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Journal of Bacteriology, August 2004, p . 5258-5266, Vol . 186,
No . 16
Control
of Virulence by the Two-Component System CiaR/H Is Mediated via HtrA, a Major
Virulence Factor of Streptococcus pneumoniae
Yasser Musa Ibrahim, Alison R . Kerr, Jackie McCluskey, and Tim J .
Mitchell*
Division of Infection and Immunity, Institute of Biomedical and Life
Sciences, University of Glasgow, Glasgow G12-8QQ, United Kingdom
Received 19 February 2004/ Accepted 5 May 2004
The CiaR/H two-component system is involved in regulating virulence
and competence in Streptococcus pneumoniae . The system is known
to regulate many genes, including that for high-temperature
requirement A (HtrA) . This gene has been implicated in the ability of
the pneumococcus to colonize the nasopharynx of infant rats . We
reported previously that deletion of the gene for HtrA made the
pneumococcal strains much less virulent in mouse models, less able to
grow at higher temperatures, and more sensitive to oxidative stress .
In this report, we show that the growth phenotype as well as
sensitivity to oxidative stress of
ciaR
mutant was very similar to that of a
htrA
mutant and that the expression of the HtrA protein was reduced in a
ciaR-null mutant . Both the in vitro phenotype and the reduced
virulence of
ciaR
mutant could be restored by increasing the expression of HtrA .
Streptococcus pneumoniae (the pneumococcus) is an important
human pathogen . This gram-positive organism is a major cause of a
variety of diseases such as pneumonia, bacteremia, meningitis, otitis
media, and sinusitis in both adults and children all over the world (40,
43) . The nasopharynx is the major reservoir of
pneumococci, from which they can spread to other sites such as
bloodstream or lung tissues (44) .
Pathogenic bacteria encounter a number of environmental stresses
during their life cycle such as temperature shifts, variations in
osmolarity, changes in pH, and nutrient deprivation (45) .
The pneumococcus responds to these stresses, particularly heat
stress, by mediating a cascade of events leading to the synthesis of
a unique group of proteins called heat shock proteins (HSPs) (7) .
The production of these proteins represents a protective cellular
response to cope with the stress-induced damage of proteins (26) .
HSPs are molecular chaperones or proteases that take part in protein
quality control during normal growth and under stress-inducing
conditions (6, 12) .
Recent studies have demonstrated the role of bacterial two-component
signal-transducing systems in mediating adaptive responses to
environmental signals (30, 38) . The
pneumococcal CiaR/H two-component system consists of a sensor
histidine kinase, CiaH, anchored in the cell membrane and a
cytoplasmic response regulator, CiaR, which is a DNA-binding protein
involved in the regulation of genes in response to environmental
signals sensed by CiaH (15) . This system was
identified as 1 of 13 two-component signal-transducing systems in two
genomic screens (24, 42) . Pleotropic
effects caused by cia mutations in the pneumococcus include
sensitivity to cefotaxime, an ability to form protoplast,
susceptibility to lysis by deoxycholate (11), and
a tendency to early lysis (24) . CiaH mutants also
have transformation deficiency (8, 11,
16) . In vivo, CiaR/H has been shown to contribute to
colonization of the mouse lung (42) and the
nasopharynx of infant rats (35) and to be involved
in systemic infection in mice (27) . Previous
studies have shown that the CiaR/H regulon contains many genes,
including the high-temperature requirement A gene (29,
35) .
High-temperature requirement A (HtrA), also known as DegP or DO
protease (36), is a stress-induced serine protease that
manifests both general molecular chaperone and proteolytic activities
and switches from chaperone to protease in a temperature-dependent
manner (37), the protease activity being most apparent
at elevated temperature . It is involved in the degradation of
periplasmic misfolded proteins in Escherichia coli (39) .
