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Journal of Bacteriology, January 2004, p . 248-252, Vol . 186,
No . 1
Transcriptome Analysis of the Response of Pseudomonas aeruginosa to
Hydrogen Peroxide
Marco Palma,1 Darrow DeLuca,1 Stefan Worgall,2
and Luis E . N . Quadri1*
Department of Microbiology and Immunology,1 Department of Genetic
Medicine, Weill Medical College of Cornell University, New York, New York 100212
Received 14 July 2003/ Accepted 29 September 2003
Pseudomonas aeruginosa must often overcome a high concentration
of oxidants to successfully infect the human host . We report
here the results of a transcriptome profiling comparing cells treated
with H2O2 and untreated controls . The data indicate
that the early response of P . aeruginosa to H2O2
consists of an upregulation of protective mechanisms and a
downregulation of primary metabolism .
The 6.3-Mb genome of Pseudomonas aeruginosa is one of the largest
bacterial genomes sequenced (28) . In addition to having
a free lifestyle, P . aeruginosa causes opportunistic
infections in humans (7) . Studies with animals
suggest that an adaptive mechanism important for the ability of P .
aeruginosa to infect humans is the oxidative stress response (7) .
This response is aimed at preventing, counteracting, and repairing
oxidative damage produced by reactive oxygen intermediates (ROIs)
such as H2O2, O2•-, and
OH• . During infection, P . aeruginosa is confronted
with ROIs from the respiratory burst of human phagocytes (19) .
In particular, the inflammatory response in the infected lungs of
cystic fibrosis patients results in high levels of ROIs that P .
aeruginosa must survive to persist (2) . Several
P . aeruginosa proteins involved in oxidative stress defense
have been identified (3, 6,
13, 18), and some of these proteins have been
shown to be induced by treatment with oxidants (see below) .
To gain insights into the early transcriptional response of P .
aeruginosa to oxidative stress, we performed a comparative
transcriptome analysis between H2O2-treated P .
aeruginosa PAO1 cells and untreated controls by using GeneChip
P . aeruginosa genome arrays (Affymetrix) . H2O2
was selected as the oxidant because it is a natural effector of
innate immunity (19) . Two milliliters of an
overnight culture was inoculated into a 1-liter Erlenmeyer flask with
100 ml of tryptic soy (TS) broth (11), and
cultures were incubated at 37°C with shaking at 220 rpm . When the
optical density at 600 nm reached 0.5 (0.5 x
108 to 1.0 x 108
CFU/ml), the culture was split in aliquots of 10 ml into 100-ml
Erlenmeyer flasks . Five of these cultures were immediately treated by
addition of H2O2 (1 mM), whereas the remaining
five cultures were left untreated . After 10 min of incubation under
the conditions mentioned above, cells from each culture were
harvested by centrifugation and RNA was isolated from each cell
pellet by using the RNeasy Minikit (Qiagen) . cDNA was prepared from
each RNA sample by using pd(N)6 random primers and the
SuperScript II kit (Invitrogen) . Each cDNA sample was fragmented
(average size, 50 bp) with DNase I in One Phor-All buffer
(Invitrogen) at 37°C for 10 min, and fragmented cDNA was 3' labeled
by using the Enzo BioArray Terminal kit with Bioin-ddUTP
(Affymetrix) . Each labeled cDNA sample was used for hybridization to
a single P . aeruginosa array . Array hybridization and array
and data analysis were performed as recommended in the GeneChip P .
aeruginosa genome array expression analysis protocol technical
manual (Affymetrix) . A 1 mM H2O2 concentration
was selected for treatment, since it is commonly used to trigger
sublethal oxidative stress in P . aeruginosa (12,
18) . A 10-min treatment time was chosen based on
several considerations . (i) A time span of 5 to 15 min is sufficient
to detect mRNA level changes induced by H2O2 in
P . aeruginosa, Escherichia coli, and other bacteria (1,
2, 22, 25) . (ii) Our
reverse transcription (RT)-PCR studies revealed that sodM mRNA
levels increase after a 10-min exposure to 1 mM H2O2
but return to nearly the levels of the untreated control after 20 min
(not shown) . (iii) H2O2 is rapidly degraded in
P . aeruginosa cultures due to endogenous catalases; e.g., H2O2
in TS broth drops at a rate of
0.17
mM/min during a 15-min period after addition of only 20% P .
aeruginosa spent medium (15) . (iv) We wanted
to investigate the early and acute transcriptional response to H2O2 .
