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Journal of Bacteriology, May 2003, p . 3118-3126, Vol . 185,
No . 10
CodY Is
a Nutritional Repressor of Flagellar Gene Expression in Bacillus subtilis
F . Bergara,1 C . Ibarra,1 J . Iwamasa,1
J . C . Patarroyo,1 R . Aguilera,2 and L . M . Márquez-Magaña1*
Department of Biology, San Francisco State University, San Francisco,
California 94132,1 Department of Biology, University of Texas, El
Paso, Texas 799682
Received 25 November 2002/ Accepted 27 February 2003
Expression of the
D-dependent
flagellin gene, hag, is repressed by the CodY protein in
nutrient-rich environments . Analysis of a codY mutant bearing
a hag-lacZ reporter suggests that the availability of amino
acids in the environment is the specific signal that triggers this
repression . Further, hag-lacZ expression appears to be
sensitive to intracellular GTP levels, as demonstrated by increased
expression upon addition of decoyinine . This result is consistent
with the postulate that the availability of amino acids in the
environment effects intracellular GTP levels through the stringent
response . However, the levels of hag-lacZ measured upon the
addition of subsets of amino acids suggest an additional
mechanism(s) . CodY is a DNA binding protein that could repress
flagellin expression directly by binding to the hag promoter
region, or indirectly by binding to the fla/che promoter region
that governs expression of the
D
transcriptional activator required for hag gene expression .
Using an electrophoretic mobility shift assay, we have demonstrated
that purified CodY protein binds specifically to both the hag
and fla/che promoter fragments . Additionally, CodY acts as a
nutritional repressor of transcription from the fla/che
promoter region that contains two functional promoters . CodY binds to
both the
D-
and
A-dependent
promoters in this region, as demonstrated by DNase I footprint
analyses . Footprint analyses of the hag gene demonstrated that
CodY binds downstream of its
D-dependent
promoter . Taken together, these results identify new members of the
CodY regulon that encode motility functions in Bacillus subtilis
and are controlled by the
D
alternate sigma factor .
The
D
regulon of Bacillus subtilis is composed of genes encoding
proteins for motility and chemotaxis functions (including the
structural gene for flagellin, hag) (1,
16), which are maximally expressed at the end of exponential
growth in complex, sporulation medium (11,
14, 20) . In fact,
D-dependent
gene expression has been shown to be subject to nutritional
repression (15) . In complex medium, expression of
a
D-dependent
reporter gene (hag-lacZ) is repressed early in exponential
growth, increases as nutrients become limiting, and peaks early in
stationary phase . In contrast, expression of this reporter remains
high and constant throughout growth in minimal medium . The addition
of Casamino Acids (CAA) to minimal medium results in a decreased
level of hag-lacZ expression that remains constant
throughout growth, whereas the addition of amino acids to minimal
medium recapitulates the pattern of expression found in complex
medium . Therefore, it appears that at least two classes of
nutritional signals may control flagellin gene expression .
Interestingly, hag-lacZ expression in a codY mutant growing
in complex medium is constitutively high, demonstrating that
nutritional repression of flagellin gene expression is abolished in
this strain (15) . CodY controls the nutritional regulation
of several genes involved in competence and the metabolism of
nitrogen and acetate in response to growth rate (8) . In S7
minimal medium, the development of competence is repressed by the
addition of CAA (4) . This repression is exerted
throughout growth and is relieved in strains bearing a codY
mutation (19) . Furthermore, the highest levels of
CodY-dependent repression of nitrogen metabolism genes occur in cells
growing rapidly in a medium rich in amino acids, and this repression
is relieved at the end of exponential growth (8) .
Since CodY has been shown to mediate the repressive effects of both
CAA and amino acids in a manner consistent with their regulation of
flagellin gene expression, its genetic and molecular role in the
control of
D-dependent
gene expression was analyzed in this study .
Recent studies have implicated CodY as a global regulator in B .
subtilis that monitors the general nutritional state of the cell
by sensing intracellular GTP levels (17) . Under rich growth
conditions when GTP levels are high, CodY acts as a transcriptional
repressor, while carbon or nitrogen limitation results in poor
growth and decreased GTP levels that appear to relieve CodY
repression, allowing for expression of genes that comprise the CodY
regulon . Ratnayake-Lecamwasam et al . have demonstrated that GTP binds
to purified CodY and acts as a corepressor in an in vitro
transcription assay, supporting the postulate that intracellular GTP
levels are the molecular link between the nutritional state of the
cell and CodY activity (17) . This work has
received much attention since it provides an elegant mechanism for
sensing the nutritional environment of the bacterial cell and
effecting global gene expression by CodY in B . subtilis and
perhaps nutrient-dependent gene expression in other bacterial species
where CodY homologs have been identified (5, 9,
17) . In fact, the CodY homolog in Lactococcus
lactis acts as a transcriptional repressor of genes involved in
oligopeptide transport and appears to respond to the intracellular
pool of branched chain amino acids (BCAA) (12) . In
this study we monitored the effects of varying intracellular GTP
pools and BCAA availability on CodY repression of flagellin gene
expression .
