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Journal of Bacteriology, January 2004, p . 287-295, Vol . 186,
No . 2
The
Methyltransferase from the LlaDII Restriction-Modification System Influences the
Level of Expression of Its Own Gene
Lisa Lystbæk Christensen and Jytte Josephsen*
Department of Dairy and Food Science, Centre of Advanced Food Studies, The
Royal Veterinary and Agricultural University, DK-1958 Frederiksberg C, Denmark
Received 14 July 2003/ Accepted 13 October 2003
The type II restriction-modification (R-M) system LlaDII isolated
from Lactococcus lactis contains two tandemly arranged genes,
llaDIIR and llaDIIM, encoding a restriction endonuclease (REase)
and a methyltransferase (MTase), respectively . Interestingly,
two LlaDII recognition sites are present in the llaDIIM promoter
region, suggesting that they may influence the activity of the
promoter through methylation status . In this study, separate
promoters for llaDIIR and llaDIIM were identified, and the
regulation of the two genes at the transcriptional level was
investigated . DNA fragments containing the putative promoters were
cloned in a promoter probe vector and tested for activity in the
presence and absence of the active MTase . The level of expression of
the MTase was 5- to 10-fold higher than the level of expression
of the REase . The results also showed that the presence of M.LlaDII
reduced the in vivo expression of the llaDIIM promoter (PllaDIIM)
up to 1,000-fold, whereas the activity of the llaDIIR promoter
(PllaDIIR) was not affected . Based on site-specific
mutations it was shown that both of the LlaDII recognition sites
within PllaDIIM are required to obtain complete
repression of transcriptional activity . No regulation was found for
llaDIIR, which appears to be constitutively expressed .
Although a great number of restriction-modification (R-M) systems
have been identified (27), relatively little about regulation
of their expression has been determined . Tight regulation of
the sequential expression of modification and restriction that
prevents premature activity of the restriction endonuclease (REase)
is essential as many R-M systems are encoded by mobile genetic
elements that can be transferred to recipient cells having no prior
protection from the cognate modification enzymes . Controlling the
activity of m5C methyltransferases (MTases) is important as excessive
methylation may lead to DNA mutations (2,
28) . Also, having very high MTase activity at all times
would decrease the efficiency of restriction of viral DNA .
There are different types of regulation for type II R-M systems .
One group, exemplified by PvuII (31) and BamHI (8),
is regulated at the transcriptional level by small so-called
C-proteins; the genes that encode these proteins are usually located
upstream of and in some cases partially overlap the REase gene . The
C-proteins constitute a family of regulatory proteins that bind to a
common operator sequence (C box) through a helix-turn-helix (HTH)
motif (26, 32,
33) . They function as transcriptional activators of the REase
genes, as well as their own genes, and in some systems, such as
BamHI, they have been found to down-regulate expression of the MTase
genes as well and thus to have dual functions . A couple of examples
of regulatory proteins not classified with the C-proteins mentioned
above have been described . In Kpn2I the gene organization is R-M-C,
and the direction of transcription of kpn2IC is opposite the
direction of transcription of kpn2IM (15) .
C.Kpn2I was found to repress MTase expression but had no effect on
expression of the REase, which apparently is constitutively
expressed . C.Kpn2I is a small protein containing an HTH motif, but no
known operator sequence could be identified upstream of kpn2IM .
Supposedly, the initial overexpression of M.Kpn2I is sufficient to
ensure methylation of the chromosomal DNA before R.Kpn2I is active .
In contrast to this, C.EcoO109I is necessary for expression of the
REase of EcoO109I but has no influence on expression of the MTase (13) .
C.EcoO109I presumably functions as a transcriptional activator,
binding to an inverted repeat upstream of ecoO109IC and thus
enhancing the expression of both its own gene and the cotranscribed
gene ecoO109R . C.EcoO109I and its binding site exhibit no
sequence similarity to the C-proteins and the C box, respectively .
