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Journal of Bacteriology, August 2004, p . 5410-5417, Vol . 186,
No . 16
Molecular Characterization of the eis Promoter of Mycobacterium
tuberculosis
Esteban A . Roberts, Amanda Clark, Sarah McBeth, and Richard L .
Friedman*
Department of Microbiology and Immunology, University of Arizona, Tucson,
Arizona 85724
Received 19 April 2004/ Accepted 18 May 2004
To further understand Mycobacterium tuberculosis pathogenesis,
the regulation of potential virulence genes needs to be investigated .
The eis gene of M . tuberculosis H37Rv enhances the intracellular
survival of Mycobacterium smegmatis, which does not contain
eis, within macrophages (J . Wei, J . L . Dahl, J . W . Moulder,
E . A . Roberts, P . O'Gaora, D . B . Young, and R . L . Friedman, J .
Bacteriol . 182:377-384, 2000) . Experiments were done to characterize
the eis promoter in M . smegmatis and M . tuberculosis
H37Ra . The putative –10 and –35 regions matched the Escherichia
coli
70
consensus 67 and 83%, respectively, making it a group A/SigA-like
mycobacterial promoter . Expression of site-directed variants of the
core promoter region, determined by flow cytometry using gfp
as a reporter, showed that the putative –10 region is essential for
eis expression . In addition, site-directed alteration of the
eis promoter to the consensus E . coli
70
promoter elements increased gfp transcription to levels
similar to that driven by the heat shock promoter, phsp60, of
Mycobacterium bovis BCG . Upstream promoter deletion analysis
showed that a 200- and 412-bp region of the promoter was necessary
for maximum expression of gfp in M . smegmatis and M .
tuberculosis H37Ra, respectively . Random mutagenesis of the
412-bp eis promoter, using a catechol 2,3-dioxygenase screen
and activity assay, defined nucleotides upstream of the core promoter
region that are essential to eis expression in both M .
smegmatis and M . tuberculosis H37Ra, including a region
homologous to a DinR cis element .
Tuberculosis (TB) continues to be the world's most destructive human
bacterial infectious disease . Current estimates show that more than
two million people die from TB each year, and TB remains a major
cause of premature death (18) . Mortality due to TB is
a major global health crisis due to AIDS and the increasing
prevalence of multidrug-resistant strains of Mycobacterium tuberculosis,
although effective treatments are available . Despite the elucidation
of the genome sequence of several M . tuberculosis strains (5,
14) and available genetic tools to identify genes
involved in TB pathogenesis (13, 16,
23, 26), the molecular basis of its
ability to survive within host cells and evade host immune responses
is unknown . Understanding the molecular mechanisms of pathogenesis
is essential for the development of better methods of diagnosis,
treatment, and prevention . One way to heighten our understanding
of M . tuberculosis pathogenesis is to examine the regulation
of potential virulence genes, in particular the promoters and
other elements that govern their expression .
Approximately 130 mycobacterial promoters have been characterized
to date, but only 76 have been categorized into the four groups (A to
D) of mycobacterial promoters (15) . Identified promoters
comprise less than 3% of the potential promoters in the genome
of M . tuberculosis . The majority of the categorized promoters
are from Mycobacterium smegmatis and Mycobacterium paratuberculosis,
with less than 25% derived from M . tuberculosis itself . This
indicates that we know little about promoter function in mycobacteria
and even less about promoters from M . tuberculosis . Therefore,
there is a need for detailed studies on M . tuberculosis promoter
characterization and function, especially for genes that may
play a role in the survival of M . tuberculosis within macrophages .
The eis gene of M . tuberculosis H37Rv was found to enhance the
survival of saprophytic M . smegmatis during repeated passage
through the human macrophage-like cell line U-937 (32) .
How eis confers this survival phenotype on M . smegmatis,
which does not contain eis, is unknown because it is not
homologous to any gene of known function . Fractionation studies and
immunoblot analyses performed on culture-grown M . tuberculosis
found that the Eis protein was distributed throughout the bacterium,
including the cell wall and cytoplasm (7) . More
recent studies have shown that eis is differentially expressed
in a clinical strain of M . tuberculosis upon infection of
activated human macrophages (4) . These results do
not suggest a function for the Eis protein or indicate how eis
may be regulated . Our goal here is to understand the expression of
eis as a foundation for eventually understanding its proposed
role in M . tuberculosis virulence .
