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Journal of Bacteriology, August 2004, p . 5450-5459, Vol . 186,
No . 16
spoIVH (ykvV), a Requisite Cortex Formation Gene, Is Expressed in
Both Sporulating Compartments of Bacillus subtilis
Daisuke Imamura,1 Kazuo Kobayashi,2 Junichi
Sekiguchi,3 Naotake Ogasawara,2 Michio Takeuchi,1
and Tsutomu Sato1*
International Environmental and Agricultural Science, Tokyo University of
Agriculture and Technology, Fuchu, Tokyo 183-8509,1 Graduate School
of Information Science, Nara Institute of Sciences and Technology, Ikoma, Nara
630-0101,2 Department of Applied Biology, Faculty of Textile Science
and Technology, Shinshu University, Ueda, Nagano 386-8567, Japan3
Received 27 January 2004/ Accepted 18 May 2004
It is well known that the ykvU-ykvV operon is under the regulation
of the
E-associated
RNA polymerase (E E) .
In our study, we observed that ykvV is transcribed together
with the upstream ykvU gene by E E
in the mother cell and monocistronically under E G
control in the forespore . Interestingly, alternatively expressed
ykvV in either the forespore or the mother cell increased the
sporulation efficiency in the ykvV background . Studies show
that the YkvV protein is a member of the thioredoxin superfamily and
also contains a putative Sec-type secretion signal at the N terminus .
We observed efficient sporulation in a mutant strain obtained
by replacing the putative signal peptide of YkvV with the secretion
signal sequence of SleB, indicating that the putative signal sequence
is essential for spore formation . These results suggest that YkvV is
capable of being transported by the putative Sec-type signal sequence
into the space between the double membranes surrounding the
forespore . The ability of ykvV expression in either
compartment to complement is indeed intriguing and further introduces
a new dimension to the genetics of B . subtilis spore
formation . Furthermore, electron microscopic observation revealed a
defective cortex in the ykvV disruptant . In addition, the
expression levels of
K-directed
genes significantly decreased despite normal
G
activity in the ykvV mutant . However, immunoblotting with the
anti- K
antibody showed that pro- K
was normally processed in the ykvV mutant, indicating that
YkvV plays an important role in cortex formation, consistent with
recent reports . We therefore propose that ykvV should be
renamed spoIVH .
The gram-positive bacterium Bacillus subtilis forms dormant
and environmentally resistant spores in response to nutrient
deprivation (10) . Early in sporulation, cells divide into two
unequal compartments, a larger mother cell and a smaller forespore
(24, 34) . Just after septation, RNA
polymerase sigma factors
F
and
E
govern gene expressions in the forespore and in the mother cell,
respectively (14, 19) . Later in
sporulation, after the completion of the engulfment of the forespore
by the mother cell,
G
and
K
become activated and replace
F
and
E
in the forespore and mother cell compartments, respectively (23,
25, 42) . Prior to the
completion of the engulfment process, an inactive precursor protein
pro- K,
which contains an N-terminal extension of 20 amino acids (aa), is
produced in the mother cell (6, 20,
26) . The processing of pro- K
into an active form requires the expression of the signaling protein
SpoIVB in the forespore under the control of
G
(4, 46) . A processing complex consisting of
SpoIVFA, SpoIVFB, and BofA receives the signal via SpoIVB that
engulfment is completed, and then pro- K
is processed into active
K
in the mother cell (5, 27,
36) . The engulfment process culminates in two bilayer
membranes surrounding the forespore . A thick peptidoglycan layer
is then deposited between the two membranes of the forespore to
form the spore cortex that confers heat resistance on the spore (13) .
The coordinated functions of this cascade of sigma factors ensure
distinct regulation of hundreds of sporulation-specific genes,
including many whose functions are not yet known .
With the successful completion of the B . subtilis genome-wide
sequence (21), the current focus of the B . subtilis
functional genomics project is to identify the roles of all genes of
unknown functions by gene disruption with insertional mutagenesis and
pMUTIN vectors (31) . Within the framework of this
project, the sporulation-deficient spoIVH mutant was
identified .
Recently, Eichenberger et al . (8) and Feucht et al . (11)
reported that spoIVH is required for efficient sporulation and
is transcribed from the consensus sequence of the
E-recognized
promoter located upstream of ykvU . In this paper, we report
that spoIVH is expressed in both compartments under the
control of
E
and
G .
This is the first instance of nonspecific compartment expression of a
sporulation gene during spore formation in B . subtilis .
Measurement of sporulation frequencies. Sporulation efficiency
was measured by incubating B . subtilis cells in DSM (Difco
sporulation medium) (39) at 37°C for 24 h . The
number of spores per milliliter of culture (CFU) was determined as
the number of heat-resistant (80°C for 10 min) colonies on tryptose
blood agar base .