The evidence points to a major role for this protease in helping
organisms to survive environmental stresses such as elevated
temperature and oxidative and osmotic stresses (13,
31, 46) . HtrA is known to be involved
in the virulence of many gram-negative bacteria such as Salmonella
enterica serovar Typhimurium (2), Brucella
abortus (9), and Yersinia enterocolitica
(25) . This protease is also required for full
virulence of the gram-positive bacterium Streptococcus pyogenes
(20) . An HtrA homologue has also been identified in
S . pneumoniae (10) and is regulated by the
CiaR/H two-component system (29, 35) .
These studies demonstrated that CiaR positively regulates HtrA and
that this regulation is probably direct, as the CiaR was shown to
bind to DNA upstream of the htrA gene . An S . pneumoniae
strain lacking the htrA gene showed decreased fitness in a
competitive model of colonization (35) . HtrA was
identified as a virulence factor of the pneumococcus in a signature-tagged
mutagenesis screen (17) .
We previously reported that HtrA plays a crucial role in virulence
of the pneumococcus (18), as HtrA-deficient strains are
attenuated in both pneumonia and bacteremia models of infection . HtrA
is involved in resistance to temperature and oxidative stress and
also in genetic competence . Here we present evidence that the
contribution of the CiaR/H system to thermotolerance, oxidative
stress tolerance, and virulence of S . pneumoniae is mediated
through HtrA .
Bacterial strains, primers, and growth conditions. Bacterial
strains and oligonucleotide primers used in this study are listed in
Table 1 . S . pneumoniae strains were grown routinely
on blood agar base 2 (Oxoid, Basingstoke, United Kingdom) supplemented
with 5% (vol/vol) defibrinated horse blood (BAB; E&O Laboratories,
Bonnybridge, United Kingdom) and in brain heart infusion (BHI)
broth at 37°C . E . coli ultracompetent cells (Stratagene) used
for cloning were grown on Luria-Bertani broth or Luria-Bertani agar
plates . Where appropriate, antibiotics were added to the growth
medium at the following concentrations: ampicillin at 50 µg/ml,
erythromycin at 1 mg/ml for E . coli or 1 µg/ml for S .
pneumoniae, and spectinomycin at 100 µg/ml .
| TABLE 1 . List of bacterial strains and primers used in this study
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DNA techniques and transformation. Chromosomal DNA was prepared
from S . pneumoniae as described elsewhere (4) .
PCR, restriction endonuclease digestions, DNA ligation, and DNA
electrophoresis were performed according to standard protocols (34) .
Kits from QIAGEN were used for DNA purification and plasmid
preparations according to the manufacturer's instructions .
Transformation of E . coli with plasmid DNA was carried out
according to the manufacturer's instructions (Stratagene) .
Transformation of S . pneumoniae D39 (serotype 2) was done by
using a modification of the method of Lacks and Hotchkiss (23) .
Competent cells of D39 were prepared as follows: 200 µl of a
glycerol stock of cells (previously frozen down at an optical density
at 600 nm [OD600] of
0.6)
was used to inoculate 10 ml of CAT medium (32)
supplemented with 20% glucose and 0.5 M K2HPO4
(CAT/GP medium) and incubated at 37°C until they reached an OD600
of 0.3 to 0.4 . Cells were then harvested by centrifugation at 5,000
x g for 10 min at 4°C, and cell
pellets were resuspended in CAT/GP medium containing 20% glycerol and
frozen down at –80°C as 100-µl aliquots . An aliquot of competent
cells was thawed and diluted 1/10 in CAT/GP medium supplemented
with 4% bovine serum albumin and 0.1 M CaCl2 (CTM medium), and
100 ng of CSP1/ml was added (33) . Different
concentrations of transforming DNA (0.5 to 2 µg) were then added, and
the cells were incubated at 37°C for 10 min and then at 30°C
for 20 min . Transformed cells were selected on BAB plates with
appropriate antibiotic selection .
Construction of the plasmid expressing the htrA gene in S .
pneumoniae. htrA was expressed in pAL2 plasmid (3)
from the constitutive promoter of an S . pneumoniae aminopterin
resistance operon (ami) (1) . The
construction of the pAL2-HtrA plasmid was described elsewhere (18),
and a schematic representation of it is shown in Fig . 1 .
