|
|
|
Journal of Bacteriology, July 2004, p . 4535-4542, Vol . 186, No . 14
Helicobacter pylori FlgR Is an Enhancer-Independent Activator of
|
| ABSTRACT |
|---|
Helicobacter pylori FlgR activates transcription with
54-RNA
polymerase holoenzyme (
54-holoenzyme)
from at least five flagellar operons . Activators of
54-holoenzyme
generally bind enhancer sequences located >70 bp upstream of the
promoter and contact
54-holoenzyme
bound at the promoter through DNA looping to activate transcription.
H . pylori FlgR lacks the carboxy-terminal DNA-binding domain
present in most
54-dependent
activators . As little as 42 bp of DNA upstream of the flaB
promoter and 26 bp of DNA sequence downstream of the transcriptional
start site were sufficient for efficient FlgR-mediated expression
from a flaB'-'xylE reporter gene in H . pylori,
indicating that FlgR does not use an enhancer to activate
transcription . Other examples of
54-dependent
activators that lack a DNA-binding domain include Chlamydia
trachomatis CtcC and activators from the other Chlamydia
spp . whose genomes have been sequenced . FlgR from Helicobacter
hepaticus and Campylobacter jejuni, which are closely
related to H . pylori, appear to have carboxy-terminal
DNA-binding domains, suggesting that the loss of the DNA-binding
domain from H . pylori FlgR occurred after the divergence of
these bacterial species . Removal of the amino-terminal regulatory
domain of FlgR resulted in a constitutively active form of the
protein that activated transcription from
54-dependent
genes in Escherichia coli . The truncated FlgR protein also
activated transcription with E . coli
54-holoenzyme
in an in vitro transcription assay .
| INTRODUCTION |
|---|
Helicobacter pylori is a microaerophilic, motile bacterium that
is the etiological agent of chronic gastritis in humans (10,
11) . Colonization of the gastric mucosa by H . pylori
is associated with development of peptic ulcers, gastric
non-Hodgkin's lymphomas, and gastric mucosa-associated lymphoid
tissue lymphoma (5) . Motility in H . pylori
is achieved through two to six polar flagella and is essential for
colonization in gnotobiotic piglets (12,
13) .
The H . pylori genome contains about 40 known flagellar genes scattered throughout the genome, which are organized into 25 or more transcriptional units (1, 58) . Where the regulation of flagellar biogenesis has been studied in other bacteria, flagellar gene expression is under the control of a regulatory hierarchy in which genes encoding the basal body and protein export apparatus are expressed first, followed by the genes encoding components of the hook, and then finally the genes encoding filament proteins (31, 62) .
Flagellar gene regulation in H . pylori is complex, involving
all three sigma factors found in the bacterium . Genes encoding
flagellar components required early in flagellar biogenesis are
transcribed by
80-RNA
polymerase holoenzyme, the primary form of RNA polymerase holoenzyme
in H . pylori, and are equivalent to the class II flagellar
genes in Escherichia coli and Salmonella enterica
serovar Typhimurium (31) . Class III flagellar genes
in H . pylori are transcribed by
54-RNA
polymerase holoenzyme (
54-holoenzyme)
and encode basal body rod proteins (flgBC), the hook protein (flgE),
and a minor flagellin (flaB) (54, 56) .
Expression of the
54-dependent
flagellar genes requires a two-component system consisting of the
sensor kinase HP0244 (3), which we refer to as
FlgS, and the response regulator FlgR (54) . The
gene encoding FlgS appears to be within a class II operon (1,
58), which may provide a mechanism for controlling the
hierarchical expression of the class III operons . The class IV
flagellar genes in H . pylori, which include the major
flagellin gene flaA, are transcribed by
28-RNA
polymerase holoenzyme (22, 29) . Temporal
control of class IV genes appears to be coordinated through the
regulation of both the expression and activity of
28 .
The gene encoding
28,
fliA, is part of a class II operon (1,
58), and the activity of
28
is negatively regulated through interactions with the anti-
28
factor FlgM (9, 19) .
