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Journal of Bacteriology, January 2004, p . 427-437, Vol . 186,
No . 2
Occurrence and Characterization of Mercury Resistance in the Hyperthermophilic
Archaeon Sulfolobus solfataricus by Use of Gene Disruption
James Schelert, Vidula Dixit, Viet Hoang, Jessica Simbahan, Melissa
Drozda, and Paul Blum*
Beadle Center for Genetics, University of Nebraska, Lincoln, Nebraska
Received 24 July 2003/ Accepted 20 October 2003
Mercury resistance mediated by mercuric reductase (MerA) is
widespread among bacteria and operates under the control of MerR .
MerR represents a unique class of transcription factors that exert
both positive and negative regulation on gene expression . Archaea and
bacteria are prokaryotes, yet little is known about the biological
role of mercury in archaea or whether a resistance mechanism occurs
in these organisms . The archaeon Sulfolobus solfataricus was
sensitive to mercuric chloride, and low-level adaptive resistance
could be induced by metal preconditioning . Protein phylogenetic
analysis of open reading frames SSO2689 and SSO2688 clarified their
identity as orthologs of MerA and MerR . Northern analysis established
that merA transcription responded to mercury challenge, since
mRNA levels were transiently induced and, when normalized to 7S RNA,
approximated values for other highly expressed transcripts . Primer
extension analysis of merA mRNA predicted a noncanonical TATA
box with nonstandard transcription start site spacing . The functional
roles of merA and merR were clarified further by gene
disruption . The merA mutant exhibited mercury sensitivity
relative to wild type and was defective in elemental mercury
volatilization, while the merR mutant was mercury resistant .
Northern analysis of the merR mutant revealed merA
transcription was constitutive and that transcript abundance was at
maximum levels . These findings constitute the first report of an
archaeal heavy metal resistance system; however, unlike bacteria the
level of resistance is much lower . The archaeal system employs a
divergent MerR protein that acts only as a negative transcriptional
regulator of merA expression .
The element mercury is a toxic heavy metal that occurs naturally in
several forms, including elemental (Hg0), ionized (inorganic
salts Hg2+ and Hg+), organic (typically alkylated),
or sulfidic (cinnabar) . Mercury use is widespread, particularly in
the production of gold, vaccines, antimicrobials, amalgams, and
electronics . Mercuric chloride (HgCl2) is most often used
in experimental studies because it is soluble and poisonous . Mercury
is a redox-active transition metal in both biotic and abiotic
environments . In vivo, mercury plays a critical role in modulating
cellular redox status by depleting antioxidant pools (16) .
Both ionic and organic mercury form covalent bonds with sulfur atoms
in cysteine residues of target proteins .
Bacteria respond to mercury exposure using several strategies .
While mechanisms involving tolerance occur (33,
34, 58), enzymatic reduction of
mercuric ion to elemental mercury-catalyzed by-products of the mer
operon is the only resistance mechanism that has been described
(reviewed in references 4, 30,
31, and 50) . The mer
operon (merTPCAD) encodes a group of proteins involved in the
detection, transport, and reduction of mercury . The NADPH-dependent
enzyme, mercuric reductase (MerA), transfers two electrons to
mercuric ion, Hg2+, reducing it to elemental mercury Hg0 .
Elemental mercury is volatile and is released from the cell . Mercuric
ion is scavenged from the environment through the action of the
periplasmic protein, MerP, which binds Hg2+ and transfers
it to the membrane protein MerT . MerT transports mercuric ion into
the cytoplasm . Additional mer genes occur, notably merB,
an organomercurial lyase . Inclusion of merB in the mer
operon results in a so-called broad-spectrum mercury resistance .
Expression of the mer operon by the activity of its major promoter,
PT, is controlled by MerR, a dual-function transcriptional
regulatory protein that remains bound to PT at an inverted
repeat sequence called merO (51) . In the
absence of mercury, MerR binds and bends the DNA and then attracts
RNA polymerase to the operator and holds it there in an inactive
state and represses transcription (2,
3) . In the presence of mercury, the MerR homodimer undergoes a
conformational change that underwinds the DNA, creating optimal PT
topology by rotating the -10 region 30° closer to the helix face of
the -35 region, thereby facilitating access to it by prebound RNA
polymerase, which subsequently activates mer operon
transcription . MerO is located in the intergenic region between the
divergently transcribed merR gene and the mer operon,
where it simultaneously exerts control over both transcription units .
MerR consists of an N-terminal helix-turn-helix domain coupled to a
C-terminal mercuric ion binding domain containing three active
cysteines . MerR constitutes a distinct class of transcriptional
regulatory factors as yet not reported in either archaea or
eukaryotes (11) .