Transcriptome changes induced by H2O2.
A global analysis indicated that the early response of P . aeruginosa
to H2O2 resulted in a substantial modification of
the transcriptome . Of 5,500 arrayed P . aeruginosa genes (open
reading frames), 1,854 displayed statistically significant mRNA level
changes of >2-fold (genes with statistically significant expression
changes were identified by the Wilcoxon-Mann-Whitney test [P
cutoff value, 0.05]) and 2,792 displayed no change . The latter
group was defined as being composed of genes showing no significant
mRNA level changes and genes with statistically significant changes
of twofold or less . Finally, mRNAs of 854 genes were not detected
above background in three or more of the five arrays of treated and
untreated samples . Substantial changes of mRNA levels ( 5-fold)
were observed for 520 genes, with 216 of them displaying increased
transcript levels (Table 1) . Interestingly, genes
in the functional classes of "hypothetical, unclassified, unknown"
and "transport of small molecules" were highly represented in this
group (Fig . 1) . (Gene names, descriptions, and
functional classes are taken from
http://www.pseudomonas.com/current_annotation.asp.) This response
is comparable to that of E . coli exposed to identical
treatment (1 mM H2O2, 10 min), which resulted in 140 of
4,169 arrayed genes displaying mRNA levels increased >4-fold (32) .
| TABLE 1 . Effects of treatment with H2O2 on mRNA
levels
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FIG . 1 . Functional classification of genes with mRNA level changes of
fivefold or more . The percentage of genes whose mRNA levels increased
with treatment per functional class (closed bars) is relative to the
total number of genes displaying
5-fold
mRNA level increase with treatment . The percentage of genes whose mRNA
levels decrease with treatment per functional class (open bars) is
relative to the total number of genes displaying
5-fold
mRNA level decrease with treatment . Functional classes are taken from
http://www.pseudomonas.com/current_annotation.asp.
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Recently, Salunkhe and coworkers reported P . aeruginosa transcriptome
profiling aimed at studying the steady-state response, rather
than the early adaptation phase, to paraquat (0.5 mM, 2 h) (27) .
Unexpectedly, induction of various genes (e.g., katB, soxR,
ahpC, trxB2, ohr, and gor) shown in our array
study and by other investigators to be induced by oxidant treatment
was not observed in this study for yet unclear reasons (see below) .
Only 21 to 29 gene transcripts showed significant change ( 2-fold)
with treatment in each of the three strains investigated . This
represented a total of 55 genes after considering the overlaps
between strains . mRNA levels of 29 of these 55 genes were affected in
our study by H2O2 treatment (PA0105 to 0107, PA0140,
PA0672, PA0848, PA0941, PA0942, PA1300, PA2033, PA2230, PA2426,
PA2663, PA3234, PA3235, PA3397, PA3417, PA3899, PA4205, PA4227,
PA4296, PA4467 to PA4471, PA4502, PA4504, and PA4570) .
Genes whose mRNA levels increased with H2O2
treatment. Treatment with H2O2 resulted in a
dramatic increase in the mRNA levels of many genes that, based on
their known or suspected functions, would prevent, counteract, or
repair oxidant-derived damage . These genes appear to be part of two
main regulons, an oxidant-responsive regulon, whose genes are likely
to be directly induced by H2O2, and the SOS
regulon, whose genes are likely to be induced by the expected
oxidant-dependent DNA damage . Some of the genes displaying mRNA level
increases are listed in Table 2 . Additional tables
that can be found at
http://www.med.cornell.edu/gradschool/fac/quadri.html (site under
construction) include the complete lists of genes with statistically
significant mRNA level increases (Supplemental Table 1)
and decreases (Supplemental Table 2), the list of genes
not detected in the arrays (Supplemental Table 3), and the entire
data sets for the arrays (Supplemental Table 4) .
| TABLE 2 . List of the 40 genes whose mRNA levels displayed the highest
fold changes with H2O2 treatment
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The mRNA levels of many genes relevant for oxidative stress
adaptation increased dramatically with treatment . Examples of mRNAs
with important level changes ( 8-fold)
are those of PA4471 (fagA, Fur-associated gene), fumC
(O2•--resistant fumarase), PA4469 (unknown
function), sodM (superoxide dismutase), and PA4467 (unknown
function, located downstream of sodM) . The PA4471-fumC-PA4469-sodM
operon has been shown to be inducible by treatment with paraquat (27),
Fur repressed, and inducible by iron starvation (6,
9, 10, 23,
24) . Interestingly, a few additional iron
starvation-inducible genes (pchR, pchB, pchD,
fptA, pvdS, pfeR, tonB, PA0471, and PA0472) showed
substantially increased mRNA levels ( 7-
to 45-fold) in H2O2-treated cells . These
results may suggest that H2O2-treated cells experience
iron starvation and/or a transient loss of Fur repressor function
(perhaps due to oxidative inactivation of Fur or oxidation and
loss of the Fe2+ from the Fur-Fe2+ complex) . The latter is
more likely to be the reason for the increased transcript levels,
since TS broth provides abundant iron .
