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Journal of Bacteriology, April 2003, p . 2315-2329, Vol . 185, No . 7
Identification of a New Gene Essential for Germination of Bacillus subtilis Spores with Ca2+-Dipicolinate
Katerina Ragkousi,1 Patrick Eichenberger,2 Christiaan van
Ooij,2 and Peter Setlow1*
Department
of Biochemistry, University of Connecticut Health Center, Farmington,
Connecticut 06032 ,1
Department of
Molecular and Cellular Biology, Harvard University, Cambridge,
Massachusetts 021382
Received 3 September 2002/
Accepted 6 January 2003
Bacillus
subtilis spores can germinate with a 1:1 chelate of
Ca2+ and dipicolinic acid (DPA), a compound present
at high levels in the spore core . Using a genetic screen to identify
genes encoding proteins that are specifically involved in spore
germination by Ca2+-DPA, three mutations were
identified . One was in the gene encoding the cortex lytic enzyme, CwlJ,
that was previously shown to be essential for spore germination by
Ca2+-DPA . The other two were mapped to an open
reading frame, ywdL, encoding a protein of unknown function.
Analysis of ywdL expression showed that the gene is expressed
during sporulation in the mother cell compartment of the sporulating
cell and that its transcription is
E dependent.
Functional characterization of YwdL demonstrated that it is a new spore
coat protein that is essential for the presence of CwlJ in the spore
coat . Assembly of YwdL itself into the spore coat is dependent on the
coat morphogenetic proteins CotE and SpoIVA . However, other than
lacking CwlJ, ywdL spores have no obvious defect in their
spore coat . Because of the role for YwdL in a part of the spore
germination process, we propose renaming ywdL as a spore
germination gene,
gerQ .
Bacillus subtilis is a well-studied gram-positive soil organism
that when starved for one or more nutrients can initiate the
developmental program of sporulation that eventually leads to the
production of metabolically dormant spores
(16) . These spores can
survive for long periods of time in the environment
(57) . However, in
response to particular nutrients, termed germinants, the spores can
come back to life through the process of germination, followed by
outgrowth and conversion to vegetative cells
(39) . Spore germination
has been separated into two distinct and sequential stages
(47,
56) . The first is
germinant recognition by specific receptors . A number of studies have
identified and localized the major germinant receptors that sense the
nutrients that trigger germination
(26,
45) . Germinant-receptor
interaction then leads to the release of the large depot
( 10% of the spore's dry weight) of
pyridine-2,6-dicarboxylic acid (dipicolinic acid [DPA]) that
is present in the core region of the dormant spores . This DPA is likely
to be in a 1:1 chelate with divalent cations, predominantly
Ca2+
(22) . After their DPA
release, spores can be arrested at this stage if they lack the two
major cortex lytic enzymes, CwlJ and SleB, that are needed to progress
through the second stage of germination, which requires hydrolysis of
the spore's peptidoglycan cortex
(47,
56) . However, CwlJ and
SleB have redundant functions, since in the absence of either one,
cortex hydrolysis is complete and spores can eventually become
vegetative cells (27).
The spore cortex peptidoglycan is formed between the spore's inner
and outer membranes, and cortex hydrolysis is necessary for outgrowth
to occur . This cortex has one major spore-specific modification that
allows its recognition by CwlJ and SleB
(2,
50) .
It was
reported many years ago that in addition to nutrients, a 1:1 chelate of
Ca2+-DPA can also trigger spore germination
(53) . Studies on the
mechanism of Ca2+-DPA-induced spore germination have
shown that the germinant receptors are not involved
(46), and it appears
likely that exogenous Ca2+-DPA as well as endogenous
Ca2+-DPA released early in spore germination can
activate the cortex lytic enzyme, CwlJ, and hence allow progression
through the second stage of the germination process
(42) . While CwlJ has been
shown to be essential for spore germination with
Ca2+-DPA
(42), it is not clear if
other proteins are involved in this process . In this work we report the
results of a genetic screen to identify mutations in other genes
essential for spore germination with Ca2+-DPA . This
screen has identified a mutation in cwlJ itself, as expected,
and in a new gene, ywdL . Functional analysis of ywdL
showed that YwdL is present in the spore coats, a proteinaceous layer
surrounding the spore's outer membrane . YwdL was found to be
essential for the localization of CwlJ in the spore coats and thus for
Ca2+-DPA-induced spore
germination .
Strains and plasmids used in this
study.
The B.
subtilis strains and plasmids used in this study are listed in
Table
1 . However, many of the strains used for mapping (obtained from the
Bacillus Genetic Stock Center, Ohio State University) are not listed.
The B . subtilis strains are all derivatives of strain 168, and
strains constructed in this work were prepared by transformation with
either chromosomal DNA or plasmid DNA
(1) . The genotypes of
strains arising from transformation with plasmid DNA were confirmed by
Southern blot analysis
(34) . Escherichia
coli strains TG1 and DH5 were used for the production of
plasmids (34) .
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TABLE 1 . B.
subtilis strains and plasmids used
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Two
of the isolated ger mutations, mut-5 and
mut-16, were transferred by congression to the
wild-type strain PS832
(9) . In these
congressions, chromosomal DNA from the mutant strain was transformed
along with either a nonreplicating plasmid that integrates into the
recipient chromosome at a specific locus by a double-crossover event or
a derivative of the replicative plasmid pUB110 that does not integrate
into the B . subtilis chromosome
(7) . Plasmid pFE170 was
used as the integrative plasmid because it introduces a selectable
tetracycline resistance (Tetr) cassette in the middle of an
operon (yndDEF) that is not essential for spore germination
(46), while plasmid
pFE50, which provides kanamycin resistance (Kmr), was used
as the replicative plasmid . Transformants in congression experiments
were selected by their antibiotic resistance, and these colonies were
screened for the acquisition of the ger phenotype by a plate
assay (see "Spore germination" below) . With congression
being a rare event, only 1 to 2% of the selected colonies
carried the ger mutation . The resultant strains KB1 and KB2,
carrying mutations mut-5 and
mut-16, respectively, were used for the genetic
mapping experiments .
Plasmid pKE7, containing the 3' end
of the ywdL gene, was constructed as follows . The 3'
region of ywdL (45 bp upstream and 156 bp downstream of the
ywdL translation stop codon) was amplified by PCR (primer
sequences are available on request) from chromosomal DNA of strain
PS832 and cloned into plasmid pCR2.1 (Invitrogen) to give plasmid
pCywdL-TA . The insert was sequenced and recovered as
a PstI-XbaI fragment (sites introduced into the PCR
primers), and the fragment was inserted between the PstI and
XbaI sites in plasmid pSGMU2
(20), giving plasmid
pKE7 . This plasmid was used to transform B . subtilis PS832 to
chloramphenicol resistance (Cmr) by a single-crossover event
such that the ywdL open reading frame (ORF) is not disrupted
by the insertion of the chloramphenicol cassette .
Plasmid pKE15,
which carries the internal region of the spsA coding region,
was constructed as follows . A 277-bp region within the 768-bp
spsA ORF (from bp 127 to 404 downstream of the translation
start codon) was amplified by PCR from chromosomal DNA of strain PS832
and cloned into plasmid pCR2.1 . The insert was sequenced and recovered
as an EagI-XbaI fragment (sites introduced into the
PCR primers), and the fragment was inserted between the EagI
and XbaI sites in plasmid pFE140
(46), giving plasmid
pKE15 . This plasmid was used to transform B . subtilis PS832 to
macrolide-lincosamide-streptogramin B resistance (MLSr) by a
single-crossover event such that the spsA ORF is disrupted by
the MLSr cassette . The spsA insertional mutants had
no defect in their sporulation or in their spore germination with
Ca2+-DPA .