Another interesting mode of regulation was found for MspI (30),
SsoII (10), and EcoRII (29) . The MTases
of these R-M systems contain N-terminal HTH motifs and have
been found to interact directly with their own promoter sequences and
to down-regulate the transcriptional activity . Inverted repeat
sequences, which are not conserved, have variable lengths, and are
present upstream of the MTase genes, have been proposed to be the
binding sites for the corresponding MTases (10) . Only
in SsoII do the promoters of the divergently transcribed MTase
and REase genes overlap, resulting in regulation of both genes; the
expression of ssoIIM is down-regulated, and the expression of
ssoIIR is up-regulated . Recently, a novel type of autoregulation
was found for CfrBI (3) . A single CfrBI recognition site
is present within the overlapping promoter regions of the divergently
transcribed MTase and REase genes . When the CfrBI recognition
site is methylated, expression of the MTase gene is down-regulated
and expression of the REase gene is up-regulated; the opposite occurs
when the recognition site is unmethylated .
Until now, LlaI (22) and ScrFI (4) have
been the only two lactococcal R-M systems whose regulation has been
studied . LlaI consists of five genes, including a type IIS MTase gene
and three genes responsible for the restriction activity; the fifth
gene, llaIC, encodes a small protein which was found to be
involved in posttranscriptional regulation of the restriction
activity, possibly through mRNA stabilization (22) .
All five genes involved in the restriction and modification activity
of LlaI are transcribed as a polycistronic operon . The chromosomally
encoded type II R-M system ScrFI, which contains an REase gene (scrFIR)
flanked by two MTase genes (scrFIBM and scrFIAM), has a
more complicated transcription pattern (4) . An open
reading frame (ORF) having an unknown function, orfX, is
cotranscribed with scrFIBM and scrFIR on a single mRNA,
whereas scrFIAM is transcribed separately . M.ScrFIA contains
an N-terminal HTH motif and was found to bind to its own promoter
region and subsequently down-regulate the transcriptional activity .
No binding to the promoter responsible for orfX, scrFIBM, and
scrFIR transcription could be established; however, M.ScrFIA
appeared to repress the activity of this promoter as well .
LlaDII (accession no.
Y12707), isolated from Lactococcus lactis subsp .
cremoris W39, was cloned and partially characterized previously (16) .
LlaDII is a type II R-M system that recognizes the palindromic
sequence 5'-GC NGC-3' .
In this study we investigated regulation at the transcriptional level
of the REase and MTase genes . We show that expression of M.LlaDII is
subject to autoregulation due to the presence of LlaDII recognition
sites within its own promoter, while no regulation of R.LlaDII was
observed .
Bacteria and growth media. L . lactis subsp . cremoris
MG1363 (5) was propagated at 30°C in M17 medium
(Oxoid Limited, Basingstoke, United Kingdom) supplemented with 0.5%
(wt/vol) glucose (GM17) . Cells were made competent and transformed by
electroporation as described by Holo and Nes (7) .
When appropriate, chloramphenicol and erythromycin were added to a
final concentration of 5 µg/ml and tetracycline was added to a final
concentration of 2 µg/ml . For screening for promoter activity, GM17
agar plates containing the appropriate antibiotic(s) and 80 µg of
5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indolyl-ß-D-galactopyranoside
(X-Gal) per ml were used .
Molecular cloning techniques. All plasmids and primers used
in this study are listed in Tables 1 and
2, respectively . Plasmid DNA was isolated with QIAGEN
plasmid purification kits (QIAGEN, Hilden, Germany) after treatment
with lysozyme (20 mg/ml) at 37°C for 30 min . Pfu DNA polymerase
(Promega, Madison, Wis.) was used for PCR amplification with
plasmid pHW393 as the template . Plasmids pLLC11-pLLC20, pLLC26-pLLC28,
and pLLC30 containing DNA upstream of llaDIIR or llaDIIM
were constructed by inserting BamHI-digested PCR fragments
into BamHI-digested plasmid pTRK390 . The following primers were used:
P.14 plus P.18 (pLLC11), P.14 plus P.17 (pLLC12), P.15 plus P.18
(pLLC13), P.15 plus P.17 (pLLC14), P.16 plus P.18 (pLLC15), P.16 plus
P.17 (pLLC16), P.19 plus P.22 (pLLC17), P.19 plus P.21 (pLLC18),
P.20 plus P.22 (pLLC19), P.20 plus P.21 (pLLC20), P.23 plus
P.21 (pLLC26), P.24 plus P.21 (pLLC27), P.25 plus P.21 (pLLC28), and
P.26 plus P.21 (pLLC30) .