Bacterial strains and growth media. M . smegmatis 1-2c, a
derivative of strain mc26 selected for improved
transformation efficiency (35), was grown in Middlebrook
7H9 broth (Difco) supplemented with 2% glucose and 0.05% Tween
80 . M . tuberculosis H37Ra, an avirulent derivative of H37Rv,
was cultured in Middlebrook 7H9 broth (Difco) supplemented with 10%
oleic acid albumin dextrose catalase and 0.05% Tween 80 . M .
smegmatis and M . tuberculosis H37Ra were also plated on Middlebrook
7H10 agar (Difco) supplemented with either 2% glucose or 10%
oleic acid albumin dextrose catalase, respectively . Kanamycin at a
concentration of 25 µg/ml (Boehringer Mannheim) was used in both
liquid and solid mycobacterial media to maintain vector constructs .
Luria-Bertani broth or agar with 50 µg of kanamycin/ml was used for
selection and growth of E . coli DH10B (Invitrogen)
transformants . Hygromycin B was added at 50 µg/ml to maintain
mycobacteria containing the eis clone p69 (32) .
RNA isolation and primer extension. Twenty-five-milliliter
culture pellets from log-phase grown M . smegmatis(p69), M .
tuberculosis H37Ra(p69), and M . tuberculosis H37Ra (wild
type) were resuspended in 1 ml of RLT lysis buffer (QIAGEN) . Cells
were disrupted three times in a FastPrep FP120 angular reciprocating
shaker (Bio 101) at maximum settings using 0.1-mm zirconium beads .
Total RNA was isolated using an RNeasy mini kit (QIAGEN), and RNA
yield and purity were calculated using spectrophotometry after
on-column DNaseI digestion, according to the manufacturer's
instructions . The primer Pxt was end labeled with 30 µCi of [32P- ]ATP
using T4 polynucleotide kinase . Unincorporated radionucleotides were
removed using a G-25 Sephadex spin column (Boehringer Manheim) .
Primer extension was performed using 5 µg of total RNA and
Superscript II reverse transcriptase (Invitrogen) according to the
manufacturer's protocol . Primer extension reactions were incubated
for 1 h at 44°C . Primer extension products were run alongside a
Redivue 33P-labeled DNA sequencing reaction performed with
Pxt, using p69 as a template on a 6% polyacrylamide, 8 M urea gel .
The gel was exposed to BioMax autoradiograph film (Kodak) for 48 h at
–80°C prior to development .
Site-directed mutagenesis of putative core eis promoter.
Site-directed mutagenesis was performed using the Quikchange
site-directed mutagenesis kit (Stratagene) with pEP412 as a template,
according to the manufacturer's protocol . All site-directed mutations
in pSKM constructs were verified by DNA sequencing using the pF1
primer .
Construction of pEP vector series. The promoterless gfp
vector pFPV27 (see Fig . 3A) was used as the primary
cloning vector for these studies . Variable regions of the eis
promoter upstream from the start codon of the gene, and not including
the putative Shine-Dalgarno sequence, were amplified using PCR . The
reverse primer, ApaIr, which contains an ApaI restriction sequence at
the 5' end, was used for all amplifications . Forward primers
containing a BamHI restriction sequence were paired with ApaIr for
amplification of eis promoter variants, and amplicons were
cloned into the BamHI/ApaI site of pFPV27 (1) to
create the pEP vector series (see Fig . 3A) . The
numbers associated with each construct indicate the size of the
amplicon . Primers were obtained from Invitrogen . PCRs contained: 1x
PWO polymerase buffer with 2 mM MgSO4 (Roche), 0.6
mM deoxynucleoside triphosphates, 4 µM (each) primer specific for the
desired product, 2.5 U of PWO proofreading polymerase (Roche),
and 5% dimethyl sulfoxide in a final volume of 50 µl . Thermocycling
reactions were performed in a Bio-Rad iCycler thermocycler with the
following parameters: an initial denaturation at 95°C for 5 min, 30
cycles of 95°C for 1.5 min, 56°C for 1.5 min, and 72°C for
1.5 min, followed by a final extension at 72°C for 5 min .
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FIG . 3 . (A) Construction of the pEP vector series . A 922-bp fragment
upstream of eis in p69 was PCR amplified and cloned into the
promoterless gfp shuttle vector pFPV27 to create the full-length
eis promoter construct pEP922 . Subsequent 5' deletions of the
eis promoter (pEP662, pEP412, pEP300, pEP200, and pEP112) were
amplified and cloned into pFPV27 . Flow-cytometric analysis of gfp
expression by the pEP vector series in M . smegmatis (B) and M .
tuberculosis H37Ra (C), including the negative control pFPV27 and
the positive control pBEN, is shown . Data represent results from at
least three independent experiments performed in triplicate . In panel B,
the asterisk denotes a significant difference in the fluorescence
between pEP112 and pEP922 at a P value of <0.0001 using a paired
t test, and in panel C, it indicates significant differences
between pEP112, pEP200, and pEP300 versus pEP922 at a P value of
<0.0001 using one-way ANOVA . In panel C, the diamond indicates a
significant difference in fluorescence at a P value of <0.05,
using a paired t test, between pEP112 and pEP200 . Note that
different fluorescence scales are used for results presented in panel B
versus panel C.