Plasmid and strain constructions. Table 1
lists the bacterial strains and plasmids used in this study . B .
subtilis was transformed and plasmids were constructed in
Escherichia coli JM105 by standard methods (7,
37) .
| TABLE 1 . Bacterial strains and plasmids used in this study
|
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Integration plasmids pJMVU and pJMIVH were constructed as follows .
PCR-amplified products were generated . The 237-bp internal segment of
ykvU was generated with primers ykvU-F (5'-CCGGAATTCTATGATTTTGGCGCGGG-3',
the EcoRI site is underlined) and ykvU-R (5'-CGCGGATCCGGAATAAACGGAAGCGC-3',
the BamHI site is underlined), and the 168-bp internal segment
of spoIVH was generated with primers IVH-F (5'-CCGGAATTCCTGCTGTTCCCGCTGTT-3',
the EcoRI site is underlined) and IVH-R (5'-CGCGGATCCCACTGTCGGATGGATGG-3',
the BamHI site is underlined) . These products were trimmed with
the respective restriction enzymes and then ligated with pJM114 (33)
digested with EcoRI/BamHI . The resulting plasmids, pJMVU and pJMIVH,
were used to transform competent cells of B . subtilis 168 to
generate strains TS002 and TS001, respectively .
To obtain the vector pTCE1 to enable the introduction of DNA
fragments into the thrC region by double crossover, a 993-bp
5' region and a 990-bp 3' region of the thrC gene were amplified
with primer pairs thrC-UF (5'-CGGGGTACCTTGAAGCCAGTGTTGCC-3',
the KpnI site is underlined) and thrC-UR (5'-CGCGGATCCTGTAAAGTTAGCGCCGG-3',
the BamHI site is underlined) and thrC-DF (5'-AAAACTGCAGGAAATCACCGATTGCCC-3',
the PstI site is underlined) and thrC-DR (5'-CCCAAGCTTGTCCGCTTCAGACAGCT-3',
the HindIII site is underlined), respectively . The plasmid that
was used, pCBB31 (38), harbors a Cmr cassette
flanked by unique KpnI/BamHI and PstI/HindIII sites . The 993-bp PCR
product was trimmed with the enzymes KpnI and BamHI and then ligated
with pCBB31 digested with KpnI/BamHI, resulting in the plasmid pTCC0 .
The 990-bp product was cut with PstI and HindIII and then ligated
with pTCC0 digested with PstI/HindIII, resulting in the plasmid
pTCC1 . Next, the multiple cloning sequence region of pHY300PLK (18)
was digested with EcoRI and HindIII, and the small 39-bp fragment was
ligated into pUC19 (47) to obtain plasmid pTC1 . A
1,197-bp HpaII and BanIII fragment of the erm gene from pE194
(16) was cloned into the AccI site of pTC1 to generate
plasmid pTC2 . To obtain plasmid pTC3, a 1,218-bp BamHI and XbaI
fragment of the erm gene of pTC2 was cloned into the BamHI and
XbaI site of pUC18 (43) . A 1,213-bp BamHI and
BglII fragment of the erm gene of pTC3 was cloned into the
BamHI and BglII site of pTCC1, resulting in a BamHI- and
BglII-digestible plasmid named pTCE1 .
To obtain the plasmids pTCE10 and pTCE11, which harbor the SpoIVH
coding region with and without promoter, respectively, DNA segments
of positions –115 to +515 and –28 to +515 relative to the spoIVH
start codon were amplified from strain 168 chromosomal DNA with
primers IVH-115X (5'-TGCTCTAGAGCAAAGCATTGAAGGTA-3', the XbaI
site is underlined) or IVH-28X (5'-TGCTCTAGACTAATTGAAAAGCATGA-3',
the XbaI site is underlined) each against primer IVH-RB (5'-CGCGGATCCAGAGTCTATGCTCTCAG-3',
the BamHI site is underlined), respectively . These PCR products
were trimmed with the respective restriction enzymes and then ligated
with XbaI/BglII-digested pTCE1 . The resulting plasmids, pTCE10 and
pTCE11, were linearized with ScaI and then used for the introduction
of spoIVH (without promoter) and PspoIVH-spoIVH
into the thrC locus of B . subtilis strain 168 through a
double-crossover event . Erythromycin-resistant transformants were
selected to obtain strains TS007 and TS006 with and without spoIVH
promoter, respectively .