Bacterial strains. The Escherichia coli strains used
were XL-1 Blue (recA1 endA1 gyrA96 thi-1 hsdR17 supE44 relA1 lac
[F' proAB lacIqZ M15
Tn10] [Tetr]) (Stratagene) and BL21 DE3
(hsdS gal [ cIts857
ind1 Sam7 nin5 lacUV5-T7] gene1) (23)
(Novagen) containing pPS41, which has been previously described (18) .
The latter strain overproduces CodY protein, while XL-1 Blue cells
were used for amplification of pTC99 . The B . subtilis strains
used in this study are listed in Table 1 . All
strains were maintained on solid medium on tryptose blood agar base
(Difco) or Luria broth plates . Antibiotics (Sigma) were used at
standard concentrations when necessary: 1 µg of erythromycin/ml, 25
µg of lincomycin/ml, 5 µg of chloramphenicol/ml, 5 µg of neomycin/ml,
and 50 µg of ampicillin/ml .
| TABLE 1 . B . subtilis strains used in this study
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Construction of B . subtilis strains. The LMB240 strain
bearing the fla/che-cat-lacZ transcriptional fusion was
constructed by transformation of LM96 with plasmid pTC99 . pTC99
contains the fla/che promoter region residing on a 1.03-kb
fragment of DNA amplified from genomic sequence found upstream of
flgB, the first structural gene within the fla/che operon .
This fragment of DNA was amplified from LMB7 chromosomal DNA by PCR
using the upper primer OHW15 (5'-ACACTGCAGGAAACTCCTTGGGTATTCAA-3')
and the lower primer OLS2 (5'-CGGGATCCTCCACTTACCTCCATTTCAGT-3'),
which were designed to contain target sites for PstI and BamHI
restriction enzymes (underlined), respectively . The conditions
for PCR are described below for preparation of probe fragment, except
that an annealing temperature of 55°C was used . The resultant 1.03-kb
fragment was digested with PstI and BamHI to generate
compatible ends for subsequent insertion of the fragment into pJPM122
(22), resulting in pTC99 .
For construction of fla/che-cat-lacZ reporter strains, a lysate
from LMB240 was prepared as previously described (24) .
Strains LMB255 and LMB256 were generated by transducing strains LMB7
and LMB254, respectively, with this lysate as described previously
(24) . LMB7 is the wild-type strain, and LMB254 is an
otherwise isogenic strain containing a null mutation in codY
that was introduced by transformation of chromosomal DNA from FJS151
as described in Table 1 .
Bacterial growth and measurement of ß-galactosidase activity.
B . subtilis cultures for ß-galactosidase assays were grown as
described previously (15) in complex, sporulation (2XSG)
or minimal medium (S7) with the addition of 100-µg/ml
concentrations each of tryptophan and phenylalanine, since the
reporter strains studied are auxotrophic for these requirements . In
some experiments, the minimal medium was further supplemented with
0.32% CAA, or subsets of the same amino acids found in CAA were added
as pure, sterile solutions to their final concentrations in 0.32%
CAA . The effect of decoyinine on hag-lacZ expression was
monitored by first growing the reporter strain (LMB25) in complex
medium (2XSG) lacking decoyinine to a turbidity at 600 nm of 0.35 to
0.45 . The culture was then split into two flasks, and decoyinine
(dissolved at 100 mg/ml in 1 N KOH) was added to one flask to a final
concentration of 500 µg/ml and an equal volume of 1 N KOH was added
to the second flask, as described by others (17) .
ß-Galactosidase activity as a result of hag-lacZ expression
was determined as previously described (6), while
the incubation time for hydrolysis of o-nitrophenyl-ß-D-galactopyranoside
was increased to 60 min to monitor fla/che-cat-lacZ expression .
CodY purification. CodY was purified for an electrophoretic
mobility shift assay (EMSA) and DNase I footprint analysis from an
E . coli BL21 DE3
strain transformed with pPS41, an overexpression plasmid for
codY. Recombinant CodY was purified from this strain essentially
as described by others (18), except that the pulse time
for sonication was reduced from 15 s to 6 s and the heparin agarose
column used was a Hi-Trap column (Pharmacia) . Cell extract from
the BL21 DE3
strain, lacking the pPS41 plasmid, was similarly produced and used as
a negative control .