| TABLE 1 . Plasmids used in this study
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| TABLE 2 . Primers used in this study
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Plasmid pLLC32 was constructed by inserting an NcoI-HindIII-digested
PCR fragment encoding llaDIIM (nucleotides [nt] 1370 to 2346,
generated with primers P.29 and P.30) into plasmid pNZ44 digested
with NcoI and HindIII . The MTase activity of pLLC32 in L . lactis
MG1363 was verified, as jj50 bacteriophages (9)
propagated on the strain were able to circumvent LlaDII activity .
Plasmid pLLC6 was constructed by shotgun cloning of
HindIII-EcoRI-digested pHW393 in plasmid pCI3340 . The nucleotide
sequences of all cloned fragments except pLLC6 and pLLC32 were
verified by DNA sequencing performed with a CEQ dye terminator cycle
sequencing kit and a CEQ 2000 DNA analysis system (Beckman Coulter,
Chaska, Minn.) .
Northern blotting. Total cellular RNA was isolated from
exponentially growing cells . Harvested cells were disrupted with
glass beads (maximum diameter, 106 µm; Sigma-Aldrich) in a Fastprep
FB 120 homogenizer (Thermo Savant, Holbrook, N.Y.) for 45 s . Total
RNA was purified with an RNeasy mini kit (QIAGEN) . RNA gel
electrophoresis was performed as described by Pellé and Murphy (24),
with minor modifications . RNA size standards from New England Biolabs
(Beverly, Mass.) were included to estimate transcript sizes .
Samples were transferred to a positively charged nylon membrane by
standard diffusion blotting and were hybridized with the appropriate
DNA probes . Hybridization probes were obtained by performing PCR with
primers P.31 and P.32 for llaDIIR and with primers P.33 and
P.34 for llaDIIM and were labeled with [ -32P]dATP
(Amersham Biosciences, Little Chalfont, Buckinghamshire, England)
by using the Multiprime DNA labeling system (Amersham Biosciences) .
Following hybridization, the membranes were scanned with a PhosphorImager
(Storm system; Molecular Dynamics) .
Primer extension. Total cellular RNA was isolated as
described above for the Northern blot analysis . In addition, the RNA
was treated with an RNase-free DNase set (QIAGEN) . Five micrograms of
RNA was mixed with 1 pmol of Cy5-labeled primer in hybridization
buffer (50 mM potassium HEPES, 100 mM KCl; pH 7) in a 10-µl (total
volume) reaction mixture . The mixture was denatured at 70°C for 5 min
and immediately transferred to ice . Annealing was performed at 48°C
for 15 min . Then 200 U of Moloney murine leukemia virus reverse
transcriptase (Promega) and extension buffer (Promega) containing
each deoxynucleoside triphosphate at a concentration of 200 µM in a
15-µl (total volume) mixture were incubated at 48°C for 1 h .
Following ethanol precipitation the pellet was dissolved and loaded
on a DNA sequencing gel next to a sequencing reaction mixture
prepared with a Thermo Sequenase kit (Amersham Biosciences) and the
same primer that was used for the extension reaction . The primer
extension products were analyzed with an ALFexpress DNA sequencer
(Amersham Biosciences) as described by Myöhänen and Wahlfors (20) .
Measurement of promoter activity. ß-Galactosidase activity
was determined by using exponentially growing cells . Cells were
permeabilized with sodium dodecyl sulfate (0.1%) and chloroform . The
assays were carried out essentially as described by Miller (19) .
