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Journal of Bacteriology, July 2004, p . 4628-4637, Vol . 186,
No . 14
P2
Growth Restriction on an rpoC Mutant Is Suppressed by Alleles of the
Rz1 Homolog lysC
Dmitry Markov,1 Gail E . Christie,2 Brian Sauer,3,
Richard Calendar,3 Taehyun Park,4 Ry Young,4
and Konstantin Severinov1*
Waksman Institute and Department of Molecular Biology and Biochemistry, State
University of New Jersey, Rutgers, Piscataway, New Jersey 08854,1
Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Virginia Commonwealth University,
Richmond, Virginia 23298,2 Department of Molecular and Cell Biology,
University of California, Berkeley, California 94720,3 Department of
Biochemistry and Biophysics, Texas A&M University, College Station, Texas
77843-21284
Received 16 February 2004/ Accepted 14 April 2004
Escherichia coli strain 397c carries a temperature-sensitive
mutation, rpoC397, that removes the last 50 amino acids of the
RNA polymerase ß' subunit and is nonpermissive for plating of
bacteriophage P2 . P2 gor mutants productively infect 397c and
define a new gene, lysC, encoded by a reading frame that
extensively overlaps the P2 lysis accessory gene, lysB . The
unusual location of lysC with respect to lysB is reminiscent
of the Rz/Rz1 lysis gene pair of phage
.
Indeed, coexpression of lysB and lysC complemented the
growth defect of
Rz/Rz1 null mutants, indicating that the LysB/C pair is
similar to Rz/Rz1 in both gene arrangement and function . Cells
carrying the rpoC397 mutation exhibited an early onset of
P2-induced lysis, which was suppressed by the gor mutation in
lysC . We propose that changes in host gene expression
resulting from the rpoC397 mutation result in changes in the
composition of the bacterial cell wall, making the cell more
susceptible to P2-mediated lysis and preventing accumulation of
progeny phage sufficient for plaque formation .
During bacteriophage infection, the machinery for macromolecular
synthesis in the cell is recruited to serve the needs of the virus,
and systematic changes in viral gene expression take place in a
defined sequence . Bacterial DNA-dependent RNA polymerase (RNAP;
subunit composition, a2ßß' ),
the enzyme responsible for most host transcription, is a major target
of this regulation (14) . Thus, mutations in RNAP rpo
genes often specifically prevent bacteriophage development . To date,
mutations that interfere with bacteriophage development have been
identified in genes coding for all RNAP subunits except the smallest
subunit,
(reviewed in reference 34) . Some of these mutations define
RNAP sites that interact directly with viral regulators (25,
26, 40), while others affect phage
gene expression indirectly by altering the properties of RNAP, such
as the efficiency of transcription termination (39) .
The power of phage genetics, allowing isolation of suppressor
mutations that overcome the blocks conferred by the changes in RNAP,
has been invaluable in the study of these phenomena, and the results
have greatly enriched our understanding of the basic processes of
transcription (27) .
From this perspective, the block against plaque formation for
phages P2 (10) and N4 (25) conferred by
the rpoC397 mutation has long been provocative . This mutation
removes 16 bp close to the end of rpoC, resulting in the
replacement of the last 50 amino acids of RNAP subunit ß' with 23
incorrect residues (10) . In addition to being
nonpermissive for the two phages, Escherichia coli strain
397c, carrying rpoC397, has a gross temperature-sensitive (Ts)
growth phenotype . Based on biochemical experiments, the N4 block
appears to be due to the loss of a contact between N4 SSB
(single-strand DNA binding protein) and ß' that is required for
activation of viral late transcription (25) .
However, the mechanism by which the rpoC397 mutation prevents
P2 growth has not been determined . Here, we report genetic and
physiological experiments addressing this issue and discuss the
surprising results in terms of the timing of host lysis .
Bacterial strains, plasmids, phages, and molecular cloning. The
strains, plasmids, phages, and oligonucleotides used throughout this
work are listed in Table 1 . Luria-Bertani (LB) medium (4)
was the standard culture medium, supplemented as appropriate
where indicated .
| TABLE 1 . Bacterial strains, plasmids, phages, and primers used in this
study
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P2 lysC, or lysB/lysC, lysB/lysC(gor)
or lysB/lysC(Am) pairs were amplified by PCR from P2
lysates and cloned between the NdeI and XhoI sites of pCYB2 . Since
pCYB2 allows substantial expression of structural genes even in the
absence of induction (28), all experiments were
conducted without IPTG (isopropyl-ß-D-thiogalactopyranoside) .
pUCF4 is a pUC8 derivative carrying the P2 late promoter pF (12) .