Other genes that are relevant for oxidative stress adaptation and
whose mRNA levels increased considerably ( 20-fold)
were the catalase genes katA and katB and those of PA4612
(unknown function, adjacent to katB) . Previous observations
indicated that these genes are induced by H2O2
treatment; however, the reported induction of katA varied from
a fewfold increase to undetectable change (3,
12, 14, 18,
22) . The mRNA levels of PA2273 (soxR),
encoding a possible sensor and transducer of oxidative stress and
inducible by treatment with paraquat (8), showed a
relatively modest but significant (threefold) increase . The mRNA
levels of ahpC, ahpF, PA0848 (alkyl hydroperoxide reductases),
trxB2 (thioredoxin reductase), and ohr (organic
hydroperoxide resistance) also increased (4- to 22-fold) . The
ahpCF and trxB-PA0848 operons and ohr were recently
shown to be induced by treatment with oxidant (21,
22) . The mRNA levels of gor (glutathione reductase)
increased fourfold, whereas the mRNA levels of the neighboring
genes PA2826 (predicted glutathione peroxidase) and PA2827 (predicted
transcriptional regulator) increased sevenfold or more . Notably,
hemH mRNA increased fivefold . hemH encodes the ferrochelatase
required for synthesis of heme, which is needed for synthesis
of heme-containing peroxidases and catalases .
Overlap between the adaptive responses to H2O2 and
agents that result in DNA damage was earlier documented in proteomic
studies with Enterobacteriaceae (20) .
Consistent with these early observations, our studies revealed
increases in mRNA levels of genes relevant for DNA repair or related
functions in H2O2-treated cells . Most of these
genes appear to be part of the P . aeruginosa SOS regulon,
which was probably activated indirectly by H2O2 treatment
due to oxidant-induced DNA damage . Among these genes are recA
and lexA, whose mRNA levels increased 3- and 11-fold,
respectively . DNA damage is known to induce the SOS regulon repressor
lexA and the state of RecA that stimulates the autocatalytic
cleavage of LexA to allow expression of the regulon (4,
17) . Increased expression of E . coli recA
and lexA or their gene products following cell treatment with
DNA-damaging agents or H2O2 has been reported
in previous studies (30-32) . The mRNA
levels of PA3008, adjacent to lexA, also increased (14-fold) .
The PA3008 product is similar to E . coli SulA/SfiA, a protein
of the SOS regulon believed to arrest cell division until DNA repair
processes are completed (16) . The mRNA levels of
PA0670 and PA0671 (in an apparent operon) increased 7- and 23-fold,
respectively . The products of PA0670 and PA0671 are similar to DinP,
a DNA damage-inducible protein of Ralstonia solanacearum (26)
and E . coli SulA/SfiA, respectively . Also, mRNA levels of
recN (DNA repair gene of the SOS regulon) and PA0962 (predicted
DNA-binding stress protection protein) increased significantly (12-
and 15-fold, respectively) .
The fact that our analysis identified most genes previously known
to be induced (directly or indirectly) by oxidants in P .
aeruginosa validates the ability of our experiments to reveal
candidate genes important for oxidative stress adaptation . Furthermore,
to further validate our array methodology, real-time RT-PCR was
used to determine relative mRNA levels of selected genes (e.g.,
PA3287, potB, nuoA, and sodB) in H2O2-treated
P . aeruginosa compared with untreated controls . Increases or
decreases determined by arrays and by RT-PCR in H2O2-treated
cells were as follows: PA3287 mRNA increased 80-fold by array and 22-
(±7)-fold by RT-PCR; potB mRNA decreased 21-fold by array and
28- (±6)-fold by RT-PCR; nuoA mRNA decreased 7-fold by array
and 5- (±2)-fold by RT-PCR; and sodB mRNA levels were
unchanged by array and by RT-PCR . Overall, the values obtained by
RT-PCR have a good correspondence with the results of the arrays,
taking into account the variation expected due to the different
natures of the two methodologies .
