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Journal of Bacteriology, August 2004, p . 5551-5554, Vol . 186,
No . 16
Excision of the Shigella Resistance Locus Pathogenicity Island in
Shigella flexneri Is Stimulated by a Member of a New Subgroup of
Recombination Directionality Factors
Shelley N . Luck, Sally A . Turner, Kumar Rajakumar, Ben Adler,*
and Harry Sakellaris
Australian Bacterial Pathogenesis Program, Department of Microbiology, Monash
University, Clayton 3800, Australia
Received 17 March 2004/ Accepted 7 May 2004
Pathogenicity islands are capable of excision and insertion within
bacterial chromosomes . We describe a protein, Rox, that stimulates
excision of the Shigella resistance locus pathogenicity island
in Shigella flexneri . Sequence analysis suggests that Rox
belongs to a new subfamily of recombination directionality factors,
which includes proteins from P4, enterohemorrhagic Escherichia
coli, and Yersinia pestis .
A variety of mobile genetic elements, including insertion sequences,
transposons, plasmids, bacteriophages, and pathogenicity islands
(PAIs), mediate the lateral acquisition of foreign DNA in bacteria .
PAIs are large regions of the chromosome that are genetically and
functionally distinct units (7) . These elements are often
incorporated into bacterial chromosomes by site-specific integration
at tRNA genes, and some are capable of excision . PAIs often
have G+C contents that vary from those of their host bacteria,
suggesting that they are acquired by horizontal transfer . Thus far,
PAIs have been identified predominantly in gram-negative enteric and
uropathogenic organisms, such as Salmonella spp . and Vibrio
cholerae, and in a variety of other pathogens, e.g.,
Escherichia coli, Helicobacter pylori, Yersinia enterocolitica,
and Shigella flexneri (9) . S . flexneri
carries five distinct PAIs: Shigella island 2 (SHI-2), SHI-3,
the she PAI, the Shigella resistance locus (SRL) PAI,
and the mxi-spa gene cluster on the large virulence plasmid (1,
13, 15, 17,
28, 29) .
The SRL PAI is a 67-kb island first identified in S . flexneri
2a YSH6000 (13) . The element was discovered due to its
carriage of a locus mediating resistance to ampicillin, streptomycin,
chloramphenicol, and tetracycline, the SRL . The SRL PAI also
encodes a functional ferric citrate transport system, a number of
insertion sequences, and a large number of phage-like genes . Turner
et al . have shown that the SRL PAI can undergo precise insertion and
deletion in an integrase-dependent manner (26,
27) .
The importance of genetic acquisition and loss was highlighted by
the recent sequencing of the S . flexneri 2a genome, which
showed that the major differences between S . flexneri and E .
coli arose primarily through the loss or acquisition of DNA,
including PAIs and bacteriophages (8) . However, very
little is known about the movement of PAIs into and out of bacterial
genomes . Several PAIs, including the SRL and she PAIs, are capable
of spontaneous deletion from the chromosomes in which they normally
reside (18, 27) . Like many PAIs, the
SRL PAI encodes an integrase that is homologous to members of the P4
family of integrases (13) . Integrases mediate PAI
integration into the chromosome (19,
26) and are also essential for PAI excision (11,
20, 27) . However, little is
known about how the excision of PAIs is regulated .
The regulation of integrase-mediated excision of mobile genetic
elements, in the cases where it is understood, follows two distinct
mechanisms . In the majority of cases, excision is stimulated by a
class of proteins collectively known as excisionases or recombination
directionality factors (RDFs) (12) . RDFs have been
identified mostly in phage systems but have also been identified in
transposons (22) and plasmids (14) .