For plasmids pTCE12 and pTCE13, which harbor the SpoIVH coding
region plus the ykvU ( E)
or sspE ( G)
promoter region, respectively, the DNA segment containing positions
–28 to +515 of the spoIVH region was amplified with IVH-28H
(5'-CCCAAGCTTCTAATTGAAAAGCATGA-3', the HindIII site is
underlined) and IVH-RB, and then the promoter regions of ykvU
(positions –113 to –13 from the initiation codon of the ykvU
gene) and sspE (positions –58 to –12 from the initiation codon
of the sspE gene) were amplified with primers ykvU-113 (5'-TGCTCTAGAATTTGTCTCAGCTGTGC-3',
the XbaI site is underlined) and ykvU-13 (5'-CCCAAGCTTTGTCTCTTGTACTACCA-3',
the HindIII site is underlined) and primers sspE-58 (5'-TGCTCTAGAAAAAGAGGAATAGCTAT-3',
the XbaI site is underlined) and sspE-12 (5'-CCCAAGCTTCCACGGTCATTAGAATG-3',
the HindIII site is underlined), respectively . These PCR products
were trimmed with the respective restriction enzymes and then
ligated with XbaI/BglII-digested pTCE1 .
For plasmid pTCE14 with the putative PspoIVH promoter plus
the signal sequence-less SpoIVH coding region, the DNA segment from
–115 to +3 of spoIVH and the DNA segment from +79 to +515
relative to the spoIVH start codon were amplified with the primer
pairs IVH-115X and IVH-3H (5'-CCCAAGCTTCATGGAATCTTCCTTTC-3',
the HindIII site is underlined) and IVH-sig-H (5'-CCCAAGCTTGAGGAAAAACAGCCTGC-3',
the HindIII site is underlined) and IVH-RB, respectively . These
PCR products were trimmed with the respective restriction enzymes and
then ligated with pTCE1 digested with XbaI/BglII . Plasmid pTCE15,
harboring the PsleB promoter to the sleB signal
sequence coding region plus the signal sequence-less SpoIVH coding
region, was constructed by amplifying the DNA segment from –79
to +87 of sleB and the DNA segment from +79 to +515 with primer
pairs sleB-FX (5'-TGCTCTAGAAAGGAAAGAGTGTCTAA-3', the XbaI site
is underlined) and sleB-RH (5'-CCCAAGCTTGGCAGAGATCGTTTCAG-3',
the HindIII site is underlined) and IVH-sig-H and IVH-RB, respectively .
These PCR products were trimmed with each restriction enzyme
and then ligated with pTCE1 digested with XbaI/BglII to obtain the
plasmid pTCE15 .
Plasmids pTCE12, pTCE13, pTCE14, and pTCE15 were used for the
introduction of PykvU-spoIVH, PsspE-spoIVH,
PspoIVH-spoIVH
signal,
and PsleB-signalsleB-spoIVH
signal
into the thrC locus of B . subtilis strain 168 through a
double-crossover event by selecting for erythromycin-resistant
transformants to generate strains TS008, TS009, TS014, and TS015,
respectively . Proper constructions were verified by PCR and DNA
sequencing .
Electron microscopy. B . subtilis cells that were
grown in casein growth medium at 37°C and induced to sporulate by the
resuspension method for 6 h were collected by centrifugation .
Transmission electron micrographs were taken at UltraStructure
Research Laboratories (Kanagawa, Japan) . Samples were prefixed in 2%
(wt/vol) glutaraldehyde in 0.1 M phosphate buffer (pH 7.4), fixed
with 1% osmic acid, and successively stained with 2% uranyl acetate .
Epoxy Spurr resin (Okenshoji Co., Ltd) was used for embedding the
cells . Sections (800 Å) of the cells were prepared with an LKB
Co . U5 ultramicrotome (Amersham Pharmacia) and examined with a
JEOL Co . JEM 100S electron microscope .
DPA quantification. The dipicolinic acid (DPA) content in
sporulating cells was determined . At hourly intervals until 12 h
after the end of log-phase growth (T12) and then
subsequently T24, suspended cells and the culture
medium were harvested by centrifugation (13,000
x g, 2 min) from 1.5 ml of culture .
The pellet was resuspended in 1 ml of sterile distilled water, boiled
for 20 min, cooled for 15 min on ice, and then separated by
centrifugation at 9,000 x g
for 2 min . The supernatant (600 µl) was reacted with 200 µl of 50 mM
sodium acetate (25 ml, pH 4.6, adjusted with acetic acid) containing
25 mg of L-cysteine, 0.31 g of FeSO4
· 7H2O, and 80 mg of (NH4)2SO4 . The
DPA content was determined as the optical density at 440 nm (1) .
ß-Galactosidase assay. Activities of ß-galactosidase were
determined as described by Miller (28) with o-nitrophenyl-ß-D-galactopyranoside
as the substrate . Enzyme-specific activity is expressed as nanomoles
of substrate (o-nitrophenyl-ß-D-galactopyranoside)
hydrolyzed per milligram per minute .
Immunoblot analysis. To detect pro- K
and
K
by Western immunoblotting, B . subtilis cells were grown in
casein growth medium at 37°C and induced to sporulate by the
resuspension method (41) . Protein samples were
extracted from cultures taken at different time points . Samples were
separated by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel
electrophoresis and analyzed by Western immunoblotting with
polyclonal anti- K
serum (12) .