To construct plasmid pKE21, which
carries an internal fragment of the spsL coding region, a
261-bp fragment from within the 453-bp spsL ORF (from bp 121
to 382 downstream of the translation start codon) was amplified by PCR
from chromosomal DNA of strain PS832 and cloned into plasmid pCR2.1,
and the insert was sequenced and recovered as a
ClaI-EcoRI fragment (ClaI site introduced
into the 5' PCR primer and EcoRI site present in
plasmid pCR2.1) . The fragment was inserted between the ClaI
and EcoRI sites of plasmid pJL74
(31), giving plasmid
pKE21, and this plasmid was used to transform B . subtilis
PS832 to spectinomycin resistance (Spr) by a
single-crossover event such that the spsL ORF is disrupted by
the insertion of the Spr cassette . The spsL
insertional mutants had no defect in their sporulation or in their
spore germination with Ca2+-DPA .
Plasmid
pKE28, used to generate a deletion of ywdL, was constructed in
two steps . The 5' region of ywdL (137 bp upstream and
64 bp downstream of the translation start codon) was amplified by PCR
from chromosomal DNA of strain PS832 and cloned into plasmid pCR2.1,
and the insert was sequenced and then recovered as a
SpeI-BamHI fragment (sites introduced into the PCR
primers) . The fragment was inserted between the SpeI and
BamHI sites of plasmid pJL74
(31) upstream of the
Spr cassette, giving plasmid pNywdL-spc.
The 3' region of ywdL was recovered as a
PstI-EcoRI fragment from plasmid
pCywdL-TA (described above) and was inserted between
the PstI and EcoRI sites of plasmid
pNywdL-spc, downstream of the Spr
cassette, giving plasmid pKE28 . Plasmid pKE28 was used to transform
B . subtilis strains to Spr by a double-crossover
event such that the internal part of the ywdL ORF is deleted
and replaced by the Spr cassette .
A translational
fusion of ywdL to lacZ was constructed as follows.
The region encompassing 194 bp upstream and 17 bp downstream of the
translation start codon of ywdL was PCR amplified from
chromosomal DNA of strain PS832 and cloned into plasmid pCR2.1, and the
insert was sequenced and removed as an EcoRI-BamHI
fragment (EcoRI site present in the pCR2.1 vector and
BamHI site present in the 3' PCR primer) . This
fragment was inserted between the EcoRI and BamHI
sites of plasmid pJF751
(19) to create plasmid
pKE41, such that the 5' region including the first seven codons
of ywdL is fused in frame to the amino-terminal end of the
lacZ gene . Plasmid pKE41 was used to transform
B . subtilis strains to Cmr by integration
at the ywdL locus through a single-crossover event . Similarly,
plasmid pKE64 was constructed so that it carries the 5' region
including the first four codons of cwlJ in frame with the
amino-terminal end of the lacZ gene .
The fusion of
ywdL to the amino-terminal end of gfp was also in
frame and was constructed as follows . The complete coding region of
ywdL (minus the first two codons and the stop codon) was
amplified by PCR with chromosomal DNA from strain PY79 as the template.
The resulting fragment was digested with EcoRI and
XhoI (sites introduced into the PCR primers) and was cloned
into similarly digested pKL168
(32), giving plasmid
pCVO289 . This plasmid was used to transform strain PY79 to
Kmr by a single-crossover event, producing strain CVO1724.
In this strain gfp is fused in frame to the 3' end of
ywdL at the ywdL locus . Therefore, the
ywdL-gfp fusion in strain CVO1724 is the only
complete ywdL gene .
To fuse either the first 3 or first
122 codons of ywdL to the amino-terminal end of the
gfp gene, plasmid pKE69 was constructed as follows . Plasmid
pCVO119 (15) was digested
with SphI, and the sites were made blunt with T4 DNA
polymerase (New England Biolabs) and then digested with KpnI.
The fragment released from pCVO119 that carries the gfp gene
downstream of a multiple cloning site was ligated to
HincII-KpnI-digested pFE140, which carries an
MLSr cassette, producing plasmid pKE69 . The region
encompassing 194 bp upstream and 6 bp downstream of the ywdL
translation start codon was amplified by PCR from chromosomal DNA of
strain PS832 and cloned into plasmid pCR2.1, and the insert was
sequenced and removed as an EcoRI-XhoI fragment
(EcoRI site present in pCR2.1 and XhoI site present
in the 3' PCR primer) . This fragment was then ligated to
EcoRI-XhoI-digested pKE69, giving plasmid pKE70 . This
plasmid was used to transform strain PS832 to MLSr by a
single-crossover event such that the gfp gene is in frame with
the first three codons of ywdL . Similarly, the region starting
from 99 bp upstream to 363 bp downstream of the ywdL
translation start codon was amplified by PCR from chromosomal DNA of
strain PS832 and cloned into plasmid pCR2.1, and the insert was
sequenced and removed as an EcoRI-XhoI fragment
(sites present in the PCR primers) . This fragment was ligated to
EcoRI-XhoI-digested pKE69, giving plasmid pKE71 . This
plasmid was used to transform strain PS832 as described above such that
the gfp gene is in frame with the first 122 codons of
ywdL .
Media, growth, and
sporulation under normal conditions.
E . coli and B.
subtilis strains were normally grown at 37°C in rich
(Luria-Bertani [LB] or 2x YT) medium
(34), supplemented when
necessary with the following antibiotics (in milligrams per liter):
ampicillin (100), spectinomycin (100), erythromycin (1) and lincomycin
(25) (MLS), chloramphenicol (5), kanamycin (10), or tetracycline
(7) .
B . subtilis strains were routinely sporulated at
37°C by nutrient exhaustion on 2x SG medium agar plates
for 6 to 8 days, and the spores were harvested by scraping them off the
agar surface as previously described
(43) . The spores were
purified by sonication and repeated washing with cold distilled water.
All spore preparations were free (>99%) of vegetative
and sporulating cells and were stored in distilled water at
12°C in the dark
(41) . B.
subtilis strains used for transduction by phage PBS1 were grown at
37°C in Penassay broth (PAB) medium
(24) . For studies of gene
expression during sporulation at 37°C, B . subtilis
strains were grown and induced to sporulate by the resuspension method
(59) .
Spore
germination.
B.
subtilis spores were germinated by nutrients or
Ca2+-DPA . Spores in water (optical density at 600 nm
[OD600] of 50) were heat activated (70°C,
30 min), cooled on ice, diluted to an OD600 of 1 in
2x YT medium plus 10 mM L-alanine, and incubated at
37°C as described previously
(42) . For
Ca2+-DPA germination, spores at an OD600
of 1 were incubated in 60 mM Ca2+-DPA (60 mM
CaCl2, 60 mM DPA [pH 8.0]) at either 25 or
42°C (42) . Heat
activation of spores prior to germination with
Ca2+-DPA was not essential and was
omitted .
The germination of spores in nutrients was monitored by
measurement of the changes in OD600 as described previously
(38,
44) . This assay was not
used for monitoring germination by Ca2+-DPA, since
there was a slow precipitation of the mixture of 60 mM
Ca2+and DPA at a ratio of 1:1 during incubation
(53) . Instead, spore
germination with Ca2+-DPA was monitored by checking
the spores with phase-contrast microscopy or by a plate assay . The
plate assay described previously
(38,
44) was modified slightly
to test well-sporulated colonies for spore germination by
Ca2+-DPA . Individual B . subtilis colonies
were patched onto 2x SG agar plates and were sporulated by
incubation at either 25°C (for 20 days) or 30 or 37°C
(for 10 days); the plates were wrapped in plastic bags to reduce
drying . The sporulated colonies were lifted onto Whatman 3MM filter
paper disks that were then baked at 70°C for 3 h to
kill any remaining vegetative cells . After cooling to room temperature,
the filters were soaked in the germination medium (60 mM
Ca2+-DPA [pH 8.0] and 1 mg of
2,3,5-triphenyltetrazolium chloride per ml, plus 5 mM glucose for color
enhancement
[44]) and left
in a covered petri dish at either 25 or 42°C for 6 to
10 h . The colonies that contain germinated spores turn red in
this assay because they reduce the tetrazolium dye, while dormant
spores do not
(38) .