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Electroporation of E . coli, M . smegmatis, and M .
tuberculosis H37Ra. Electroporations were performed using a Gene
Pulser electroporator (Bio-Rad) . Forty microliters of a 1:5 dilution
of Max Efficiency E . coli DH10B cells in cold 10% sterile
glycerol were mixed with a 1/10 volume of the appropriate ligation
reaction and placed on ice for 10 min . Electroporation into E .
coli was performed at settings of 1.8 kV, 25 µF, and 100
in a 0.1-cm cuvette (Bio-Rad) that had been prechilled on ice for 20
min . Electrocompetent M . smegmatis 1-2c (0.4 ml) was mixed
with approximately 1 µg of DNA from each construct, pipetted into a
0.4-cm cuvette (Bio-Rad), and placed on ice for 30 min .
Electroporations were performed at settings of 2.5 kV, 25 µF, and
1,000
.
Conditions identical to those used for M . smegmatis were used
for M . tuberculosis H37Ra except that all steps were performed
at room temperature, as previously described (31) .
Flow cytometry of mycobacteria. M . smegmatis and
M . tuberculosis H37Ra cultures containing the pEP constructs were
grown to log phase, harvested, vortexed for 10 s using 3-mm glass
beads to reduce clumping, and diluted to an optical density at 650 nm
(OD650) of 0.05 to 0.250 . The appropriate dilution to
obtain 108 cells in 1 ml for each sample was calculated by
using the equivalence that an OD650 of 0.100 equals 108
cells (32) . Dilutions were prepared in 12- by 75-mm
polystyrene round-bottom tubes (Becton Dickinson) containing 10
to 12 3-mm sterilized glass beads, and samples were vortexed for 10 s
just prior to flow cytometry to reduce clumping . A Becton Dickinson
FACScan 8383 with a 488-nm argon laser was gated to detect the
presence of individual mycobacteria producing green fluorescent
protein (GFP) . A total of 10,000 events from each sample was
measured, with at least 2,000 gated events recorded to ensure
statistical significance . All parameters for data acquisition were
identical for both M . smegmatis and M . tuberculosis
H37Ra . Mycobacteria containing pFPV27 were used as negative controls
for these experiments . Positive controls were mycobacteria containing
the vector pBEN, which contains gfp driven by phsp60, a
strong heat shock promoter from Mycobacterium bovis BCG (2,
27) . Levels of fluorescence were plotted as the
geometric mean of the histograms .
Random PCR mutagenesis and PCR of mutated inserts for sequencing.
To create the pTKep mutants, the primers Epxyl-F and Epxyl-R were
used to amplify the 412-bp eis promoter . Mutagenic PCR pools
of the eis promoter were cloned into the promoterless xylE-containing
vector pTKmx, as described previously (19) .
Mutagenic PCR was performed using conditions previously described (20),
with the following modifications . Briefly, 0.4 mg of each primer/ml
was added to a reaction mixture containing a 0.25:1 ratio of dATP to
dGTP, dCTP, and dTTP to attain approximately one nucleotide change
per 400 bp . The primers Kep-F and PCR2 were used to amplify eis
promoter mutants from pTKep clones . Crude extracts of mycobacteria to
be used as PCR templates were prepared as described elsewhere (16) .
Two and a half microliters of crude extract was added to a final
volume of 20 µl containing 2 µl of 10x
reaction buffer (Roche), 4 µl of 1.25 mM deoxynucleoside
triphosphates, 0.27 U of Taq polymerase (Roche), 20 pmol of
each primer, and 5% dimethyl sulfoxide . Mutations were verified by
DNA sequencing of both strands from each mutant using the primers
Kep-seq and Epxyl-R .