Northern hybridization. Samples of cultures in DSM at 37°C
were drawn at intervals, and total RNA was extracted from harvested
cells as described previously (17) . Total RNA (5
µg) resolved by electrophoresis was blotted onto a positively charged
nylon membrane (Hybond N+; Amersham Pharmacia) and
hybridized by using digoxigenin-labeled RNA probes (10 ng) according
to the manufacturer's instructions (Roche) . The following
oligonucleotide primers were used to amplify the specific templates
for probe generation: ykvU, ykvU-F2
(5'-AATGCCTTGAATTTGTCGTC-3') and ykvU-T7R
(5'-TAATACGACTCACTATAGGGCGAGAAATCAGCACAGCCATGTC-3'); spoIVH,
IVH-F1 (5'-ATGTTGACGAAGCGCTTGC-3') and IVH-T7R
(5'-TAATACGACTCACTATAGGGCGACAATCGGAAACGTCAGCTTG-3') .
Primer extension. Cells were grown in DSM at 37°C and
withdrawn at T–1, T3, and T4 .
Total RNA was extracted from harvested cells as described previously
(17) . One hundred micrograms of total RNA and 1
pmol of the infrared-dye (IRD)-labeled oligonucleotide primer IVH-EX
(5'-GCACCATGACGTCCAAAAATGGAG-3'), which is complementary to the
nucleotide sequence of the spoIVH gene and the 3' end of the
primer located 172 nucleotides (nt) downstream from the initiation
codon, were mixed and heated at 80°C for 15 min . Samples were
incubated at 25°C for 10 min, and then reverse transcription
reactions were carried out with 400 U of SuperScript III reverse
transcriptase (Invitrogen) at 55°C for 60 min . Reactions were
inactivated at 70°C for 15 min and treated with RNaseH .
Ethanol-precipitated products were run on 5% polyacrylamide-6 M urea
gels with a sequencing ladder . The DNA fragments amplified by PCR
with IVH-115 and IVH-RB were sequenced with IVH-EX to generate a
sequence ladder . IRD was detected with a LI-COR DNA sequencer model
4200 (Aloka) .
Compartmental localization of ß-galactosidase activity.
Cells in 200 µl of cultures were sedimented by centrifugation and
resuspended into 200 µl of 50 µM fluorescein di-ß-D-galactopyranoside
(FDG) substrate reagent (Marker Gene Technologies, Inc.) . Samples
were incubated for 2 min at 37°C, and then FDG loading was terminated
by the addition of 900 µl of ice-cold phosphate-buffered saline
buffer (100 ml, pH 7.6, containing 0.8 g of NaCl, 0.02 g of KCl, 0.29
g of Na2HPO4 · 12H2O, 0.02 g of KH2PO4,
and 0.28 g of HEPES) . Cells were placed on ice until examination by
fluorescence microscopy (22) .
Fluorescence microscopy. B . subtilis cells incubated
in hydrolyzed casein growth medium at 37°C were induced to sporulate
by the resuspension method of Sterlini and Mandelstam (41),
as specified by Nicholson and Setlow (30) and
Partridge et al . (32) . The resuspension medium was
supplemented with FM4-64 (final concentration, 0.5 µg/ml; Molecular
Probes) for staining of the cell membranes . Samples mounted on glass
slides coated with 0.1% poly-L-lysine (Sigma)
were observed with an Olympus BX50 microscope with a 100x
UplanApo objective . Images were captured by using a SenSys
charge-coupled device camera (Photometrics) . FM4-64 and FDG were
visualized by using a wide interference green filter set (Olympus) or
a fluorescein isothiocyanate filter set (Olympus) and processed
by using Metamorph, version 4.5, software (Universal Image) and
Adobe Photoshop, version 4.0.1J .
Disruption of spoIVH (ykvV) blocks stage IV of
sporulation. The ykvV (named spoIVH) pMUTIN2MCS
insertional mutant YKVVd was identified as a heat-sensitive spore
phenotype during a screening of disruptants of genes of unknown
function in B . subtilis . Consistent with a recent report (8),
the spoIVH mutant TS001 sporulated in DSM at a low frequency
of about 0.0001 (Table 2) . The forespores were
mostly phase dark (data not shown) . We further examined the structure
of the forespores by electron microscopy . After engulfment is
completed, the cortex layer is synthesized at the inner space between
double membranes surrounding the forespore in B . subtilis . The
wild-type cortex was obvious as a white layer at T6
(Fig . 1a) . Although we observed more than 20 cells,
the spoIVH mutant did not form a visible cortex layer (Fig.