Plasmid pGC160 carries the P2 lysis region (nucleotides [nt] 6695 to
8544) under pF control . This region was amplified from P2 vir-1
with primers Lys5 and Lys3, using Pfu Turbo DNA polymerase, digested
with BamHI and PstI, and ligated with pUCF4 cleaved with the same two
enzymes . Plasmid pGC163 was made the same way, using the equivalent
fragment amplified from P2 gor-1 .
To construct pTG257, a plasmid that carries an IPTG-inducible copy
of the P2 ogr gene, a 400-bp XhoI-HindIII fragment containing
the ogr gene under the control of a variant T7A1 promoter with
two lac operators (PA1/03/04) (21) was
isolated from plasmid pBJ49 (18) . This fragment
was inserted at the unique BamHI site of pRG1, a derivative of
pACYC177 (7) containing a 1.2-kb PstI fragment
encoding lacIq (Robert Garcea, unpublished observation) .
Both the fragment and linearized pRG1 were filled-in with Klenow
polymerase prior to ligation .
Activation of a cloned P2 late promoter. Chloramphenicol
acetyltransferase (CAT) expression was assayed in cultures of P90A5c
and 397c carrying either the P2 late promoter expression plasmid
pFCAT100 (15) and the IPTG-inducible P4 Delta
plasmid pDEB50 (9) or carrying pSL130 (22),
a control plasmid expressing cat from the tac promoter,
and the compatible lacIq plasmid pRG1 . Cultures were grown in
LB medium supplemented with ampicillin (100 µg/ml) and kanamycin (60
µg/ml) to an A600 of 0.5 and induced by the
addition of IPTG to 1 mM . Forty-five minutes after induction,
duplicate cultures were lysed by sonication and CAT activity was
determined spectrophotometrically and normalized to the protein
concentration, as described previously (15) . The
values given represent the average of at least three determinations
on two separate cultures .
P2 complementation by plasmid-encoded proteins. Overnight
E . coli cultures were inoculated into 100 volumes of LB medium
containing 2 mM CaCl2 and 2 mM MgCl2 and grown
at 30°C to an optical density at 600 nm (OD600) of 0.5 (ca .
3 to 5 h) . One hundred microliters of cell culture was mixed
with 100 µl of 10 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.9), 1% (wt/vol) NaCl, 2 mM MgCl2,
and 2 mM CaCl2 containing ca . 500 to 1,000 PFU of P2 and
incubated for 7 min at 30°C . Cell-phage suspensions were mixed with 2
ml of molten 0.6% LB top agar and poured over the surface of
60-mm-diameter plates containing 10 ml of hardened 1.5% LB bottom
agar . Both top agar and bottom agar contained 2 mM CaCl2 .
For plasmid-carrying strains, ampicillin was added to the medium at a
final concentration of 200 µg/ml . Plates were incubated face up
overnight at various temperatures . Phage plaques and cleared zones
were recorded with a Nikon SMZ-U binocular microscope attached to a
Hitachi KP-D50 digital camera (zoom, 1:10) .
Construction of a P2 lysC(Am) mutant. An amber
mutation in the putative lysC open reading frame was
introduced into the sequence between lysB and gene R, at P2
nt 8370 to 8372, by incorporation of a phosphorylated mutant
oligonucleotide during PCR amplification . DNA was amplified from
pNL130 by using 100 ng each of the P2 primer MR2 and the lacZ
primer 1212 (New England Biolabs), and 1,000 ng of phosphorylated
mutagenic primer 28am . PCR was carried out with Vent DNA polymerase
in the presence of Taq DNA ligase (both from New England Biolabs) .
The full-length PCR product was gel purified, digested with EcoRI and
SphI, and used to replace the corresponding EcoRI-SphI fragment in
pNL130 . The mutation in the resulting plasmid, pTG605, was verified
by sequence analysis and introduced into the genome of P2 vir-1
by homologous recombination, using rescue of P2 vir-1 R(Am)3
(which has a Ts phenotype on supD strains), as described by
Ziermann et al . (44) .
Marker rescue. For rescue of the cloned gor-1 or
lysC(Am) mutations, P2 phages were grown in permissive strains
carrying the plasmid with the desired mutation . Phage lysates were
treated with UV light to 50% survival prior to infection to enhance
recombination . Following infection, the progeny phage was then plated
on both permissive and nonpermissive strains to assess the frequency
of rescue and to select the desired recombinant phages .
