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Journal of Bacteriology, February 2004, p . 866-869, Vol . 186,
No . 3
Transcriptional Profiling of Colicin-Induced Cell Death of Escherichia coli
MG1655 Identifies Potential Mechanisms by Which Bacteriocins Promote Bacterial
Diversity
Daniel Walker,1 Matthew Rolfe,2 Arthur
Thompson,2 Geoffrey R . Moore,3 Richard James,4
Jay C . D . Hinton,2 and Colin Kleanthous1*
Department of Biology, University of York, Heslington, York YO10 5YW,1
Molecular Microbiology Group, Institute of Food Research, Norwich Research Park,
Colney, Norwich NR4 7UA,2 School of Chemical Sciences and Pharmacy,
University of East Anglia, Norwich NR4 7TJ,3 Division of Microbiology
& Infectious Diseases, University Hospital, Queens Medical Centre, University of
Nottingham, Nottingham NG7 2UH, United Kingdom4
Received 28 August 2003/ Accepted 24 October 2003
We report the transcriptional response of Escherichia coli MG1655
to damage induced by colicins E3 and E9, bacteriocins that kill
cells through inactivation of the ribosome and degradation of
chromosomal DNA, respectively . Colicin E9 strongly induced the
LexA-regulated SOS response, while colicin E3 elicited a broad
response that included the induction of cold shock genes, symptomatic
of translational arrest . Colicin E3 also increased the transcription
of cryptic prophage genes and other laterally acquired mobile
elements . The transcriptional responses to both these toxins suggest
mechanisms that may promote genetic diversity in E . coli
populations, pointing to a more general role for colicins in adaptive
bacterial physiology than has hitherto been realized .
Colicins are plasmid-encoded, multidomain bacteriocins produced by
Escherichia coli during times of stress (12) . Colicin E9
is a magnesium-dependent endonuclease that kills cells through
cleavage of chromosomal DNA at its H-N-H active site (17,
22) . The H-N-H motif is found in a diverse range
of nucleases, including the caspase-activated DNases, responsible for
the degradation of chromatin in eukaryotic apoptosis (27) .
Colicin E3 kills cells by inactivating the prokaryotic ribosome and
abolishing protein synthesis . The ability of this enzyme to inhibit
ribosome function is due to its cleavage of a single phosphodiester
bond in the 16S rRNA between bases A1493 and G1494 at the ribosomal
A site (2) . In the present work, we show that the global
transcriptional responses of E . coli to colicins E3 and E9
have distinct signatures that are consistent with their known
cellular targets . Moreover, they indicate how bacterial cells respond
to colicin intoxication and highlight molecular mechanisms by which
microbial genetic diversity may be promoted .
The effects of colicins E9 and E3 on E . coli were studied in
type I microarray experiments (7) . For each experiment, RNA
was extracted in parallel from colicin-treated and control cultures
of E . coli MG1655 grown at 37°C with shaking in 50 ml of
Luria-Bertani broth, with the purified colicin E3-Im3 (28) or
colicin E9-Im9 (29) complexes added (at an optical
density at 600 nm of 0.6) to a final concentration of 5 µg/ml of
culture . RNA samples were prepared from cultures taken at 0,
10, and, in the case of colicin E3, 20 min after the addition of the
toxin . Each RNA sample was labeled in a reverse transcriptase
reaction, and the cDNAs from the test and control cultures were
combined and hybridized to E . coli MG1655 microarrays in quadruplicate
(technical replicates) . Each experiment was repeated with independently
prepared RNA (biological replicates) . Until about 20 min after
the addition of colicin E9, the growth of the colicin-treated cells
mirrored that of the control culture . For colicin E3, the arrest of
growth was more rapid but did not cause any overall reduction in
optical density after 10 min . The detailed protocols for RNA
isolation, reverse transcription of RNA, and cDNA labeling with Cy3
and Cy5 are available at
http://www.ifr.ac.uk/safety/microarrays/protocols.html . The E .