The specific ß-galactosidase activity was calculated on the basis of
the optical density at 600 nm of the culture and was expressed in
Miller units . At least three independent assays were performed with
duplicate cultures of each strain . The results of these measurements
(at least six measurements) were used to calculate the average and
the standard error .
Transcriptional analysis of LlaDII. Sequence analysis of LlaDII
(a schematic representation is shown in Fig . 1a)
showed that both the REase and MTase genes contained putative
consensus promoters, as shown in Fig . 1b and c . llaDIIM
has previously been shown to express a functional MTase when it
is cloned alone, thus establishing that there is a functional
promoter in front of this gene (16) . Furthermore, an inverted
repeat is present in the intergenic region and may constitute a
rho-independent transcriptional terminator, as suggested in Fig.
1d . The free energy of formation of the hairpin is only
-6.2 kcal/mol (34), and considerable readthrough may
therefore occur, especially when the competing hairpin with a free
energy of formation of -15.4 kcal/mol is considered (Fig.
1d) . However, collectively, these observations
suggested that the two genes are transcribed separately . To establish
the size of the transcripts from LlaDII, Northern blotting was
performed . Total RNA was isolated from L . lactis MG1363
containing either plasmid pCAD1 encoding LlaDII or no plasmid .
Hybridization with the llaDIIR probe resulted in
identification of an approximately 650-nt transcript, which
corresponded to llaDIIR being transcribed on an individual
transcript (Fig . 2) . A weak band corresponding to
an approximately 950-nt transcript was also detected with the
llaDIIR probe, which may have corresponded to an extended mRNA
due to inadequate transcriptional termination or a longer processed
transcript . A transcript larger than 1,500 nt would be expected if a
dicistronic mRNA containing both llaDIIR and llaDIIM
was synthesized . No transcripts were observed with the llaDIIM
probe . As determined subsequently, this was most likely due to the
very low level of expression of the MTase in a cell fully modified by
LlaDII, in accordance with the results of the promoter fusion studies
described below .
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FIG . 1 . (a) Schematic representation of LlaDII, showing the two ORFs
encoding llaDIIR and llaDIIM . The position of the putative
rho-independent terminator is indicated . (b) Sequence of the llaDIIR
promoter . The unusual translational start codon (TTG) is indicated by a
bent arrow below the sequence . The previously determined transcriptional
start site (A715) is indicated by a bent arrow above the sequence . (c)
Sequence of the llaDIIM promoter and the site-specific mutations
within the promoter used for analysis of the importance of methylation
in promoter activity . The mutations are underlined . LlaDII recognition
sites (5'-GCNGC-3') are indicated by facing arrows . The translational
start is indicated by a bent arrow below the sequence . The bent arrows
above the sequence indicate the two alternative transcriptional start
sites (A1364 and A1367) determined in this study . (d) Possible
transcriptional terminator downstream of llaDIIR and competing
hairpin . The free energy of formation ( G)
for each of the two RNA secondary structures is shown . The numbers above
the sequences indicate the positions in the LlaDII sequence . RBS,
ribosome binding site.
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FIG . 2 . Northern blot analysis of RNA isolated from L . lactis
MG1363 (lane 1) or from L . lactis MG1363 containing pCAD1 (lane
2) . A DNA probe corresponding to llaDIIR was used . Sizes are
indicated on the left.
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Identification of promoters within LlaDII. In order to identify
promoters for the LlaDII genes, DNA fragments of various lengths
containing the putative promoters of llaDIIR and llaDIIM
were generated by PCR and cloned in the promoter probe vector pTRK390
containing a promoterless lacZ gene . The resulting plasmids
were designated pLLC11 to pLLC20, and an overview of the cloned
promoter-containing fragments and measured specific ß-galactosidase
activities is shown in Fig . 3a and b (- MTase
column) . Generally, both the PllaDIIR and PllaDIIM
fusions containing the putative ribosome binding sites and the
translational start codon of the genes expressed ß-galactosidase at
higher levels than the constructs that did not contain the putative
ribosome binding sites and the translational start codon (e.g., 521
and 31 Miller units for pLLC11 and pLLC12, respectively, and 5,645
and 172 Miller units for pLLC17 and pLLC18, respectively) . This was
probably due to increased mRNA stability as two translational stop
codons are present upstream of the lacZ start codon, thus
ruling out translational fusion as the cause of increased activity .