Burst size determination. E . coli strain C-1a was
grown with shaking at 37°C in LB medium supplemented with 0.2%
glucose (LBglc) to a value of 50 Klett units . Cells were concentrated
twofold in LBglc supplemented with 5 mM CaCl2 and infected
with P2 or P2 lysC(Am) at a multiplicity of infection of 5 .
After 8 min of incubation, the infected cells were diluted 10-fold
into LBglc containing anti-P2 serum (K value of approximately 6
[first-order inactivation constant]), incubated for an additional 8
min, and then diluted 10–4 into LBglc . An aliquot was removed
immediately, and the titer was determined on strain C-520 to
determine the number of infected cells . The culture was incubated
with shaking at 37°C for 60 min, and the titer was determined again
on C-520 .
prophage construction and induction. The
prophages containing Rz and/or Rz1(Am) mutations carry
chloramphenicol resistance and are thermally inducible (43) .
Phage lysates were prepared from logarithmically growing lysogens
of E . coli MC4100 by induction for 15 min at 43°C, followed
by aeration at 37°C for 40 to 60 min or until visible lysis
occurred . After the addition of 1% (vol/vol) chloroform and 10 mM
MgCl2, cultures were vigorously vortexed for 20 s, incubated
at 37°C for 30 min, and clarified by low-speed centrifugation .
The cleared phage lysates were stored at 4°C .
Lysis induction by the cloned P2 lysis cassette. E . coli
strains transformed with the Ogr expression plasmid pTG257 and a
compatible lysis region plasmid or vector control were grown at 30°C
in LB medium containing ampicillin (100 µg/ml) and kanamycin (60
µg/ml) to a value of
50
Klett units . Expression of ogr was induced by the addition of
IPTG to 1 mM, and lysis was monitored by measuring the OD of
the culture . Each lysis plasmid was assayed at least six times from a
minimum of three independent transformants .
The P2 growth defect depends on the Ts phenotype of the rpoC
deletion. To assess whether the rpoC397 mutation was sufficient
for the growth defect of P2 on strain 397c, isogenic plasmids
constitutively expressing the wild-type rpoC allele or the
rpoC397 allele were introduced into both the wild-type and the
397c hosts and the transformants were tested for plaque-formation by
P2 . The experiment presented in Fig . 1 shows that
wild-type rpoC expressed from a plasmid complemented the
rpoC397 block to P2, whereas a plasmid carrying the mutant
rpoC gene did not . P2 growth in the wild-type rpoC host
was unaffected by the presence of the rpoC397 plasmid,
indicating that the rpoC defect is recessive . Thus, the lesion
in RNAP is solely responsible for the P2 growth defect exhibited by
the 397c cells and is recessive to the wild type .
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FIG . 1 . The rpoC397 mutation interferes with bacteriophage P2
growth . A plasmid-encoded RNAP ß' subunit complements the P2 plating
defect on a 397c host . Bacteriophage P2 was used to infect lawns of 397c
or its rpoC+ parent, P90A5c, harboring plasmids
expressing wild-type rpoC, rpoC carrying the 397c mutation
or control vector plasmid . The results of overnight plating at 30°C are
presented.
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If the nonpermissive phenotype for P2 was due to a lack of an
interaction between a phage transcription factor and the mutant RNAP
present in 397c, then Ts+ revertants of the rpoC deletion
mutant should retain the plating defect . However, a spontaneous
Ts+ derivative of 397c efficiently plated P2 vir-1, but still
contained the deletion, as indicated by the presence of the
shortened ß' subunit (Fig . 2) . The result therefore
suggests that in contrast to N4 (25), P2 is unlikely to
encode a transcription factor that directly interacts with the
portion of ß' removed by the rpoC397 deletion .
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FIG . 2 . P2 plates on a Ts+ pseudorevertant of 397c . A
spontaneous revertant of E . coli 397c able to form colonies at
42°C was isolated . (Top panel) Proteins from whole-cell lysates of
rpoC+ strain P90A5c, the 397c mutant, and the 397c Ts+
revertant were resolved by electrophoresis on a 5% sodium dodecyl
sulfate gel and visualized by Coomassie staining . The portion of the gel
containing the ß and ß' subunits is shown . (Bottom panel) Bacteriophage
P2 was used to infect lawns of the indicated cells . The results of
overnight growth at 30°C are presented.