Archaea and bacteria are both prokaryotes (56,
57) . Archaea however, use simplified versions of
several eukaryotic-like subcellular processes, including
transcription (5, 8) . The regulation
of gene expression is an active area of research in archaea
because of this evolutionary overlap and the attraction of a less
complex experimental system . Examples of this overlap include
homologous promoter structure (21, 41),
orthologs of TATA binding protein (29,
37, 48), TFIIB (referred to as TFB in
archaea [18, 38,
39]), TFIIE
(TFE
[6, 22]), TFIIS (TFS [25]),
and the 12-subunit RNA polymerase II (28) . They
appear, however, to lack homologs of TFIIA, TFIIF, and TFIIH . In the
crenarchaeal subdivision of the archaea, RNA polymerase is recruited
by TATA binding protein and TFB to an octameric TATA box (YTTTTAAA [40])
and 5'-flanking TFB recognition element (BRE) hexamer having a
consensus sequence of RNWAAW (where R is a purine, N is any base, and
W is A or T [8]) . The midpoint of the TATA box is
located 26 nucleotides from the start point of transcription (41) .
Conservation of a eukaryotic-type transcription apparatus has notable
consequences for the mechanism of regulation of gene expression in
archaeal prokaryotes . Consequently, gene regulatory studies in these
organisms are expanding and include efforts on negative (7,
12, 13, 54) and
positive (32, 36) transcriptional
mechanisms of control .
Sulfolobus solfataricus is a hyperthermophile and a member of
the crenarchaeal subdivision of the archaea . This organism is
found in acidic geothermal pools, while in the laboratory it grows
chemoheterotrophically on reduced carbon compounds at an optimal
temperature of 80°C (14, 19,
23, 24) . Hot springs are
typically rich in heavy metals, but little is known about the
interaction between these elements and resident archaea . To
investigate this relationship, S . solfataricus was used because
it grows aerobically in defined media, has a sequenced genome (49),
and offers powerful experimental genetic techniques (27,
59) .
Archaeal strains, cultivation, and construction. Archaeal
strains, plasmids, and primers used in this work are indicated in
Table 1 . S . solfataricus strain 98/2 and mutant
derivatives were grown at 80°C in batch culture as described
previously (9, 60) . A defined minimal
medium consisted of the basal salts of Allen (1) as
modified by Brock (10), supplemented either with
0.2% (wt/vol) sucrose (SM) or lactose (LM) as the sole carbon and
energy source . Recovery of transformed cells employed a rich medium
(RM) supplemented with 0.2% (wt/vol) tryptone . Growth was monitored
at a wavelength of 540 nm using a Cary 50 Bio, UV-visible
spectrophotometer (Varian) . A solid medium was prepared using 0.6%
(wt/vol) gelrite gellan gum (Kelco) and 8.0 mM magnesium chloride .
Mercury-containing plates were formed by mixing mercuric chloride
dissolved in double-distilled water with liquid plate medium just
prior to pouring . Plates were incubated at 80°C in plastic containers
with sufficient hydration to prevent desiccation .
| TABLE 1 . Archaeal strains, plasmids, and primers
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A Jerome 431X mercury vapor analyzer (Arizona Instrument) was used to
measure volatilization of elemental mercury (Hg0) . Cultures
were grown in minimal medium to a cell density of 108/ml in
glass screw-cap Erlenmeyer flasks (250 ml) fitted with neoprene
O-rings, and mercuric chloride was added to the cultures to a final
concentration of 0.3 µM . Cultures were then incubated for 4 h at 80°C
and cooled for 1 h at room temperature . After cooling, flask lids
were removed and mercury content was measured in units with the
Jerome analyzer intake tube centered at a distance of 12 to 13 mm
above the flask opening . The intake was 750 ml/min (12.5 ml/s), and
the duration of the reading was 13 s for a total volume of 163 ml of
air per reading . Ambient air was sampled to ensure a zero baseline
reading . Detergent-treated cell extracts were prepared by addition of
N-laurylsarcosine at 2.5% (wt/vol) prior to inoculation .
Strain PBL2002 (lacS::IS1217) was used to create the merA
disruption mutant and is a spontaneous derivative of wild-type S .
solfataricus (PBL2000) with an insertion of IS1217 at
position 1242 in lacS (59) . Strain PBL2025
was used to create the merR disruption mutant and is deleted
for lacS and flanking genes . PBL2025 was selected from a
collection of spontaneous lacS mutants (24)
because it harbors a 58-kb deletion spanning open reading frames
SSO3004 to SSO3050 as annotated by She and coworkers (49) .
Both strains are unable to utilize ß-linked disaccharides
as a sole carbon and energy source, and reintroduction of lacS
integrated at other chromosomal loci is necessary and sufficient to
restore this ability . Transformation procedures were as described
previously, using electroporation to mobilize DNA into target cells (59) .
Following electroporation, cells were subcultured into RM for 8 h to
allow recovery and then subcultured again into LM to enrich for
chromosomal recombinants . Following appearance of turbidity,
dilutions of the cultures were prepared and spread on RM plates to
allow colony formation . Chromosomal recombinants resulting from
insertion of the lacS gene were detected by spraying plates
with 5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indolyl-ß-D-galactopyranoside
solution to identify Lac+ colonies . These isolates were then
subcultured into RM medium and analyzed in greater detail . Disruption
of merA was conducted as described previously for other genes
(59), while construction of the merR mutant
employed an alternative strategy with a new strain to increase the
incidence of recombination at the targeted locus .