FlgR activates transcription with
54-holoenzyme
and belongs to a large family of activators that are widespread in
bacteria and that are involved in regulation of diverse functions
including nitrogen fixation, C4-dicarboxylic acid
transport, degradation of aromatic compounds, hydrogen metabolism,
flagellar biogenesis, and pilin formation (24,
64) . To activate transcription, activators of
54-holoenzyme
typically bind to enhancer-like sequences located upstream of the
promoter and contact
54-holoenzyme
bound at the promoter in a closed complex through DNA looping (7,
50, 51, 55) .
Productive interactions between the activators and
54-holoenzyme
lead to conversion of the closed promoter complex to an open complex
in a reaction that is coupled to ATP hydrolysis by the activator (38,
47, 52, 61) .
Activators of
54-holoenzyme
are modular in structure, generally consisting of an amino-terminal
regulatory domain, a central domain responsible for transcriptional
activation and ATP hydrolysis, and a carboxy-terminal DNA-binding
domain (41, 64) . The central
activation domain belongs to the AAA+ superfamily of ATPases (ATPases
associated with various cellular activities), the members of which
are involved in diverse functions including transcription, DNA
replication, protein folding and unfolding, proteolysis, and membrane
fusion (39, 43, 65) .
FlgR is unusual in that it lacks the DNA-binding domain found in other activators (Fig . 1); it consists of only an amino-terminal response regulator domain and an AAA+ domain . Chlamydia trachomatis CtcC was reported recently to lack the carboxy-terminal DNA-binding domain (23), indicating that FlgR is not unique in its unusual structural arrangement . Previous study on CtcC, however, did not address the issue of whether an enhancer is required for efficient CtcC-mediated transcriptional activation in C . trachomatis .
|
To address the possibility that an enhancer-binding activity needed
for FlgR function resides on a separate polypeptide, flaB'-'xylE
reporter genes that carried various amounts of DNA sequence upstream
of the promoter were constructed and FlgR-mediated transcriptional
activation from these reporters in H . pylori was monitored . As
little as 42 bp of sequence upstream of the flaB promoter and
26 bp of sequence downstream of the transcriptional start site were
needed for efficient expression in H . pylori, indicating that
FlgR does not use an enhancer to activate transcription . The levels
of FlgR in H . pylori were estimated by Western blotting and
found to be somewhat higher than those reported for other
54-dependent
activators that have a carboxy-terminal DNA-binding domain . The AAA+
domain of FlgR was expressed in E . coli and purified . This
truncated FlgR protein was constitutively active and was able to
function with E . coli
54-holoenzyme
both in vivo and in vitro .
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
|---|
Bacterial strains and media. E . coli strain DH5
[
80d
lacZ
M15
recA1 gyrA96 thi-1 hsdR17(rK– mK+)
supE44 relA1 deoR
(lacZYA-argF)U169]
was used for cloning and was cultured in Luria-Bertani (LB) medium at
37°C . H . pylori strains ATCC 43504 and 26695 were grown on
tryptic soy agar (TSA) supplemented with 5% horse serum at 37°C under
microaerobic conditions, which consisted of an atmosphere of 4%
O2, 5% CO2, and 91% N2 . When included in the
medium, antibiotics were used at the following concentrations:
ampicillin, 100 µg/ml; chloramphenicol, 30 µg/ml; kanamycin, 30
µg/ml; bacitracin, 200 µg/ml; colistin, 15 µg/ml .
PCRs. Genomic DNA used for PCR was isolated from bacterial strains with the Wizard genomic DNA purification kit (Promega) . PCR primers were from Integrated DNA Technologies . PCR amplifications were done with either Taq (Promega) or Pfu (Stratagene) DNA polymerase . DNA was amplified in 30 cycles with the following temperature regimen: 94°C for 2 min, 49°C for 1.5 min, and 72°C for 3 min . PCR products were cloned into the cloning vector pGEM-T (Promega), and sequencing of the cloned PCR products was performed at the Molecular Genetics Instrumentation Facility at the University of Georgia .
Transformation of H . pylori. Electrocompetent H . pylori cells were prepared and transformed as described previously (53) . When transforming cells with derivatives of the shuttle vector pHel3, plasmid DNA was methylated with S-adenosylmethionine and H . pylori cell extract essentially as described previously to improve the transformation efficiency (44) . Briefly, 25 µg of plasmid DNA was treated with H . pylori cell extract (3 mg/ml) in a 200-µl reaction mixture containing 20 mM Tris-HCl, 50 mM KCl (pH 7.9), 5 mM EDTA, and 2 µM S-adenosylmethionine (Sigma) . Samples were incubated at 37°C for 30 min, after which time the DNA was purified with QIAGEN gel extraction columns . Treated plasmids were introduced into H . pylori by electroporation, and transformants were selected on TSA containing kanamycin .