1b and c), suggesting that the absence of SpoIVH
may have some effects on spore cortex formation .
| TABLE 2 . Defective sporulation in spoIVH disruptanta
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FIG . 1 . Transmission electron micrographs of typical sporulating cells .
Wild-type 168 (a) and spoIVH mutant TS001 (b and c) were allowed
to sporulate for 6 h after the initiation of sporulation . The arrow
indicates the wild-type cortex layer . Bar, 0.2 µm.
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DPA accumulation significantly decreased in mutant spores.
Several previous studies indicate that the accumulation of DPA is
impaired in mutants with a defective cortex (1,
2) . We therefore proceeded to examine the cortex integrity of the
spoIVH mutant by quantifying the DPA content in pellets of
centrifuged culture (Fig . 2) . We observed
significantly less DPA accumulation in the spoIVH mutant than
in wild-type cells . Together, these results confirm defective cortex
formation in spoIVH mutant spores . Based on these late-stage
characteristics, we classified ykvV as a stage IV sporulation
gene and renamed it spoIVH .
|
FIG . 2 . Quantification of DPA . Cultures of 168 ( )
and TS001 ( )
were induced to sporulate in resuspension medium . Aliquots were
withdrawn at the indicated time points . Time zero (0) corresponds to the
initiation of sporulation . The optical density at 440 nm (OD440)
directly reflects the DPA concentration.
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Effect of spoIVH mutation on the sigma cascade. To
determine the effect of a spoIVH mutation on the activity of
the sporulation-specific RNA polymerase sigma cascade comprising
F,
E,
G,
and
K,
we compared the expressions of various lacZ fusions in the
presence or absence of an intact spoIVH gene . Although
F,
E,
and
G
activities were normal (Fig . 3A and data not
shown), the expression of
K-directed
gerE-lacZ and
K-directed
GerE-dependent cotD-lacZ was inhibited (Fig .
3A) . These results suggest that spoIVH mutation affects
the sigma cascade after the activation of forespore-specific
G
and partially shuts down mother cell-specific
K
activation late in sporulation . The expression of low
K-directed
genes and normal
F-,
E-,
and
G-directed
genes in the spoIVH mutant suggests that the spoIVH
gene product is necessary for efficient pro- K
processing .
|
FIG . 3 . Effects of spoIVH mutation on sigma cascade . Strains
carrying lacZ fusions along with intact ( )
or disrupted ( )
spoIVH were induced to sporulate, and ß-galactosidase activities
were assayed.
G,
G-directed
sspE-lacZ expression ( ,
SSPEd;
,
TS003).
K,
K-directed
gerE-lacZ expression ( ,
REZ;
,
TS004).
K+GerE,
K-directed
and GerE-dependent cotD-lacZ expression ( ,
TDZ;
,
TS005) . Averages of the results from three or two independent
experiments are shown . Error bars represent standard deviations . (B)
Western blots of pro- K
processing in strain 168 and the spoIVH mutant (TS001) . Cells
were induced into sporulation and collected at the indicated time
points . Whole-cell extracts were Western blotted with antibody that
recognizes
K .
p and m indicate pro- K
and mature
K,
respectively.
|
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To examine this hypothesis, we Western blotted the spoIVH mutant
with anti- K
antibody . Figure 3B shows that both the spoIVH mutant
and the wild-type strain contained the mature form of
K
from T4 to T6 . Densitometry
analysis showed that the levels of both pro- K
and
K
observed in the wild type and the spoIVH mutant at every
examined time point were not significantly different (data not
shown) . These results indicate that pro- K
processing is not impaired by spoIVH inactivation, suggesting
that decreased activity of
K
may result from an indirect effect of the spoIVH mutation,
most probably caused by an abnormal condition in the mother cell
resulting from impaired sporulation .
Transcriptional analysis of spoIVH. In a recent
report, Eichenberger et al . (8) and Feucht et al . (11)
indicated that ykvU, located upstream of spoIVH (Fig.
4A), and spoIVH were cotranscribed by E E
by microarray analysis . In addition, Eichenberger et al . (8)
identified a transcriptional start site of the ykvU-spoIVH
operon and found a promoter very similar to the consensus sequence
recognized by E E,
5'-Ata-16 bp-cATAcanT-3' (15), in the –27 to –56
segment of ykvU (8) . However, plasmid
integration in ykvU, whose mutation is expected to prevent the
expression of spoIVH, did not abolish the sporulation
efficiency (Table 2) . These findings indicate that
there may be a promoter located just upstream of spoIVH . To
investigate the transcription of the ykvU and spoIVH genes,
we examined RNA synthesis by Northern blotting of RNA extracted
from growing and sporulating cells (Fig . 4B) . The ykvU
gene probe detected a band at approximately 2.0 kb (band b, T2
and T3), corresponding to the predicted length of a
transcript initiated at the ykvU promoter and terminating at
the putative terminator located downstream of the spoIVH
coding region . The spoIVH gene-specific probe detected bands
of about 2.0 kb (T2 to T3), 0.5 kb (T3
to T7), and 0.4 kb (vegetative cells and T0) .