Primers used for PCR of merA were forward primer MerA2-F and
reverse primer MerA2-R . MerA2-F starts 325 bp upstream relative
to the merA start codon, and MerA2-R starts 1,362 bp downstream
relative to the merA start codon, beginning with the merA
stop codon . MerA2-F encodes an added EcoRI site, and MerA2-R
encodes an added XbaI site . PCR primers for lacS were
forward primer LacS-MfeI-F and reverse primer LacS-MfeI-R, and both
encode added MfeI sites . LacS-MfeI-F starts 170 bp 5' to the
lacS start codon, while LacS-MfeI-R starts 165 bp 3' to the
lacS stop codon . Plasmid pMerA1 was constructed by insertion of
an EcoRI-XbaI-digested PCR merA amplicon
produced with primers MerA2-F and MerA2-R and cloned into the EcoRI-
XbaI sites of pUC19 . Plasmid pMerASI was constructed by
insertion of an MfeI-digested PCR lacS amplicon into
the MfeI site of pMerA1 in the reverse orientation relative to
merA . PCR and restriction analysis were used to verify the
identity of the merA recombinant strain . Amplification of the
wild-type undisrupted merA locus using primers MerA2-F and MerA2-R
produced a single fragment of 1.69 kb and two fragments of 1.26
and 0.43 kb after digestion with MfeI . Amplification of the
disrupted merA locus in strain PBL2020 produced a single fragment
of 3.62 kb and three fragments following digestion representing
the 5' and 3' ends of merA and the 1.93-kb lacS insert .
The MfeI site located in merR of pMerRS1 was created by overlap
extension PCR (26) with primers MerR-OL-MfeI-F and
MerR-OL-MfeI-R . The 5' end of MerR-OL-MfeI-F begins 4 bp upstream of
the merR start codon and is complementary to MerR-OL-MfeI-R .
PCR of the modified merR allele, wild-type allele, and lacS-disrupted
merR allele for verification of recombinant identity employed
primers MerR-L-BamHI-F and MerR-L-BamHI-R . The 5' start
of MerR-L-BamHI-F is located 547 bp upstream of the merR
start codon . The 3' end of MerR-L-BamHI-R is located 893 bp
downstream of the merR start codon . PCR and restriction
analysis were used to verify the identity of the merR
recombinant strain . Amplification of wild-type merR and
flanking regions using primers MerR-L-BamHI-F and MerR-L-BamHI-R
produced a single band of 1.44 kb that was cut into two bands
by digestion with MfeI . Amplification of the disrupted merR
locus in strain PBL2026 produced a single band of 3.37 kb, approximately
1.9 kb larger than that observed with the undisrupted locus due
to the presence of the inserted copy of lacS . This fragment
was cut by MfeI into three fragments of 0.57, 0.85, and 1.93
kb that represented the 5' and 3' ends of merR and the lacS
insert, respectively .
Molecular biology methods. DNA cloning, PCR, and plasmid
transformation of Escherichia coli were performed as described
elsewhere (24, 43) . DNA sequencing
was as described previously (45) . DNA and RNA
concentrations were measured using either a DyNA Quant 200
fluorometer (Hoefer) or a UV-visible Genesys 2 spectrophotometer
(Spectronics) . All manipulations of RNA were as described previously
(9, 23) . Protein concentrations
were measured using a bicinchoninic acid protein assay reagent kit
(Pierce) . Unless otherwise indicated, all chemicals were obtained
from common chemical suppliers .
Northern blot analysis. RNA extraction and Northern
hybridization using antisense riboprobes were performed as described
previously (9, 23) . RNAs were detected
by autoradiography on X-Omat AR film (Kodak) . Digital images
were acquired using a GDS7800 gel documentation system (UVP) .
Scanning densitometry of the images was performed using GelBase-Pro
software (UVP) . The 7S RNA probe was prepared as described elsewhere
(9) . The merA probe was prepared by PCR amplification
using chromosomal DNA and primers MerA-F and MerA-R, which were
complementary to positions 133 to 161 and 773 to 801, respectively,
in the merA coding region . The 640-bp fragment was cloned at
the XbaI and SphI sites of pT7T3/18U (Pharmacia) . In
riboprobe synthesis merA was linearized using SmaI, and
T3 RNA polymerase was used for transcription to produce a 32P-labeled
antisense RNA .