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Initial efforts to elucidate the P2 growth defect conferred by the
rpoC397 mutation included assessing the effects of this mutation
on P2 DNA replication and transcription . Formation of pulse-labeled,
covalently closed circular P2 DNA following infection at 33°C was
assayed by CsCl-ethidium bromide density gradient centrifugation, and
the levels were found to be similar in both P90A5c and 397c; the
identity of this newly synthesized DNA was further confirmed by EcoRI
restriction (33; data not shown) . Since P2 DNA
replication is dependent upon P2 early gene products, this implies
that P2 early transcription is also not impaired in 397c . P2 late
gene transcription is normally activated by the P2 Ogr protein, used
during P2 lytic infection, or by the related Delta protein of
satellite phage P4, which stimulates high levels of P2 late gene
expression when P2 is serving as a helper for P4 lytic growth
(reviewed in reference 11) . To examine the effect
of the rpoC397 mutation on initiation of P2 late
transcription, Delta-dependent expression of cat from the P2
late promoter PF was assayed in P90A5c and 397c and
compared to that of a control plasmid in which cat was expressed
from the tac promoter . For the tac promoter, cat
expression was reduced slightly in 397c, to 74% of the level seen in
P90A5c . A slightly larger effect on expression from PF was
seen; in 397c, the CAT activity was 44% of that obtained in P90A5c .
It is likely that this larger reduction is due to a combined
nonspecific effect on expression of P4 Delta from pDEB50 and on
subsequent Delta-dependent expression from PF . We conclude
that in contrast to the late transcription defect imposed by the
rpoA109 mutation, which prevents an essential interaction between
the RNAP
subunit and Ogr or Delta and reduces expression from PF by
about 2 orders of magnitude (15), the rpoC397
mutation does not appear to confer a specific block to P2 late
transcription .
P2 mutations that allow growth on 397c define a new gene. To
determine the basis of the P2 plating defect, spontaneous suppressor
mutants that formed plaques on 397c lawns were obtained . One class of
suppressors, called trl, was isolated directly by plating on
397c lawns at 30°C . A second class of mutants, called gor,
were originally isolated based on their ability to overcome a block
to P2 growth imposed by the rho(Ts)15 mutation in E .
coli strain AD1600 (13) and were found to plate on 397c
as well . The suppression was not reciprocal: while the P2 gor
mutants formed plaques on 397c lawns, P2 trl mutants did not
form plaques on AD1600 lawns (Table 2) .
| TABLE 2 . Plating of P2 and related phages on strains carrying the
rpoC397 and rho(Ts)15 mutations
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The rpoC397 mutation did not affect growth of the P2-related
phage 186, but growth of the hybrid phage Hy5, which carries the
early region of 186 and the late region of P2 (17), was
blocked (Table 2), suggesting that the trl
mutations map to the P2 late genes . Indeed, three factor crosses (33;
data not shown) placed the trl and gor mutations
between P2 genes K and R, in a region encoding host
lysis and tail functions . A cloned 2.1-kb EcoRV fragment spanning the
lysis region (P2 coordinates 6290 to 8378; GenBank accession no.
AF063097; see also reference 43) from P2
gor1 rescued the plating of wild-type P2 on 397c (data not
shown) . The DNA sequence of this region from gor1 and from two
independent trl isolates was determined and compared to the
wild-type P2 sequence . The two trl mutants had a single,
identical nucleotide change, from C to A at nt 8274, and the gor1
mutant also had a single-nucleotide change, which was immediately
adjacent to the trl substitution, from C to T at nt 8275 . These
changes fall within lysB, encoding a nonessential lysis gene
(44), and also within an overlapping +1 reading frame,
spanning P2 coordinates 8202 to 8492 . This reading frame is preceded
by a good Shine-Dalgarno sequence and potentially encodes a
proline-rich protein (10 Pro residues in 96 amino acids) . The first
half of this open reading frame is embedded within the last 48 codons
of lysB; the end of this reading frame extends into the tail
gene R (Fig . 3A) . Originally designated orf28
by Portelli et al . (31), this reading frame was
predicted to be another nonessential lysis gene, lysC, and to
encode a homolog of the
Rz1 lysis protein (43) . Since the gor mutation is
silent within lysB, the suppression of the Gro–
phenotype of 397c by the gor and trl mutations must be
due to the changes in lysC (Pro 25 Leu and Pro 25 Thr for
gor and trl, respectively; Fig . 3A) .
This result indicates that lysC does encode a P2 protein .