Typical members of this family include the bacteriophage lambda
excisionase (Xis) and bacteriophage P2 Cox proteins . RDFs are usually
small DNA-binding proteins encoded by genes in close proximity to the
integrase genes carried on mobile elements . In the best-studied case,
that of lambda Xis, the protein regulates excision by binding
directly to DNA in the vicinity of the recombination site and to
integrase to form a complex that stimulates excision and inhibits
integration (23) . The excision of CP4-57, a genomic
island of E . coli K-12, is stimulated by an alternative mechanism
that relies instead on the transcriptional activation of the
CP4-57 integrase gene by a protein designated AlpA (25) . The
resulting increase in integrase expression is responsible for
the stimulation of excision . In the present study, we tested whether
excision of the SRL PAI was also regulated and investigated the
mechanism by which this regulation occurs .
Sequence analysis of AlpA homologues. Analysis of the SRL
PAI sequence revealed two open reading frames (ORFs) with
corresponding sequence similarity to proteins that regulate the
excision of other mobile elements, namely, ORF3, which was
subsequently termed Rox (regulator of excision), and ORF41 (13) .
Rox shows 66% sequence similarity to AlpA from CP4-57, while ORF41 is
more closely related (53% similarity) to Vis, another AlpA homologue
from the satellite phage P4 . Vis is a multifunctional protein that
represses transcription from the PLL late promoter of P4
and activates transcription of Psid (16) .
In addition, Vis represses transcription of the P4 integrase gene and
is also an excisionase that promotes integrase-dependent P4 excision
(D . Ghisotti, personal communication) .
The recent sequencing of the enterohemorrhagic E . coli (EHEC)
strain O157:H7 EDL933 has revealed AlpA homologues, Z1124 and
Z1563, on duplicate O islands 43 and 48, which have an integrase
nearly identical with that encoded by the SRL PAI . Unlike alpA,
the EHEC homologues show significant nucleotide identity with
rox . EHEC EDL933 O islands 43 and 48 encode the proteins required
for tellurite resistance and urease biosynthesis and share no
similarity with the SRL PAI aside from the presence of a number of
putative prophage ORFs (13) . Database probing also revealed
Rox homologues on other previously described elements, including
the she PAI in S . flexneri and the high pathogenicity island
(HPI) of Yersinia pestis . An alignment of these seven homologues
shows two areas of conservation (Fig . 1) . The first
region corresponds to a predicted DNA-binding, helix-turn-helix motif
in all homologues except Roxshe and ORF41, with Dodd and
Egan scores (5) for RoxSRL, AlpA, Vis,
EHEC Z1124 or Z1563, and YP01904 of 6.35, 3.98, 5.25, 4.94, and 3.45,
respectively, where a value of
2.5
is indicative of a likely helix-turn-helix motif . Database and motif
probing has provided no clues as to the potential role of the second
conserved region . Mutational analysis may provide clues as to
the potential function of this region .
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FIG . 1 . Multiple alignment of Rox homologues . Amino acids that are
identical or similar in at least two-thirds of the sequences are
rendered as white characters on a black or grey background,
respectively . Z1124 and Z1563 are encoded by EHEC EDL933 O islands 43
and 48, respectively . YPO1904, Roxshe, Vis, and AlpA are
proteins encoded by the HPIs of Y . pestis, the S . flexneri she
PAI, bacteriophage P4, and cryptic prophage CP4-57, respectively . The
proposed helix-turn-helix (HTH) motif is indicated by a bar . Alignment
was performed by using Clustal W (24).
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Recently, an xis gene was identified on the SXT element of V .
cholerae and found to have a role in SXT excision (4) .
SXT Xis did not belong to any of the RDF subgroups previously
described by Lewis and Hatfull (12) . We compared a
member of each previously described subgroup of RDFs, including SXT
Xis, with Rox, ORF41, and the homologues described above . Clustal W
analysis suggested that these homologues are most closely related to
the SLP1 subgroup, which is typified by an RDF encoded by the SLP1
plasmid from Streptomyces coelicolor (12),
but that they form a distinct and thus a new subgroup (Fig.