Qualitative and quantitative catechol 2,3-dioxygenase activity
assays. For qualitative assays, M . smegmatis(pTKep) and M .
tuberculosis H37Ra(pTKep) clones, grown on their respective agar,
were sprayed with 100 mM catechol in 50 mM potassium phosphate buffer
(pH 7.5) . Catechol 2,3-dioxygenase (CDO) converts catechol into
2-hydroxymuconic semialdehyde, a product with a bright yellow
color and an absorbance maximum at 375 nm (25) . White and
light yellow clones, representing deficient CDO production, were
selected after 5 min of color development, patched to new agar
plates, rescreened, and compared to pTKepNM (nonmutated eis
promoter) and pTKmx isolates . True-white and light-yellow colonies
were used to inoculate liquid media or were patched onto agar to
prepare crude extracts for PCR amplification of the mutated
eis promoter insert . Quantitative CDO assays were performed,
similar to those previously described, with slight modifications (28,
29) . M . smegmatis and M . tuberculosis H37Ra
cultures were grown in their respective liquid media to stationary
phase . One-milliliter aliquots were centrifuged at 13,000 rpm for 3
min and washed once with 0.5 ml of 50 mM potassium phosphate
buffer (pH 7.5) . Cells were suspended in 0.5 ml of 50 mM potassium
phosphate buffer (pH 7.5) and lysed as described above for RNA
extraction with the addition of 1 mM final phenylmethanesulfonyl
fluoride (Sigma) . Bicinchoninic acid assays (Pierce) were used to
determine protein concentrations of lysates, according to the
manufacturer's protocol . One hundred microliters of lysate was then
mixed with 0.9 ml of 0.3 mM catechol in 50 mM potassium phosphate
buffer (pH 7.5), and the OD375 was recorded over a 2-min
period . A change in the OD375 of 0.0147 is equal to 1 mU
of specific activity at 24°C (25) . Results presented
are from experiments performed in triplicate using three independent
cultures for each sample tested . Values are expressed as
milliunits/milligram/minute .
DNA sequencing. Sequencing reactions were performed by the
Arizona Research Laboratories Genetic Analysis and Technology Core
using an Applied Biosystems 3730xl DNA analyzer .
Statistical analysis. Results of flow cytometry and CDO
activity experiments are expressed as the mean ± standard error of
the mean . Differences in fluorescence or CDO activity between three
or more constructs were assessed using one-way analysis of variance
(ANOVA) . When two constructs were compared to one another, a paired
Student's t test analysis was used to determine the
statistical difference .
Transcriptional start point mapping of eis. The
transcriptional start point (TSP) of the eis gene was determined
by primer extension analyses on total RNA from M . smegmatis(p69),
M . tuberculosis H37Ra(p69), and wild-type M . tuberculosis
H37Ra . In both M . smegmatis and M . tuberculosis H37Ra,
the TSP mapped to an A nucleotide 33 bp upstream from the start codon
of eis (Fig . 1A and B) . The wild-type M .
tuberculosis H37Ra product was very faint compared to M .
tuberculosis H37Ra harboring p69, indicating low levels of
chromosomal eis transcript production during logarithmic
growth . A putative –10 region matching the consensus E . coli
70
sequence at 4 of 6 bases was found 8 bp upstream from the TSP, and a
putative –35 region matching the E . coli
70
consensus sequence at 5 of 6 positions was located 13 bp upstream
from the putative –10 region (Fig . 1B) . The
consensus sequence data for the putative –35 and –10 regions place
the eis promoter within the group A mycobacterial promoters (15) .
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FIG . 1 . Primer extension analysis of the eis transcript in
mycobacteria . (A) Primer extension analysis of M . smegmatis(p69)
(lane 1), M . tuberculosis H37Ra(p69) (lane 2), and M .
tuberculosis H37Ra wild type (lane 3), showing the TSP mapping to an
A nucleotide in both species . Labeled primer was run as a negative
control (lane 4) . (B) Sequence upstream from the published eis
start codon . Putative Shine-Dalgarno (S.D.), –35, and –10 regions are
underlined and boldfaced, and the TSP is indicated by an asterisk.
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Flow cytometry of site-directed core eis promoter mutants in
M . smegmatis and M . tuberculosis. We tested whether the
putative –35 and –10 regions of the eis promoter were
important for the transcriptional activity of gfp . Figure
2 shows the specific mutations that were made in
these regions . Two substitutions were made in the –10 region, A G
at –12 (pSKM1) and A G
at –9 (pSKM2) (Fig . 2) . pSKM1 exhibited a fourfold
and sixfold decrease in fluorescence in M . smegmatis and M .
tuberculosis H37Ra, respectively, compared to pEP412 (P <
0.05) . pSKM2 showed a twofold decrease in fluorescence compared to
pEP412 in both mycobacteria (P < 0.05) . These results indicate
that the –10 region is critical for the expression of eis in
mycobacteria .