Primer extension analysis. The merA transcript was
subjected to primer extension using primer MerAp, which is
complementary to positions 47 to 70 downstream from the merA
start codon . The primer extension oligonucleotide was labeled at the
5' end with [ -32P]ATP
using T4 kinase (NEB) as described previously (9,
53) . The labeling reaction was terminated by EDTA
addition followed by heating at 65°C . The labeled primer was purified
using a Sep-pak cartridge (Waters), dried, and resuspended in 10 µl
of 10 mM Tris-Cl (pH 8.0), 1 mM EDTA . A typical reaction yielded 10
µl of 106-cpm/µl labeled oligo, and 1 µl of this oligo was
used for each reverse transcription reaction . Reverse transcription
was as described elsewhere (9, 53)
with modifications . Samples of total RNA (20 µg) were hybridized with
the labeled primer in 150 mM MgCl2, 10 mM Tris-Cl (pH
8.3), and 1 mM EDTA, heated at 65°C for 90 min, and cooled to allow
primer annealing . The mixture was adjusted to 20 mM Tris-Cl (pH 8.3),
10 mM MgCl2, 0.5 mM dithiothreitol, 0.15 mg of actinomycin
D/ml, and 0.15 mM deoxynucleoside triphosphates, and 5 U of avian
myeloblastosis virus reverse transcriptase (Pharmacia) was added . The
reaction was incubated for 1 h at 42°C and terminated by addition
of 17.5 ng of salmon sperm DNA/ml, 14 ng of RNase A/ml followed
by incubation for 15 min at 37°C . The reaction was extracted with
phenol-chloroform (1:1), and primer-extended DNA was recovered by
ethanol precipitation, dried, and resuspended in the stop solution of
the T7 Sequenase version 2.0 DNA sequencing kit (Amersham) . The
primer-extension primer also was used to generate the sequencing
ladder for mapping the start site of transcription of merAp .
The template used to generate the DNA sequencing ladder for merAp
primer extension mapping was plasmid pMerA10 . DNA sequencing reaction
products were separated on preequilibrated 8% (wt/vol) denaturing
polyacrylamide sequencing gels as described previously (45) .
Bioinformatic analysis. Sequences used for phylogenetic
analysis were derived by BLAST queries against the NCBI database
using S . solfataricus P2 open reading frames SSO2689 and
SSO2688 . CLUSTAL W (52) was used to create
multiple sequence alignments . PHYLIP version 3.57c (20)
and the distance method of analysis were used for phylogenetic
studies . SEQBOOT was used to generate 100 bootstrapped data sets,
distance matrices were determined using PROTDIST and the Dayhoff PAM
matrix option, unrooted trees were inferred by neighbor-joining
analysis using NEIGHBOR, CONSENSE was used to identify the most
likely tree, and FITCH was used to create branch lengths proportional
to distance values . Nearly full-length sequences were used for both
the MerA phylogenetic tree (433 residues) and MerR phylogenetic tree
(104 residues) . BOXSHADE version 3.21 was used to create boxshade
diagrams . Sequences employed for the MerA tree were the following:
Acinetobacter calcoaceticus (Q52109), Pseudomonas aeruginosa
Tn501 (RDPSHA); Shigella flexneri R100 (P08332),
Thiobacillus ferrooxidans (P17239), Shewanella putrefaciens
(Q54465), Bacillus sp . strain RC 067 (P16171), Clostridium
butyricum (T44505), Staphylococcus aureus pI258 (P08663),
S . solfataricus P2 (NP_344015), Thermoplasma acidophylum
(CAC12462), Thermoplasma volcanium (NP_110770), Aeropyrum
pernix (B72625), Halobacterium sp . strain NRC-1
(AAG18773), and mouse transcription factor SOX 10 (Q04888) . Sequences
employed for the MerR tree were E . coli Tn21
(AAC33922), Pseudomonas fluorescens Tn501 (P06688),
E . coli pDU1358 (A33858), S . aureus p1258 (P22874), T .
ferrooxidans (P22896), Archaeoglobus fulgidus (AAB90568),
S . solfataricus P2 (AAK42804), Streptomyces lividans
(P30346), and Halobacterium salinarum (AAG18773) .
Adaptive response to mercury challenge. The minimal
growth-inhibitory concentration of mercuric chloride for S .
solfataricus that was effective in a defined liquid medium (SM)
was determined in batch culture (Fig . 1) . Growth was
unaffected following addition of the metal at a final concentration
of 0.3 µM, but at 0.5 µM a transient growth lag was
apparent that was followed by resumption of a normal growth rate .
Addition of a yet-higher metal concentration (1.5 µM) terminated
growth, and recovery was apparent only after prolonged incubation .
The rate of response to addition of an inhibitory metal concentration
was quite rapid and evident within minutes . In a complex liquid
medium (RM), the MIC was 2.5 µM and higher than that in the defined
medium, due to thiol titration by complex medium components .
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FIG . 1 . Adaptive resistance to mercuric chloride . Wild-type S .
solfataricus was grown in SM and challenged with mercuric chloride .
Open symbols, unadapted cultures; closed symbols, adapted culture;
inverted triangles, untreated control . Unadapted cells challenged with
0.3 (squares), 0.5 (triangles), or 1.5 µM (open circles) . The arrow
indicates the time of addition of mercuric chloride.
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While these data indicate the organism could overcome growth-inhibitory
levels of this heavy metal, they do not assess the existence of
an adaptive response . To test whether S . solfataricus exhibits
an adaptive response to mercuric chloride, cultures were pretreated
by addition of a concentration of this metal that was transiently
growth inhibitory (0.5 µM) and then challenged using a dose (1.5 µM)
that blocked growth of untreated cells and could only be overcome
with prolonged incubation (Fig . 1) . The growth of
mercury-adapted cells was insensitive to addition of the higher
challenge dose, since no growth lag was apparent . This indicates that
S . solfataricus harbors an adaptive mechanism to detoxify
mercuric chloride .