Preparation of probe fragments. DNA probes for EMSA and
DNase I footprinting analysis were produced via PCR using primers
specific to the regions to be amplified and the appropriate plasmids
as templates (Table 2) . EMSA probes were internally
labeled through inclusion of 50 µCi of [ -32P]dCTP
(NEN), whereas footprint probes were end labeled by first treating
with kinase either the upper or lower primer in the PCR as described
below . All PCR amplifications were accomplished in a 25-µl reaction
volume containing 1x Taq buffer stock
(50 mM KCl, 10 mM Tris-Cl [pH 9.0], 0.1% Triton X-100), 1.5 mM
MgCl2, a 1 mM concentration of each deoxynucleoside triphosphate
(Promega), a 0.5 µM concentration of each primer for EMSA and
unlabeled primer for the footprint assay (Operon), 1 µg of plasmid
DNA as template, and 5 U of Taq polymerase (Perkin-Elmer) . The
cycling parameters were an initial denaturation step of 94°C for 4
min; then 30 cycles at 94°C for 1 min, 50 to 52°C for 1 min, and 72°C
for 1 min; and a final extension step of 72°C for 10 min . The
annealing temperature for the hag-specific primers was 50°C,
and 52°C was used for the remaining primers .
| TABLE 2 . Primers and plasmids used for probe preparation
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The upper or lower primer for footprint analysis (upper to label
nontemplate strand, lower to label template) was end labeled in a
30-µl kinase reaction mixture containing 3 µmol of primer, 1x
kinase buffer (0.5 M Tris-Cl [pH 8.3], 0.1 M MgCl2, 1 mM
spermidine, 1 mM EDTA [pH 5.0], 15 mM dithiothreitol), 50 µCi of [ -32P]dATP,
and 15 U of T4 polynucleotide kinase . The reaction was incubated at
37°C for 45 min, and the enzyme was inactivated by heat denaturation
at 65°C for 10 min . Half of the kinase reaction mixture (15 µl) was
added to the PCR described above for specific labeling of either the
template or nontemplate strand . In order to isolate full-length
probes and to remove unincorporated radionucleotides, the entire
contents of each PCR were resolved by electrophoresis on an 8%
polyacrylamide (30:1) nondenaturing gel . The full-length radiolabeled
probes were purified from gel slices into double-distilled H2O
following standard procedures, and the volume was reduced by repeated
extraction with s-butanol . Typically, probe preparations of
40,000 cpm/µl, as determined by scintillation counter, were obtained
for use in the footprint assay .
EMSA. EMSAs for assessment of DNA binding activity were
performed as described previously (18), with minor
modifications . As opposed to using end-labeled DNA probes, the probes
were generated by PCR and radiolabeled by the addition of [ -32P]dCTP
as described above . Specific activities for the radiolabeled probes
synthesized were approximately 108 cpm/µg, and 50,000 cpm
was used in each assay . Crude extracts from the E . coli strain
overproducing CodY, as well as from the same strain lacking the
overexpression vector, were added at 89 ng unless otherwise noted .
Additionally, the native gels were not dried before being subjected
to autoradiography .
DNase I footprinting analysis. This method was used to
determine the specific regions on fla/che and hag bound
by CodY . End-labeled probes were prepared and purified as described
above, and CodY binding was allowed as described for the EMSA, except
that a 10-µl volume was used . Magnesium and calcium chloride levels
were adjusted to 1.5 and 0.5 mM, respectively, by the addition of
activator buffer (5 mM MgCl2, 10 mM CaCl2), and
DNase I digestion was performed by adding 1 U of RQ1 DNase I . The
digestion reaction was allowed to proceed for 45 s at 25°C and
terminated by the addition of 4 µl of stop solution (20 mM EDTA, 1%
sodium dodecyl sulfate, 0.6 M NaOAC, 0.25 mg of tRNA/ml) . The DNA
products were extracted by phenol-chloroform, precipitated by the
addition of ethanol, and resuspended in 3 µl of sequencing gel
loading buffer (Amersham Life Science) and 3 µl of 0.2 N NaOH
prior to loading on a 6-to-8% polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis-urea
gel . The gels were dried and subjected to autoradiography .