However, all promoter fusions containing 328- to 60-bp fragments for
llaDIIR (pLLC11 to pLLC16) and 217- to 60-bp fragments for
llaDIIM (pLLC17 to pLLC20) expressed ß-galactosidase, clearly
showing that they contained active promoters . Notably, when the
highest specific ß-galactosidase activities obtained were compared,
the values obtained for PllaDIIM were generally 5-
to 10-fold higher than the values obtained for PllaDIIR
(e.g., 5,645 Miller units for pLLC17 compared to 521 Miller units for
pLLC11) . Interestingly, the specific ß-galactosidase activities for
the PllaDIIR fragments increased twofold with
truncation from nt 618 to nt 673, as observed when the effects of
plasmids pLLC13 and pLLC15 (528 and 1147 Miller units, respectively)
were compared . The reason for this is not clear .
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FIG . 3 . LlaDII promoter fusions . (a and b) DNA fragments upstream of
llaDIIR (a) and llaDIIM (b) cloned in pTRK390 . (c)
Site-specific mutations within PllaDIIM (pLLC20) . (d)
Vector control with no insertion . Specific ß-galactosidase activity was
determined in the absence of MTase (- MTase), in the presence of
constitutively expressed M.LlaDII (+ pLLC32), and in the presence of
M.LlaDII expressed from the wild-type promoter (+ pEE1) and is expressed
in Miller units; unless indicated otherwise, the values are averages ±
standard errors of three independent assays performed with duplicate
cultures . A solid arrowhead indicates an LlaDII recognition site . The
positions of the -35 sequence, the -10 sequence, and the ribosome
binding site (RBS) are indicated above the DNA fragments . The numbers
are the positions in the LlaDII sequence . n.d., not determined . An
asterisk indicates that the value is the average of two independent
assays.
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Regulation of expression. The presence of two LlaDII
recognition sites within the promoter region of llaDIIM raised
the question of whether these sites have an effect on expression of
M.LlaDII and, less likely, R.LlaDII . The different promoter fusions
were cotransformed with plasmid pLLC32 or pEE1 into L . lactis
MG1363 . pLLC32 contained the llaDIIM gene constitutively
expressed from the P44 promoter in plasmid pNZ44, whereas pEE1
contained the wild-type MTase gene . Using the constitutively
expressed M.LlaDII gene instead of the wild-type gene should preclude
any anomalies resulting from having the MTase promoter present twice
in the experiments . The results of ß-galactosidase assays with cells
containing promoter fusions and pLLC32 are shown in Fig.
3a and b (+ pLLC32 column) . No significant effects
were observed for the PllaDIIR fusions (Fig.
3a), whereas the specific ß-galactosidase activities
obtained for the PllaDIIM fusions were reduced to the
background level (Fig . 3b) . When the wild-type
llaDIIM gene on plasmid pEE1 was present instead of pLLC32,
significantly higher specific ß-galactosidase activities were found
for the MTase promoter fusions (measured for pLLC19 and pLLC20) (Fig.
3b, + pEE1 column) . The PllaDIIM
activity was reduced only 10-fold compared to the full activity in
the absence of the MTase . As with pLLC32, no significant changes in
specific ß-galactosidase activities were observed with pEE1 for PllaDIIR
(measured for pLLC13 to pLLC16) (Fig . 3a, + pEE1
column) .
Not surprisingly, M.LlaDII seemed to have no effect on regulation
of llaDIIR . During the original cloning of LlaDII, 744 bp of
apparently noncoding DNA was found upstream of llaDIIR (16) .