Although sequence similarity between LysC and Rz1-like proteins is
not significant, inspection of the LysC primary structure reveals a
consensus signal peptidase II cleavage site (Fig . 3A)
and a high proportion of Pro residues, both characteristic of all Rz1
protein sequences (43) . These considerations, the
unique intragenic embedding of lysC and Rz1, and the results
of functional analysis presented below strongly indicate that
LysC and Rz1 are evolutionarily homologous, as first suggested by
Zhang et al . (43) .
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FIG . 3 . P2 mutants that grow on 397c define a new gene, lysC . (A)
Map of the bacteriophage P2 lysis region . The P2 genome coordinates of
the EcoRV fragment used to rescue the trl and gor
mutations are indicated, as are the relative locations of the genes in
this region . The amino acid sequence of the lysC reading frame is
shown below the map, and the amino acid sequence changes resulting from
the trl and gor mutations are indicated below the
sequence . The PP dipeptide characteristic of all Rz1 proteins is
underlined . Also shown for comparison is the amino acid sequence of
Rz1 . Gray arrows indicate the putative signal peptidase II cleavage
sites in the two proteins . (B) Overexpression of lysC harboring
gor or trl mutations, but not wild-type lysC, is
sufficient to overcome the plating defect of P2 . 397c or P90A5c cells
harboring plasmids expressing wild-type lysC, lysC
carrying the gor or trl mutations, or control vector
plasmid pCYB2 were infected with wild-type P2 (top) or a P2 mutant
carrying an amber mutation in lysC (bottom) . The results of
overnight growth at 30°C are presented.
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In order to obtain further evidence as to whether lysC represented
a protein-coding gene, we introduced an amber mutation in place
of codon 57 (P2 coordinates 8370 to 8372) . This nonsense mutation
does not alter the predicted amino acid sequence of LysB, yet it
showed a distinct suppressible plating phenotype, plating with normal
plaque size on supD or supF strains but with a tiny
plaque size on nonsuppressing hosts, indicating that orf28 encodes a
protein . A comparison of the burst size of this mutant with that of
P2 vir-1 in a nonsuppressing host showed less than a twofold
reduction (124 for the amber mutant versus 200 for P2 vir-1),
suggesting that the plating phenotype might be related to host lysis,
rather than the intracellular production of virions . Taken together,
these data further strengthen the conclusion that lysC,
previously orf28, is a P2 gene encoding an Rz1-like protein product .
To confirm that the lysC mutations are sufficient to overcome
the P2 plating defect on 397c cells, we created plasmids that
expressed the wild-type, trl, or gor alleles of lysC from
the tac promoter . These plasmids were introduced into 397c
cells, and their ability to complement the plating defect of
wild-type P2 was determined . Expression of the wild-type lysC
had no effect on P2 growth . In contrast, expression of lysC(gor),
and to a lesser degree lysC(trl), allowed plaque
formation (Fig . 3B) . The suppressing effect of the
plasmid-borne lysC(trl) allele was more pronounced in
P2lysC(Am) infections (Fig . 3B) . This
suggests that the wild-type LysC may be inhibiting the function of
the LysC(trl) mutant .
P2 LysB/C complements
Rz/Rz1 lysis defects. The lysC gene and its overlapping
arrangement with lysB are conserved in closely related P2-like
phages, including 186, W ,
L-413C, Fels-2, SopE ,
and PSP3, as well as in the more distantly P2-related Pseudomonas
aeruginosa phage
CTX .
No significant sequence similarity is found with other genes in the
database . Rz1 genes are always found embedded within Rz
genes (30, 41,
43), so lysC and lysB may be similar to Rz1 and Rz
genes, respectively . In
and P22, Rz and Rz1 are both required for lysis if the host envelope
is stabilized by millimolar concentrations of divalent cations . Rz1
is a lipoprotein, processed by signal peptidase II, and LysC has an
appropriately placed Cys residue, which could serve as part of a
signal peptidase II motif . Moreover, although there is no significant
amino acid sequence similarity between LysC and Rz1, both are rich in
Pro residues . To establish whether LysB/C and Rz/Rz1 have analogous
functions, we introduced plasmids carrying lysB, lysC,
or both genes into E . coli cells lysogenic for wild-type
or various
Rz/Rz1 mutants (43) and subjected
the transformants to thermal induction in the presence of 10 mM MgCl2 .
As expected, lysis was observed in the induction of the Rz+
Rz1+ lysogen, but not in Rz(Am), Rz1(Am), and
Rz(Am) Rz1(Am) (data not shown; see also reference
43) . This lysis defect was complemented by a
plasmid coexpressing lysB and lysC, but not by plasmids
expressing lysB or lysC alone (Fig . 4) .