Construction of H . pylori mutant strains with insertions in flgR or flgS. Plasmid pGHPAY91 carries the flgR gene from H . pylori strain 26695 and was obtained from the American Type Culture Collection . A 1.4-kb EcoRI fragment from plasmid pHP1 (34) that carries the Campylobacter coli aphA3 cassette was cloned into a unique StuI site within flgR in plasmid pGHPAY91 to create a suicide vector that was introduced into H . pylori strain ATCC 43504 by electroporation . Transformants were selected on TSA containing kanamycin, and genomic DNA from some of these colonies was analyzed by PCR to confirm that the chromosomal copy of flgR had been inactivated with the aphA3 cassette . One of these strains was saved and named MGD1 . An H . pylori flgR insertion mutant was similarly generated with a cassette bearing a chloramphenicol transacetylase (cat) gene from C . coli . The entire flgR from H . pylori strain 26695 was amplified by PCR and cloned in pGEM-T . A 1.3-kb EcoRI fragment from plasmid pSKAT4 (59) that carried the C . coli cat cassette was introduced into a unique Eco47III site within flgR in this plasmid, which then was transformed into H . pylori strain ATCC 43504 by electroporation . Transformants were selected on TSA containing chloramphenicol, and inactivation of the chromosomal copy of flgR by the cat cassette in these strains was confirmed by PCR . One flgR:cat mutant strain was saved and designated HP31 .
The entire flgS was amplified from H . pylori strain ATCC 43504 by PCR and cloned into pGEM-T . The 1.4-kb EcoRI fragment carrying the C . coli aphA3 cassette was inserted into a unique HindIII site with flgS in this plasmid to create plasmid pMD5 . Plasmid pMD5 was introduced into H . pylori strain ATCC 43504 by electroporation, and transformants were selected on TSA containing kanamycin . Genomic DNA from kanamycin-resistant colonies was analyzed by PCR to confirm that the chromosomal copy of flgS had been inactivated with the aphA3 cassette, and one flgS:aphA3 mutant strain was saved and designated MGD2 . The 1.3-kb EcoRI fragment bearing the C . coli cat cassette was also inserted into the HindIII site within flgS in pMD5 . This plasmid was introduced into H . pylori strain ATCC 43504 by electroporation, and transformants were selected on TSA containing chloramphenicol . Genomic DNA from chloramphenicol-resistant colonies was analyzed by PCR to confirm that the chromosomal copy of flgS had been inactivated with the cat cassette, and one of the flgS:cat strains was saved and named strain HP22 .
Construction of xylE reporter genes. For construction of all of the reporter genes described below, genomic DNA from H . pylori strain 26695 was used as a template . Cloned PCR products were sequenced to verify that no mutations had been introduced during DNA amplification . Reporter genes were constructed with a promoterless Pseudomonas putida catechol-2,3-dioxygenase (xylE) reporter (44) . A region of DNA that corresponded to positions –67 to +26 relative to the transcriptional start site of H . pylori flaB, which was determined previously (54), was amplified by PCR and cloned upstream of the promoterless xylE reporter gene . The resulting flaB'-'xylE reporter gene (designated flaB1'-'xylE) was moved into the shuttle vector pHel3 (16) to create plasmid pPBHP21, which was introduced into H . pylori strains by electroporation . Similarly, a region of DNA corresponding to positions –393 to +26 relative to the transcriptional start site of flaB was amplified and cloned upstream of xylE to create the flaB2'-'xylE reporter gene, which was moved into the shuttle vector pHel3 to create plasmid pPBHP22 .
For construction of the flaA'-'xylE reporter gene, DNA corresponding to positions –126 to +47 relative to the transcriptional start site of flaA (37) was amplified by PCR and then introduced upstream of xylE . The resulting flaA'-'xylE reporter gene was cloned into pHel3 to create plasmid pPBHP24 . For construction of the flgI'-'xylE reporter gene, a DNA fragment corresponding to positions –225 to +24 relative to the translational start site of flgI was amplified and cloned upstream of xylE . The resulting flgI'-'xylE reporter gene was moved into the shuttle vector pHel3 to create plasmid pPBHP23 .