Exposure to H2O2 also resulted in increased mRNA levels
of virulence-related genes, such as the exoenzyme S and T genes,
PA4937, and PA3239, with products similar to VacB and VacJ,
respectively . VacB and VacJ are involved in virulence in
Enterobacteriaceae (5, 29) .
Furthermore, transcript levels of pvdS, a gene required for
exotoxin A and PrpL proteinase synthesis, increased in H2O2-treated
cells . These observations could suggest that P . aeruginosa has
a mechanism by which the oxidative environment in the host triggers
an increase in the production of virulence factors, some of
which might allow P . aeruginosa to avoid killing by incapacitating
phagocyte functioning .
Genes whose mRNA levels decreased with H2O2
treatment. A large number of the genes with decreased mRNA levels in H2O2-treated
cells are involved in primary metabolism (Table 2 and
Supplemental Table 2) . These genes are unlikely to
be part of an oxidant-responsive regulon(s) and directly affected by
H2O2 or part of the SOS regulon . Their mRNA
level decreases probably reflect general changes in cell physiology
and a transient metabolism slowdown as a consequence of sublethal
oxidative damage resulting from treatment . For example, transcripts
of genes involved in energy generation were markedly influenced; the
mRNA levels of 5 of 13 nuo genes, encoding the NADH
dehydrogenase complex I of the respiratory chain, decreased
5-fold,
and the mRNA levels of 9 atp genes, encoding the F1Fo ATP
synthase complex of the oxidative phosphorylation, decreased
4-fold .
Ribosomal biogenesis was also affected; e.g., the mRNA levels
of 41 of 54 genes encoding 30S and 50S proteins (rps, rpl, rpm,
and prm genes) decreased (16 of them
5-fold),
while the remaining 13 genes showed unchanged mRNA levels . mRNA
levels of genes from primary anabolic pathways such as nucleotide,
fatty acid, and polyamine synthesis decreased as well . For example,
(i) the mRNA levels of 11 of 21 purine and pyrimidine synthesis genes
(pur, gua, and pyr genes) decreased
5-fold,
whereas the rest remained unchanged or changed modestly; (ii)
the mRNA levels of accD, accC, acpP, fabF1, fabB,
and fabA, encoding enzymes of fatty acid synthesis, decreased
3- to 13-fold; and (iii) the mRNA levels of polyamine synthesis and
uptake genes (speA, speD, speE, and potABCD
operon) decreased
5-fold .
Finally, the primary sec-dependent protein translocation pathway
was also critically affected, with secA, secB, secD,
secE, secF, secG, and secY mRNA levels
decreasing 3- to 11-fold .
The presented work represents the first genome-wide investigation
into the nature of the mRNA level changes induced in P . aeruginosa
by exposure to a biologically relevant oxidant . Overall, the
expression data indicate that the early response of P . aeruginosa
to H2O2 consists of the following: (i) an
upregulation of protective mechanisms, including production of
cytotoxins that could impair immune cell functioning; and (ii) a
downregulation of primary metabolism, perhaps influenced by growth
arrest proteins encoded by PA0671 and PA3008 (with similarity to
E . coli SulA and SfiA) . Our results strengthen the confidence of
previous assignments to the list of genes whose mRNA levels are
modulated in response to an oxidant and add a significant number of
P . aeruginosa genes likely to belong to this list . More
importantly, our expression data provide clues as to the potential
involvement of several genes listed as hypothetical, unclassified,
and unknown in oxidative stress adaptation and constitute a
genome-wide guide for mutagenesis analysis aimed at identifying novel
functions important for the adaptation of P . aeruginosa to
oxidative stress . Guided by our data, we have begun a mutagenesis
analysis that has already indicated that PA0250 and PA3919 (genes
listed as hypothetical, unclassified, and unknown and whose
transcript levels increased with treatment) are required for optimal
resistance to H2O2 . The way that these genes
protect the cells against oxidants is currently under investigation .
This work was supported by Cystic Fibrosis Foundation grant
QUADRI00V0 and the Niarchos Foundation . The Department of Microbiology
and Immunology at Weill Medical College of Cornell University
acknowledges the support of the William Randolph Hearst Foundation .
* Corresponding author . Mailing address: Medical College of
Cornell University, Microbiology and Immunology, 1300 York Ave., Box 62, W-706,
New York, NY 10021 . Phone: (212) 746-4497 . Fax: (212) 746-4028 . E-mail: leq2001@med.cornell.edu.
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