2) . Of the new subgroup, Roxshe,
YPO1904, and Vis have been shown experimentally to have a role in
excision (10, 20; D . Ghisotti, personal
communication) .
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FIG . 2 . Phylogenetic tree representing subgroups of RDFs . Members of
each subgroup were chosen based on the Lewis and Hatfull definition of
RDF subgroups (12) . The proposed new subgroup is
boxed . Mapping was performed by using Clustal W (24) .
B.melitensis, Brucella melitensis; M.loti, Mesorhizobium loti;
S.melioti, Sinorhizobium meliloti; M.leprae, Mycobacterium
leprae.
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Effect of Rox and ORF41 on SRL PAI excision. In order to
determine if Rox or ORF41 had a role in the excision of the SRL PAI,
assays were performed to test SRL PAI excision when these genes were
overexpressed . rox and orf41 were amplified by PCR from
S . flexneri YSH6000 genomic DNA and cloned directionally into
the EcoRI and BamHI sites of pPBA1100 (pUC18 carrying kan from
pMK3), giving rise to plasmids pAL34 and pAL31, respectively .
Accurate amplification of PCR products was confirmed by sequencing
the inserts of the plasmids obtained . These plasmids, along with
pPBA1100, were transformed separately into S . flexneri 2a
strain YSH6000, resulting in strains AL66(pAL34), AL67(pAL31), and
AL75(pPBA1100) . Each strain was grown overnight with aeration in 2.5
ml of 2YT medium supplemented with 50 µg of kanamycin/ml and 10 mM
IPTG (isopropyl-ß-D-thiogalactopyranoside) .
Extraction of genomic DNA was performed as described previously (2) .
Excision of the SRL PAI was assayed by semiquantitative PCR with
inward-facing primers flanking the SRL PAI (BAP679
[5'-GTGCTGCTTTCGGTGTGC-3'] and BAP1157 [5'-GCCAGCATTTCAACAGGAGG])
(Fig . 3) . The PCR amplification of recA (BAP1643
[5'-CTACGCACGTAAACTGGGCG-3'] and BAP1644 [5'-ACCGGTAGTGGTTTCCGGG-3'])
served as controls for template concentration . Although recA
controls indicated that the concentration of chromosomal DNA was
10-fold greater in the AL66 template than in the wild-type and AL67
templates (data not shown), the level of SRL PAI excision was 104-fold
greater in the AL66 template, where Rox was overexpressed, than
in the wild-type template (Fig . 3) . In contrast,
overexpression of orf41 had no effect on SRL PAI excision . The
PCR product obtained from strain AL66 was sequenced and shown to be
the reconstitution of serX with a single copy of the 14-bp
direct repeat that flanks the SRL PAI, as was previously observed
upon deletion of the SRL PAI (27) . Therefore, Rox,
but not ORF41, stimulates SRL PAI excision .
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FIG . 3 . The effect of RoxSRL and ORF41 on SRL PAI excision .
(i) The shaded box denotes the SRL PAI, and the lines denote
YSH6000-flanking chromosomal DNA . The primers used to determine if the
PAI has excised are shown by arrowheads . (ii) Lane
,
lambda HindIII markers . Other lanes contain 10-fold serial dilutions of
genomic DNA . AL66, AL67, and AL75 are S . flexneri 2a strains
overexpressing rox, overexpressing orf41, and carrying an
empty plasmid, respectively . The SRL PAI excisions in AL67 and the
plasmid control can be seen as PCR products and are indicated by the
arrowheads.