coli K-12 microarrays consisted of 4,262 of the 4,279
protein-coding regions or open reading frames derived from the
complete genome sequence (1) . Entire coding sequences were
amplified by using specific primer pairs (Sigma Genosys) . DNA was
spotted onto CMT-GAPS slides (Corning) by using a self-built
"Stanford" arraying robot (23) . Following the
scanning of microarrays, spot and background fluorescence was
quantified by using GenePix Pro software, version 3.0 (Axon
Instruments, Inc.) . Data centering was performed by bringing the
median ln(red/green) to 0 for each group of spots printed by the same
pin . Microarray data were filtered by using Significance Analysis of
Microarrays (SAM) freeware (24) . The raw data
derived from colicin E3-treated cultures at 10 and 20 min were SAM
filtered at delta values of 1.5 and 2.0, respectively, and the E9
data were filtered at a delta value of 2.0 . The median coefficients
of variation for the biological replicates were 11.2 and 6.5% for E9
at 0 and 10 min, respectively, and 10.8 and 29.8% for E3 at 0 and
20 min, respectively . The median coefficients of variation for
the technical replicates were between 4.1 and 8% .
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Colicin E9 induces the SOS response .
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Colicin E9 treatment for 10 min led to the up-regulation of 30 genes
by more than twofold . All but two of these genes can be identified as
belonging to the LexA (SOS) regulon (6, 9,
26) . In view of the nonspecific DNase activity of
colicin E9, activation of the LexA regulon was not unexpected . It is,
however, notable that few genes outside this response are induced,
with only ppdC and b1012 not being readily identifiable
as being LexA regulated . Five genes were down-regulated more than
twofold on colicin E9 treatment (lpp, cspE, yeeD,
cysH, and yhjR) . Hence, the transcriptional changes
that we observed are almost exclusively limited to the classical SOS
response . Overall, the transcriptional response to colicin E9
treatment is similar to that reported by Courcelle et al . (6),
who identified LexA-regulated genes in a broader microarray-based
study in which DNA damage was induced through the exposure of
wild-type and LexA-deficient cells to UV radiation . As in their
study, sulA, recN, recA, umuC, and
umuD were among the genes for which mRNA levels showed the
greatest increase on induction by colicin E9, all showing >7-fold
up-regulation . Additionally, similar transcriptional readthroughs
from known LexA-regulated genes are apparent . For example,
transcription of dinB leads to increased transcription of
yafN, yafO, and yafP (see "Supplementary data" below) .
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The transcriptional response to colicin E3 shows
similarities to the cold shock response .
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Colicin E3 selectively cleaves around 50 bases from the 5' end of the
16S rRNA of the prokaryotic ribosome, leading to the inhibition of
translation (2) . This specific effect on the 16S
rRNA could be observed directly in our experiments by analyzing the
RNA samples isolated from colicin E3-treated cells, used subsequently
for microarray analysis (Fig . 1); this indicated
that there was almost complete cleavage of 16S rRNA in the culture
after 20 min . In contrast to colicin E9 treatment, where changes in
mRNA levels are almost exclusively limited to increased transcript
levels of the LexA regulon, many genes show significantly decreased
transcript levels after 10 min . It has previously been shown in
protein expression studies that the response of E . coli to
inhibitors of translation, such as the antibiotic chloramphenicol, is
similar to that elicited by cold shock (25) . Notable aspects
of the cold shock response are increased expression of the major
cold shock protein CspA and the cold shock-inducible DEAD box
RNA helicase CsdA and decreased expression of heat shock-inducible
proteins (14, 25) . An increase in
transcription of the cspA gene on treatment of E . coli
with chloramphenicol has also been reported (13) .