Protein phylogeny of MerA and MerR. Several mer genes
have been annotated in the S . solfataricus strain P2 genome,
including a putative mercuric reductase (merA; SSO2689) and a
mercury transcriptional regulatory protein (merR; SSO2688 [49]) .
The merR and merA genes are arranged in opposite
directions, and their open reading frames are separated by a
300-nucleotide (nt) sequence (Fig . 2) . Immediately downstream
of merA is an open reading frame designated SSO2690 of unknown
function separated from merA by 141 nt . BLAST analysis indicated
that the S . solfataricus MerA protein exhibited significant
homology to biochemically validated bacterial MerA proteins .
The best match was to the S . aureus protein, with 40% amino
acid identity over the length of the protein . Since MerA orthologs
have been annotated in other archaeal genomes, a protein phylogenetic
analysis of these and selected bacterial sequences was conducted to
ascertain the relationship between these proteins (Fig . 3A) .
A consensus neighbor-joining distance tree with robust topology
indicated the existence of two distinct clades . One clade comprised
the bacterial MerA proteins, while the other contained crenarchaeal
MerA sequences . The halobacterial NRC1 protein fell outside the
crenarchaeal clade despite the use of an unrelated sequence as an
outgroup . Unlike merA homologs, merR homologs are only
rarely evident in archaeal genomes . To assess the significance of the
putative MerR protein in S . solfataricus, a similar protein
phylogenetic procedure was employed (Fig . 3B) . In this case,
a small clade containing Sulfolobus and Streptomyces lividans
MerR representatives was evident and distinct from all other
bacterial MerR sequences .
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FIG . 2 . S . solfataricus mer locus . Lengths are in nucleotides.
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FIG . 3 . Protein phylogenies of MerA and MerR . (A) MerA tree; (B) MerR
tree . Neighbor-joining distance trees are based on comparison of
near-full-length protein sequences of 422 residues for MerA and 104
residues for MerR . Distances are indicated by the bar in the lower left
corner and represent 10 substitutions per 100 residues . Percent
occurrence among 100 trees is given for all nodes . Accession numbers are
indicated in the text.
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A multiple sequence alignment comparing MerA proteins from Bacillus
sp . strain RC601, Tn501, Tn21, and S . solfataricus is
also shown (Fig . 4A) . The catalytically active
cysteines (C135, C140, C558, and C559 [15]) and
one of two tyrosines (Y264 [42]) are present . In
addition, the S . solfataricus protein lacks the N-terminal
extension commonly found in bacterial MerA proteins and present in
the bacterial sequences used in this alignment (4) . A multiple
sequence alignment of MerR proteins from Tn501, Tn21, S .
lividans, and S . solfataricus is also shown (Fig.
4B) . The S . solfataricus MerR homolog
exhibits several key differences from most of its bacterial
counterparts . While it has a conserved N-terminal DNA binding motif,
the sequence of this domain is divergent and it lacks a critical
glutamic acid residue (E22) required for DNA binding of the MerR
protein from transposon Tn501 (46) . The
S . solfataricus MerR homolog is one-third shorter in length than
most of its bacterial counterparts and contains only two of the three
catalytically active cysteines (C82 and C128) found in Tn501
and Tn21 MerR proteins (4) . The third active cysteine
(C119) is missing .
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FIG.4 . Multiple sequence alignments of MerA and MerR . Sequence
conservation is indicated by boxshading . (A) MerA alignment . Multiple
sequence alignment is shown for Bacillus sp . strain RC607 (607),
Tn501 (501), Tn21 (21), and S . solfataricus (Sso)
MerA proteins . Numbering refers to the position of the protein relative
to its amino-terminal end . Conserved catalytically active residues are
outlined in boxes and labeled . (B) MerR alignment . Multiple sequence
alignment is shown for Tn501 (501), Tn21 (21), and S .
lividans (Slv) and S . solfataricus (Sso) MerR proteins . The
conserved glutamate required for DNA binding and the catalytically
active cysteines are outlined in boxes and labeled.
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Transcriptional regulation of merA expression by mercury.
Northern blot analysis of merA was conducted to test if expression
of this gene was influenced by mercuric chloride challenge (Fig .
5) . Batch cultures grown in a defined minimal SM were
treated with 0.3 µM mercuric chloride, and samples were removed
for analysis at times thereafter . The signal recognition particle
7S RNA was used to standardize mRNA band intensity as described
previously (9) . Blots were probed simultaneously with
antisense merA and 7S RNA riboprobes . Levels of merA
mRNA were undetectable before mercuric chloride addition and for a
short period immediately following addition . After 4 h, however,
several abundant transcripts became evident . The smaller of the two
transcripts (approximately 1.5 kb) was of sufficient size to encode
merA, while the larger transcript (approximately 2.0 kb) was
sufficient in size to encode both merA and the adjacent gene,
SSO2690 . After 9 h of exposure these mRNAs were no longer
detected . Several smaller RNAs representing possible mRNA degradation
products were also evident . Analysis of transcript induction using
samples from earlier times and with longer autoradiographic exposure
indicated merA transcripts could be detected within 1 h of
mercuric chloride addition . Fully induced merA mRNA levels
normalized to 7S RNA levels in the same samples and expressed as a
percentage of that amount averaged 119.9% ± 84.9% (mean ± standard
deviation) . Transcript abundances for other highly expressed
S . solfataricus genes expressed in an identical manner were as
follows: lacS, 45.2% ± 14.4%; tfb-1, 67.2% ± 16.6%;
malA, 47.8% ± 24.3%; sod, 88.3% ± 40.0%; glnA-1,
45.0% ± 12.1%; and dhg-1, 88.4% ± 14.9% (9) .