Repression of hag-lacZ expression by the availability of amino
acids is mediated by CodY. Previously, we demonstrated that CodY
mediates nutritional repression of flagellin gene (hag)
expression in complex medium . Specifically, hag-lacZ
expression was found to be constant and high in a codY mutant,
whereas hag-lacZ expression in a wild-type strain is repressed
early in exponential growth (15) . In fact, recent
work has implicated the codY gene product in the nutritional
regulation of several genes and operons and has demonstrated that it
apparently responds to the availability of CAA, as well as to a
mixture of amino acids in the environment (3, 7,
8, 10, 19,
25) . Since we had previously determined that hag-lacZ
expression is also repressed by the addition of CAA and amino
acids (15), we sought to determine the role of CodY in
mediating these specific responses .
Flagellin gene expression in response to CAA and amino acid
addition was monitored in wild-type (LMB25) and codY mutant
(LMB207) cells by measuring ß-galactosidase activity throughout
growth in minimal medium and in minimal medium supplemented with
0.32% CAA or with the same combination and concentration of purified
amino acids . The pattern of hag-lacZ expression found in the
wild-type background was nearly identical to the results previously
obtained (Fig . 1A) (15) . hag-lacZ
expression is constant and high in cells growing in minimal medium
and is repressed throughout growth (>3-fold) by the addition
of CAA . A similar level of repression is achieved early in exponential
growth by the addition of purified amino acids . However, this
repression is relieved at the end of exponential phase, presumably as
the amino acids are exhausted . These results demonstrate that a
mixture of amino acids recreates the pattern of expression found for
the flagellin gene in rich medium (15) and that an
additional component of CAA (that is neither an amino acid nor
exhausted by bacterial metabolism) exerts negative control of hag
gene expression .
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FIG . 1 . Flagellin gene expression in wild-type and codY mutant
strains . ß-Galactosidase activity was monitored in strains bearing a
hag-lacZ reporter construct throughout growth in minimal medium and
minimal medium supplemented with either 0.32% CAA or the same
combination and concentration of purified amino acids . For each panel,
the y axis is ß-galactosidase activity expressed in Miller units
and the x axis is absorbance at 600 nm . Symbols: open squares,
minimal medium; closed squares, minimal medium plus 0.32% CAA; closed
circles, minimal medium plus amino acids . (A) Wild-type strain (LMB25);
(B) codY mutant strain (LMB207) . The data presented are the
results of two experiments.
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Expression of the hag-lacZ reporter in a codY mutant grown in
the presence or absence of amino acids was constant and high
(Fig . 1B), demonstrating that CodY is required for nutritional
repression of flagellin gene expression in response to the availability
of amino acids in the environment . However, the effect of CAA
on hag-lacZ expressions appears to be largely independent of
CodY . The pattern of hag-lacZ expression in the codY mutant
grown in the presence of CAA was identical to the wild-type
strain grown in this medium and was repressed approximately twofold
throughout growth (Fig . 1B) . These results are consistent
with previous work demonstrating that at least two classes of
nutritional signals repress flagellin gene expression (15) .
Whereas CodY is absolutely required for amino acid repression
of flagellin gene expression, it appears to play a small role in
governing the level of the response to CAA .
CodY repression of hag-lacZ appears to be governed by
intracellular GTP levels. A recent study has implicated intracellular
GTP levels as the signal that governs CodY activity in response to
amino acid availability via the stringent response (17) .
We therefore studied the effect of decoyinine addition and
differential activation of the stringent response on hag-lacZ
expression .
Decoyinine addition decreases intracellular GTP levels due to its
role as a GMP synthetase inhibitor . Cells bearing the hag-lacZ
translational fusion (LMB25) were grown in complex medium to early
exponential phase in the absence of decoyinine . The culture was
split, and decoyinine was added to one flask . Within 20 min a
detectable increase in hag-lacZ expression was observed in
cells growing in the presence of decoyinine . At 1 h following
decoyinine addition, maximum expression of the reporter was obtained
and levels were nearly twofold greater than the levels of
ß-galactosidase measured for cells grown in the absence of decoyinine
(Fig . 2A) . The effect of decoyinine addition on
hag-lacZ expression was abolished in a reporter strain bearing a
codY null mutation (LMB207) (data not shown) . These results
are consistent with previous studies demonstrating increased
expression of CodY targets following decoyinine addition (9)
and implicate intracellular GTP levels in the regulation of
flagellar gene expression by CodY .
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FIG . 2 . Effects of decoyinine and subsets of amino acids on flagellin
expression . ß-Galactosidase activity was monitored in a wild-type strain
bearing a hag-lacZ reporter construct . (A) hag-lacZ
expression in complex, sporulation medium (open squares) and in complex
medium with the addition of 500 µg of decoyinine/ml (closed squares) .