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In order to determine if the effect of Rox on PAI excision was
dependent on the SRL PAI integrase, a PCR excision assay was
performed on an int mutant, AL11 (27) . AL11 was
transformed with pUC19-Tp and pAL85 (pUC19-Tp carrying rox),
giving rise to strains AL296 and AL295, respectively . The excision
assay was performed as described previously, with strains AL325
(wild-type int with pAL85), YSH6000 (parent), and SBA1363 (SRL
PAI–) as controls . The results showed that both Rox and
Int have critical roles in SRL PAI excision, as excision was not
observed in AL295, the int mutant strain that overexpressed
Rox . In contrast, SRL PAI excision was clearly visible when rox
was overexpressed in the presence of an intact int gene
(AL325) (Fig . 4) .
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FIG . 4 . The effect of Int and RoxSRL on SRL PAI excision .
Lane
,
lambda HindIII markers . The various strains used as templates for PCR
were as follows: AL296 (int mutant, pUC19-Tp) (lane 1), AL295 (int
mutant, pUC19-Tp/rox) (lane 2), SBA1363 (SRL PAI–)
(lane 3), AL325 (wild-type int, pUC19-Tp/rox) (lane 4).
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Does Rox affect int transcription? A potential binding
site (YYRTTCGRNRY) for the bacteriophage P4 Vis protein was proposed
by Polo et al . (16) . This binding site is present
upstream of slpA, the gene encoding the CP4-57 integrase, and
the SRL PAI int gene . The similarity to AlpA and the presence
of a potential binding site upstream of int suggested that Rox
may be required for the regulation of int transcription . In
order to test this hypothesis, the int gene of S . flexneri
2a strain SBA1366, an antibiotic-sensitive derivative of YSH6000, was
disrupted by a Campbell insertion with pJP5603 as previously
described (27), giving rise to strain AL467 . It
was necessary to inactivate int to avoid potential complications
associated with SRL PAI excision, leading to the loss of the
PAI and therefore the int gene . AL467 was transformed with pBAD30
(6) and pAL216 (pBAD carrying rox), giving rise
to strains AL468 and AL469, respectively . The use of pBAD allowed the
tight regulation of Rox expression . RNA was extracted as described
previously (21) with the following modifications:
cells were grown for 1 h in a solution containing Luria broth, 50 µg
of kanamycin/ml, and 100 µg of ampicillin/ml and then induced with 1
mM arabinose for an additional 2 h before RNA extraction . Real-time
reverse transcriptase PCR was performed as described by Boyce
et al . (3) . Assays of gyrB transcription served as
controls for RNA concentration . Levels of transcription of rox
were also compared between strains, and as expected, the level of
rox transcription was significantly higher (27-fold) in AL469
than in AL468 . However, there was no statistically significant change
(P value = 0.385; two-tailed t test) in int
transcription when rox was overexpressed following arabinose
induction . Therefore, although Rox stimulates integrase-dependent SRL
PAI excision, it is not an activator of int transcription .
Multiple attempts to purify Rox for further characterization and
DNA-binding experiments were prevented by the exceptional instability
of the protein .
Little is known about the mechanisms of PAI mobility . However,
Turner et al . (27) showed that the SRL PAI int gene is
required for excision of the SRL PAI, and it has been demonstrated
that HPI int and SRL PAI int modules are capable of
site-specific integration (19, 26) .
Together, these results support the significance of int genes
in PAI mobility . This study investigated the role of Rox in the
regulation of SRL PAI excision . Our findings suggest that although
Rox stimulates the excision of the SRL PAI, regulation of excision
does not follow the model proposed for CP4-57 (10) .
Since Rox does not act like AlpA, the transcriptional activator
of CP4-57, we propose based on its homology to Vis and its presently
proven ability to potently stimulate excision of the SRL PAI that it
probably has direct excisionase activity . On the basis of sequence
comparisons, RoxSRL appears to be a member of a new
subgroup of RDFs that includes Roxshe, Vis, YP01904, and
Z1124 or Z1563 .
* Corresponding author . Mailing address: Department of
Microbiology, Monash University, Clayton 3800, Australia . Phone: 613 9905 4815 .
Fax: 613 9905 4811 . E-mail:
ben.adler@med.monash.edu.au .
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