To test whether the effect of the presence of the pAL2-HtrA plasmid
was solely due to htrA insertion, the EcoRI-digested pAL2
fragment containing the ami promoter was self-ligated to
create the empty plasmid pAL2YI . This plasmid was used to transform
the D39 wild type to generate the D39/pAL2YI strain .
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FIG . 1 . A schematic representation of pAL2-HtrA plasmid used for
expression of the htrA gene in S . pneumoniae . The
pAL2-HtrA plasmid was modified from pAL2 plasmid (3)
as explained in Materials and Methods . Arrows indicate the locations and
orientations of open reading frames . The nucleotide sequence shows the
region between the ami promoter and the start codon of htrA .
The gram-positive ribosome-binding site is shown in bold and uppercase
characters, the htrA start codon is shown in uppercase
characters, and restriction sites are underlined . Em-R, erythromycin
resistance gene; Cm-R, chloramphenicol resistance gene.
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Construction of
htrA
and
ciaR
mutants and complementation with HtrA in serotype 2 background. The
htrA
mutant was constructed as described elsewhere (18) .
The
ciaR
mutant strain cia spc 136b (28) was used to move the
ciaR
mutation into D39 by PCR amplification of a 6-kb fragment
corresponding to the
ciaR
mutation by the use of primer pair MP144 and MP145 (28);
the amplified fragment was used directly to transform the D39 wild
type to create D39 ciaR .
Transformant cells were selected on spectinomycin . The pAL2-HtrA
plasmid, which carries an erythromycin-resistant cassette, was used
to transform D39 htrA
and D39 ciaR
mutants to generate the complemented strains D39 htrA/phtrA+
and D39 ciaR/phtrA+,
in which HtrA is expressed from the plasmid .
Western immunoblotting. Total cellular proteins were
extracted from cultures grown to mid-log phase as static cultures in
BHI broth . Cell pellets were collected by centrifugation at 5,000
x g for 15 min and were
resuspended in 1 ml of phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) . Cell
suspensions were sonicated four times at 30 s each time with a 13-mm
probe (Sonicator, Vibra cell; Sonics & Materials Inc.) with a power
output of 36 W . The tubes containing the samples were kept in crushed
ice during sonication . The cell debris was removed by centrifugation
at 13,000 x g for 10 min .
Concentrations of total proteins were determined by the Bradford
assay, with the use of bovine serum albumin as a standard (5) .
For Western blot analysis, 15 µg of total proteins from each
strain was separated on sodium dodecyl sulfate-10% polyacrylamide gel
electrophoresis, electroblotted onto nitrocellulose membranes
(Amersham), and reacted with specific antiserum against HtrA by a
standard protocol (34) . To ensure that nitrocellulose was
not saturated with bound HtrA, a dilution series was performed;
the results confirmed that using this amount of total cell protein,
band intensity was related to the amount of HtrA .
In vitro experiments. To compare the abilities of
ciaR
of both type 2 and type 3 pneumococci and the complemented strain D39 ciaR/phtrA+
mutants to grow at normal and elevated temperatures to those of their
wild types, the same number of viable cells (106 CFU/ml)
was used to inoculate BHI broth prewarmed at 37 and 40°C . At 1-h
intervals, samples were withdrawn to measure the OD600 and
viable counts . The sensitivity of D39 ciaR
and D39 ciaR/phtrA+
strains to H2O2 was tested by exposing aliquots
of cultures grown to an OD of
0.3
to 40 mM of H2O2 for 5, 10, and 15 min at room
temperature . The viable cells were counted by plating onto blood agar
plates before and after the exposure to H2O2,
and the result was expressed as percent survival (19) .