Mutagenesis
and enrichment.
Four
independent batches of exponentially growing cells of B.
subtilis FB72
( gerA::spc
gerb::cat
gerK::ermC) or FB104
( gerA::spc
gerb::cat
gerk::tet) were
mutagenized with ethylmethanesulfonate (EMS) as follows . Cells were
grown at 37°C in PAB medium to mid-exponential phase
(OD600 of 0.5 to 0.7), 20 ml of cells was centrifuged (2,600
x g, 10 min, 25°C), and the pellet
was resuspended in 20 ml of TSS minimal medium
(9) . EMS was added, the
sample was split into four 5-ml aliquots, and the samples were
incubated at 37°C for 1 h . In separate mutageneses
the concentrations of EMS used were 1.5, 1.8, and 2.7% . The
mutagenized cells were washed twice by centrifugation with 5%
sodium thiosulfate, and the percentage of cells killed by the mutagen
was determined by spotting appropriate cell dilutions on LB plates
before and after treatment with EMS . The level of mutagenesis was
estimated from the percentage of the surviving cells that could either
not grow on TSS minimal medium plates and/or not sporulate on
2x SG medium plates
(17) .
Mutagenized
cells were grown in PAB medium at 25 or 30°C for 24 h
before they were transferred to 2x SG liquid medium for
sporulation at either 25 or 30°C . B . subtilis cells
grow and sporulate equally well at both 25 and 30°C, but we
found the sporulation to be significantly faster at 30 than at
25°C . For this reason only one batch of mutagenized cells was
grown and sporulated at 25°C; the others were grown and
sporulated at 30°C . Spores were purified and germinated in
liquid by Ca2+-DPA at 42°C (nonpermissive
temperature) for 1 to 2 h as described above, and the mix was
heated at 70°C for 1 h to kill any germinated spores
and then pelleted by centrifugation (2,600 x g, 10
min, 25°C) . In order to separate the spores from the
Ca2+-DPA precipitate that is slowly formed during
germination, we took advantage of the fact that the precipitate of a
1:1 chelate of Ca2+-DPA is soluble in excess DPA
(53) . Therefore, we
treated the germinated spore pellet with 60 mM DPA and washed it twice
by centrifugation with distilled water . The washed spores were then
germinated again with 60 mM Ca2+-DPA at 25°C
(permissive temperature) for 1 h, and the germinated spores
were pelleted by centrifugation, resuspended in PAB medium, and grown
at 25 or 30°C for 24 h . Aliquots of these cells were
then sporulated in liquid 2x SG medium at 25 or 30°C.
The cycle of elimination of spores that germinated at 42°C and
recovery of spores that germinated at 25°C was repeated three
or four times to enrich for spores that germinate with
Ca2+-DPA at the permissive temperature
(25°C) but not at the nonpermissive temperature (42°C).
After the final enrichment, 200 individual colonies from each
independent mutagenesis were screened by the plate assay described
above .
Genetic mapping.
The B . subtilis mapping
strains 1A627 to 1A645 (from the Bacillus Genetic Stock Center
[60]) and phage
PBS1 were used to map our ger mutants as described previously
(44) . Additional B.
subtilis strains (Table
1) were used for the
refined mapping of the mutations . Manipulation of PBS1 was as described
previously (13), and the
number of phage particles was amplified by three cycles of transduction
of each individual B . subtilis mapping
strain .
Complementation
studies.
The transcription
units of wild-type and mutant cwlJ were cloned into plasmid
pDG364, a plasmid that integrates by a double-crossover event at the
B . subtilis amyE locus
(9) . The cwlJ
transcription unit was PCR amplified from either PS832 or KB76
[ger-3b mut76(Ts)] chromosomal DNA with
primers designed to include the promoter (475 bp upstream of the
translation start site), the ORF, and the terminator sequence (85 bp
downstream of the translation stop codon) of cwlJ
(27) . The PCR product was
cloned into plasmid pCR2.1, and the insert was sequenced and recovered
as an EcoRI-BamHI fragment (sites introduced into the
PCR primers) that was inserted between the EcoRI and
BamHI sites of plasmid pDG364, giving plasmids pKE53 and
pKE55, carrying the wild-type and mutant version of cwlJ,
respectively . These plasmids were used to transform B.
subtilis strains to Cmr . Transformants in which the
cwlJ transcriptional unit was integrated at the amyE
locus were identified by their amy phenotype on starch plates
(9) .
Since the
position of the promoter of ywdL was unknown at the time this
work began, the region encompassing 194 bp upstream of the translation
start codon as well as the complete ORF and the region 156 bp
downstream of the translation stop codon of ywdL were PCR
amplified and cloned into plasmid pCR2.1 . The insert was sequenced,
recovered as a HindIII-EcoRI fragment (sites
introduced into the PCR primers), and inserted between the
HindIII and EcoRI sites of plasmid pDG364, giving
plasmid pKE39 . B . subtilis transformants with the
ywdL transcription unit integrated at the amyE locus
were obtained and identified as described
above .
Identification of the
ywdL transcription start site by 5'
RACE-PCR.
The 5'
end of the ywdL mRNA was determined by rapid amplification of
cDNA ends-PCR (5' RACE-PCR)
(21,
51) . Total RNA was
extracted from strains PE436 (sigE+) and
PE437 (sigE) . These strains also had a spoIIID
mutation, and strain PE436 had a spoIIIG mutation to eliminate
G- and
K-dependent gene
expression (49) . Strains
PE436 and PE437 were induced to sporulate in parallel by the
resuspension method (59).
Two and a half hours after resuspension, 25 ml of each culture was
harvested and the pellets were immediately mixed with an equal volume
of methanol at -20°C . After centrifugation for 5 min at
4,000 x g, the RNA was extracted from the cell pellets
by a hot acid-phenol protocol
(18) . Twenty-five
micrograms of RNA was reverse transcribed by using the Superscript
first-strand synthesis system for reverse transcription-PCR
(Invitrogen) in the presence of 70 pmol of a gene-specific primer
located 465 bp downstream of the predicted promoter region . The cDNA
was purified with a QiaQuick purification spin column (Qiagen), a
homopolymeric T-tail was added to the 3' end of the cDNA with
terminal transferase (Roche) according to the instructions of the
manufacturer, and the sample was purified with a QiaQuick column . The
tailed cDNA served as the template for PCR amplification in the
presence of a poly(dA) primer and a second gene-specific primer located
223 bp downstream from the predicted promoter region . The PCR product
was gel purified and sequenced by using a primer located 139 bp
downstream of the predicted promoter . The transcription start site was
defined as the nucleotide immediately preceding the stretch of A
residues complementary to the T tail in the sequence of the PCR
product . The transcription start site obtained for ywdL from
the RNA isolated from strain PE436 is compatible with this mRNA being
transcribed by
E as predicted by a promoter search
approach (15) . In this
approach, the pattern search module of the SubtiList website
(http://genolist.pasteur.fr/Subtilist)
was used to search the region upstream of ywdL for motifs
similar to the defined consensus for
E
(25) . No ywdL
mRNA was identified in RNA isolated from strain PE437
(sigE) .
Spore titers and DPA
assay.
Spore DPA content
was assayed as described previously
(41,
55) . Spore titers were
determined as described previously
(46) to determine the
number of spores that can form colonies on LB medium agar plates.
Briefly, spores at an OD600 of 1 in water were heat
activated (70°C, 30 min), and 10-µl aliquots of serial
dilutions of spores in water were spotted on LB agar plates . The CFU
were counted after overnight incubation at
30°C .