The largest band corresponded to band b, which was detected with the
ykvU probe . A smaller band (band c) corresponded to the
predicted length of a transcript initiated upstream of spoIVH
and terminating in a stem and loop structure at the end of the
ykvU-spoIVH transcriptional unit . The smallest band (band
a), detected at the vegetative stage and at T0,
seems slightly shorter than band c and the spoIVH gene (498
bp) . Probably, the band a signal is not specific for spoIVH
mRNA . However, even if spoIVH is expressed in the vegetative
phase and is functional, it may be one of several similar proteins
including paralogous genes, so its inactivation had little or no
effect on growth .
|
FIG . 4 . Transcriptional analysis of spoIVH region . (A)
Arrangement of spoIVH and upstream gene ykvU . Bars
indicate the positions of sequences corresponding to the Northern
blotting probe . Loops with lines indicate putative terminators . Arrows
with lines indicate (putative) promoters . Arrows under the physical map
indicate observed mRNA . (B) Northern blots of whole RNA extracted from
wild-type 168 cells . Arrows indicate positions of molecular size
markers . Cells were grown on DSM and harvested at the indicated time
points . (C) Northern blot of whole RNA extracted from 168 with
disruptions of the indicated genes . WT, 168; spo0A, TF97; sigH,
TF85; sigF, TF83; sigE, TF82; sigG, TF84; sigK,
TF99; arrowheads, mRNA signals; Veg., vegetative cells.
|
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To determine the dependence of spoIVH expression, we analyzed
transcripts from the two promoters that function in the sporulation
phase at T2 and T4 in spo0A (Spo0A),
spo0H ( H),
spoIIAC ( F),
spoIIGB ( E),
spoIIIG ( G),
and spoIIIC ( K)
mutant backgrounds (Fig . 4C) . A band (band b) was
detected in the wild type and the spoIIIG and spoIIIC
mutants but not in the spo0A, spo0H, spoIIAC,
and spoIIGB mutants . The transcript (band c) was detected only
in the wild type and in the spoIIIC mutant (Fig . 4C) .
These results indicate that spoIVH is transcribed together
with ykvU from T2 to T3 by
E E
from the promoter located upstream of ykvU, consistent with
previous reports (8, 11), and transcribed
monocistronically from T3 under E G
control from promoter PspoIVH, indicated in Fig.
4A .
To determine the 5' end of spoIVH mRNA transcribed by E G,
we carried out the primer extension analysis with total RNA extracted
from strain 168 (Fig . 5A) . Although the transcription
start site was not detected at the vegetative phase, it was located
23 to 25 nt upstream of the initiation codon of spoIVH at T3
and T4 . Consistent with our results, we found a region
highly similar to the consensus sequence recognized by
G,
5'-gnATA/G-18 bp-cAtnnTA-3' (15), in the spoIVH
segment from –27 to –56 from its initiation codon (Fig .
5B) . An extension reaction was primed from 172 nt downstream of
the initiation codon of spoIVH with IRD-labeled primer IVH-EX .
However, a vegetative-phase-specific extension product was not
detected (data not shown), suggesting that band a, detected as shown
in Fig . 4B, may not be specific for spoIVH
mRNA .
|
FIG . 5 . Mapping of the transcription start sites of spoIVH by
primer extension analysis . (A) Total RNA was prepared from wild-type 168
of exponentially growing cells (lane V) or at T3 (lane
T3) or T4 (lane T4) .
(B) Nucleotide sequence of the upstream region of spoIVH . The
regions with similar consensus sequences recognized by
G
are underlined . The positions of primer-extended products are indicated
with asterisks.