A new cloning analysis of LlaDII containing only 272 bp upstream
of llaDIIR (plasmid pLLC6) resulted in a fully functional R-M
system exhibiting levels of bacteriophage resistance similar to
those observed for the original clone (results not shown),
substantiating the conclusion that no sequence elements relevant for
expression of LlaDII are present from nt 1 to 471 . A search for ORFs
within or in the vicinity of the LlaDII sequence (nt 472 to 2355)
resulted in identification of four small ORFs encoding 34 to 50 amino
acids (results not shown) . No sequence similarity with known
regulatory C-proteins or any other proteins was found, and no
consensus promoter elements could be identified for these additional
ORFs .
Site-specific mutations within the promoter of llaDIIM.
To verify that the LlaDII recognition sites are directly responsible
for regulation of llaDIIM and to determine whether both sites
are needed to repress transcription, a number of site-specific
mutations were constructed within the PllaDIIM fragment found
in pLLC20 comprising nt 1318 to 1377 (Fig . 1c) . Single
point mutations were introduced into either one (pLLC26 and pLLC27)
or both (pLLC28) of the LlaDII recognition sites . The double
mutation in pLLC30 (T1331C T1332C) destroyed the -35 region while
leaving the LlaDII recognition sites intact . Specific ß-galactosidase
activities for pLLC26 to pLLC28 and pLLC30 are shown in Fig.
3c . In the absence of an active MTase, the specific
ß-galactosidase activities induced by the mutated promoters were
approximately the same (within twofold) as the specific activities
for the wild-type promoter (pLLC20) . When the -35 region was impaired
in pLLC30, a 10-fold-lower specific ß-galactosidase activity was
observed, which was even further down-regulated when pLLC32 was
present, as expected .
In the presence of the constitutively expressed MTase on pLLC32,
the specific ß-galactosidase activity of the wild-type promoter
fusion pLLC20 decreased approximately 100-fold . When a single point
mutation was introduced (pLLC26 and pLLC27), the specific
ß-galactosidase activity decreased approximately 10-fold, whereas
when both recognition sites were destroyed (pLLC28), no decrease in
the expression level was observed . This shows that a single LlaDII
recognition site is not sufficient to obtain complete down-regulation
of promoter activity .
Determination of the transcriptional start site for llaDIIM.
The transcriptional start site was previously determined for
llaDIIR (16); however, attempts to determine the start
site for llaDIIM were unsuccessful (Annette Madsen, personal
communication) . This was probably due to repressed expression of the
MTase, leading to very small amounts of mRNA for llaDIIM, as
observed for the Northern blots in this study . As the promoter fusion
in pLLC17 had high transcriptional activity in the absence of
M.LlaDII, this clone was chosen for primer extension . Total RNA was
isolated from L . lactis MG1363 containing pLLC17, pLLC17 plus
pLLC32, or pTRK390 as a control . Primer extension was performed with
two different Cy5-labeled primers (P.42 and P.43 [Table
2]) annealing to the lacZ gene within pTRK390 and
located approximately 50 bp apart . The results of primer extension of
RNA isolated from L . lactis MG1363 containing pLLC17 with
primer P.43 are shown in Fig . 4 . Two different
transcriptional start sites, at A1364 and A1367, corresponding to 28
and 25 nt upstream of the ATG translational initiation codon,
respectively, were identified with both primers . As expected, no
extension products resulted from primer extension of RNA isolated
from L . lactis MG1363 containing pLLC17 plus pLLC32 or
pTRK390 .
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FIG . 4 . Primer extension mapping of the llaDIIM promoter . The
extension reaction was performed with RNA isolated from L . lactis
MG1363 harboring pLLC17 . The dotted lines indicate the positions of the
two extension products corresponding to two alternative transcriptional
start sites, A1364 and A1367.