Mice and infections. Female outbred MF1 mice (25 to 30 g of
body weight) were purchased from Harlan Olac, Bicester, United
Kingdom . They were used at the age of 9 weeks . For intranasal
infection, mice were lightly anesthetized with 1.5% (vol/vol)
halothane and a 50-µl infectious dose (106 CFU/mouse for
type 2 strains or 107 CFU/mouse for type 3 strains) was
administered to the nostrils of mice held vertically (21) .
For intraperitoneal infection, the infectious dose (2
x 105 CFU/mouse) was resuspended
in 200 µl of sterile PBS and administered into the peritoneal cavity
of mice . After the infectious dose was administered, mice were
observed and the development of symptoms was recorded .
Bacteriological investigation. At prechosen intervals after
infection, groups of mice were sacrificed by cervical dislocation and
a blood sample was removed via cardiac puncture . Lungs were removed
and homogenized in 5 ml of PBS with a glass handheld tissue
homogenizer (Jencons, Leighton Buzzard, United Kingdom) . Viable
bacteria in lung and blood samples were counted by plating out serial
10-fold dilutions on BAB (22) .
Competition experiments. Competitive analysis of virulence
was examined using a slight modification of the method of Hava and
Camilli (17) . Essentially, challenge doses of
wild-type and mutant strains were mixed in a 1:1 ratio and inoculated
intranasally at 2 x 106 and 2
x 105 bacteria for
intraperitoneal infections . After 24 and 48 h, bacteria were
recovered from the lungs and blood . The number of wild-type versus
mutant bacteria recovered was determined by plating on nonselective
and selective media, and competitive indices were calculated as the
ratio of mutant to wild-type bacteria recovered from each animal .
Statistical analysis. Statistical analyses were carried out
using StatView 4.1 (Abacus Concept) . Survival times were analyzed by
using nonparametric Mann-Whitney U analysis . Bacteriology results are
expressed as geometric means ± standard errors of the means (SEM) .
Comparisons of bacterial loads in the time course bacteriology
experiment were performed using unpaired t tests . In all analyses,
a P value of <0.05 was considered statistically significant .
Introduction of a
ciaR
mutation into S . pneumoniae. A
ciaR
mutation in strain 0100993 was made by allelic replacement with an
erythromycin resistance marker and was kindly provided by Martin
Burnham (42) . To perform the complementation experiments
with the pAL2-HtrA plasmid (erythromycin selection) we needed
to use another antibiotic marker to disrupt the ciaR gene . We
therefore constructed a
ciaR
strain of D39 with resistance to spectinomycin by transformation with
a 6-kb fragment amplified by PCR from strain ciaspec136b (28) .
This mutation was confirmed by PCR and sequencing (data not shown) .
HtrA Western immunoblot analysis. As CiaR is involved in
virulence and regulates htrA, which we have shown previously
to be a crucial virulence factor (18), we asked
whether the CiaR phenotype was associated with the down-regulation of
htrA . To test this we constructed a plasmid to allow the
constitutive expression of HtrA in the pneumococcus . Plasmid
pAL2-HtrA (Fig . 1) allows the expression of HtrA from
the pneumococcal ami promoter (1) . Western
blotting was used to examine the levels of HtrA expressed by
pneumococcal strains . The level of expression of HtrA was shown to be
higher at 40°C than at 37°C in the wild-type D39 but not in the D39 ciaR
mutant (Fig . 2A), confirming HtrA to be an HSP of the
pneumococcus and to be up-regulated by CiaR in response to heat
shock . As expected, HtrA expression was abolished in D39 htrA .
We could restore levels of expression of HtrA in the D39 htrA
mutant to levels similar to wild-type levels with the plasmid
pAL2-HtrA . The level of HtrA was reduced but not abolished in
ciaR,
and introduction of pAL2-HtrA into the
ciaR
strain resulted in expression of levels of HtrA similar to wild-type
levels (Fig . 2B) . Western blotting is
semiquantitative, but a dilution series of samples allowed us to
confirm that we were loading amounts of HtrA that were not saturating
for the nitrocellulose membrane . Visual examination of these blots
suggests that deletion of CiaR results in an approximately fourfold
reduction in HtrA . Expression of HtrA in the
ciaR
strain from the plasmid restored the level of HtrA to that of the
wild type . Expression of HtrA from the plasmid in the wild-type
strain did not increase total levels of HtrA (data not shown) .