Spore resistance to sodium
hypochlorite and lysozyme.
B . subtilis spores at an
OD600 of 1 were treated at room temperature with
0.25% sodium hypochlorite (pH 11.5) in distilled water.
Reactions were stopped at different times by the addition of 1%
sodium thiosulfate, and aliquots of serial dilutions in water were
spotted on LB agar plates to determine the number of the survivors as
described above .
B . subtilis spores at an
OD600 of 1 were treated with lysozyme (1 mg/ml) in buffer
(20 mM Tris-HCl [pH 8.0], 300 mM NaCl) and incubated at
37°C for 20 min . Aliquots of serial dilutions in water were
then spotted on LB agar plates to determine the number of survivors as
described above .
Microscopy and
photography.
For the
YwdL-green fluorescent protein (GFP) localization experiments,
sporulating cells and dormant spores were viewed with a BX40 microscope
(Olympus, New Hyde Park, N.Y.) equipped with an Endow GFP filter
(Chroma Technology Corp.) . Images were taken with an Olympus Plan
phase-contrast objective (magnification, x100; numerical
aperture, 1.25) and captured with a Magna-Fire digital camera
(Optronics International, Chelmsford, Mass.) . Images were processed
with Photoshop 3.0 (Adobe, Mountain View,
Calif.) .
Spore decoating and spore
protein extraction and detection.
Spores were decoated by treatment for
30 min at 70°C with 0.1 M NaCl-0.1 M
NaOH-1% sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)-0.1 M
dithiothreitol, and the treated spores were washed as described
previously (42,
61) .
For CwlJ-His
tag detection,
12 mg (dry weight) of spores was dry ruptured
(18 times for 30 s each at 30-s intervals) with 100 mg of
glass beads in a dental amalgamator (Wig-L-Bug) . Soluble proteins were
extracted with 50 mM HEPES (pH 7.5)-5 mM EDTA-1 mM
phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride for 30 min on ice, followed by a 5-min
centrifugation (13,000 x g, 12°C) as
previously described (5).
Both the supernatant (soluble fraction) and the pellet (insoluble
fraction) were assayed for the presence of the CwlJ-His tag by Western
blot analysis with anti-His tag antibodies (Novagen) as described
previously (5) . The
CwlJ-His tag protein has been shown to be fully functional and is in
the insoluble fraction of spore extracts
(5) .
For detection
of the different YwdL-GFP products,
50 mg (dry weight) of
sporulating cells was collected and lyophilized 4 h after
initiation of sporulation by resuspension
(59) . The cells were dry
ruptured, and the soluble proteins were extracted in 400 µl of
the extraction buffer described above . Both the soluble and insoluble
fractions were suspended in 1x sample buffer
(23), boiled for 15 min,
and separated by SDS-12.5% polyacrylamide gel
electrophoresis, and the proteins were transferred to an Immobilon-P
membrane (Millipore)
(23) . The YwdL-GFP
products were detected with a 1:5,000 dilution of anti-GFP polyclonal
antibodies (Molecular Probes) and a 1:10,000 dilution of goat
anti-rabbit immunoglobulin G-alkaline phosphatase conjugate
(Southern Biotechnology Associates) as described previously
(23) .
Other
methods.
Cells were
extracted for ß-galactosidase assays as described previously
(41).
ß-Galactosidase was assayed with the use of either
o-nitrophenyl-ß-D-galactoside (4
mg/ml) or
4-methylumbelliferyl-ß-D-galactopyranoside
(50 µg/ml) as the substrate, as described previously
(41);
ß-galactosidase specific activities were expressed in Miller
units for
o-nitrophenyl-ß-D-galactoside
hydrolysis (36) or in
picomoles per milliliter · minute · OD600 unit
for
4-methylumbelliferyl-ß-D-galactopyranoside
hydrolysis
(41) .
Complete
sequences of cwlJ and ywdL from the genomes of
Bacillus anthracis strain A2012, Bacillus cereus,
Bacillus halodurans, and Bacillus stearothermophilus
were downloaded from the National Center for Biotechnology Information
website
(http://www.ncbi.nih.gov)
as DNA sequences in contigs and then translated to the predicted
protein sequences by DNA Strider . Protein sequence alignments were done
with ClustalW
(http://www.ebi.ac.uk/clustalw) .
Isolation
of mutants defective in Ca2+-DPA-induced spore
germination.
Although
germination of B . subtilis spores is commonly triggered by
nutrients, these spores can also be germinated by other agents, in
particular Ca2+-DPA . While spores that lack the
cortex lytic enzyme CwlJ germinate relatively normally with nutrients,
they can no longer germinate with Ca2+-DPA
(42) . Indeed it appears
that Ca2+-DPA released from the dormant spore soon
after nutrient addition normally activates CwlJ and hence triggers
cortex hydrolysis (42).
While CwlJ is clearly needed for Ca2+-DPA-triggered
spore germination, it is not clear if other proteins are also required
for this process . Consequently, we initiated a genetic screen to
identify proteins other than CwlJ that might be involved in spore
germination triggered by Ca2+-DPA .
Since our
genetic screen aimed to isolate mutant spores that fail to germinate
only with Ca2+-DPA, we used B . subtilis
strains (termed ger-3 strains) that lack all of the
functional nutrient germinant receptors and consequently can germinate
only with Ca2+-DPA
(46) . Vegetative cells of
either the ger-3a or ger-3b strains
were mutagenized with EMS at a concentration of 1.5, 1.8, or
2.7%; the percentages of cell killing were 32, 87.5, and
95%, respectively, for the three EMS concentrations tested, and
4 to 50% of the survivors had mutations giving rise to either
auxotrophy or asporogeny . The mutagenized cells were then enriched for
mutant spores that were unable to germinate with
Ca2+-DPA at a nonpermissive temperature
(42°C) but were able to germinate with
Ca2+-DPA at a permissive temperature (25°C),
as described in Materials and Methods . Screening of the final enriched
mutant spore population with a plate assay identified five mutants
whose spores reduced a tetrazolium dye at the permissive temperature in
the presence of Ca2+-DPA, an indication of
successful spore germination, but failed to do so at the nonpermissive
temperature . Analyses by phase-contrast microscopy further indicated
that spores that failed to reduce the dye during
Ca2+-DPA treatment remained bright while spores that
reduced the dye appeared dark and swollen and thus had germinated . The
spores of three mutants failed to germinate significantly at both
temperatures . Presumably, these spores were recovered through the
enrichment cycles by their low level of spontaneous germination, since
even spores lacking all nutrient receptors exhibit a low frequency of
spontaneous germination in nutrients
(46) . The sporulated
colonies of the putative ger mutants were picked from a
replica plate, resuspended in water, and heat treated at 70°C
for 30 min to kill any vegetative cells, and the spores were germinated
by Ca2+-DPA at the permissive temperature, plated on
nutrient agar, and left to grow at the permissive temperature . As
expected, the spores of the five temperature-sensitive mutants gave
rise to viable cells at the permissive temperature . In contrast, the
spores of the three mutants that did not germinate with
Ca2+-DPA at either temperature gave rise to viable
colonies on nutrient agar at only a very low frequency, consistent with
spontaneous germination ( 0.1% of input spores)
(46) . The mutants that
were recovered were then grown further and sporulated at both the
permissive temperature and 37°C, the temperature that is
routinely used for sporulation of B . subtilis in the
laboratory . Four of the temperature-sensitive and one of the absolute
Ca2+-DPA ger mutants sporulated poorly at
37°C and were not considered further . The remaining three
mutants [mut-5, mut-16, and
mut-76(Ts) mutants] grew and sporulated normally
at 37°C . Mutations mut-5 and
mut-16 were further transferred to the wild-type
strain PS832 by congression, giving strains KB1
(mut-5) and KB2 (mut-16
yndDEF) . The spores of the congressant strains and
the temperature-sensitive mutant
[mut-76(Ts)] readily exhibited their
ger phenotype in the plate assay (Fig.