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From the sequence encoding LlaDII the two tandemly arranged genes,
llaDIIR and llaDIIM, were expected to be transcribed from
individual promoters . This hypothesis was previously partially
substantiated by the observed MTase activity of plasmid pEE1, which
does not contain the promoter upstream of llaDIIR . In this
study the existence of two separate promoters within the llaDII
gene cluster was established by analysis of the transcriptional
pattern . In the SalI type II R-M system the two genes, which are
arranged with the REase gene preceding the MTase gene, as observed
for LlaDII, are cotranscribed; however, the MTase is also transcribed
from an intrinsic promoter, supposedly ensuring that the MTase is
active prior to the REase when the genes are transferred to a new
host cell (1) . A similar transcription pattern
could have been expected for LlaDII; however, Northern blotting
revealed no transcript large enough to cover both genes . A faint band
at 950 nt could indicate a processed form of a longer transcript
covering both genes . If this is the case, the long transcript is very
unstable . However, production of such a transcript might help produce
larger amounts of MTase fast by introduction of the R-M system into a
new host . The only clearly identifiable transcript corresponded to
llaDIIR because the level of expression of llaDIIM was too
low to detect in mRNA isolated from cells harboring the fully
implemented R-M system . The size of the llaDIIR transcript
correlates well with the size expected from termination at the
proposed rho-independent transcriptional terminator . Use of one of
the promoter fusions, pLLC17, which is known to sustain high
transcriptional activity of ß-galactosidase in the absence of
M.LlaDII, allowed determination of the 5' end of the llaDIIM
transcript . The primer extension analysis showed that there are two
alternative transcriptional start sites within the expected distance
from the -10 consensus region . Thus, the promoter for the MTase gene
was established both by promoter fusions and by primer extension
analysis .
The boundaries of the two promoters within LlaDII were examined by
cloning DNA fragments of different lengths in the promoter probe
vector pTRK390 . The results showed that fragments as small as 60 bp
for both promoters still induced expression of ß-galactosidase . When
the fragments containing PllaDIIR were shortened from the
5' end from nt 618 to 673, twofold-higher specific ß-galactosidase
activity was observed . Although the effect of deletion is small,
it could be speculated that the area between nt 618 and nt 673
contains an operator site for a repressor of gene expression .
Repressors usually bind within the promoter region, thereby
inhibiting the initiation of transcription; however, cooperative
binding of repressor multimers to operators, one of which is located
at a remote site that results in looping of the intervening DNA, has
been described in several cases (17) . In this scenario,
llaDIIR would contain operator sites both within the promoter
and within the upstream region covering nt 618 to 673 . There is
at this point no evidence for the existence of such a regulation
scheme for llaDIIR, and no repressor protein or potential operator
sites have been identified . In the cases of gene regulation by
a third independent protein that have been described, the gene is
usually located close to or overlapping the REase and MTase genes . A
number of small ORFs were identified within or close to llaDIIR
and llaDIIM, but none of these seem to encode functional
genes . However, our knowledge of gene regulation within R-M systems
is still very limited; therefore, a regulatory role for these ORFs
cannot be ruled out .
The specific ß-galactosidase activities of the promoter fusions
were also determined in cells containing plasmid pEE1 expressing the
LlaDII MTase from the wild-type promoter or plasmid pLLC32 expressing
the LlaDII MTase constitutively . The results showed that the
expression of llaDIIR was not influenced by the presence of
M.LlaDII, while the expression of llaDIIM was reduced 10- to
1,000-fold . The effect of the constitutively expressed MTase on the
down-regulation of llaDIIM promoter activity was significantly
more severe than the effect of the wild-type MTase . This was most
likely because the M.LlaDII activity in cells harboring the
constitutively expressed gene was much higher than the M.LlaDII
activity in cells expressing llaDIIM from the wild-type
promoter, the activity of which was itself down-regulated . Also, the
constitutively expressed gene was present on a high-copy-number
plasmid, pNZ44, in contrast to the wild-type gene on pCI3340, a
medium-copy-number plasmid .