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FIG . 2 . Western immunoblot analysis . (A) Expression of HtrA at 37 and
40°C in wild-type (WT) strain D39 and strain D39 ciaR .
(B) Levels of HtrA in strain D39 htrA
and strain D39 ciaR
and their complemented strains grown at 37°C.
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In vitro growth phenotype of
ciaR
mutants. We have shown before that HtrA is involved in the ability of
the type 2 pneumococci to grow at elevated temperature and that
the effect of htrA deletion was to slow growth rather than prevent
it (18) . We also found that the D39 htrA
mutant has a decreased rate of autolysis compared to its parent
strain at 40°C, as indicated by viable counts at the stationary and
decline phases of growth (data not shown) . We also studied the growth
phenotype of D39 ciaR
mutant at normal and elevated temperatures . In similarity to the
results seen with D39 htrA,
the growth of the D39 ciaR
mutant was less than that of the wild type at 40°C, as judged by OD
(Fig . 3A) . The D39 ciaR
strain showed a decreased rate of autolysis after reaching the
stationary phase of growth at both 37 and 40°C compared to the D39
wild type (Fig . 3B) . This growth phenotype of
strain D39 ciaR
could be restored by increasing HtrA levels in the complemented
strain D39 ciaR/phtrA+
(Fig . 3) . Introduction of the pAL2YI vector had no
effect on the growth of strain D39 at either 37 or 40°C (data not
shown) . Also, introduction of the pAL2-HtrA plasmid into the
D39 wild-type strain did not result in altered growth at these
temperatures .
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FIG . 3 . Growth curves of D39 wild-type (WT), D39 ciaR,
and D39 ciaR/phtrA+
strains at 37 and 40°C; results are represented as OD600
values in panel A and as viable counts after reaching the stationary
phase of growth in panel B . A total of 106 CFU/ml of each
strain was used to inoculate BHI broth prewarmed at the indicated
temperatures, and samples were withdrawn at 1-h intervals to measure the
OD600 values and viable counts.
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The effect of ciaR mutation in type 3 strain 0100993 was more
dramatic at elevated temperature when compared to type 2 results .
Growth of the 0100993
ciaR
mutant was similar to that of the wild type and a similar rate of
autolysis was seen at 37°C, whereas growth at 40°C was prevented by
the mutation (Fig . 4) .
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FIG . 4 . Growth curves of the type 3 0100993 wild-type (WT) strain and
its
ciaR
mutant at 37 and 40°C; results are represented by OD600
values in panel A and by viable counts in panel B . The growth of the
0100993
ciaR
mutant was impaired at 40°C and showed a rate of autolysis similar to
that of the wild type at 37°C.
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Sensitivity of the D39 ciaR
strain to oxidative stress is similar to that of the D39 htrA
mutant and can be restored by complementation with HtrA. We have shown
previously that HtrA is involved in the ability of D39 to resist
oxidative stress (18) . To determine whether
reduced expression of HtrA in strain D39 ciaR
resulted in sensitivity to oxidative stress we compared D39 ciaR
to the wild type and the complemented strain D39 ciaR/phtrA+
for sensitivity to hydrogen peroxide . The D39 ciaR
strain was significantly more sensitive to peroxide than the parent
strain D39 after 10 and 15 min of exposure to hydrogen peroxide .
There was no statistically significant difference 5 min after
peroxide treatment, probably because strain D39 ciaR
still expresses some HtrA . By restoring HtrA to a level similar to
that of the wild type in D39 ciaR/phtrA+,
the strain was again identical to the wild type in response to
oxidative stress (Fig . 5) . The sensitivity of strain D39 ciaR
to oxidative stress is therefore similar to what we reported
previously for strain D39 htrA
(18) and could be explained by the down-regulation
of HtrA in the CiaR-null mutant .