1) .
|
FIG . 1 . Germination
of spores with Ca2+-DPA at 42 and 25°C as
determined by the plate assay . Well-sporulated colonies were
transferred onto a filter paper and incubated with
Ca2+-DPA, glucose, and a tetrazolium dye at either
42 or 25°C as described in Materials and Methods . Colonies of
germinated spores appear red, due to their ability to carry out
metabolism and reduce the tetrazolium dye, while colonies of dormant
spores appear brown, because they do not reduce the dye . Horizontal
rows of colonies (numbered in the center) are from the following
strains: 1, PS832 (wild type); 2, KB1 (mut-5); 3, KB2
(mut-16
yndDEF); 4, KB76
[ger-3b mut-76(Ts)]; 5, KB29
( ywdL); and 6, FB111 ( cwlJ) . Note
that
cwlJ spores do not germinate with
Ca2+-DPA at either
temperature.
|
|
Mapping of the ger
mutations.
We determined the
linkage between the ger mutations in strain KB1, strain KB2,
and the temperature-sensitive mutant KB76 [ger-3b
mut-76(Ts)] and the antibiotic resistance markers in
the mapping strains by phage-mediated generalized transduction . Phage
PBS1 was initially used to infect the mapping strains, each of which
carries a selectable antibiotic marker at a specific locus in the
B . subtilis genome . The PBS1 transducing lysates were then
used to transduce the various ger strains to antibiotic
resistance, and spores from the antibiotic-resistant transductants were
tested by the plate assay for the acquisition of the wild-type spore
germination phenotype .
We obtained 20% cotransduction of
the wild-type alleles of the ger mutations in strains KB1 and
KB2 with the MLS resistance marker located at 342° in the
chromosome of the mapping strain 1A645 . The frequency of cotransduction
increased with the use of strains KB12 (katX-lacZ
cat) and KB9 (ywhE-lacZ cat), reaching
100% with the use of strain KB8 (ywdL-cat),
indicating a close linkage of the ger mutations in strains KB1
and KB2 to a locus around or in the ywdL gene . There was no
cotransduction between the ger mutations and the
Spr marker in strain PS2355
( sspF::spc) . For refined
mapping, chromosomal DNAs from strains KB8, KB18
(spsA::ermC), and KB25
(spsL::spc) were used to
transform strain KB2 to antibiotic resistance . One hundred of the
transformants were sporulated and tested for germination by
Ca2+-DPA . The cotransformation frequencies for the
ger mutation from strain KB2 were 99% with the
Cmr marker in ywdL, 92% with the
MLSr marker in spsA, and 32% with the
Spr marker in spsL (data not shown), indicating
that the ger mutation in strain KB2 lies very close to
ywdL . These cotransformation frequencies are consistent with
the location of ywdL 300 bp away from spsA and 10 kb
away from spsL .
We obtained 72% cotransduction
between the temperature-sensitive ger mutation in strain KB76
[ger-3b mut-76(Ts)] and the
antibiotic marker at the amyE locus 45 kb from cwlJ
in strain KB11 (amyE::ermC) . This
value is similar to the frequency of cotransduction obtained between
the antibiotic marker at the amyE locus and the antibiotic
marker in cwlJ when strain FB111 ( cwlJ) was
infected with a phage lysate from strain KB11 (data not
shown) .
Identification of
Ca2+-DPA ger mutations in cwlJ and
ywdL.
Since the
mapping experiments had localized the temperature-sensitive
ger mutation close to or in cwlJ and the other two
ger mutations close to or in ywdL, we PCR amplified
the regions encompassing each gene from both the parental (PS832) and
mutant (KB1, KB2, and KB76) strains . Two independent PCR amplifications
were performed for each mutant and parental DNA, and each PCR product
was sequenced in duplicate to minimize the possibility of errors during
PCR or DNA sequencing .
The cwlJ allele in strain KB76
differed from the parental gene in a G-to-A transition that changed an
aspartate residue (D) to asparagine (N) at position 47 of the
cwlJ ORF [D47 (GAT) N (AAT)]
(data not shown) . This residue is aspartate in CwlJ homologs from
B . anthracis, B . cereus, B . halodurans, and
B . stearothermophilus . To confirm that this change alone was
responsible for the temperature-sensitive spore germination phenotype
of strain KB76, the transcription unit of cwlJ from strain
KB76 was inserted at the amyE locus of strain FB111
( cwlJ), giving strain KB57, in which the only copy of
cwlJ is that from the mut-76(Ts) isolate.
The germination phenotype of spores of strain KB57
[ cwlJ cwlJ76(Ts)] with
Ca2+-DPA was temperature sensitive as tested by the
plate assay (data not shown), indicating that the point mutation giving
the D47N change in CwlJ is sufficient to render spores temperature
sensitive for germination by Ca2+-DPA.
Interestingly, we transferred the cwlJ76(Ts) mutation into the
wild-type strain PS832, thus creating a merodiploid (strain KB56) in
which both wild-type and mutant forms of CwlJ are present . Spores of
the merodiploid strain did germinate with Ca2+-DPA
at 42°C as tested by the plate assay, but the overall process
was much slower than that of the wild-type spores under the same
conditions (data not shown) . This result indicates that the
temperature-sensitive CwlJ is interfering with the function of the
wild-type protein and suggests that functional CwlJ may be oligomeric.
Indeed, recent work suggests that CwlJ may be at least dimeric
(8) . Both the mutant and
wild-type versions of CwlJ from our laboratory strain PS832 differed
from the published cwlJ sequence
(http://genolist.pasteur.fr/SubtiList/)
in the presence of an arginine residue at position 86 instead of
glycine [R86 (CGG) instead of G86
(GGC)] (data not shown) . This residue is also an arginine in the
CwlJ homologs from B . cereus, B . anthracis, and
B . halodurans and is a glutamine in B.
stearothermophilus, and this difference is not a result of our
mutagenesis .
Strains KB1 (mut-5) and KB2
(mut-16
yndDEF) were found to carry
mutations in the coding sequence of ywdL . In
mut-5 a C-to-T change at position 39 of YwdL resulted
in a nonsense codon early in the ORF [Gln39
(CAG) stop codon (TAG)], and in mut-16 a
G-to-A change at position 123 of YwdL resulted in a nonsense mutation
midway in the ORF [Trp123 (TGG) stop codon
(TAG)] (Fig.
2) . The mut-5 and mut-16 mutations will
be subsequently referred to as ywdL5 and ywdL16 . The
ger phenotype of spores of the ywdL5 and
ywdL16 mutants was duplicated by deletion of the majority of
the coding region of ywdL and its replacement with an
Spr cassette in strain KB29 . This
ywdL
strain grew and sporulated normally, but the spores were not able to
germinate with Ca2+-DPA as tested by both the plate
assay and phase-contrast microscopy (Fig.
1 and data not shown) . In
addition, the Ca2+-DPA-induced germination of spores
carrying the ywdL5 and ywdL16 mutations was restored
to wild type when the KB1 and KB2 strains were complemented with a DNA
fragment containing the putative promoter and ORF of ywdL
(data not shown) (Fig . 2).
These results confirm that the mutations in isolates KB5
(ger-3b mut-5) and KB16 (ger-3a
mut-16) are in ywdL and indicate that spores
lacking ywdL do not germinate with
Ca2+-DPA .
Role of YwdL
in spore germination.