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FIG . 2 . Flow-cytometric analysis of gfp expression in
mycobacteria by site-directed mutants (pSKM series) in the core promoter
of eis . Open bars represent pSKM constructs assayed with M .
smegmatis and solid bars represent pSKM constructs assayed with
M . tuberculosis H37Ra . Mutations are underlined and boldfaced .
Asterisks indicate significant differences at P values of <0.05
using one-way ANOVA between pEP412 and pSKM constructs with both M .
smegmatis and M . tuberculosis H37Ra . The diamond indicates a
significant difference using a paired t test between pBEN and
pSKM7 in M . smegmatis at P values of <0.05 . The square
represents a significant difference using a paired t test between
pSKM4 and pEP412 in M . tuberculosis H37Ra at P values of
<0.05 . The –35 and –10 sequences of pSKM7 represent the E . coli
70
consensus sequences.
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Three mutations were made in the –35 region to examine its role in
eis expression . A single change from T to C at –32 (Fig.
2, pSKM3) enhanced expression in both M . smegmatis and
M . tuberculosis H37Ra by 1.75- and 1.5-fold, respectively . A
C T
change at –28 (pSKM4) had no significant effect in M . smegmatis
but caused a 1.36-fold decrease (P < 0.05) in expression in
M . tuberculosis H37Ra . A change from C to A at –29 (pSKM5) had no
significant effect on expression in either mycobacteria (Fig.
2) . These results suggest that the putative –35
region may be subtly involved in the recognition of the eis
promoter by the mycobacterial transcriptional machinery but is not
essential for expression .
We then changed the eis promoter sequences further from (pSKM6)
and closer to (pSKM7) the E . coli
70
consensus sequence . We discovered a 1.7-fold increase (P <
0.05) in transcriptional activity in pSKM6 in both mycobacteria,
indicating slightly better promoter recognition . Interestingly, an
enormous increase in activity occurred when the eis promoter
was changed to the E . coli
70
consensus sequence (pSKM7) . In M . smegmatis, pSKM7 exhibited a
5.7-fold increase in activity over that of pEP412 and a 1.84-fold
increase in activity over that of pBEN . In M . tuberculosis
H37Ra, pSKM7 exhibited a 5.5-fold increase in activity over that of
pEP412 and displayed levels of fluorescence similar to that of pBEN .
pSKM7 also showed a twofold increase in gfp expression in
E . coli compared to that of pEP412 in logarithmic-phase cells
(data not shown) . The results from the site-directed mutagenesis of
the putative –35 and –10 regions indicate that these regions comprise
the core promoter of eis . In addition, these results confirm
that the eis promoter is a group A/SigA-like mycobacterial
promoter .
Flow cytometry of M . smegmatis containing 5' eis
promoter deletion constructs. To identify the region of the eis
promoter required for maximal expression in the heterologous host
M . smegmatis, 5' eis promoter deletions were cloned
upstream of promoterless gfp in pFPV27 to create the pEP
vector series (Fig . 3A) . These plasmids were
transformed into M . smegmatis 1-2c, and cells harboring these
constructs were grown to log phase and diluted for flow cytometry .
The negative control carrying pFPV27 displayed minimal fluorescence
(Fig . 3B) . The heat shock promoter control, pBEN, produced a
120-fold higher level of fluorescence than the negative control,
pFPV27 (Fig . 3B) . pBEN produced a fourfold higher level
of fluorescence than the largest eis promoter construct,
pEP922 (Fig . 3B) . When the pEP series constructs
were compared to each other, there was no significant difference in
the levels of fluorescence from pEP922 to pEP200 (Fig .
3B) . However, pEP112 showed a twofold-lower level of fluorescence
than pEP200 . pEP112 conferred more than 14-fold more fluorescence
than the negative control, indicating that while it was weaker than
pEP200, it was still positive (Fig . 3B) . These data
indicate that at least 200 bp of the eis promoter are required
for maximal eis expression in log-phase M . smegmatis .
Flow cytometry of M . tuberculosis containing 5' eis
promoter deletion constructs. To determine the region of the eis
promoter required for maximal expression in M . tuberculosis, M .
tuberculosis H37Ra was transformed with the pEP vector series,
grown to log phase, and diluted for flow cytometry . The negative
control, pFPV27, showed minimal fluorescence, and the positive
control, pBEN, produced a fluorescence signal 215-fold higher than
that of the negative control, indicating that the heat shock promoter
functions at a nearly twofold-higher level in M . tuberculosis
H37Ra than in M . smegmatis (Fig . 3B and C) .