The y axis is ß-galactosidase activity expressed in Miller units,
and the x axis is time in minutes . At the zero time point the
culture was split and decoyinine added as described in Materials and
Methods . The data presented are the results of two experiments . (B)
hag-lacZ expression early in logarithmic growth (A600
= 0.5) in minimal medium and in minimal medium supplemented with the
purified amino acids listed on the x axis at the same
concentrations found in 0.32% CAA . No = no amino acid supplementation;
All = all amino acids found in CAA; BCAA = leucine, isoleucine, and
valine . The y axis is ß-galactosidase activity expressed in
Miller units . The data presented are averages of replicate experiments.
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Intracellular GTP pools are apparently affected by amino acid
availability through the stringent response (2) . As a result
of amino acid limitation, the ratio of uncharged to charged
tRNA in the cell increases, triggering the stringent response and the
synthesis of ppGpp from existing GTP pools by the stringent response
regulator, RelA . Furthermore, production of ppGpp inhibits IMP
dehydrogenase, the first enzyme in the GMP synthesis pathway .
Therefore, activation of the stringent response by amino acid
limitation decreases intracellular GTP by at least two separate
mechanisms and is predicted to inhibit CodY activity in the cell .
This hypothesis is based on recent biochemical studies demonstrating
that CodY is a GTP binding protein and that the GTP cofactor is
required for maximum repression of one of its target genes (dpp)
in an in vitro transcription reaction (17) .
We sought to quantify the level of repression exerted by CodY on
flagellin expression due to activation of the stringent response,
since the high levels of hag-lacZ expression (>2,000 Miller
units when maximally expressed) provide a sensitive monitor of CodY
activity . The hag-lacZ reporter strain was grown in S7 minimal
medium containing 2 mM glucose . Under these conditions, glucose is
utilized as the energy source, and the addition of 0.32% CAA is
nearly limiting for growth and has a maximal effect on the repression
of hag-lacZ expression (15) . The hag-lacZ
reporter strain (LMB25) was grown in S7 medium in the presence
or absence of amino acids, and their effect on flagellin gene
expression was measured during early exponential growth (A600
= 0.5) . The lack of amino acid supplementation was presumed to
activate the stringent response, and a time point early in
exponential growth was chosen for this analysis since maximal CodY
repression of hag expression is found at this time (Fig .
1A) . Flagellin gene expression in the reporter strain resulted
in an eightfold decrease in ß-galactosidase activity (285
versus 2,242 Miller units) when the reporter cells were grown in the
presence of amino acids (Fig . 2B) . These results
support the hypothesis that activation of the stringent response by
the depletion of amino acids in the medium leads to inactivation of
CodY and an eightfold increase in hag-lacZ expression .
Interestingly, the addition of BCAA results in a twofold decrease
in hag-lacZ expression in the reporter strain (1,063 versus
2,242 Miller units) when compared to flagellin expression in the
absence of amino acid supplementation (Fig . 2B) . While BCAA
addition may result in partial activation of the stringent response
and a decrease in CodY repressor activity, it appears that these
amino acids may play a role in governing CodY function independent
of the stringent response . The CodY homolog in L . lactis responds
to the availability of BCAA in the environment to mediate repression
of its target genes (12) . The addition of BCAA in our
system leads to a twofold repression of hag-lacZ expression
(Fig . 2B), consistent with a similar regulatory
mechanism in B . subtilis .
Taken together, the results of our supplementation studies support
the proposed role of the stringent response in indirectly controlling
CodY activity by affecting intracellular GTP levels and suggest that
additional signaling mechanisms exist . Additional environmental
signals may include the monitoring of BCAA levels as seen in L .
lactis and a non-amino-acid component found in CAA .
CodY binds specifically to hag and fla/che promoter
fragments. Having further characterized the nature of the nutritional
signal responsible for repression of flagellin gene expression by
CodY, we sought to analyze the molecular mechanism by which it exerts
this control . CodY is a DNA binding protein that binds specifically
to the srf, comK, and dpp promoters (18)
and therefore appears to exert its repressive effect on transcription
by inhibiting association of holoenzyme with promoter DNA . Expression
of the flagellin gene initiates from a
D-dependent
promoter and requires expression of the
D
structural gene, sigD (14), encoded within
the fla/che transcription unit (13) . The effect of
CodY on flagellin gene expression could be exerted directly by
binding to the hag promoter or indirectly by binding to the
fla/che promoter region, which contains dual promoters recognized
by the
A
and
D
forms of the holoenzyme (6) .
