional stop site at its terminus, and its transcripts
appear to be monocistronic, suggesting that insertion of the cat
gene into norR does not disrupt an operon . Furthermore, the
putative gene adjacent to norR is located 200 bp downstream
from the norR TAA stop codon and appears to have a putative
promoter region at 80-bp upstream from its ATG start codon . No change
in the levels of transcripts of this ORF was seen in comparing ISP794
and QT1 (data not shown) . Third, for two quinolones, sparfloxacin and
moxifloxacin, which are poor NorA substrates and thus are little
affected by norA overexpression, norR complementation
of QT1 was complete . Work is under way to identify and characterize
the efflux pump or pumps that we postulate underlie the resistance
phenotype of the norR mutant and to define directly the role
of norR in their regulation .
Role of NorR in regulatory networks. NorR differs from SarR
and MarR in having direct binding to a target gene promoter rather
than acting indirectly on other transcriptional regulators that
themselves control target gene expression . SarR and MarR are both
autoregulatory, in keeping with their central role in complex
regulons (2, 3, 33) .
Purified NorR, however, appears not to bind upstream of norR
and thus is unlikely to be directly autoregulatory . It is as yet
unclear what factors regulate norR expression . Other mutants
that have been shown to affect norA expression do not appear
to affect expression of norR . Thus, the effects of the
arlRS two-component regulatory system on norA expression
appear not to be mediated through changes in norR expression,
suggesting that additional factors mediate increased norA
expression in arlRS mutants .
Interestingly, although norR overexpression in a wild-type background
causes overexpression of norA and increased resistance to NorA
substrates, norR overexpression does not further increase the
expression of norA or further increase resistance in mutants
that exhibit cis-acting norA overexpression (flqB norA
promoter mutant) (17, 39) or
trans-acting overexpression (arlRS mutant) of norA
(15, 16) . Thus, these mutations appear to
be epistatic to norR overexpression . Since sustained high
levels of expression of some efflux pumps are likely harmful to the
cell, it is possible that as-yet-undefined counterregulatory factors
come into play when norA expression exceeds certain levels .
Additional data obtained from overexpression of norR in agr
and sarA mutants further indicate that the effect of norR
overexpression on norA expression requires intact agr
and sarA . The nature of these requirements and interactions is
as yet unclear but could involve modification of NorR protein or a
requirement for coordinate binding to the norA promoter by
other factors under the control of the agr and sarA
global regulators .
MarR in E . coli exhibits indirect effects on the expression
of the AcrB MDR efflux pump (18, 32,
43) as well as affecting the expression of outer
membrane proteins . Thus, NorR and MarR both mediate multiple
functions within the bacterial cell that include MDR efflux pumps .
Other known regulators of MDR efflux pump expression, such as BmrR of
B . subtilis, QacR of S . aureus, EmrR of E . coli,
and MexR of Pseudomonas aeruginosa regulate transcription of
bmr, qacA, emrB, and mexAB-oprM operons encoding
the MDR pumps Bmr, QacA, EmrB, and MexAB-OprM, respectively (20,
46, 52, 55) . BmrR,
QacR, and EmrR are also known to mediate substrate induction of
transcription . EmrR is also known to regulate the expression of the
plasmid-encoded mcb operon, which directs the synthesis of
microcin B17 . NorR is less closely related to BmrR, QacR, EmrR, and
MexR than it is to MarR, and these four regulators have not been
shown to have physiologic roles apart from their direct regulation of
expression of their respective MDR pumps . In addition, the bmrR,
qacR, emrR, and mexR genes, in contrast to
norR (Fig . 2) and marR, are closely
linked to the structural genes of the pumps that they regulate,
consistent with their presumed targeted role of specific substrate
induction of a specific pump (20, 48,
55) . NorR is the first identified direct regulator
of efflux pump expression in S . aureus, and it appears to
function as both a positive and negative regulator of different
pumps . It is noteworthy that the two best-characterized MDR pumps in
Lactococcus lactis, LmrA and LmrP, are reciprocally expressed
(W . Konings, personal communication), suggesting that regulators with
opposing effects on expression of different pumps, like NorR, may
also be present in other species . Whether or not NorR protein binds
pump substrates is not known, nor is its role in mediating the
quinolone induction of norA expression reported for one mutant
strain (28) .
Regulation of expression of norA is multifactorial and is known
to include effects due to expression of the arlRS two-component
regulatory system and mutations that affect the stability of
norA mRNA (15, 17) . NorR is now
identified as a third component in the regulation of norA that
acts at the level of transcription . Variations in band-shift patterns
observed with the cell extracts obtained from the pleiotropic mutants
MT1222 and BF16 (arlS) (data not shown) suggest that
additional regulatory factors also likely bind to the norA
promoter, and experiments are underway to identify any such
additional proteins . Such proteins might also underlie the
requirement for intact agr and sarA for norR to
increase norA expression . As noted above, other mutants not
yet genetically characterized have also been described to have a
norA-mediated resistance phenotype that is inducible with
norfloxacin (27-29) . Thus, regulation of
norA and other efflux pumps warrants further study,
particularly to define the global networks that mediate regulation of
efflux pump expression and to define those environmental conditions
under which physiologic overexpression of various pumps reduces
antibiotic action and which promote selection of resistant mutants
due to efflux pump overexpression . NorR itself, functioning as both a
positive and negative regulator of efflux pump expression, appears
likely to have a central role in a regulatory network for MDR efflux
pumps that likely also interacts in complex ways with established
global regulators .
We thank Kim Lewis for providing S . aureus strain KL820; Ambrose
Cheung for S . aureus strains RN6390, RN6911, ALC135, and ALC136;
Chia Lee for plasmid pCL52.2; Jean Lee for plasmid pLI50; and
Gordon Archer for plasmid pSK950 . We thank Steve Projan for helpful
comments on the manuscript . We also thank Dilek Ince for assistance
with the allelic exchange experiments .
This work was supported by a grant from the United States Public
Health Service, National Institutes of Health (R01 AI23988 to
D.C.H.) .
* Corresponding author . Mailing address: Division of Infectious
Diseases, Massachusetts General Hospital, 55 Fruit St., Boston, MA 02114-2696 .
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