Plasmid constructions for expression of FlgR proteins. To produce a full-length histidine-tagged version of FlgR, flgR was amplified from pGHPAY91 and cloned into the expression vector pTrcHis-C (Invitrogen) . The resulting plasmid, pMD20, introduced a sequence coding for a histidine tag to the 5' end of flgR . To express a maltose-binding protein-FlgR fusion protein (MBP-FlgR), a DNA fragment bearing flgR was moved from pMD20 into a derivative of pMAL-c (New England Biolabs), resulting in plasmid pPBHP12 . A plasmid that expressed the FlgR AAA+ domain (residues His-131 to Arg-381) with a histidine tag at the amino terminus was constructed by amplifying a 750-bp DNA fragment corresponding to this region of flgR with H . pylori 26695 genomic DNA as a template and cloning the PCR product into the expression vector pTrcHis-C to create plasmid pPBHP80 . Plasmid pHX182, which expresses the Sinorhizobium meliloti DctD AAA+ domain (residues Leu-141 to Ser-390) linked to a histidine tag at the amino terminus, is a derivative of pTrcHis-C and was provided by Hao Xu (63) .
Measurement of XylE activity. XylE activities in whole cells were measured as described previously (44) . H . pylori strains containing the xylE reporter plasmids were grown on TSA supplemented with kanamycin for 48 h and then resuspended in 50 mM phosphate buffer, pH 7.4, to a cell density of 1 optical density at 600 nm (OD600) unit, which corresponded to 109CFU/ml . Reactions were initiated by adding cells (50 to 100 µl) to reaction mixtures containing 10 mM catechol in 50 mM potassium phosphate, pH 7.4 . Catechol oxidation to 2-hydroxymuconic semialdehyde was monitored continuously at 375 nm with a Beckman DU 640B recording spectrophotometer at room temperature . A unit of XylE activity corresponds to 1 µmol of catechol/min, and values were expressed as units per minute per 108 cells .
Purification of FlgR proteins. Cultures of E . coli
DH5
bearing plasmid pPBHP12 were grown in LB medium at 37°C to an OD650
of 0.5, at which point isopropyl-ß-D-thiogalactopyranoside
(IPTG) was added to the culture medium to a final concentration
of 1 mM to induce the expression of MBP-FlgR . After an additional 3
to 4 h of incubation, cells were harvested by centrifugation and the
resulting cell pellet was resuspended in a mixture containing 20 mM
Tris-HCl (pH 7.4), 5% (vol/vol) glycerol, 1 mM dithiothreitol (DTT),
1 mM EDTA, 200 mM KCl, and 0.5 mM phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride
(buffer C) . Cells were lysed in a French pressure cell at 9,000 lb/in2,
and the resulting cell extract was clarified by centrifugation at
1,000 x g for 50 min . The supernatant
was loaded onto an amylose-agarose (New England Biolabs) affinity
column, and MBP-FlgR was eluted with buffer C plus 10 mM maltose .
Protein fractions were pooled and dialyzed against 20 mM HEPES
(pH 7.4)-5% (vol/vol) glycerol-1 mM DTT-100 mM potassium thiocyanate .
Protein concentrations were determined by a bicinchoninic acid
protein assay (Pierce) using bovine serum albumin as a standard .
The histidine-tagged FlgR AAA+ domain was expressed in E . coli
DH5
from plasmid pPBHP80 . Cells were grown at 37°C to an OD650
of 0.8, at which point IPTG was added to the medium to a final
concentration of 1 mM . Cultures were incubated for an additional 3 to
4 h . Cells were harvested by centrifugation, resuspended in 50 mM
Tris-acetate (pH 8.2)-200 mM KCl-1 mM EDTA-0.5 mM
phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride, and lysed in a French pressure cell at
9,000 lb/in2 . The cell extract was clarified by centrifugation
at 1,000 x g for 50 min, and
the resulting supernatant was loaded onto a nickel-nitrilotriacetic
acid resin column (QIAGEN) . The histidine-tagged FlgR AAA+ domain was
eluted in a buffer containing 300 mM NaCl, 50 mM sodium phosphate (pH
7.8), 250 mM imidazole, and 5% (vol/vol) glycerol . Fractions
containing the FlgR AAA+ domain were pooled and dialyzed against 20
mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.8)-5% (vol/vol) glycerol-100 mM potassium
thiocyanate-0.5 mM DTT (buffer A) . The protein was then applied to a
5-ml HiTrapQ anion-exchange column (Pharmacia) and eluted in a linear
gradient to 1 mM KCl in buffer A .