It is
clear from the results presented above that YwdL is essential for spore
germination triggered by Ca2+-DPA . The obvious
question that arises is whether YwdL also plays a role in spore
germination triggered by nutrients . To answer this question, spores of
various ywdL mutant strains were incubated with nutrients and
their germination was measured by monitoring the change in
OD600 . With wild-type spores there is normally a fall of
50% in the OD600 during the initial minutes
of incubation as a result of changes that occur early in spore
germination, in particular, DPA release and spore core expansion due to
cortex hydrolysis and water uptake
(47,
56) . The increase in the
OD600 at later time points in such incubations is due to
spore outgrowth eventually leading to vegetative growth . The ability of
the spores to hydrolyze their cortex and ultimately give rise to viable
cells in response to nutrients can be further estimated by measurement
of their ability to form colonies on nutrient agar plates . These
analyses (Fig.
3A; Table 2) indicated that
spores with
mutations in ywdL were able to germinate relatively normally in
nutrients, although slightly slower than wild-type spores .
|
TABLE 2 . Germination
of spores of various strains with nutrients and
Ca2+-DPA
|
|
Since
it is only the Ca2+-DPA-induced germination that is
affected in ywdL mutants, and knowing that one protein
essential for Ca2+-DPA germination is CwlJ
(42), an obvious
possibility is that YwdL is required in some fashion for the function
of CwlJ . In an early experiment mutants KB2 and FB111
( cwlJ) were transformed with the cwlJ
transcription unit and tested for their germination with
Ca2+-DPA . Although spores of FB111 were complemented
by cwlJ and did germinate with Ca2+-DPA,
KB2 spores were not complemented and did not germinate with
Ca2+-DPA as tested by the plate assay (data not
shown) . This indicated that the extra wild-type copy of cwlJ
did not rescue the phenotype of ywdL16 mutant spores and
therefore that mutations in ywdL likely affect the function of
CwlJ . To determine whether YwdL is acting through CwlJ, we first
examined the effect of ywdL mutations on spore germination by
nutrients when the only active cortex lytic enzyme present is CwlJ . For
this purpose we introduced a sleB mutation into ywdL
mutant strains . As found previously, sleB spores germinated
normally in nutrients, and the percentage of these spores forming
viable colonies on nutrient agar plates was similar to that of
wild-type spores, indicating that cortex hydrolysis in sleB
spores can be completed (Fig.
3B; Table
2) . However, spores from
the sleB
ywdL strain behaved like spores of
the cwlJ sleB strain, which previously have been shown to go
through the initial stages of germination
(27,
56) but are unable to
hydrolyze their cortex and hence do not give rise to viable colonies on
nutrient agar plates (Fig.
3B; Table
2) . Spores of both the
sleB
ywdL and cwlJ sleB strains
showed similar changes in OD600 during incubation with
nutrients and gave a very low frequency of viable colonies on nutrient
agar plates (Fig . 3B;
Table 2) . The spore DPA
content and its release during germination were similar for wild-type,
cwlJ sleB, and sleB
ywdL spores,
suggesting that it is at the step of cortex hydrolysis that germination
of sleB
ywdL spores is arrested, as has been
shown to be the case for cwlJ sleB spores
(27,
56) (data not shown) . We
obtained the same results for sleB ywdL5 and sleB
ywdL16 spores (Table
2), suggesting that the
premature stop codon in ywdL5 and ywdL16 results in a
ywdL phenotype . From these results it is evident that
in the absence of YwdL, CwlJ is not functioning . This is why
ywdL spores are unable to germinate fully under those
conditions when CwlJ is absolutely essential, namely, germination with
exogenous Ca2+-DPA or with nutrients when SleB is
not present to carry out cortex
hydrolysis .
Localization of CwlJ and coat
structural integrity in ywdL spores.
The results given above indicated that
ywdL mutations act by eliminating CwlJ function . Previous work
has shown that cwlJ is expressed in the mother cell
compartment of the sporulating cell under the control of the
sporulation-specific sigma factor for RNA polymerase,
E
(15,
27) . It was thus formally
possible that YwdL is required in some fashion for expression of
cwlJ . To test this possibility, we constructed a translational
cwlJ-lacZ fusion and measured the
ß-galactosidase specific activity in sporulating cells of
strains KB65 (cwlJ-lacZ) and KB66
(cwlJ-lacZ ywdL) . We found no effect on cwlJ
expression when YwdL was absent (data not shown), indicating that YwdL
might be required either for CwlJ activity directly or for CwlJ
localization or stability in the spore coats . To test whether CwlJ is
localized normally in spores in the absence of YwdL, extracts were
prepared from spores also carrying a functional His-tagged CwlJ in
either wild-type,
ywdL, or ywdL16 strains,
and the extracts were analyzed for the CwlJ-His tag by Western blot
analysis . While the CwlJ-His tag protein was readily detected in
wild-type spore extracts (Fig.
4, lanes 1), we were unable to detect this protein in spores with the
ywdL and ywdL16 mutations or in wild-type
spores lacking the cwlJ-His tag fusion (Fig.
4, lanes 2, 3, and 4) . The
CwlJ-His tag protein was also absent from both the soluble and
insoluble fraction of the ywdL spore extracts (Fig.
4, lanes 2 and 4, and data
not shown) . The absence of CwlJ from ywdL spores explains why
they are unable to germinate with Ca2+-DPA, since
CwlJ is required for this process . The lack of germination of sleB
ywdL spores in nutrients is also consistent with the absence of
CwlJ from these spores .
The finding that ywdL spores
lack CwlJ and the knowledge that CwlJ is a coat protein
(5,
8) suggest that
ywdL spores may have a general spore coat defect . One such
general defect is caused by the lack of the coat morphogenetic protein
CotE; when CotE is absent, the assembly of the spore's outer coat
is perturbed (64).
Indeed, levels of CwlJ are greatly reduced in cotE spores
(5) . To test the integrity
of the coats in spores of various strains, spores of wild-type,
ywdL5, ywdL16,
ywdL, and
cotE strains were treated with either lysozyme or sodium
hypochlorite . Spores that lack the major coat morphogenetic protein
CotE are killed rapidly by treatment with either lysozyme
(64) or sodium
hypochlorite (S . B . Young and P . Setlow, unpublished data).
However, the spores of all ywdL mutants exhibited resistance
to both lysozyme and sodium hypochlorite that was essentially identical
to that of wild-type spores, while cotE spores were much more
sensitive, as expected (data not shown) . Treatment of spores with
sodium hypochlorite was done for both short and longer time periods (2
to 60 min), and both ywdL and wild-type spores showed similar
levels of survival (data not shown) . These data indicate that the
ywdL mutations do not cause a gross defect in spore coat
assembly as does a cotE
mutation .
Expression of ywdL
during sporulation.
Since
ywdL mutations affect the level of CwlJ in dormant spores and
CwlJ is a coat protein, an obvious suggestion is that YwdL itself is a
spore coat protein . To examine this possibility, we first measured
ywdL expression during growth and sporulation by using a
translational ywdL-lacZ fusion . The expression of
ß-galactosidase from this fusion was absent in vegetative
cells, and it began at the second hour in sporulation, reaching maximum
levels at the fourth hour (Fig.
5A) . The level of expression was exceptionally high, reaching a peak
specific activity of 1,600 Miller units before falling (Fig.
5A) . The fall in
ß-galactosidase specific activity could be due either to the
inactivation of the enzyme when it is no longer synthesized or to its
synthesis in the forespore and subsequent sequestering in the dormant
spore, where ß-galactosidase cannot be assayed without removing
the spore coats (35).
Since there was no ß-galactosidase activity in decoated spores
of the ywdL-lacZ strain (data not shown), the enzyme
is likely not synthesized in the forespore and inactivation of the
enzyme is the most probable reason for the fall in its specific
activity . Analysis of the RNA polymerase sigma factor dependence of
ywdL expression indicated that ywdL expression was
abolished when either the
F or
E transcription factor was absent (Fig.