EMSA was used to monitor the ability of CodY to bind to the hag
and fla/che promoter regions . Radiolabeled probes for both
regions were prepared by PCR in the presence of [32P]dCTP as
described in Materials and Methods . Radiolabeled dpp promoter
probe was similarly prepared as a positive control for CodY
binding, whereas the polC promoter fragment was prepared as a
negative control (18) . In all cases, radiolabeled probe was
incubated in the absence of protein extract, with crude extract
from the BL21 DE3
E . coli strain lacking the CodY-overproducing plasmid (pPS41),
or with crude extract from the same strain bearing pPS41 and
overproducing CodY .
Our preparation of CodY protein was found to bind to the dpp
promoter probe (Fig . 3, lane 3) and failed to bind to
the polC probe (data not shown), confirming the results of
others (18) . Moreover, CodY was found to bind to
both the hag and fla/che promoter probes (Fig.
3, lanes 6, 7, and 10) . The retardation of
electrophoretic mobility was shown to be consistent with binding of
CodY protein, since no retardation was observed when crude extract
from the E . coli strain lacking the codY overexpression
vector (pPS41) was used (Fig . 3, lanes 2, 5, and 9) .
|
FIG . 3 . Gel retardation of 32P-labeled promoter fragments by
crude extracts from E . coli cells overproducing CodY . Lanes 1 to
3, dpp promoter probe; lanes 4 to 7, hag promoter probe;
lanes 8 to 10, fla/che promoter probe . Lanes 1, 4, and 8,
radiolabeled probe alone; lanes 2, 5, and 9, 89 ng of crude extract from
a strain lacking the codY overexpression vector; lanes 3, 6, and
10, 89 ng of crude extract from CodY-overproducing strain; lane 7, 445
ng of crude extract from CodY-overproducing strain.
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Therefore, the effect of CodY on flagellin gene expression appears to
be exerted directly by binding to the hag promoter and indirectly
by binding to the fla/che promoter region required for normal
expression of sigD (6) . Interestingly, a fivefold
increase in CodY (445 ng) crude extract was required to obtain the
same shift for the hag promoter as found for the dpp
promoter (Fig . 3, compare lanes 3 and 7), whereas
the same amount of CodY crude extract completely retarded the
electrophoretic mobility of the fla/che promoter probe (Fig.
3, lane 10) . These results suggest a similar
affinity for CodY binding to the dpp and fla/che
promoter regions that is relatively stronger than that of CodY
binding to the hag promoter . In fact, competition assays using
cold dpp promoter DNA as competitor (data not shown) demonstrated
an intrinsic binding affinity of CodY for fla/che > dpp >>
hag promoter DNA under the EMSA conditions used, further confirming
the specificity of CodY binding to the fla/che and hag
promoters .
CodY appears to control expression from the fla/che promoter
region in vivo. Having demonstrated that CodY binds to fla/che
promoter DNA in vitro, we determined whether it controls fla/che
expression in the cell . A fla/che-cat-lacZ reporter fusion was
introduced into the SPß site of wild-type and codY mutant
cells, and fla/che expression was monitored by measuring
ß-galactosidase activity . Since fla/che promoter function is
subject to feedback regulation by its gene products (6,
24), the fla/che reporter was introduced at
the SPß site . In this way the endogenous fla/che operon
remains undisturbed, permitting us to study CodY regulation of
fla/che expression under conditions in which the fla/che
gene products are normally expressed .
The results found in Fig . 4 demonstrate that while
expression of fla/che-cat-lacZ is repressed early in growth in
the wild-type strain, fla/che expression is released from
nutritional repression in the codY strain . These results
suggest that CodY is required for nutritional repression of
fla/che expression in the cell . The fla/che promoter
region contains two functional promoters, PD-3 and
fla/chePA, recognized by the
D
and
A
forms of RNA polymerase, respectively (6) . The
results of the fla/che-cat-lacZ experiment failed to
differentiate between CodY control of an individual promoter or its
possible regulation of both promoter elements .
|
FIG . 4 . fla/che expression in wild-type and codY mutant
strains . ß-Galactosidase activity was monitored in strains bearing a
fla/che-cat-lacZ reporter construct throughout growth in complex,
sporulation medium . The y axis is ß-galactosidase activity
expressed in Miller units, and the x axis is absorbance at 600
nm . Symbols: closed circles, wild type (LMB255); open squares, codY
(LMB256) . The data presented are the results of two experiments.
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Footprint analyses demonstrate that CodY binds to each of the fla/che
promoters. Since the fla/che promoter region contains both
D-
and
A-dependent
promoters (6), fla/che promoter probes were
independently generated for each promoter (Table 2) .