Assaying activity of FlgR proteins in E . coli.
Plasmids pMD20, pPBHP80, and pHX182 were introduced into an E .
coli DH5
strain that contained plasmid pRKMAZ:+UAS, which bears an S .
meliloti dctA'-'lacZ reporter gene (25) . Cultures
were grown in LB medium at 37°C to an OD650 of 0.8, at which
time IPTG was added to a final concentration of 1 mM . Cultures
were incubated an addition 7 h, at which point six independent sets
of whole cell ß-galactosidase assays were done in duplicate as
described previously (2), with activities expressed
as Miller units (36) .
Western blot analysis. H . pylori cells were lysed in sodium dodecyl sulfate loading buffer and then applied to a 10% polyacrylamide gel . Following electrophoresis, proteins were transferred to nitrocellulose membranes, which were probed with antiserum prepared in New Zealand White rabbits and directed against either full-length histidine-tagged FlgR (this study) or the H . pylori flagellum (kindly provided by Paul O'Toole, Massey University) . A peroxidase-conjugated goat affinity-purified antibody against rabbit immunoglobulin G was used as the secondary antibody (ICN/Cappel) . Cross-reactive protein bands were visualized by luminescence with an ECL kit (Amersham) .
In vitro transcription assay. Single-round transcription
assays were performed as described previously (21) .
Plasmid pJES534 (48) yields an
155-nucleotide
uracilless transcript from the S . enterica serovar Typhimurium
glnA promoter and was used as a DNA template . Reaction mixtures
contained 0.1 to 10 µM FlgR AAA+ domain protein, 1 U of E .
coli RNA polymerase (Epicentre), 200 nM S . enterica serovar
Typhimurium
54,
10 nM plasmid DNA, 4 mM ATP, 400 µM GTP, 5 µM CTP, and 7.5 µCi of [
-32P]CTP
(3,000 Ci/mmol; Amersham) . Proteins were incubated with the DNA
template at 37°C for 10 min, after which time ATP was added to
stimulate open-complex formation . After 10 min, the remaining
nucleotides were added to allow synthesis of the transcripts along
with 0.1 mg of heparin/ml to prevent further open-complex formation .
Reactions were stopped after 10 min, and transcripts were visualized
on a denaturing polyacrylamide gel, followed by exposure to
X-ray film .
Glutamine synthetase assays. Glutamine synthetase activities
were determined by the
-glutamyltransferase
assay as described previously (4) . Cultures of DH5
that carried plasmids pPBHP80 or pHX182 were grown in LB medium to
mid-log phase and harvested by centrifugation . Cells were
permeabilized by including hexadecyltrimethylammonium bromide in the
assay buffer as described previously (4) . Glutamine
synthetase units were expressed as nanomoles of
-glutamyl
hydroxymate produced per minute and normalized to a cell density of 1
OD650 unit . All assays were done at least six times .
| RESULTS |
|---|
FlgR and FlgS are required for motility and expression of
54-dependent
flagellar genes. FlgR is an activator of
54-
holoenzyme that was shown previously to be required for motility and
transcription of five
54-dependent
flagellar operons (flaB, flgE, orf0906, flgBC,
and orf1120-flgK) in H . pylori strain G27 (54) .
The gene encoding FlgR is at the 3' end of a putative operon that
includes genes encoding diacylglycerol kinase (dgkA), the
subunit of DNA gyrase (gyrA), and three hypothetical proteins
of unknown function (1, 58) . Similar to
the previous observations with H . pylori strain G27, inactivation
of flgR in H . pylori strain ATCC 43504 with either an
aphA3 or cat cassette resulted in loss of motility and
expression of FlgE and FlaB (Fig . 2; data only
shown for the flgR:aphA3 mutant strain) .
|
The flgR mutant strain expressed the major flagellin, FlaA,
which is dependent on
28
for its expression (29) . This observation was
consistent with the previous report for H . pylori strain G27
that flgR was not required for expression of flaA (54) .