This difference could be due to variability in plasmid copy number
between the two species . In M . tuberculosis H37Ra, the
positive control produced fivefold more fluorescence than the largest
eis promoter construct, pEP922 (Fig . 3C) . There
was no significant difference in the level of fluorescence from
pEP922 to pEP412 (Fig . 3C) . Unlike the case with M .
smegmatis, a decrease in expression was observed when the
promoter region was shortened to 300 bp . Compared to pEP412, pEP300
and pEP200 displayed approximately twofold less fluorescence . In
addition, pEP112 was fourfold less fluorescent than pEP412 (Fig.
3C) . These data suggest that the 412-bp region of
the eis promoter is required for maximal expression of eis
in log-phase M . tuberculosis H37Ra . The data also indicate
that different cis elements may be involved in eis
expression between log-phase M . smegmatis and M .
tuberculosis H37Ra .
Quantitative analysis of random eis promoter mutants in M .
smegmatis and M . tuberculosis. To identify regions required
for eis transcriptional activity, we analyzed plasmid clones
containing random mutations in the 412-bp eis promoter that
were isolated from xylE reporter screens in M . smegmatis
and M . tuberculosis H37Ra . For each species, 10,000
independent clones were screened for diminished CDO activity based on
yellow/white screening . For M . smegmatis, 48 clones were
isolated as PCR positive for promoter inserts . Of these clones, only
five (pTKep1, -2, -3, -4, and -5) contained single nucleotide changes
in the 412-bp eis promoter (Fig . 4A) . pTKep1
and -2 were separated by only 16 bp . pTKep1 contained a T C
mutation at –383 . pTKep2 was located at –367 and had mutated
from C to T . pTKep3 and 4 were within 27 bp of one another .
pTKep3 contained an A G
substitution at –236, while pTKep4 contained a T C
substitution at –209 . pTKep5 contained an A G
substitution at –105 . These clones were assayed for quantitative CDO
activity in M . smegmatis . pTKep1, pTKep2, and pTKep4 displayed
CDO activity comparable to that of the negative control, pTKmx,
indicating the complete loss of eis promoter activity (Fig.
4B) . pTKep3 and pTKep5 showed a 5- and 6.7-fold (P
< 0.05) decrease of transcriptional activity, respectively (Fig.
4B) .
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FIG . 4 . CDO assay of random eis promoter mutants in mycobacteria .
(A) Map of pTKep mutants isolated in qualitative CDO screening in
relation to the 412-bp eis promoter . An alignment between the
B . subtilis dinR element and the putative dinR element of the
eis promoter (–397 to –383) is also shown . Quantitative analysis
of the CDO activity of pTKep mutants assayed with M . smegmatis
(B) and M . tuberculosis H37Ra (C) compared to the nonmutated
eis promoter, pTKepNM, and the negative control, pTKmx . All pTKep
constructs were significantly different from pTKepNM in both M .
smegmatis and M . tuberculosis H37Ra using paired t
tests at P values of <0.05.
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For M . tuberculosis H37Ra, only 14 clones were PCR positive
for promoter inserts, and of those only three (pTKep20, -24, and -48)
contained single-nucleotide changes in the eis promoter . All
three mutants displayed CDO activity at or below levels for the
negative control, pTKmx (Fig . 4C) . The mutation in pTKep20,
a T C
substitution at –139, was 34 bp from the mutation in pTKep5 found in
the M . smegmatis screen . However, unlike the case with pTKep5
in M . smegmatis, this mutation caused complete loss of CDO
activity . The mutation in pTKep24, a T G
transversion at –369, was only 2 bp upstream from the mutation in
pTKep2 and caused a complete loss of CDO activity similar to that
with pTKep2 . The single-nucleotide change in pTKep48 was identical
to that in pTKep1 of the M . smegmatis assay . In addition, pTKep1
and pTKep48 map to a region that contains a putative site for
DinR (Fig . 4A), a negative regulator of DNA-damage inducible
genes found in both gram-negative and gram-positive organisms (21,
33) .
The intracellular survival of M . tuberculosis within macrophages
is central to its success as a human pathogen, yet little is
known of the factors that allow its survival within this inhospitable
environment . Even less is known about the promoter function of these
factors . Very few promoters of mycobacterial genes involved in its
pathogenesis have been characterized . These include the promoters of
sigE, sigH, oxyR, ahpC, katG, mas,
and fadD28 (8, 10,
12, 17, 28,
34) . Several other genes have been shown to be
involved in the survival of mycobacteria during the infection of
macrophages, including eis (32) and the isocitrate
lyase gene (11, 30) . However, the
promoters for these genes have not been characterized .