In all cases the number of samples examined was at least three, and
the variation between triplicate measurements is indicated . This
comparison indicates merA transcript abundance was within the
range of these other mRNAs and, therefore, that merAp is a
reasonably strong promoter .
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FIG . 5 . Northern analysis of merA following mercuric chloride
challenge . Cells in exponential phase were treated with 0.3 mM mercuric
chloride, and RNA was extracted at the times indicated beneath the
figures for analysis . Blots were probed simultaneously using merA
and 7S RNA riboprobes . The data in panels A and B were prepared from
independent experiments.
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Primer extension analysis of merAp. To investigate the
basis for merA regulation by mercuric chloride challenge,
primer extension analysis was conducted to help identify the merA
promoter (merAp) . RNA was extracted from cells 4 h after
treatment with 0.3 µM mercuric chloride to ensure the presence of
merA transcript . The start point occurred at an A residue 7 nt
upstream of the start codon (GTG) of merA (Fig .
6A) . There is no TATA box or BRE sequence apparent at the
expected position 26 nt from the transcription start site (Fig.
6B); however, a putative TATA box and BRE are evident
5 nt upstream of this location . The midpoint of this putative
TATA box (ATTTAAGG) is located 33 nt 5' to the start point of
transcription and is flanked on the 5' side by a putative BRE
sequence (GGCAAG) (Fig . 6C) .
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FIG . 6 . Primer extension analysis and DNA sequence of merAp . (A)
Primer extension analysis of RNA prepared from mercuric chloride-treated
cells . The sequencing ladder is on the left, and the extension reaction
is in lane 1 . The start codon is boxed . The location of the start site
is indicated by the arrow . (B) Location and composition of the TATA box
and BRE for canonical and merAp promoters . (C) DNA sequence of
merAp with underlines indicating the positions of the BRE, TATA box,
and start codon . The large A indicates the transcription start site.
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Construction and analysis of the merA disruption mutant.
The role of merA in the adaptive resistance response to mercuric
chloride challenge was investigated by creating a mutant strain
encoding a loss-of-function mutation in this gene . The merA
disruption mutant was created by targeted recombination, placing a
copy of the ß-glycosidase gene (lacS) in the middle of the
target gene in the chromosome (Fig . 7A) using a previously
developed procedure (59) . The lacS gene,
including its promoter, and 169 and 157 bp of 5' and 3' flanking DNA
sequence, respectively, were inserted into a unique MfeI site
in merA located 932 bp downstream from the merA start
codon in a reverse orientation relative to merA .
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FIG . 7 . Disruption of merA and merR . Schematic
representations of the disrupted loci indicating the location of the
disrupting copy of lacS (black region) in the target genes (grey
regions) . The direction of transcription is indicated by the arrows;
merA (A) and merR (B) are divergently transcribed . The
primers used in the analysis of the disrupted and wild-type alleles are
indicated beneath the schematic.
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To assess the physiological consequence of merA disruption,
the response of the merA mutant strain to mercuric chloride
challenge was compared to that of the otherwise isogenic wild-type
strain (Fig . 8) . Both strains were grown in a liquid sucrose
minimal medium . At a cell density of 108 cells/ml, 0.3 µM
mercuric chloride was added to each culture . Cultures of both
strains with no added mercury were included as controls (Fig .
8A) . Growth of the wild-type strain was unaffected by mercury
addition, while the mutant strain exhibited a reduced rate of
growth for nearly 12 h followed by a resumption of the previous
growth rate . In response to a higher concentration of mercuric
chloride (0.5 µM), the wild-type strain exhibited a lag followed by a
reduced rate of growth, while the merA disruption mutant
discontinued growth altogether (Fig . 8B) . The efficiency
of plating (EOP) of both strains was examined on RM plates over
a range of concentrations of added mercuric chloride . The EOP of the
mutant relative to that of the wild-type strain was most impaired at
0.15 µM mercuric chloride, reaching only 0.34% of the wild-type value
(Fig . 8C) . At concentrations below and above this
amount the differential between the strains was less pronounced, but
in all cases the disruption mutant exhibited greater sensitivity than
the wild-type strain .
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FIG . 8 . Response of the merA disruption mutant to mercuric
chloride . (A and B) Response of the wild type (closed symbols) and
merA disruption mutant (open symbols) to mercuric chloride challenge
during growth in SM liquid medium . (A) 0.3 µM mercuric chloride
challenge (circles); (B) 0.5 µM mercuric chloride challenge (circles) .
Inverted triangles (A and B), no addition . The arrow indicates the time
of addition of mercuric chloride . (C) EOP of the wild type (filled bars)
and the merA disruption mutant (grey bars) on RM plates
containing mercuric chloride . Values are a percentage of the EOP
observed with no added mercuric chloride . Data are averages from
duplicate plates.