The PD-3F probe was designed to contain DNA specific to
the
D-dependent
promoter, whereas the fla/chePAF probe contained
sequences specific for the
A-dependent
promoter . The nontemplate or template strand was labeled for
each promoter probe, and the areas of CodY protection were determined
by DNase I footprint analysis in the presence or absence of GTP .
Our results (Fig . 5) demonstrate that CodY binds to both
the PD-3 and fla/chePA promoters on both
the nontemplate and template strands, protecting the -10, -35, and
nearby sequences from DNase I digestion . Similar levels of CodY
protein (32.5 to 75 nM CodY) allowed for detectable levels of CodY
binding to both promoters, suggesting a similar affinity of CodY for
both the
A-
and
D-dependent
promoter sequences . However, the addition of 150 nM CodY to the PD-3
probe resulted in extended areas of protection not found for the
fla/chePA probe . The latter result is particularly
interesting given that only fla/chePA plays an
important role in the expression of the fla/che operon (24) .
The extended area of protection seen for both the nontemplate and
template strands of fla/chePA when 150 nM CodY was used
(Fig . 5B, lane 4 in each panel), compared to the area of
protection found when 75 nM CodY was used (Fig . 5B,
lane 3 in each panel), may indicate cooperative binding of CodY . In
fact, footprint analyses of other CodY targets have defined areas of
protection ranging from 35 to 99 nucleotides (18,
19), consistent with cooperative binding of CodY
to its target sequences .
|
FIG . 5 . DNase I footprint analyses of the fla/che promoter region
that contains dual promoter elements dependent on
D
and
A
holoenzymes . The
D-dependent
promoter (PD-3) lies 133 bp upstream of the
A-dependent
promoter (fla/che PA), which lies 70 bp upstream of
the translational start codon for the first gene in the fla/che
operon, flgB (6) . Individual probe fragments
were prepared for each promoter and either the nontemplate or template
strand radiolabeled as described in Materials and Methods . For each set
of lanes, a sequencing reaction containing ddCTP was generated, and the
products were resolved to produce a sequencing ladder labeled as the C
lane . (A) Results of CodY binding to PD-3, the
D-dependent
promoter . Nontemplate lane 1, no CodY protein; lanes 2 and 3, 32.5 and
75 nM CodY; lane 4, 32.5 nM CodY in the presence of 2 mM GTP . Template
lane 1, no CodY protein; lane 2, 75 nM CodY; lane 3, 75 nM CodY in the
presence of 2 mM GTP . (B) Results of CodY binding to fla/chePA,
the
A-dependent
promoter . Nontemplate lane 1, no CodY protein; lanes 2 to 4, increasing
amounts of CodY protein (32.5, 75, and 150 nM); lane 5, 32.5 nM CodY in
the presence of 2 mM GTP . Template lane 1, no CodY protein; lanes 2 to
4, increasing amounts of CodY protein (32.5, 75, and 150 nM); lanes 5
and 6, 32.5 and 75 nM CodY in the presence of 2 mM GTP . The sequence of
the protected regions on each strand is given at the bottom, and the
-10, -35 promoter sequences are indicated in boldface, along with the +1
transcriptional start sites that were determined in previous studies (6).
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CodY has been shown to be a GTP binding protein, and 2 mM GTP was
found to increase repression of the dpp target gene in an in
vitro transcription assay . However, binding of CodY to the dpp
and srfA target genes is relatively unaffected (17) .
We therefore postulated that the addition of 2 mM GTP might affect
the CodY footprint found on the fla/che promoters, indicative
of a conformational change upon GTP binding . Perhaps GTP binding
by CodY promotes a change in its conformation that increases
its ability to act as a transcriptional repressor . No change in the
footprint was observed upon GTP addition (Fig . 5A and B,
last lanes in each panel) . Further, it appeared that the
addition of this nucleotide partially inhibited DNase I activity as
evidenced by the greater representation of higher-molecular-weight
DNA fragments in the reaction containing GTP . Therefore, our results
suggest that the addition of 2 mM GTP does not significantly affect
the footprint of CodY on either of the fla/che promoters, as
has been found for the dpp and srfA targets (A . Sonenshein,
personal communication) .
CodY binds downstream of the
D-dependent
hag promoter. Initial attempts to localize the region of CodY
binding to the hag promoter by DNase I footprint analysis
demonstrated that the protected region was downstream of the
D-dependent
promoter . As a result, new hag probes were synthesized that
contained sequences downstream of the promoter (Table 2) .