Primer extension analysis (Fig . 1) determined that the TSP
of the eis gene, in both M . smegmatis and M .
tuberculosis H37Ra, maps to the same A nucleotide . The level of
signal for eis transcript from wild-type M . tuberculosis
H37Ra was very low compared to that for mycobacteria containing p69
(Fig . 1, lane 3) . This indicated either that low
levels of eis expression from the M . tuberculosis H37Ra
chromosome occur during logarithmic growth or that the eis
mRNA transcript has a short half-life . This made it necessary to use
a plasmid-borne copy of eis in M . tuberculosis H37Ra to
ensure sufficient transcript yield to identify the TSP . The most
striking feature of the eis promoter region is the high
similarity to the canonical –35 and –10 sequences for E . coli
70
promoters .
We used site-directed mutagenesis (Fig . 2) to determine the
importance of the putative –35 and –10 regions . Single
mutations in the putative –10 region significantly reduced the
transcription of gfp in both M . smegmatis and M .
tuberculosis H37Ra (Fig . 2) . Loss of function upon
alteration of –10 regions is common for a variety of bacteria . For
example, base substitutions in the –10 region of the rpsL
promoter of M . smegmatis caused dramatic defects in transcriptional
activity (19) . Interestingly, changes in the –35 region
of the eis promoter had variable and low-level effects on
transcriptional activity . Mutations in the putative –35 region either
increased transcriptional activity (pSKM3) or had no effect
(pSKM4 in M . smegmatis), with the exception of a slight decrease
in fluorescence from pSKM4 in M . tuberculosis H37Ra (Fig.
2) . These results suggest that while the –35 region
may be involved in eis expression, it is not essential for
promoter activity .
We moved the eis promoter away from the E . coli
70
consensus by incorporating a combination of mutations in pSKM6 (Fig.
2) . Surprisingly, fluorescence from pSKM6 was
higher than that of its parent, pEP412, in both mycobacterial
species . We expected fluorescence to decrease since single mutations
caused decreased fluorescence in pSKM1, -2, and -4 . However, the –32
T C
mutation in pSKM3 was also incorporated into pSKM6, which showed
increased levels of fluorescence in both mycobacteria . It is
possible that the single alteration in the –35 region was able to
overcome single mutations known to negatively influence eis
expression . However, we cannot be certain of this, since multiple
mutations in the –10 region in a single construct were not tested .
E . coli promoters generally function very poorly in mycobacteria
(3) . Alteration of the core promoter of eis
toward consensus E . coli
70
promoter elements (Fig . 2, pSKM7) greatly enhanced
eis transcriptional activity in both mycobacterial species .
These results show that the eis promoter can be changed into a
strong, heat shock-like promoter . Although it would be expected that
conversion of promoter elements to consensus elements would cause
better promoter recognition and therefore greater activity, this is
the first report that alteration of mycobacterial promoter elements
to E . coli consensus elements positively influences gene
expression in mycobacteria . Our results suggest that it is perhaps
the spacing between the –35 and –10 regions in E . coli
promoters and not the consensus elements themselves that are critical
to the lack of recognition of these promoters in mycobacteria .
To identify upstream regions necessary for the maximal expression
of eis, 5'promoter deletions were assayed with mycobacteria
using GFP, which has been used widely to study mycobacterial gene
expression (2, 6, 9) .
Flow-cytometric analysis of M . smegmatis harboring the pEP
vector series suggested that at least 200 bp of the upstream eis
promoter region are necessary for the maximal expression of eis
in M . smegmatis(p69) . During the initial characterization of
eis, it was not noted that there was a decrease in the
production of the Eis protein in the deletion derivatives p69-97 and
p69-96 compared to the intact clone p69 (32) . These
derivatives contain a promoter region identical to the pEP112
construct . Although the survival phenotype was retained when using
these deletion derivatives in M . smegmatis, the promoter
region necessary for the maximum expression of eis was not present .
In contrast to M . smegmatis, flow-cytometric analysis of M .
tuberculosis H37Ra harboring the pEP vector series indicated
that a 412-bp region upstream of eis is required for maximum
expression in M . tuberculosis H37Ra . The difference in the region
required for maximum expression between the two species may be
attributed to the fact that the eis promoter is not in its
native host when analyzed in M . smegmatis . The results from
M . tuberculosis H37Ra, therefore, present a more relevant analysis
of eis promoter activity .