This finding also illustrates a difference in the mechanisms
for controlling the expression of
28-dependent
flagellar genes in S . enterica serovar Typhimurium and H .
pylori . In S . enterica serovar Typhimurium,
28
function is inhibited by the anti-
28
factor FlgM until the hook-basal body complex is completed, at
which point FlgM is translocated out of the cell by the flagellar
protein export apparatus (31) . Although H . pylori
possesses a FlgM homolog that negatively regulates the function of
28
(9, 19), alleviation of the
inhibitory effect of FlgM on
28
does not involve formation of the hook-basal body complex since
H . pylori strains with mutations in the hook protein gene do
not produce flagellar filaments yet they still accumulate FlaA (46) .
The flgS gene (orf0244) encodes the cognate sensor kinase of
FlgR and is at the 3' end of a potential operon that includes
flgI and orf0245, which encode the flagellar basal body P-ring
protein and a hypothetical protein of unknown function, respectively
(1, 58) . Inactivation of flgS
in H . pylori strain G27 resulted in loss of motility and
expression of
54-dependent
flagellar genes, as assessed by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis
analysis of cell extracts of the mutant strain (3) .
As in these earlier observations, it was found that inactivation of
flgS in H . pylori strain ATCC 43504 resulted in loss of
motility and expression of FlgE and FlaB (Fig . 2) .
In contrast to the previous report with H . pylori strain G27,
however, inactivation of flgS in H . pylori strain ATCC
43504 did not eliminate expression of FlaA . This apparent discrepancy
could be due to differences between the two H . pylori strains .
Alternatively, since FlaA would not localize correctly in the absence
of FlgE and FlgB, it may not accumulate to wild-type levels in the
flgS mutant strain . Therefore, our ability to detect FlaA in the
flgS mutant strain may simply reflect the fact that the
sensitivity of the Western blotting procedure that we used was higher
than that of the two-dimensional gel electrophoresis method used in
the previous study for detecting expression of FlaA .
FlgR does not require upstream activation sequences for efficient
transcriptional activation from the flaB promoter. Activators of
54-holoenzyme
generally bind to DNA sequences located relatively far from the
promoter and contact the closed promoter complex through DNA looping
to activate transcription . These activator binding sites are
typically located >100 bp upstream of the transcriptional start site
since shorter distances hinder the ability of the activator to
interact with
54-holoenzyme
through DNA looping due to constraints in DNA flexibility (64) .
As illustrated in Fig . 1, H . pylori FlgR lacks
the carboxy-terminal DNA-binding domain found in most other
54-dependent
activators, suggesting that FlgR does not bind DNA to activate
transcription . Consistent with the lack of a DNA-binding domain,
purified full-length FlgR failed to bind a DNA fragment that bore the
flaB promoter regulatory region in gel mobility shift assays
(data not shown) . We wanted to examine the possibility, however, that
a DNA-binding activity required for FlgR function resides on a
separate polypeptide .
To determine if upstream activation sequences are required for
expression of
54-dependent
flagellar genes in H . pylori, we constructed flaB'-'xylE
reporter genes that had either 393 or 67 bp of DNA sequence upstream
of the transcriptional start site of flaB, which we designated
flaB2'-'xylE and flaB1'-'xylE,
respectively . Both reporter genes contained 26 bp of DNA sequence
downstream of the transcriptional start site of flaB, which
corresponded to the untranslated region of the flaB transcript .
These reporter genes were placed on the shuttle vector pHel3
and introduced into H . pylori strain ATCC 43504 . Levels of expression
from the two flaB'-'xylE reporter genes were similar and
dependent on both FlgR and FlgS (Table 1) .