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Production of elemental mercury was assessed as an additional
indication of the role of the merA gene in mercury resistance .
Mercuric reductase catalyzes the reduction of mercuric ion to
elemental mercury . Since elemental mercury is volatile, it can
accumulate in the headspace of a culture flask . Detection of this
form of the metal was accomplished using a Jerome meter, which
measures conductivity changes produced by the interaction of mercury
with a gold film sensor . Cultures of both strains were cultivated in
a liquid SM, and 0.3 µM mercuric chloride was added . After 4 h of
additional incubation, the flasks were allowed to cool and the
concentration of volatile mercury trapped in the headspace was
measured . Levels of mercury (in nanograms) were as follows: wild
type, 62.8 ± 11.9; merA mutant, 11.8 ± 3.8; no inoculum, 41 ±
1.9; detergent-treated wild type, <0.4 . The wild-type strain produced
sixfold more elemental mercury than the mutant . A control sample
consisting of the minimal medium with mercuric chloride but without
added cells also produced detectable mercury, though at considerably
lower levels . Since the headspace of the mutant culture also
contained detectable mercury, an effort was made to identify its
source . Continued release of low levels of mercury from the mutant
strain together with its ability to withstand exposure to lower
challenge doses (Fig . 8C) suggested additional pathways
for mercury reduction that could be present in this strain . To
test this possibility, the ability of the mutant strain to undergo an
adaptive response to mercuric chloride challenge was examined as
described above for the wild-type strain (Fig . 1);
however, no adaptation was observed . Since cell extracts prepared by
detergent solubilization of the cell envelope incubated in the same
medium with added mercuric chloride produced no measurable mercury,
it seems plausible that reduced intracellular thiol compounds were
responsible for residual mercury reduction in the mutant strain .
Construction and analysis of the merR disruption mutant.
Disruption of the merR gene used a strategy similar to that
employed for merA disruption, but the alternative strain, PBL2025,
replaced the use of PBL2002 . PBL2025 harbors a large chromosomal
deletion spanning lacS and flanking regions and increases the
frequency of recovery of recombinants at the target locus by
avoiding those occurring at the lacS locus . The deletion in
this strain was spontaneous and was recovered using a screen for
isolates that had lost lacS (22) . PCR was used to
determine the extent of the deleted region . Open reading frames that
could be amplified from this strain included SSO3000, -3002, -3003,
-3051, and -3052, while those that could not be amplified included
SSO3004, -3006, -3017, -3019, -3032, -3036, -3048, -3049, and
-3050 . DNA sequence analysis indicated the presence of an IS1173
inserted in SSO3052 at the 3' end . These results showed that
the deleted region extends from SSO3004 through SSO3050 . The suicide
plasmid pMerS1 was transformed into PBL2025 by electroporation, and
chromosomal recombinants were recovered by selection for lactose
utilization as described previously (59) . Since lacS
was deleted, recombinants could only arise by homologous recombination
between the chromosomal and plasmid-encoded copies of merR .
The lacS gene was inserted in a reverse orientation relative
to merR at an artificial MfeI site that converted a G into a
C at nt 19 relative to the merR start codon (Fig . 7B) .
The merR disruption mutant exhibited increased resistance to
mercuric chloride (Fig . 9) . The adaptive resistance
response of wild-type cells enabled them to grow without a lag when
challenged with doses of mercuric chloride that were otherwise growth
inhibitory . The merR disruption mutant was insensitive to
addition of 0.75 µM mercuric chloride, while this same dose blocked
growth of the wild-type strain . Since mercuric reductase appears
necessary for mercuric chloride resistance in wild-type cells, the
resistance of the previously unconditioned merR disruption
mutant suggested merA expression might be constitutive .
Northern analysis of merA levels in the merR mutant and
its parental strain were examined to determine the correlation
between transcript abundance and mercury resistance (Fig.
10) . Mercuric chloride (0.3 µM) was added to both
cultures, and RNA samples were removed at the indicated times . Unlike
the inducible pattern of merA expression observed in the
wild-type strain, in the merR disruption mutant the merA
transcript was produced constitutively, and this expression was
independent of mercury challenge . The ratio of the levels of merA
transcript relative to those of the 7S RNA control in the merR
disruption strain were similar to those observed for the wild-type
strain at peak levels of merA expression . These results
indicated that merR is necessary for the inducible pattern of
merA expression evident in wild-type cells . They also indicate
that MerR must be absent for constitutive expression of merA .
|
FIG . 9 . Response of the merR disruption mutant to mercuric
chloride . Cells were grown in SM liquid medium and challenged with 0.75
µM mercuric chloride (arrow) . Cultures were merR disruption
mutant (triangles) or wild type (circles) . Open symbols, untreated
cultures; closed symbols, treated cultures.