Binding of CodY to these probes was comparable to binding of CodY to
the fla/che probes, requiring 75 to 150 nM CodY for visible
detection of the protected region . It appears that the relatively
weak affinity of CodY to the hag probe used for EMSA may be
due to the fact that the protected region is located at the 3'-most
region of that probe, and additional residues downstream of this
region may be required for stabilization of CodY binding .
The CodY footprint of the hag probe begins approximately 80
bp downstream of the transcriptional start site on both the
nontemplate strand and template strands (Fig . 6) . Protection
of the nontemplate strand includes the sequences encoding the
ribosome binding site and start codon (Fig . 6) . Furthermore,
as was found for CodY binding to the fla/che promoters, 2 mM
GTP failed to promote a significant change in the CodY footprint
found for the hag probe (Fig . 6, lanes 5 and 3 in
the nontemplate and template panels, respectively) .
|
FIG . 6 . DNase I footprint analyses of the 5' end of the hag gene .
Individual probe fragments were prepared for either the nontemplate or
template strand radiolabeled as described in Materials and Methods . For
each set of lanes a sequencing reaction containing ddCTP was generated,
and the products were resolved to produce a sequencing ladder labeled as
the C lane . Nontemplate lane 1, no CodY protein; lanes 2 to 4,
increasing amounts of CodY protein (75, 150, and 300 nM); lane 5, 75 nM
CodY in the presence of 2 mM GTP . Template lane 1, no CodY protein; lane
2, 150 nM CodY; lane 3, 150 nM CodY in the presence of 2 mM GTP . The
sequence of the protected regions on each strand is given at the bottom,
and the -10, -35
D-dependent
promoter is indicated in boldface along with the +1 transcriptional
start site that was determined previously (14) . The
ribosome binding site and translational start codon are underlined and
in boldface.
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Binding of CodY to the srfA, comK, and dpp promoter regions
includes, or is near, the
A-dependent
promoters found within these regions (18,
19) . CodY protection of the srfA promoter
includes both the -10 and -35 regions, while only the -35 region of
comK is protected, and protection of dpp begins immediately
downstream of the -10 region and includes the transcriptional
start site . CodY protection of the sequences encoding the ribosome
binding site and start codon appears to be unique to the hag
gene . No consensus target site has been identified for CodY binding (8),
and the addition of the fla/che and hag sequences
protected from DNase I digestion in an alignment search failed to
identify highly conserved sequence motifs (data not shown) . Instead,
it has been proposed that a DNA structure formed by AT-rich DNA
sequences is recognized and bound by CodY (9,
19) . In fact, the sequences bound by CodY in both the fla/che
promoter and hag gene are AT rich, although no conserved DNA
structure was identified for these targets and other members of the
CodY regulon by computer-based DNA-folding algorithms (data not
shown) .
While the specific molecular determinants for CodY binding to
target DNA remain elusive, our results have led to the identification
and study of additional members of the CodY regulon . Expression of
the hag gene and fla/che operon was found to be subject to
nutritional repression by CodY, and this activity was linked to
intracellular GTP levels and perhaps the availability of BCAA and
small peptides . These data confirm and extend our understanding of
CodY, an important global regulator in B . subtilis that is
highly conserved in other bacterial species (9,
12, 17) . CodY appears to monitor the general
nutritional state of the cell and govern the expression of gene
products required for adaptation to nutritional stress, including
competence factors and nitrogen utilization proteins (9) .
This work demonstrates that motility functions are another adaptive
response controlled by CodY, since the hag gene and fla/che
operon are required for flagellar assembly and expression of the
flagellum-specific alternate sigma factor, SigD (1,
16) . Moreover, the first biochemical evidence is
presented for control of a SigD-dependent gene by the CodY protein .
We are grateful to Abraham L . Sonenshein and members of his
laboratory for providing the CodY-overproducing strain and for
technical advice necessary for completion of this work . We thank
Laura Burrus and Joyce West for their insightful guidance in
preparing CodY protein extracts and effectively implementing the
EMSA, respectively . We acknowledge Ivan Moszer for amino acid
utilization data in B . subtilis and the CCSF Bridges summer
students of 1999 for construction of pTC99 .
This research was supported by NSF-CAREER grant MCB-9600932 and
NIH MBRS SCORE grant S06 GM52588 to L.M.-M . and by NIH-MBRS
GM52588-03 support to J.I . and J.C.P .
* Corresponding author . Mailing address: Department of Biology,
San Francisco State University, San Francisco, CA 94132 . Phone: (415) 338-3289 .
Fax: (415) 338-0927 . E-mail: marquez@sfsu.edu.
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