The presence of two LlaDII recognition sites in the intergenic
region, one of which partially overlapped the -35 region of PllaDIIM,
suggested the possibility that these sites influence the promoter
activity . The direct involvement of the two recognition sites in the
down-regulation of transcriptional activity was verified by
site-specific mutational analysis . When either of the two sites was
mutated, the repression of llaDIIM gene expression was only
partial . When both were destroyed, no repression was observed,
showing that both recognition sites are required for full repression .
This study provided evidence that M.LlaDII regulates the expression
of its own gene . Further studies are needed to establish whether
methylation of the LlaDII recognition sites within the promoter
region is the actual cause of the observed regulation of expression
of llaDIIM in hindering the interaction of the RNA polymerase
with the promoter, as hypothesized for cfrBIM (3), or
whether the binding of the MTase itself is sufficient . In any case,
the regulation of llaDIIM appears to differ from the regulation
of MspI (30), SsoII (10), and EcoRII
(29), in which inverted repeat sequences with no
relation to recognition sites were identified as potential binding
sites for the MTases upstream of their own genes . Incidentally, the
two recognition sites within PllaDIIM constitute an
inverted repeat (Fig . 1c), a feature that seems to
be merely coincidental . Our investigations did not reveal any
regulation of the REase gene on the transcriptional level; the gene
must therefore be considered constitutively expressed or may be
translationally regulated . However, when LlaDII is introduced into a
new host cell, some measures must be taken to ensure that the REase
is not active before the chromosomal DNA has been fully methylated . A
number of conditions may be considered relevant in accordance with
this, as follows . (i) REases of type II R-M systems usually function
as homodimers, although one example of a homotetrameric REase has
been described for SfiI (21) . The dimerization or
possibly multimerization step may permit a delay in restriction
activity compared to methylation . (ii) The promoter study showed that
the activity of PllaDIIR is 5- to 10-fold lower
than that of PllaDIIM . This initial overexpression
of MTase compared to expression of the REase could ensure methylation
of the cell prior to restriction . (iii) R.LlaDII has an unusual
initiation codon, UUG . UUG has been found to be an inefficient
initiation codon compared to the usual AUG codon (25)
and thus may be an effective way of ensuring low expression of a gene
at the translational level . The transcriptional activity of
llaDIIR may be up to 10-fold lower than that of llaDIIM
(prior to methylation), but with the noncanonical inititation codon
the expression of R.LlaDII compared to the expression of M.LlaDII may
be even lower .
Gene expression of R-M systems influenced by methylation has
previously been described only for CfrBI (3) . In CfrBI a
single recognition site present in the intergenic region of the
divergently transcribed genes regulates both the MTase and REase
genes . Other R-M systems are, however, expected to employ the same
type of control over gene expression; e.g., the LlaDII isoschizomer
Bsp6I (14) has a sequence that is highly related to the
sequence of LlaDII and also contains two recognition sites in the
promoter region of the MTase . FokI is another example . The MTase and
REase genes are cotranscribed from a promoter upstream of fokIM
(12) . Two FokI recognition sites are present just
downstream from the -35 and -10 sequences, which may be involved in
regulation of transcription . In the intergenic region there is a
third FokI recognition site in an inverted repeat forming a stem-loop
structure within the dicistronic mRNA that had to be removed to
overproduce R.FokI (11) . No regulatory role can be expected
from methylation of this intergenic recognition site .
This research was supported by the Programme Committee for Nutrition
and Food Research (FELFO) under FØTEK 3 .
We thank Todd R . Klaenhammer and Douwe van Sinderen for providing
plasmids pTRK390 and pNZ44, respectively . We are grateful to Karin
Hammer for valuable suggestions concerning the manuscript .
* Corresponding author . Mailing address: Department of Dairy
and Food Science, The Royal Veterinary and Agricultural University, Rolighedsvej
30, DK-1958 Frederiksberg C, Denmark . Phone: 45 35 28 32 32 . Fax: 45 35 28 32
14 . E-mail: jyj@kvl.dk .
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