|
|
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FIG . 10 . Northern analysis of merA in the merR disruption
mutant following mercuric chloride challenge . Levels of merA in
the merR disruption mutant and the wild type (PBL2025) were
determined in response to mercuric chloride challenge (0.3 µM) . Lanes 1,
3, 5, 7, 9, and 11, wild type; lanes 2, 4, 6, 8, and 10, merR
disruption mutant . Sample times and lane numbers were as follows: lanes
1 and 2, 0 h; lanes 3 and 4, 0.5 h; lanes 5 and 6, 1 h; lanes 7 and 8, 2
h; lanes 9 and 10, 4 h; lanes 11 and 12, 9 h . The positions of the
merA and 7S RNA are indicated . A larger transcript possibly encoding
merA and SSO2690 is indicated by the arrow.
|
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These studies investigated the relevance of MerA and MerR homologs to
the sensitivity of the archaeon S . solfataricus to challenge
by the heavy metal mercury . To explain the observed results, the
following model is proposed . MerR regulates merA transcription,
acting in a negative fashion on merAp activity . Mercuric ion
relieves this effect by interacting with MerR . If MerR binds
merAp, then mercuric ion interaction may stimulate MerR release .
However, merAp structure appears insufficient to explain the
merA expression pattern observed in the merR disruption
mutant strain, because merAp is unlikely to constitute a
strong promoter . Though the merAp promoter has a putative TATA
box and a consensus BRE, the presence of a G at the 3' end of another
archaeal TATA hexamer reduced promoter strength by 75% (21) .
In addition, merAp exhibits nonstandard spacing between the
TATA box and the start point of transcription . The consensus for this
distance in archaeal promoters is 26 nt measured from the midpoint of
the octameric TATA box to the start point of transcription (21,
40, 41) . In merAp, this
distance is 33 nt and would thus rotate the TATA box around the DNA
helix relative to the start point of transcription . Consequently,
constitutive expression of merAp should require the action of
some additional factor to overcome this topological constraint on
promoter recognition by general transcription factors and RNA
polymerase .
The pattern of merA expression observed in the merR disruption
mutant also indicated that MerR is only negatively acting . This
is unlike the case with most bacterial MerR proteins, and the only
exception yet reported is the MerR protein of S . lividans (47) .
Interestingly, protein phylogenetic analysis of the S .
solfataricus MerR protein revealed that it occurred in a clade
with the S . lividans protein and separately from other bacterial
MerR proteins . This finding suggests that these proteins have a
common evolutionary origin . The absence of the third catalytically
active cysteine residue (C119) in the S . solfataricus MerR protein
does not block its ability to act as a negative regulator . In
addition, the absence of the conserved glutamate (E22) in the
N-terminal domain of bacterial MerR proteins, which is required for
DNA binding, again appears unnecessary for the action of the S .
solfataricus MerR protein as a negative regulatory element for
merA transcription .
Restoration of repression of merA expression observed in wild-type
S . solfataricus strains following mercury challenge occurred
prior to the onset of significant cell division . Disappearance
of merA transcript must therefore require that MerR repression
be reinstated to prevent new synthesis and that merA transcript
be actively degraded . The stability of mRNAs in this organism
has been examined (9) . In all cases the rate of turnover was
low, indicating that mRNA degradation proceeded at a slow rate,
and in the case of merA transcript a half-life of less than an
hour seemed necessary .
The level of mercuric chloride resistance observed in S . solfataricus
containing a functional mercuric reductase is surprisingly low
relative to that observed in bacteria . Mercury-resistant bacteria
exhibit tolerance to mercuric chloride concentrations 20- to 40-fold
greater (17, 55) than that reported here
for S . solfataricus . Though the archaeal merA is
chromosomally encoded and bacterial mer operons are typically
plasmid encoded, R factors are low copy, and merA gene dosage
appears unrelated to the level of mercury resistance (35) .
Consequently, the difference observed between this archaeon and
bacteria could be explained by proposing that S . solfataricus
MerA is a relatively inefficient enzyme, or that there is some other
fundamental difference between bacteria and archaea controlling the
biological activity of this heavy metal . Homologs of MerA are evident
in many archaeal genomes . Proof of the importance of this gene in
S . solfataricus indicates that other archaeal homologs may indeed
play functional roles . Since merR homologs rarely accompany
these merA sequences, it will be of interest to understand how
these merA homologs are regulated and what factors might
control their expression .
Construction of the merR disruption mutant employed a new strategy
involving the use of a host strain with the disrupting marker
gene, lacS, deleted . This approach simplified recovery of recombinant
isolates by preventing occurrence of those resulting from recombination
at the chromosomal copy of lacS as observed previously (59) .
The present system should be suitable to allow identification
of cis-acting sequences required for merR function as well as
to address questions concerning merAp promoter activity . Further
advances in genetic strategies for the manipulation of this
organism will facilitate studies on mechanisms involving gene
regulation of the archaeal transcription apparatus and provide a
complement to biochemical approaches .
This research was supported by National Science Foundation grants
MCB-0085216 and MCB-0235167 .
We thank Anne Summers for advice on early stages of the research .
* Corresponding author . Mailing address: E234 Beadle Center for
Genetics, University of Nebraska, Lincoln, NE 68588-0666 . Phone: (402) 472-2769 .
Fax: (402) 472-8722 . E-mail: pblum1@unl.edu.
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