In our study, both cspA and csdA showed increased
transcript levels of six- and fivefold, respectively, on colicin E3
treatment at the 10-min time point and are among the most highly
up-regulated genes (Fig . 2a) . The
32-regulated
heat shock proteins encoded by dnaK, dnaJ, gapA,
mopA, mopB, and htpG showed significantly
decreased transcript levels of three- to eightfold at the 20-min time
point (Fig . 2a) . Down-regulation of the heat shock
regulon is likely related to the reduced translational capacity of
colicin E3-treated cells and the instability of the
32
protein, which is rapidly degraded (half-life, <1 min) in growing
MG1655 cells at 37°C (15) . We also noted increased
transcript levels for genes encoding the CspA homologues CspF and
CspG (4- and 10-fold, respectively, at 20 min) and significant
decreases in those encoding CspC and CspE (approximately 5-fold at 20
min) . CspG is cold shock inducible, but little is known about CspF
expression patterns (8) . Both CspE and CspC are not
cold shock inducible and are in fact constitutively expressed at 37°C
(21) . In addition, transcript levels for rhlE,
which encodes a DEAD box RNA helicase closely related to CsdA, was
up-regulated by a factor of threefold after 10 min . Cold induction of
a DEAD box RNA helicase has also been described for cyanobacteria (5)
and archaea (19), and this appears to be a
conserved feature of the response to cold shock and perhaps other
forms of translational inhibition . DEAD box RNA helicases are
ubiquitous; their importance to cold adaptation even in eukaryotes is
highlighted by the mutation of the RNA helicase LOS4 of
Arabidopsis thaliana which causes cold sensitivity (11) .
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FIG . 1 . Effect of colicin E3 on 16S rRNA from E . coli MG1655 .
Time-dependent cleavage of the 16S rRNA by colicin E3 monitored by size
chromatography by using an Agilent 2000 bioanalyzer . Total RNA was
isolated from colicin E3-treated cultures (E3) and compared to control
cultures (Cont) of E . coli MG1655.
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FIG . 2 . Time dependence of mRNA colicin/control ratios for selected
genes . (a) Known cold shock- and heat shock-inducible genes . Colicin E3
treatment induces increased transcript levels for the cold
shock-inducible genes cspA and csdA and decreased
transcript levels for the
32-regulated
heat shock genes . (b) Transcription profiles for selected genes involved
in de novo purine synthesis and nucleotide transport.
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Functional classification and regulation of genes showing
decreased mRNA levels .
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In addition to the down-regulation of the
32-dependent
heat shock proteins, it is notable that a significant number of genes
showing decreased transcript levels are in the
38
regulon . Decreased transcript levels were also observed for the
majority of genes coding for enzymes involved in central energy
metabolism . In particular, those required for the conversion of
fructose 1,6-biphosphate to pyruvate (fba, tpiA,
gapA, pgk, gpmA, eno, and pykF [10])
were strongly affected and were down-regulated by three- to
sixfold after 20 min . This metabolic pathway is highly conserved, and
decreased transcript levels for some of these genes have been
reported on treatment of Streptococcus pneumoniae with
chloramphenicol, erythromycin, or tetracycline, but not puromycin (20) .
Genes encoding a number of tricarboxylic acid enzymes (gltA,
icdA, acnA, fumA, and frdA) were also down-regulated
on colicin E3 treatment .
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Functional classification and regulation of genes showing
increased mRNA levels .
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Many genes showing increased transcript levels are of unknown
function and in many cases are not conserved except in very close
relatives of E . coli . A notable exception is provided by genes
involved in de novo purine synthesis under the transcriptional
control of the PurR repressor, which show significant up-regulation
after 10 min (30) . Indeed, all the enzymes required for the
conversion of 5-phosphoribosyl-1-pyrophosphate to inosinate,
i.e., the enzymes encoded by purFDNLMKCBH, showed a 1.5- to
4-fold increase in transcript levels after 10 min of colicin E3
treatment . However, after 20 min, these genes were down-regulated by
around twofold relative to the 10-min time point (Fig . 2b) .