Low-level expression from the flaB2'-'xylE reporter
gene was observed in the flgR and flgS mutant strains,
suggesting that
80-holoenzyme
or
28-holoenzyme
might initiate transcription weakly from a sequence located
upstream of the flaB promoter between positions –67 and –393 .
|
Expression from a flaA'-'xylE reporter gene, which is dependent
on
28-holoenzyme,
and a flgI'-'xylE reporter gene, which is dependent on
80-holoenzyme,
was compared with that from the flaB'-'xylE reporter
genes (Table 1) . Expression from the flaA'-'xylE
reporter gene was independent of FlgR and FlgS, while expression
from the flgI'-'xylE reporter gene was approximately twofold
lower in the flgR mutant strain but not in the flgS mutant
strain (Table 1) . We do not understand why
disruption of flgR resulted in lower expression from the
flgI'-'xylE reporter gene, but it does not seem likely
that it was due to the failure of the mutant strain to express the
54-dependent
flagellar genes, since this would also require FlgS . The XylE
activities observed for the flagellar reporter genes were consistent
with the expected relative amounts of the products of these genes
associated with the H . pylori flagellum (i.e., FlaA > FlaB >
FlgI) . Taken together, these data indicate that FlgR does not use an
upstream activation sequence or enhancer to elicit its function on
the flaB promoter .
FlgR levels in H . pylori are slightly higher than levels of
54-dependent
activators in other bacteria. Transcriptional activation in the absence
of DNA binding has been reported previously for other
54-dependent
activators, including NtrC (42), DctD (18,
60), NifA (17), and PspF (20) .
In these previous studies, the DNA-binding motifs of the activators
were either deleted or mutated to eliminate DNA-binding activity
or the upstream activation sequence of the target gene was removed .
Transcriptional activation under these conditions required that
the activator be present at higher-than-normal levels . We wished to
estimate the levels of FlgR in H . pylori to determine if it
was expressed at levels that were higher than those for
54-dependent
activators that function by binding to an upstream activation
sequence or enhancer .
Levels of NtrC in E . coli range from about 10 molecules of monomeric
protein per cell when cells are grown in a medium with excess
nitrogen to approximately 140 molecules per cell following starvation
of cells for nitrogen (32, 49) . We
estimated FlgR levels in H . pylori strain ATCC 43504 by
Western blotting using antiserum directed against the full-length
histidine-tagged FlgR . For the Western blot, purified MBP-FlgR was
used as a standard to avoid underestimating the FlgR concentration
due to antibodies that may have recognized the histidine tag . Various
amounts of H . pylori cells were lysed and loaded directly onto
the sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel for the Western blot
assay . Under the assay conditions the detection limit for MBP-FlgR
was
12.5
ng, or approximately 0.14 pmol of MBP-FlgR monomer (Fig.
3) . FlgR could be detected by the Western blot assay when
as few as 108 cells were lysed and loaded on the gel, which
corresponded to
800
FlgR monomers per cell . Thus, assuming that the intracellular volumes
of H . pylori and E . coli are similar, the level of FlgR
in H . pylori appears to be about sixfold higher than that of
NtrC in E . coli under conditions where these proteins are
activating transcription .
|
FlgR functions with E . coli
54-holoenzyme.
We wished to examine the function of FlgR in an in vitro transcription
assay . H . pylori
54-holoenzyme
has not been purified in an active form, so we used E . coli
54-holoenzyme
for these experiments . Previous work in the laboratory showed that
H . pylori rpoN, which encodes
54,
failed to complement an S . enterica serovar Typhimurium
rpoN mutant strain (M . Dashti, unpublished data), so it was
unclear if FlgR could function with E . coli
54-holoenzyme .
To examine H . pylori FlgR function in E . coli, flgR was cloned into the expression vector pTrc-HisC, which introduced a sequence coding for a histidine tag at the 5' end of the gene . Removal of the amino-terminal receiver domain of S . meliloti DctD had been shown previously to result in a constitutively active form of the protein (26), and we wished to determine if removal of the receiver domain of FlgR would similarly result in constitutive activity . Therefore, a truncated flgR allele that encoded residues His-131 through Arg-381, which is the carboxy-terminal amino acid residue of native FlgR, was cloned into pTrc-HisC .
Expression of both the full-length and truncated FlgR proteins was
inducible with IPTG to about the same level (data not shown) .
Activity of the FlgR proteins was monitored in E . coli with an
S . meliloti dctA'-'lacZ reporter gene, the expression from
which is dependent on
54-holoenzyme .
This reporter gene was used because S . enterica serovar
Typhimurium
54
(and also presumably E . coli
54)
has a low affinity for the H . pylori flaB promoter (L . Pereira
and T . R . Hoover, unpublished data) . Full-length FlgR activated
transcription from the dctA'-'lacZ reporter gene very
weakly (approximately threefold above background) when its expression
was induced with IPTG but failed to activate transcription above
background levels when its expression was not induced (Fig.