In the lysB- and lysC-complemented inductions, lysis
kinetics were somewhat delayed for both Rz(Am) lysogens,
whereas the Rz+ Rz1(Am) lysogen underwent lysis at
the same time as the parental lysogen (Fig . 4) . We
conclude that P2 LysB/LysC can functionally substitute for
Rz/Rz1, but neither LysB nor LysC alone can complement either an
Rz or Rz1 defect .
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FIG . 4 . Co-overexpression of bacteriophage P2 lysB and lysC
complements the lysis defect caused by bacteriophage
Rz and/or Rz1 mutations . Logarithmically growing rpoC+
P90A5c cells lysogenic for
Rz+/Rz1+ or the indicated Rz
and/or Rz1
mutants were thermally induced for 15 min at 43°C (hatched area) and
then transferred to 37°C . Cell lysis was monitored
spectrophotometrically . The values presented are mean values from three
independent experiments . Different panels represent lysis curves
obtained with induced lysogens harboring plasmids expressing lysC
(pCYB2lysC) (A), lysB (pCYB2lysB) (B), or
coexpressing wild-type lysB and lysC (pCYB2lysB,
lysC) (C).
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lysC mutations delay host lysis. Efforts to monitor
P2-induced lysis directly in strains carrying rpoC397 are
complicated by the relatively poor adsorption of P2 to E . coli
K-12 strains, which precludes analysis of one-step growth curves (our
unpublished data), and by the apparent incompatibility of rpoC397
with E . coli C, in which P2 is normally studied (33) .
In order to circumvent these technical limitations, we assayed
P2-induced host cell lysis by using expression plasmids carrying the
entire lysis gene cassette (Y K lysABC) . Tight control of
these otherwise toxic genes was achieved by regulation of this
cassette by using the P2 late promoter PF . Expression from PF
was regulated by the P2 late transcription factor Ogr, which
was supplied in trans from compatible plasmid pTG257, carrying
an IPTG-inducible copy of the P2 ogr gene . The ogr gene in this
construct was expressed from the same promoter used for expression
of P4 Delta in the cat assays described above, and, accordingly,
should be expressed in rpoC397 cells, albeit at a slightly reduced
level . Ogr was chosen instead of Delta for these experiments
because it is a less efficient activator of PF, thus minimizing
the potentially lethal effects of any leaky activator expression
in the absence of IPTG induction .
The otherwise isogenic E . coli strains RW4206 (rpoC+)
and RW4204 (rpoC397) carrying pTG257 and plasmids with either
the wild-type (pGC160) or gor-1 (pGC163) alleles of lysC
were grown to early logarithmic phase at 30°C and induced with IPTG
(Fig . 5) . In the rpoC+ host, the
wild-type lysis cassette caused a cessation of growth at about 30 min
after induction, and overt lysis was observed beginning at about 45
min . The same plasmid caused cessation of growth significantly
earlier in the rpoC397 host, and gradual lysis was detectable
by 25 min after induction . This was surprising, especially in light
of the fact that we expected expression of the plasmid-encoded lysis
cassette to be slightly reduced in this strain compared to that in
the rpoC strain . The early cessation of growth was
reproducible and may indicate that some cells started to lyse at this
point, while others continued to grow . In contrast, the expression of
the lysis cassette carrying lysC(gor) resulted in an
extended growth period and delayed lysis in both the parental and
rpoC397 backgrounds—especially in the latter, where growth
continued until lysis was apparent at about 70 min after induction .
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FIG . 5 . lysC gor delays host lysis . Logarithmically growing
RW4206 (rpoC+) (A) or RW4204 (rpoC397) (B)
E . coli cells carrying the ogr expression plasmid pTG257 and
either pUCF4 (vector control), pGC160 (lysC+), or
pGC163 (lysCgor) plasmids with P2 lysis genes under
the control of the P2 pF promoter were induced with IPTG, and cell lysis
was monitored spectrophotometrically . Curves representative of the
results from six independent experiments are shown.
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We conclude that the primary effect of the lysC(gor) allele
is a delay in the onset of lysis . Accordingly, we propose that
early onset of lysis observed with the wild-type lysis cassette in
the rpoC397 background underlies the plating defect of P2 on
this host, and that the suppressor effect of the gor mutation
derives from a delay in lysis that allows accumulation of phage
progeny sufficient for plaque formation .