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To confirm the compartment localization of spoIVH expression,
we used fluorescence microscopy and the ß-galactosidase sensitive
substrate FDG, which can show compartment expression of the lacZ
gene (22) . Fluorescence from FDG in spoIID-lacZ
( E)
and sspE-lacZ ( G)
strains was detected in the mother cell and in the forespore
compartment, respectively (data not shown) . No fluorescence from FDG
was detected under our conditions in the wild-type strain (data not
shown) . In the ykvU and spoIVH insertional mutants with
the pMUTIN2MCS vector, the lacZ gene was integrated into each
of the genes, meaning ß-galactosidase is expressed from the promoter
for ykvU and spoIVH . Figure 6 shows
that FDG fluorescence was detected in the mother cell at T2
in both strains . At T4, in the strain carrying ykvU-lacZ
(YKVUd), fluorescence was still detectable in the mother cells
(Fig . 6A) and in both compartments of the ykvU-spoIVH-lacZ
(YKVVd) strain (Fig . 6B) . Furthermore, the signal
became more intense in the forespore than in the mother cell at T6
in the ykvU-spoIVH-lacZ strain . The percentage
of compartment expression in cells that showed FDG fluorescence is
shown to the right of the pictures (Fig . 6) . At
least 377 cells were counted in each sample . In the ykvU-lacZ
strain, although the number of cells showing FDG green fluorescence
decreased from T2 to T6 (35, 22, and 17%
of cells at T2, T4, and T6,
respectively), FDG fluorescence was observed only in the mother cell
compartment at every observed time point . In contrast, ykvU-spoIVH-lacZ
expression was detected only in the mother cell at T2;
however, it was observed in both compartments in 14 and 39% of cells
at T4 and T6, respectively . In
the ykvU-spoIVH-lacZ strain, FDG fluorescence was observed
only in the forespore in 51% of cells at T6 . These
results suggest that ykvU and spoIVH are expressed only
in the mother cell early in sporulation; however, spoIVH alone
is expressed in the forespore during late sporulation .
|
FIG . 6 . Compartmental expression of spoIVH . Strains YKVUd (A) and
YKVVd (B) were induced to sporulate, and after the indicated time,
samples were prepared for fluorescence microscopy and stained with FDG .
PC, phase contrast; FDG, FDG fluorescent signal; Merge, merge of PC and
FDG; Membrane, FM4-64-stained membrane . Arrows indicate typical cells .
M, F, and B indicate the cells in which the FDG signal was observed in
the mother cell, forespore, and both compartments, respectively . Cells
were induced to sporulation by the resuspension method and observed at
the indicated time points . Ratios of compartmental expression are shown
to the right of the pictures . At least 377 cells were counted at the
indicated time points . This number did not include cells that showed no
fluorescence.
|
|
Alternative expression of spoIVH. To determine the
essentiality of spoIVH expression in the forespore and mother
cell for efficient sporulation, we constructed strains in which
spoIVH is transcribed in the forespore only or in the mother cell
only (Fig . 7) . Although strain TS010, which has
intact spoIVH without promoter, did not support wild-type levels
of sporulation (frequency of 0.0017), the expression of spoIVH
from the putative
G
promoter located just upstream of spoIVH was completely
sufficient for proper spore formation (0.81 in TS011), as shown in
Table 3 . This is consistent with the observation
that the ykvU insertional mutant sporulated normally . In the
event of a polar effect, the transcription of spoIVH from ykvU
may be blocked in the ykvU mutant and the expression of spoIVH
would be effected only from its own promoter . Interestingly,
the sporulation deficiency of the spoIVH mutant strain was compensated
completely (0.94) or partially (0.13) by the introduction of
the
G
(PsspE, TS013)- and
E
(PykvU, TS012)-directed spoIVH genes,
respectively (Table 3) . These results suggest that spoIVH
is capable of contributing to spore formation from both sporulating
cell compartments . It is, however, quite puzzling how spoIVH
functions from both compartments .
|
FIG . 7 . Schematic representation of strains used in experiments analyzed
in Tables 3 and 4 . The putative
Sec-type signal sequence in SpoIVH is hatched . The Sec-type signal
sequence of SleB is checked . Black boxes indicate putative ribosome
binding sites . Arrows with lines indicate promoters of genes and are
shown to the left . spoIVH at the native locus was disrupted in
all strains . The amino acid sequences of signal peptides and flanking
regions are indicated . The peptide of KL was encoded by the HindIII
restriction site (gray boxes) in TS016 and TS017 . The positions of DNA
fragments relative to the start codons of the original genes are
indicated at the ends of the fragments.
|
|
| TABLE 3 . Alternative expression of spoIVH in mother cell or
foresporea
|
|
We could not detect SpoIVH localization by using the SpoIVH-GFP
strain, probably due to the low level of spoIVH expression .
However, a peptide in the N-terminal region (1 to 26 aa) of SpoIVH
closely resembles the Sec-type signals, which are involved in one of
the major pathways for translocation in B . subtilis (45) .
Furthermore, the C-terminal region of the SpoIVH signal sequence
contains a consensus amino acid sequence A-X-A, which serves as an
SPase I cleavage site (44) . The sleB gene, which
encodes a putative spore-cortex-lytic enzyme, is translocated
across the forespore inner membrane by a secretion Sec-type signal
peptide and is deposited in the cortex layer synthesized between the
forespore inner and outer membranes (29) . To investigate
the importance of the signal peptide for SpoIVH function, the
region encoding the putative signal peptide (1 to 26 aa) of the
SpoIVH protein was removed (TS016) or substituted (TS017) with a
fragment (–79 to +87) containing the
G-recognized
promoter region of sleB to the region encoding the signal peptide
(1 to 29 aa) of the SleB protein (Fig . 7) . As shown in
Table 4, in the mutant strain without the SpoIVH
signal sequence (TS016), as well as in the spoIVH single
mutant (TS001), sporulation was inhibited, indicating that the signal
sequence of SpoIVH is indispensable for SpoIVH to function
efficiently . In contrast, in the other spoIVH mutant strain
(TS017) in which the SleB signal domain replaced the signal sequence
of the SpoIVH protein, the sporulation efficiency compared to that of
the wild-type strain was not significantly different, indicating that
the SpoIVH signal domain is functionally similar to that of the
SleB protein . These results suggest that SpoIVH could act in
the inner space between the double membranes where the cortex is
formed .