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FIG . 5 . H2O2 sensitivity assay for D39 wild-type
(WT), D39 ciaR,
and D39 ciaR/phtrA+
strains . H2O2 (40 mM) was added to 1-ml aliquots
of culture grown to an OD600 of
0.3 .
Viable counts were performed on BAB plates before and after the addition
of peroxide, and the percentages of survival were calculated . Values
expressed are the means (± SEM) of three independent experiments . *,
P < 0.05 for lower survival for the D39 ciaR
mutant than the wild type.
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The
ciaR
mutant displays attenuated virulence in vivo. The CiaR/H system has
previously been reported to play a role in mouse lung colonization (42)
and colonization of the nasopharynx of infant rats (35)
and has also been identified as playing a role in a mouse model of
systemic disease (27) . We confirmed and further
investigated the role of CiaR in our model of infection . Initially we
compared a
ciaR
mutant on a serotype 3 background with its wild-type parent (strain
0100993) . This is the same mutant as that used by Throup and
coworkers (42) and Sebert and coworkers (35)
in the studies described above . All animals challenged intranasally
with 107 CFU of the parent strain were moribund by 144 h
postinfection . In contrast, the 0100993
ciaR
mutant only caused the moribund state in 25% of the animals
(Fig . 6A) . Analysis of bacteriology showed that the 0100993
ciaR
strain grew to a viable count of approximately 103 CFU in
lung compared to 106 CFU for the wild-type organism . The
level of bacteremia caused by the 0100993
ciaR
strain was below the limit of detection of the assay (approximately
100 organisms per ml) (Fig . 6B) . Competition
experiments showed that CiaR plays a role in both the lung and
systemic infection models (Table 2) . We have also
confirmed that CiaR plays a role in the virulence of strain D39 (see
below) .
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FIG . 6 . Effect of CiaR on virulence of strain 0100993 . (A) . Survival of
animals given 107 CFU of wild-type or
ciaR
bacteria by the intranasal route; n = 10 . (B) . Mean (SEM)
bacteriology in lung (left) and blood (right) during infection, n
= 5 . The broken line represents the limit of detection of the assay . (A)
*, P < 0.05 for shorter survival times for the wild-type (WT)
strain than for the
ciaR
mutant; (B) *, P < 0.05 for lower bacterial loads for the
ciaR
strain than for the wild-type strain.
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TABLE 2 . Competitive index for 0100993 wild type versus 0100993
ciaR
in intranasal and intraperitoneal infectionsa
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HtrA can complement the CiaR mutation and restore virulence. As
the growth phenotype and sensitivity to peroxide of the D39 ciaR
mutant could be restored by complementation with HtrA, we investigated
the virulence phenotype of the knockout and complemented strains
in our mouse pneumonia model . For these studies, all mutants
used were on a D39 background and a dose of 106 CFU was given
intranasally . For the D39 wild-type strain, all animals succumbed
to the infection by 72 h whereas no animals became sick when
challenged with strain D39 htrA
(Fig . 7) . A
ciaR
mutant of D39 showed attenuation in the model, with 40% of the
animals becoming moribund during the experiment . When the pAL2-HtrA
plasmid was introduced into the D39 htrA
strain it was restored to full virulence . Moreover, when the level of
HtrA expression was corrected in the
ciaR
mutant this was also restored to full virulence .
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FIG . 7 . Effect of complementation with HtrA on virulence . Strains D39 htrA
and D39 ciaR
show reduced virulence, as judged by survival time . Complementation with
HtrA (from plasmid pAL2-HtrA) causes these strains to revert to full
virulence . WT, wild type.
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The CiaR/H two-component system is known to be important in a number
of aspects of pneumococcal biology . Mutations in the histidine
protein kinase ciaH conferred resistance to beta-lactam
antibiotics, suggesting that the system may control genes important
in cell wall metabolism (14) . The system is also involved in
the control of bacterial lysis (11, 16,
24) and the regulation of genetic competence (8,
14, 28) . Previous studies have shown
that this system plays a role in colonization of the lungs of
mice (42) and the nasopharynx of infant rats (35) .