Because the flow cytometry data from the pEP series showed that a
200-bp and 412-bp region of the eis promoter was necessary for
maximum expression of eis in M . smegmatis and M . tuberculosis
H37Ra, respectively, we were confident that more than just the
core promoter was required for activity . Random mutagenesis of the
412-bp eis promoter was employed to delineate other regions
involved in transcriptional activity . Interestingly, we did not
recover mutants that mapped to the core promoter region of eis,
which suggests that mutations in the core promoter did not fully
inhibit the production of CDO or that the core promoter is not
essential for expression in stationary-phase cells, therefore
allowing qualitatively screened colonies to retain a yellow color
upon exposure to catechol . With M . smegmatis, five mutants
were localized to regions far upstream from the core promoter of
eis (Fig . 4A and B) . pTKep1, -2, and -4 showed a complete
loss of CDO activity, while pTKep3 and -5 displayed significantly
reduced levels of CDO activity . With M . tuberculosis H37Ra,
only three single-nucleotide mutants (pTKep20, -24, and -48)
were recovered, and all showed complete loss of CDO production . The
results from the CDO activities strongly suggest that the upstream
region is essential for the expression of eis in stationary
mycobacteria .
The mutations found in pTKep1 and -48 mapped within a region with
high homology to a DinR cis element from Bacillus subtilis
(Fig . 4A) . The match was 71% identical when the 412-bp
eis promoter was used to query the recently updated
transcriptional regulatory network database, DBTBS, for B .
subtilis (22) . DinR is a negative regulator of
genes inducible by DNA damage and is the gram-positive equivalent of
the LexA SOS repressor in gram-negative bacteria (21) .
LexA (DinR) is a transcriptional repressor that binds as a dimer to a
consensus sequence presenting dyad symmetry commonly known as the SOS
box or Cheo box (33) . LexA in M . tuberculosis
has been shown to bind to a mycobacterial version of the B .
subtilis Cheo box (24) . It is unlikely that this putative
DinR cis element actually represents a site for negative
regulation, because our data support the requirement of the upstream
region for eis promoter activity in stationary mycobacteria .
The data presented here suggest that there is a transcriptional
activator binding site in the upstream region of the eis
promoter with similarity to the DinR binding site . Studies employing
gel retardation analysis to determine if this region is a binding
site for an activator or repressor protein will be needed before
hypotheses can be formulated on its role in eis expression .
A comparison of the data from the flow-cytometric analysis and the
CDO analysis of the 412-bp eis promoter revealed a difference
in the region necessary for expression in M . smegmatis . The
flow cytometry data show that a 200-bp fragment is required for
maximum expression, whereas mutations upstream of –200 cause loss of
expression . In addition, if the proposed DinR-like site is important
for expression, then its exclusion in the pEP300 construct should
have caused a loss in gfp transcription in both mycobacteria .
The mycobacteria analyzed for flow cytometry were grown to
logarithmic phase, while those analyzed using the CDO activity assay
were grown to stationary phase . We believe that the discrepancies in
the data are due to the difference in growth phase of the cells and
not the region being analyzed . We have preliminary evidence, using
real-time PCR, that eis is up-regulated in stationary-phase
M . smegmatis carrying an integrated copy of the p69 insert
(unpublished results) . It is possible that the putative DinR element
is required for eis expression in stationary-phase M .
smegmatis but not for expression during log phase . This
possibility remains to be determined for both M . smegmatis and
M . tuberculosis H37Ra . In conclusion, we show that the
promoter of the putative virulence gene eis of M .
tuberculosis is a group A/SigA-like mycobacterial promoter that
contains both a core promoter region and an upstream region required
for transcriptional activity . Future studies to identify the putative
trans-activating factors involved in the expression of eis
will enhance our understanding of how potential virulence genes may
be regulated in M . tuberculosis and will perhaps provide clues
to the function of Eis during mycobacterial infection .
We thank Norma Seaver and Debbie Sakiestewa from the Flow Cytometry
Shared Services of the Arizona Cancer Center, University of Arizona,
for expert technical assistance with the flow cytometry studies .
Special thanks are extended to the laboratory of Stanley Falkow at
Stanford University for providing the vectors pFPV27 and pBEN . A
special thanks to Gordon Churchward of Emory University is also in
order for providing the vector pTKmx . We also thank Janet Hatt, James
Moulder, Amy Windley, Linoj Samuel, and Chris Alteri for critical
review of the paper .
This work was supported by National Institutes of Health grant
AI45537-01A2 to R.L.F., the American Society for Microbiology Robert
D . Watkins Minority Fellowship to E.A.R., and funding through the
Undergraduate Biology Research Program of the University of Arizona
to S.K.M .
* Corresponding author . Mailing address: Department of
Microbiology and Immunology, The University of Arizona College of Medicine, 1501
N . Campbell Ave., P.O . Box 245049, Tucson, AZ 85724 . Phone: (520) 626-7807 . Fax:
(520) 626-2100 . E-mail:
rfriedma@email.arizona.edu .
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