5B) . However, when either
G or
K was absent,
ywdL expression continued for longer than in the wild-type
strain (Fig . 5B), perhaps
due to the loss of regulation when
G or
K is absent . Since
E activity
depends on the function of
F, but not vice versa
(49), these data indicate
that the transcription of ywdL depends on
E . This further indicates that ywdL is
expressed only in the mother cell compartment of the sporulating cell.
In agreement with these studies, a microarray analysis of the
transcriptional profile during sporulation of wild-type and
sigE strains also indicates that ywdL is a member of
the
E regulon
(15) .
Localization
of YwdL in dormant spores.
Having established that ywdL
is expressed during sporulation, we next asked whether YwdL is present
in the dormant spores or whether it functions during sporulation
without being a spore structural component . To answer this question we
studied the localization of the GFP from Aequoria victoria
fused to YwdL . The YwdL-GFP construct was inserted in the B.
subtilis chromosome such that YwdL-GFP is the only copy of YwdL
that is expressed (see Materials and Methods) . Midway in sporulation,
the YwdL-GFP appeared as a bright dot adjacent to the developing spore
(Fig . 6A and
B), while at later times the protein appeared to be around the spore's
periphery (Fig . 6B and C).
No confocal microscopy was done to definitely establish if YwdL-GFP is
localized in a complete shell around the spore . The peripheral
localization of YwdL-GFP was also seen in the majority of the dormant
spores after their release and the mother cell lysis, as 70% of
the dormant spores were surrounded by YwdL-GFP, although in a
significant number (30%) YwdL-GFP appeared as a bright dot
instead (data not shown) . The latter spores could have a mislocalized
YwdL, as the YwdL-GFP may not be fully functional . To test whether
YwdL-GFP functions normally, we moved the ywdL-gfp
fusion to a sleB strain and tested the germination of the
resultant spores in nutrients . If YwdL-GFP was nonfunctional, we
expected a phenotype similar to that of a sleB ywdL strain
(Table 2; Fig.
3) . However, while
sleB ywdL spores exhibited <0.01% of the CFU of
wild-type spores in nutrients, sleB ywdL-gfp spores
had only a 10-fold decrease in their CFU in nutrients (Table
2) . The localization of
YwdL-GFP in sleB spores was also essentially identical to that
observed in the wild-type spores (data not shown) . Presumably the
spores from the sleB ywdL-gfp population that did not
germinate in nutrients have a mislocalized YwdL-GFP and thus a
nonfunctional CwlJ; however, this is only speculation at present . We
also observed by phase-contrast microscopy that none
(<1%) of the sleB ywdL-gfp spores
germinated with exogenous Ca+2-DPA (Table
2) . Together, these
results suggest that since there is some YwdL function observed in
sleB ywdL-gfp spores, at least some YwdL-GFP is
functional .
To further test the localization pattern of YwdL in
the ywdL16 mutant, where at most only the first 122 amino
acids (aa) of the protein are expressed, we made a construct in which
gfp is fused to only that part of YwdL . In contrast to the
specific localization we observed when the complete YwdL was fused to
GFP, with this truncated YwdL-GFP fusion the GFP fluorescence was
uniformly distributed in the cytoplasm of the mother cell compartment
during sporulation (data not shown) . To check whether the GFP moiety
was indeed linked to the truncated YwdL, we analyzed the sizes of these
proteins by Western blot analysis with anti-GFP antibodies as described
in Materials and Methods, and both the complete and 122-aa YwdL were
indeed linked to GFP (data not shown) . A control strain that was made
with just the first 3 aa of YwdL fused to GFP also gave the same
uniform mother cell distribution during sporulation (data not shown),
as expected . These results indicate that while the complete YwdL is
specifically associated with the developing forespore during
sporulation, the truncated protein from the ywdL16 mutant is
not .
Results from both the gene expression and YwdL-GFP
localization studies indicate that YwdL is specifically expressed
during sporulation, is found in the dormant spores, and is likely a
coat protein . Examination of YwdL-GFP in germinated spores gave a
localization pattern generally similar to that observed in dormant
spores, although germinated spores are swollen due to core expansion
and cortex hydrolysis (Fig.
6D, E, and F) . We also
observed a number of outgrowing ywdL-gfp spores in
which the YwdL-GFP was localized in the remnants of the spore coats
that have cracked open and are in the process of being shed (Fig.
6D and F) . These results
further support the assignment of YwdL as a spore coat
protein .
Dependence of YwdL localization
on other spore coat proteins.
The results given above indicate that
YwdL is somehow involved in the assembly, localization, or stability of
CwlJ and further that YwdL is a spore coat protein itself . An obvious
question concerns the dependence of YwdL localization on other proteins
important in spore coat morphogenesis . Consequently, we studied the
localization pattern of YwdL-GFP in the absence of either of two
proteins (CotE and SpoIVA) that are known to have dramatic effects on
the assembly of the spore coat
(10) . SpoIVA is essential
for the anchorage of the coats on the forespore
(54) . Sporulating cells
of a spoIVA null mutant fail to synthesize a cortex, and the
coat is misassembled as swirls within the mother cell rather than being
deposited on the outside surface of the forespore
(54) . CotE is essential
for the assembly of mostly proteins that form the outer spore coat as
well as a few proteins of the inner spore coat
(10) . Midway during
sporulation of the spoIVA ywdL-gfp strain, instead of
one bright dot next to the forespore we observed multiple dots
distributed throughout the mother cell cytoplasm but not adjacent to
the developing spore (Fig.
6I) . This result is
consistent with SpoIVA being needed for YwdL assembly on the spore
coat, as in the absence of SpoIVA, any coat protein is expected to be
distributed throughout the mother cell compartment
(54) . Three hours after
the onset of cotE ywdL-gfp sporulation, we observed a
bright dot next to the forespore as seen in the wild-type strain (Fig.
6G) . However, 7
h after the onset of cotE ywdL-gfp sporulation,
YwdL-GFP was often diffuse in the mother cell cytoplasm instead of
localizing around the periphery of the forespore (Fig.
6H) . This result indicates
that CotE is also required for YwdL-GFP localization on the periphery
of the spore .
Since localization of CwlJ in the dormant spores
depends on CotE (5) as
well as YwdL, we also checked YwdL-GFP localization in sporulating
cells of the cwlJ ywdL-gfp strain . We found no
difference in YwdL-GFP localization from that observed in the spores of
the wild-type ywdL-gfp strain (data not shown) . This
finding indicates that CwlJ is not required for localization of YwdL in
the spore coat .
In our search
for proteins that are involved in the germination of B.
subtilis spores with Ca2+-DPA, we isolated
mutants that no longer respond to this chemical and therefore cannot
germinate and generate viable cells . We isolated three mutations that
identified two genes that are essential for spore germination with
Ca2+-DPA . One mutation that resulted in
temperature-sensitive germination with Ca2+-DPA was
due to a change of a conserved aspartate residue to asparagine in the
cortex lytic enzyme CwlJ . Previous work has shown that endogenous DPA
released during spore germination activates CwlJ, providing a link
between the germination signal being received by the germinant
receptors and the cortex hydrolysis that follows
(42) . Since spore
germination can be triggered by exogenous DPA as well, we reasoned that
CwlJ is in a location accessible by exogenous DPA . Indeed, previous
studies have shown that CwlJ is localized in the spore coats
(5,
8) . However, we still do
not know if there is some receptor for Ca2+-DPA that
might interact with CwlJ, and we also have not established whether the
mutation we found in CwlJ affects its catalytic function during cortex
hydrolysis or its activation by Ca2+-DPA .