In S . pneumoniae, an increase in transcript levels for nearly
all these genes was also observed 10 min after the addition of
sublethal concentrations of antibiotics that inhibit translation (20) .
Although this aspect of the response to translational inhibition
appears to be conserved between E . coli and S . pneumoniae,
the transcriptional arrangement of the PurR regulon in the two
organisms is very different . In S . pneumoniae, these genes form
a single monocistronic cluster, whereas in E . coli they are
distributed either singly or in pairs throughout the genome .
A surprising observation stemming from our array data for colicin
E3-treated cells is that a number of genes showing increased
transcript levels were located in phage-derived regions of the
genome . E . coli K-12 harbors at least seven cryptic prophages,
CP4-6, DLP12, e14, Rac, Qin, CP4-44,
and CP4-57, the locations of which have been either
precisely or approximately delineated (1,
3) . At the 20-min time point, around 15 of the 100 genes
showing the greatest increases in transcript levels are located
within prophage regions . Figure 3 shows the changes (n-fold)
for those genes lying within and bordering prophages CP4-6
and DLP12 (1, 3) . Genes in
the cryptic prophage regions showing increased expression include
predicted DNA integrases, invertases, and recombinases (e.g., ybcK,
b1345, b1374, and b1545) . It is notable that
other laterally acquired elements such as the insertion sequence IS1
genes, insA and insB, and genes of the Rhs elements,
rhsD and rhsE, also show large increases in transcript levels
(four- to sixfold after 20 min) .
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FIG . 3 . Colicin E3 up-regulates transcription of cryptic prophage genes .
Effect of colicin E3 on genes of the cryptic prophages CP4-6
and DLP12 after 20 min . Filled circles indicate genes of the
prophage, and open circles represent genes bordering the prophage.
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Although the cellular targets of colicins E9 and E3 are quite
different, the present study suggests that both may play a role in
the adaptive physiology of a bacterium . In the case of colicin E9,
this may be due to the activation of SOS-inducible error-prone DNA
polymerases and perhaps other SOS-induced functions (16,
18) . For colicin E3, increased mRNA levels for mobile
genetic elements, which include DNA recombinases of phage and
insertion sequence origin, may provide another route to the
generation of genetic diversity . It is interesting to speculate that
the administration of sublethal quantities of translation inhibitors
to a bacterium (in the present case, this administration pertains
to colicins but could apply equally to small-molecule antibiotics)
may promote lateral gene transfer and/or chromosomal rearrangements
and that these changes may lead to the accelerated acquisition
and spread of antibiotic resistance . Indeed, the relationship between
stress and the mobility of transposable elements in prokaryotes and
eukaryotes has been well documented (reviewed in reference
4) . Colicin E9 does not produce the same global
effect, and so this response cannot simply be due to colicin-induced
cell death but must be linked to the translational arrest caused by
colicin E3 . The mechanism by which this arrest signals the elevated
transcription of mobile elements in the genome is currently unknown .
Moreover, we are unaware of a similar phenomenon in biology, where
the cellular response to untimely cell death is akin to "rats leaving
a sinking ship."
The SAM-filtered data for genes showing a >2-fold increase in
transcript levels on colicin E9 treatment are listed in Table S1
found at
http://www.biolws1.york.ac.uk/echobase/colicinarrays/ . Filtered
data sets for genes showing increased or decreased transcript levels
on colicin E3 treatment after 10 min are listed in Table S2 and Table
S3, and those after 20 min of treatment are listed in Table S4 and
Table S5 .
This work was funded by The Wellcome Trust and the BBSRC .
We thank Peter Young (York, United Kingdom) and Mark Buttner
(Norwich, United Kingdom) for helpful discussions and Geraint Barton
(York) for additional statistical analysis .
* Corresponding author . Mailing address: University of York,
Department of Biology, York YO10 5YW, United Kingdom . Phone: 44 1904 328820 .
Fax: 44 1904 328825 . E-mail: ck11@york.ac.uk.
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