| TABLE 4 . Sporulation by fused protein of SleB signal sequence and SpoIVHa
|
|
Our work reveals a remarkable aspect of spoIVH as a gene that
is expressed not only in the mother cell by E E
but also in the forespore under the control of E G .
The strain with
E-directed
spoIVH has a somewhat reduced sporulation efficiency relative
to that of the strain with
G-directed
spoIVH, suggesting a greater functional significance of the
forespore-specific expression of spoIVH than that of the
mother cell . However, its ability to produce a number of viable
spores in either strain with the
E-
and
G-directed
spoIVH gene was 2 to 3 orders of magnitude greater than that
produced by the strain with spoIVH lacking its promoter (Table
3) . This result demonstrates that both the SpoIVH
proteins produced in the forespore and the mother cell have a role in
sporulation . We also showed that the SpoIVH protein possesses an
irremovable N-terminal signal sequence, composed of 26 aa, but that
the SpoIVH protein with a substitution of the SleB signal domain in
place of its signal sequence was functional . We therefore conclude
that the mature SpoIVH is primarily localized in the inner space
between the double membranes where the cortex is formed .
How spoIVH acquired such a dual control system, however, is
quite intriguing . However, ykvU is one of the paralogous genes
of spoVB, with a BLAST score of 180, which is expressed by E E
(35) . It appears that ykvU may have moved to the
present position from the spoVB region through transposition .
Presumably, spoIVH may have acquired this transcription system
under the dual control of
E
and
G
from the spoVB gene through evolution . spoIVH is also
known to belong to the AhpC/thiol-specific antioxidant protein family
(http://bacillus.genome.ad.jp/) and
is paralogous to trxA (thioredoxin) and resA
(thiol-disulfide oxidoreductase), with BLAST scores of 40 and 89,
respectively . Proteins of this family participate in reduction and
are widely conserved (3) . SpoIVH may act as a
thiol-specific antioxidant or thiol/disulfide bond interchange
protein during sporulation . Schiott and Hederstadt (40)
have reported that the CcdA protein, which is required for c-type
cytochrome synthesis, is also required for the late stage of
sporulation in B . subtilis . Erlendsson and Hederstedt (9)
also speculated that CcdA is related to the role of SpoIVH . If the
SpoIVH protein has a disulfide bond isomerase activity that modifies
the tertiary structure of some protein(s) required for cortex
formation, it may be possible that SpoIVH plays a significant role in
the thiol-disulfide exchange between cysteine residues of proteins in
the inner double membrane space . Among products of the many
identified cortex formation genes, SpoVB, SpoVD, SpoVE, and YabQ have
plural numbers of cysteine residues and membrane spanning domains,
suggesting that they may be targets for SpoIVH .
In addition, it is possible that spoIVH is important for maintaining
the redox state of some protein(s) in the space between the
mother cell and the forespore . Presumably, the redox states of many
proteins in the space differ relative to the mother cell and the
forespore . If the SpoIVH protein has an antioxidant enzymatic
activity, it may be altered to compensate for the reduction in the
space between the inner and outer forespore membranes; thus, the
activities of various proteins involved in spore cortex formation may
be impaired in the spoIVH mutant . Since there is little detail
on cortex formation in the space, further investigation is required
to understand the activity of SpoIVH and reveal the target of SpoIVH
during sporulation .
We thank the Japanese and European Consortia for Functional Analysis
of the B . subtilis Genome for providing the pMUTIN strains . We
especially thank Richard Losick for providing B . subtilis
strains, Masaya Fujita for providing the
K
antibody, Hideaki Nanamiya, Sawako Yoshida, and Fujio Kawamura for
assistance with the primer extension analysis, and Samuel Amiteye for
critically reading the manuscript .
This study was supported by a grant-in-aid for scientific research
on the priority area Genome Biology from the Ministry of Education,
Science, Sports, and Culture of Japan .
* Corresponding author . Mailing address: International
Environmental and Agricultural Science, Tokyo University of Agriculture and
Technology, Fuchu, Tokyo 183-8509, Japan . Phone and fax: 81 423 67 5706 . E-mail: subtilis@cc.tuat.ac.jp.
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