We have used the same mutant of S . pneumoniae (kindly provided
by Martin Burnham of SmithKlineBeecham [now GlaxoSmithKline]) used in
these two studies to show that CiaR/H also plays a major role
in the causation of disease in the mouse . The
ciaR/H
mutant of strain 0100993 was much reduced in its overall virulence
(as judged by survival times) when given intranasally . The mutant
organism grew to about 103 CFU in lungs compared to 106
for the wild-type organism (a reduction of 3 logs) . A large reduction
in growth in the lung was also observed by Throup et al . (42),
who observed a reduction of approximately 5 logs in growth in
the lung due to disruption of the CiaR/H operon . In studies of
colonization of the rat nasopharynx (35), inoculation of
wild-type organisms resulted in maximum colonization levels of
about 10 6 CFU/ml of nasal wash whereas the
ciaR/H
mutant did not colonize the nasopharynx . In the experiments reported
here, the mutant organism only invaded the bloodstream to very
low levels (at the limit of detection of 100 organisms per ml) . This
two-component system therefore seems to be very important for
colonization and growth in the lungs and also for invasion of the
bloodstream .
Low-level bacteremia following intranasal challenge could be
caused either by poor invasion from the lungs or by poor growth in
the blood . Competition experiments using wild-type and mutant strains
showed that the mutant was much less able to colonize the lungs and
also less able to grow systemically . We have confirmed that CiaR also
plays a role in the virulence of type 2 strain D39 . It is important
to investigate the role of these systems in more than one strain, as
we have recently shown that the contribution of two-component systems
to virulence can be strain dependent (4) . A role of
CiaR/H in the systemic virulence of D39 was also shown by Marra and
coworkers (27) .
As CiaR/H plays a role in virulence, the next question is how does
this system mediate pathogenesis of infection? The cia regulon
has already been defined and includes genes important for the
synthesis and modification of cell wall polymers, peptide pheromone
and bacteriocin production, and the htrA-spoJ region (29) .
Because it is already known that CiaR/H regulates the gene for HtrA (29,
35) and that deletion of the htrA gene reduces
the ability of the pneumococcus to colonize the nasopharynx (35)
and attenuates a type 2 pneumococcal strain in both pneumonia and
bacteremia models of infection (18), we attempted to define
the contribution of HtrA to the overall CiaR/H phenotype .
Both CiaR-null and HtrA-null mutants have reduced virulence, and
the CiaR/H system is known to regulate HtrA expression . We therefore
investigated whether the reduced virulence of a
ciaR
mutant could be explained by a down-regulation of HtrA expression . To
do this we made a
ciaR
version of strain D39 and confirmed that this was less virulent . The
reduction in lung colonization was of the order of several orders of
magnitude, a finding similar to that of previous studies (42) .
Western blotting indicated that strain D39 ciaR
expressed approximately fourfold less HtrA protein than wild-type
D39 . When HtrA was expressed from a plasmid in the D39 ciaR
strain, Western blotting showed the level of HtrA was restored to
that of the wild type . We also found that when HtrA was expressed
from the plasmid in the wild-type strain, there was no increase in
the level of HtrA protein . This finding is surprising and suggests
that there is a regulatory mechanism for controlling maximal levels
of HtrA and that this mechanism may not be dependent on the
presence of CiaR/H . Restoring the level of HtrA to wild-type levels
in strain D39 ciaR
produced a strain that was again fully virulent in mice . This shows
that the virulence phenotype of D39 ciaR
can be completely explained by the reduced expression of HtrA .
Interestingly, D39
ciaR
still expresses low levels of HtrA; this may explain why it is more
virulent than D39 htrA .