The
other two mutations identified an additional component essential for
Ca2+-DPA-induced germination, the protein of
hitherto-unknown function termed YwdL . The role of YwdL in spore
germination appears to be due to its importance in ensuring the
presence of CwlJ in the spore coats . However, it is not yet clear how
YwdL functions in this process . YwdL might serve as an anchor for CwlJ
in the coats, might form some sort of a chaperone ensuring CwlJ
assembly in the coats, or might even protect CwlJ from degradation by
the large amount of proteases present in the sporulation medium, which
potentially have access to CwlJ after mother cell lysis . This last
point could be addressed in the future by examining total CwlJ levels
in ywdL strains prior to and after mother cell
lysis .
YwdL and CwlJ are synthesized in the same compartment of
the sporulating cell, at about the same time in sporulation
(15,
27; this work) . Their
coding genes are also transcribed by RNA polymerase with the same sigma
factor . While these two genes are well separated on the B.
subtilis chromosome, they appear to be in an operon in other
Bacillus species whose genomes have been sequenced . This is
further evidence, albeit circumstantial, for some functional
relationship between the products of these genes . Interestingly, the
other B . subtilis spore cortex lytic enzyme, SleB, is also
encoded by a gene in a bicistronic operon, with the gene following
sleB, termed ypeB, again encoding a protein that is
essential for either the localization or stabilization of SleB in the
spore (8) .
Although
YwdL is needed in some way for the presence of CwlJ in the spore coats,
YwdL is not a major coat morphogenetic protein like CotE or SpoIVA;
ywdL spores are not lysozyme or hypochlorite sensitive, and
there was no change in the levels of detectable coat proteins extracted
from wild-type and ywdL spores (K . Ragkousi, A . Driks, and P.
Setlow, unpublished data) . The localization of SleB, which has also
been suggested to be in or adjacent to the spore coats
(8,
40), is also not affected
in ywdL spores, since this enzyme is still functional.
However, it is possible that some coat defect may become evident in
ywdL spores upon further analysis .
The primary amino
acid sequence of YwdL is highly conserved among Bacillus
species, especially in the carboxy-terminal region (Fig.
7) . Although there is little amino acid homology at the amino terminus,
there is a high content of glutamine, glycine, and proline residues
present in this part of the protein in all Bacillus species
(Fig . 7) . However, the
amino acid sequence of this part of the protein gives no clear
indication of its functional significance .
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FIG . 7 . Protein
sequence alignment of YwdL from various Bacillus species.
Asterisks below the aligned sequences indicate identical residues in
that column, double dots indicate well conserved residues, and single
dots indicate poorly conserved residues (as determined from
the ClustalW website) . The residues that were altered in
strains KB1 and KB2 (Gln39 and Trp123,
respectively) are in boldface in the B . subtilis sequence . No
homologs of YwdL were found in Clostridium species
(15).
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Interestingly, while
endogenous Ca2+-DPA can activate the germination of
ywdL-gfp spores, indicating normal CwlJ function,
exogenous Ca2+-DPA cannot . Unfortunately, we do not
know the precise details of CwlJ localization in the spore coats and
its activation by Ca2+-DPA . Consequently, it is not
clear why the fusion of the carboxy-terminal region of YwdL to GFP
interferes with CwlJ activation by exogenous
Ca+2-DPA . However, since the ywdL16 mutant
does not germinate with Ca2+-DPA and does not
contain CwlJ and GFP fused to this truncated YwdL does not localize
properly during sporulation, presumably some or all of the 59 aa at the
carboxy terminus of YwdL are essential for its proper localization and
hence the proper localization of CwlJ as well .
An interesting
feature of YwdL is its localization pattern during sporulation.
Initially, YwdL-GFP is assembled in a dot adjacent to the forespore . A
similar pattern has been observed with the coat morphogenetic proteins
CotE and SpoIVA, although the latter proteins appear to localize
initially in arc-like structures adjacent to the forespore
(11,
52) . In the absence of
CotE, YwdL-GFP is initially targeted to the forespore but does not
assemble around the spore . In the absence of SpoIVA, however, YwdL-GFP
is not even targeted adjacent to the forespore . These results fit well
with the model in which SpoIVA localizes and attaches the precoat to
the forespore before CotE assembles itself and other proteins into the
mature coat
(10) .
Both CwlJ and
YwdL seem to be outer coat proteins, since both depend on the presence
of CotE for their localization, although some inner coat proteins are
CotE dependent (10) . If
the levels of the translational fusion of ywdL to
ß-galactosidase are indicative of the protein levels in the
cell, we would expect YwdL to be a highly abundant protein . However,
until recently YwdL has not been identified in coat protein extracts.
YwdL has been recently identified in a proteomic study
(30), but it appears to
be at most a minor coat protein, which is at odds with the very high
level of expression of ywdL-lacZ . One possibility is
that the great majority of YwdL in the spore is in that fraction of
spore coat protein that cannot be extracted . Approximately 30%
of total coat protein is not extracted by procedures using alkali,
detergents, or both (63).
The reasons for the formation of this insoluble coat fraction are not
clear, although both dityrosine cross-links and isopeptide bonds
involving glutamine residues via transglutaminases have been suggested
to contribute to the formation of a protein complex that is difficult
to solubilize (10) . It is
notable that YwdL has a high content of both glutamine and tyrosine
residues (Fig . 7) . We have
also found that ywdL-gfp spores retain their YwdL-GFP
after decoating as seen in the fluorescence microscope (K . Ragkousi and
P . Setlow, unpublished data) .
Whatever the location of YwdL in
the spore coats, it is clear that this protein has an effect on spore
germination . Because of the significant role of YwdL in a part of the
spore germination process, we propose the renaming of this protein as a
Ger protein, GerQ, with the coding gene being renamed gerQ.
Other spore coat proteins are also involved in spore germination in
some fashion . Thus, gerE spores, which do not make a number of
coat proteins and appear to have defective coats are severely impaired
in their germination
(37) . In addition, GerP
proteins play a role in germination by enabling the access of
germinants to their receptors localized in the spore's inner
membrane (6) . While coat
proteins could be involved in spore germination in distinct ways, it is
still unclear how a protein such as CwlJ that is localized in the coat,
a layer separated from the cortex by the outer spore membrane, is able
to hydrolyze the cortex peptidoglycan . Perhaps the outer membrane is
not complete (12) and the
cortex is normally accessible to coat proteins such as CwlJ, which are
only activated by signals following the release of DPA . Another
possibility is that DPA release from the spore core alters the cortex
structure in some fashion
(47) such that it bulges
into the coat area where it becomes exposed to the cortex lytic
enzymes . Clearly, understanding of how the spore coats are involved in
spore germination has only just begun to take
shape .
We are grateful to Madan
Paidhungat and Irina Bagyan for advice and strains, to Glenn King for
the use of the fluorescence microscope, to Susan Young for advice on
the sodium hypochlorite assay, to Scott Robson for scanning the
tetrazolium assay filters, and to Adam Driks for discussions . We also
appreciate the comments of Madan Paidhungat and Richard Losick on the
manuscript .
This work was supported by grants from the NIH to
P.S . (GM19698), R.L . (GM18568), and C.V.O . (GM20165) and by a
postdoctoral fellowship from the Human Frontier Science Program and the
Swiss National Science Foundation to P.E . Preliminary genomic sequence
data for B . anthracis and B . cereus were made
available by the Institute for Genomic Research, where work was
supported by the Office of Naval Research, the Department of Energy,
the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Disease, and the
National Institutes of Health . B . stearothermophilus sequence
data were obtained from the University of Oklahoma Advanced Center for
Genome Research, where work was funded by an EPSCoR grant from the
National Science
Foundation .
* Corresponding
author . Mailing address: Department of Biochemistry, University of
Connecticut Health Center, 263 Farmington Ave., Farmington, CT 06032.
Phone: (860) 679-2607 . Fax: (860) 679-3408 . E-mail:
setlow{at}sun.uchc.edu .
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