Identification of the P2 lysB and lysC genes as functional
homologs of Rz and Rz1. We report here the genetic
identification and initial characterization of a new P2 gene, lysC .
P2 lysC mutants suppress the defect to P2 growth conferred by
the E . coli rpoC397 mutation in RNAP . A defect in interaction
between a viral activator of late transcription and the mutant RNAP
has been proposed to explain the reported inability of bacteriophage
N4 to grow on 397c (25) . We therefore expected
that P2 phages that grow on 397c would also carry mutations in genes
whose products interact with RNAP and affect viral gene expression .
However, the experiments presented here strongly suggest that LysC is
not involved in transcription regulation but instead plays a role,
together with its partner protein LysB, in host lysis .
It was proposed previously by one of us that the LysB/LysC pair is
homologous to Rz/Rz1 based on unusual amino acid composition and the
overlapping organization of these genes (43) . Both Rz1
and LysC are relatively short polypeptides containing an unusually
high proportion of Pro residues (11 of 79 and 10 of 96, respectively) .
The N-terminal domains of both proteins contain putative signal
peptidase II motifs, indicating that both are processed to lipoprotein
forms, resulting in short (60 and 76 amino acids, respectively)
polypeptides predicted to be attached to the inner leaflet of the
outer membrane by lipid residues on the N-terminal Cys of the mature
polypeptide (43) . However, neither LysB nor LysC
is significantly related by standard or reiterative BLAST searches to
Rz or Rz1 or in fact to any proteins except those encoded by closely
related P2-like phages . Moreover, the
Rz1 reading frame is completely embedded within the Rz
gene, while the longer lysC reading frame spans the end of
lysB, the beginning of gene R, and the intervening 107 nt .
Nevertheless, we show here that production of P2 LysB and LysC
efficiently suppresses the
cation-sensitive lysis defect caused by either Rz or Rz1
mutations, indicating that P2 LysC and LysB and
Rz1 and Rz have similar functions . Production of either LysB or LysC
alone does not correct the lysis defect caused by Rz and/or
Rz1 mutations . This strongly implies that LysB and LysC form
heteromeric complexes . A similar conclusion was reached about Rz and
Rz1 interaction while comparing host lysis defects caused by Rz,
Rz1, and Rz/Rz1 double mutants (43) .
Moreover, two-hybrid analysis has shown that the Rz and Rz1 homologs
from phage T7 interact (3) . Our data suggest that
interspecies complexes (i.e., LysB/Rz1) either do not form or are not
functional . The presence of the
Rz1 protein (in the absence of Rz) results in a retardation of lysis
mediated by LysB/LysC complexes in the presence of high magnesium ion
concentrations (Fig . 4C), perhaps because
nonfunctional LysB/Rz1 complexes reduce the amount of functional
LysB/LysC heteromers . Presumably, the unique overlapping organization
of these genes imposes severe restrictions on their evolutionary
variation and helps to ensure that they coevolve .
The functional role of Rz/Rz1 and their homologues, LysB/LysC, is
not clear . Sequence analysis reveals that genes whose products are
similar to Rz/Rz1 and/or LysB/LysC are widespread in double-stranded
DNA phage genomes . The unusual nested or overlapping arrangement of
the two genes, as well as their localization immediately after the
main host lysis genes, is also conserved, suggesting that the two
proteins play an important, evolutionarily conserved function . In
vitro analysis by the Taylor group demonstrated that
Rz1 is found in the outer membrane and that, as predicted from the
primary structure analysis, Rz1 is processed and lipoylated (16,
19, 37) . More recently, the same group
reported that Rz1 promotes membrane fusion in vitro (6) .
However, the lysis phenotype in lambda remains unexplained . In vivo,
bacteriophage
mutants with lesions in either Rz or Rz1 are defective
in host lysis, but only in the presence of millimolar levels of
divalent cations (43) . In contrast, the lysC(Am)
mutation severely affects plating efficiency and plaque morphology of
P2 (Fig . 3), and P2 lysB(Am) mutants show a
slightly retarded lysis phenotype (44), and in
neither case is the presence of millimolar concentrations of divalent
cations required . A model for Rz function has been proposed in which
Rz, and by extension, Rz/Rz1, is involved in attacking links between
the outer membrane and the murein (42) . Under
standard laboratory conditions, the phage endolysin degrades the
peptidoglycan sufficiently to cause bursting of the infected cell,
but in the presence of high levels of divalent cations, the outer
membrane would be significantly stabilized, thus making further
degradation of the envelope necessary . The lack of a cation effect in
P2 may simply reflect that the K endolysin is not as efficient at
murein degradation and thus has a constitutive partial requirement
for the LysB/C function .