We have shown in this study that HtrA behaves as a typical HSP,
with levels of the protein increasing after exposure of bacteria to a
temperature of 40°C . Interestingly, we also demonstrated that the
increased expression of HtrA at high temperature is dependent on the
presence of CiaR/H . Based on these findings we predicted that strain
D39 ciaR
would be defective in growth at 40°C (due to decreased expression of
HtrA) . Analysis in vitro indicates that the growth of the D39 ciaR
mutant was less than that of the wild type at elevated temperature .
The CiaR/H system is also involved in the control of bacterial lysis
(11, 16, 24,
29); in particular, Lange and coworkers (24)
reported that a ciaR mutant of the strain R6 had an increased
rate of autolysis when grown in Todd-Hewitt medium at 37°C . In
contrast to this report, our D39 ciaR
mutant showed a decreased rate of autolysis, as judged by viable
counts at stationary and decline phases of growth at both normal and
elevated temperatures . This may reflect differences in the genetic
content of R6 and D39, which are now known to differ at several loci
(41) . We also studied the in vitro growth
phenotype of the serotype 3 ciaR mutant . The effect of ciaR
deletion in this strain was more dramatic, as the growth of this
mutant was prevented at elevated temperature; however, it showed a
rate of autolysis similar to that of the parent strain at 37°C . These
findings highlight the differences of the effects of mutations in
different strains . The growth phenotype of strain D39 ciaR
was restored to that of the wild type by introducing pAL2-HtrA
plasmid in the complemented strain, suggesting that the strain D39 ciaR
growth phenotype is due to the low level of HtrA expressed by this
strain .
As we have previously shown that deletion of HtrA is associated
with increased sensitivity to oxidative stress (18), we
predicted that reduced levels of HtrA in strain D39 ciaR
would also result in reduced resistance to oxidative stress . The
sensitivity to oxidative stress of D39 ciaR
was increased, although not to the same extent as found previously
for the D39 htrA
mutant . After 5 min of exposure to 40 mM hydrogen peroxide, the
survival of strain D39 ciaR
was similar to that of the wild type (Fig . 5)
whereas the survival of strain D39 htrA
was significantly reduced at this time (18) . This
probably reflects the expression of low levels of HtrA in strain D39 ciaR .
Resistance of strain D39 ciaR
to hydrogen peroxide could be restored to wild-type levels by
complementation with HtrA, which again confirms that the D39 ciaR
phenotype could be explained by down-regulation of HtrA in this
mutant .
In summary, we have confirmed that the CiaR/H system is involved
in controlling the levels of HtrA within the cell and have shown that
up-regulation of HtrA in response to heat is dependent on the CiaR/H
system . As the response regulator CiaR has been shown to physically
bind to DNA in the region of HtrA, this regulation is proposed to be
direct (29) . We have shown that a number of the
phenotypes associated with deficiency in CiaR/H are due to the
alterations in levels of HtrA . Thus, the resistance of cells to
autolysis, the increased sensitivity to oxidative stress, and the
decreased virulence of strain D39 ciaR
can all be explained by alterations in levels of HtrA . We have also
shown that transformation efficiency is also altered by HtrA (18) .
While the CiaR/H regulon is obviously very complex, many of the
phenotypes observed with mutants of this regulon can be explained by
changes in HtrA . The exact mechanism by which HtrA controls these
processes is still unclear and is the subject of ongoing studies .
Yasser Musa Ibrahim is the recipient of a scholarship from the
Egyptian government .
We thank J.-P . Claverys and Bernard Martin (CNRS-Université Paul
Sabatier, Toulouse, France) for provision of strain R6 carrying a
mariner mutation in CiaR and Mark Roberts (University of Glasgow) for
provision of HtrA antiserum . We thank V . Salisbury (University of the
West of England) for providing plasmid pAL2 . We are also grateful to
Martin Burnham (GlaxoSmithKline) for provision of type 3 strain
0100993 with a CiaR mutation .
* Corresponding author . Mailing address: Division of Infection
and Immunity, Institute of Biomedical and Life Sciences, University of Glasgow,
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