lysC alleles, the suppression of RNAP defects, and
implications for lysis control. How does the rpoC397 mutation
result in defective P2 development, and how do lysC missense
mutations overcome this defect? Our initial working model was that
the RNAP mutation directly affected transcription of viral genes,
leading somehow to a lysis defect . However, the locations of the
compensatory trl and gor mutations in a gene located
near the 3' end of a long late transcription unit, coupled with the
lack of a block to initiation of phage late transcription in an
rpoC397 strain, argue that the effect of the RNAP mutation would
have to be on elongation or some kind of attenuation mechanism
affecting lysis gene expression . Since cells carrying the rpoC397
mutation appear susceptible to accelerated lysis rather than impaired
lysis, one would have to further propose that the change in
transcription affected the relative levels of the various lysis
proteins to somehow bring about the observed change in timing and
that one of the lysis proteins modulates this effect . We cannot
formally rule out such a model, but it requires invoking a
complicated hypothetical regulatory mechanism for which there is no
direct evidence or precedent . An attractive alternative model
envisions that rpoC397 causes changes in host gene expression
that alter bacterial physiology, including properties of the cell
membrane and/or cell wall, and thus affects the timing of host lysis
during bacteriophage P2 infection . Indeed, whole-genome transcription
profiling of 397c cells shows that genes responsible for type I
extracellular polysaccharide synthesis are dramatically overproduced
(38), a typical stress response when the bacterial envelope
is compromised (35) . Thus, in this scenario, 397c
cells, with defective envelopes, lyse prematurely when infected with
wild-type P2, reducing the burst size below the threshold required
for plaque formation . The gor mutation dramatically delays the
lysis of rpoC397 cells, presumably allowing a sufficient
number of progeny to accumulate in each round of infection to
generate visible plaques .
Both lysC mutations that we describe here affect the same residue
of LysC: a Pro at position 25, which is replaced by either Leu
(gor) or Thr (trl) . Unlike P2, the closely related coliphage
186 does form plaques on strain 397c and the AD1600 [rho(Ts)15]
strain (33) (Table 2) . The predicted
phage 186 LysC has a Gln at residue 25 in place of Pro . Thus, 186 may
be naturally gor (or trl) . At present, it is premature
to speculate how gor and trl mutants retard host lysis,
lacking understanding of the function of the wild-type Rz/Rz1 and
thus LysB/LysC, protein complexes . However, the results reported here
are very significant in terms of the general picture of the
phage-mediated lysis of gram-negative bacteria . Heretofore, the
timing of lysis has been thought to be the exclusive province of the
holin proteins, which are produced by all double-stranded DNA phages
(41) . In this sense, timing refers to the
termination of the infection cycle, because when the holin triggers,
the host membrane is disrupted and all macromolecular synthesis and
assembly stops . Here, timing is strongly affected by the the lysC(gor)
allele, which allows an extended growth period and thus compensates
for the abortive, truncated infective cycle in P2 infections of
the rpoC397 host . Thus for the first time, a gene other than a
holin gene is implicated in lysis timing . Although it is premature to
speculate on the mechanistic details of this effect, nevertheless
these results may be evidence for the formation of a "lysis-some," a
multiprotein complex spanning the envelope and including all the
lysis proteins, the holin Y, endolysin K, and the LysB/LysC complexes
(and perhaps LysB, a putative antiholin; T . Park and R . Young,
unpublished observation) . Future experiments defining biological and
biochemical functions, as well as interacting molecular partners, of
LysB/LysC and Rz/Rz1 should help resolve these issues .
We thank Tina Goodwin for technical assistance and Robert Weisberg
for the MG1655 rpoC derivatives .
This work was supported by NIH grant GM59295 and a Burroughs
Wellcome Career Award to K.S., ACS grant RPG-92-008NP to G.E.C., and
NIH grant GM27099 to R.Y . D.M . was postdoctoral fellow of the Charles
and Johanna Busch Memorial Fund .
* Corresponding author . Mailing address: Waksman Institute for
Microbiology, 190 Frelinghuysen Rd., Piscataway, NJ 08854 . Phone: (732)
445-6095 . Fax: (732) 445-5735 . E-mail: severik@waksman.rutgers.edu.
Present address: Stowers Institute for Medical Research, Kansas City,
MO 64110 .
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