4) . Since FlgR presumably needs to be phosphorylated
to activate transcription, the low-level activity observed with
the full-length FlgR in E . coli suggested that the protein could
be phosphorylated by another sensor kinase or a small phosphor
donor, as occurs with other response regulators (30,
40) .
|
In contrast to the results with the full-length protein, the FlgR
AAA+ domain activated transcription from the dctA'-'lacZ
reporter gene >120-fold above background levels when its
expression was not induced with IPTG . The activity of the FlgR AAA+
domain in E . coli compared favorably with that of the DctD
AAA+ domain, indicating that the FlgR AAA+ domain was able to
function effectively with E . coli
54-holoenzyme .
The activities of both the FlgR AAA+ domain and the DctD AAA+ domain
decreased upon induction of these proteins with IPTG . This decrease
in activity was not likely due to aggregation since these proteins
were in the soluble fraction when we overexpressed them for
purification . Since
54-dependent
activators can bind
54
(8), the FlgR and DctD AAA+ domains may have
sequestered
54
and prevented it from binding core RNA polymerase to form the
holoenzyme .
To determine if the FlgR and DctD AAA+ domains influenced expression
of other
54-dependent
genes in E . coli, we examined the effect of these proteins on
expression of glnA, which encodes glutamine synthetase .
Expression of glnA is dependent on
54
and NtrC, which binds to several sites located upstream of glnAp2,
the
54-dependent
glnA promoter (50) . The presence of the FlgR AAA+
domain or the DctD AAA+ domain resulted in an approximately
threefold increase in glutamine synthetase activity (Table 2),
suggesting that these activators stimulated transcription from
glnAp2 . Overexpression of these proteins, however, did not inhibit
glnA expression, as observed with the dctA'-'lacZ
reporter gene . We do not know the reason for this, but one
possibility is that
54-holoenzyme
has a higher affinity for glnAp2 than it does for the dctA
promoter and therefore might be less sensitive to decreased levels of
free
54
in the cell .
|
The FlgR AAA+ domain was purified, and its activity was examined in
vitro . The purified FlgR AAA+ domain hydrolyzed ATP and activated
transcription with E . coli RNA polymerase from a DNA template
that carried S . enterica serovar Typhimurium glnAp2 in an in
vitro transcription assay (Fig . 5) . Transcripts were
detected with as little as 0.5 µM FlgR AAA+ domain monomer . As
observed with the dctA'-'lacZ reporter gene in vivo, but in
contrast to the results for glnAp2, high concentrations of the
FlgR AAA+ domain inhibited transcription initiation from glnAp2
in the in vitro transcription assay . The reason for the discrepancy
in the in vivo and in vitro results with glnAp2 might be the
smaller amounts of
54-holoenzyme
in the in vitro system . Alternatively, conditions in the in vitro
system may not be optimized for efficient transcription, making the
in vitro assay more sensitive to perturbations . Regardless of the
reason, the results of the in vivo and in vitro transcription assays
suggest further that FlgR does not bind DNA to activate
transcription, nor does it require another DNA-binding protein to do
so since it is unlikely that the promoter regulatory regions of
dctA, glnA, and flaB have a common upstream
activation sequence .
|
| DISCUSSION |
|---|
Most bacterial transcriptional activators bind to specific sites
within the promoter regulator regions of their target genes to
recruit RNA polymerase to the promoter or to stimulate a step in
transcription initiation that occurs after the initial binding of RNA
polymerase to the promoter . One notable exception is the
bacteriophage N4 single-stranded DNA binding protein (N4SSB), which
activates transcription with E . coli
70-holoenzyme
at N4 late promoters without binding DNA (35) . N4SSB
interacts with the carboxy terminus of the ß' subunit of RNA
polymerase and appears to stimulate a step that follows the
initial binding of RNA polymerase to the promoter (35) . E .
coli MarA and the closely related SoxS protein are other examples
of transcriptional activators that function somewhat differently
from most bacterial activators . Although MarA and SoxS are DNA-binding
proteins, they appear to bind DNA after interacting with RNA
polymerase in solution (33) . MarA and SoxS interact with the
subunit of RNA polymerase in the absence of DNA to form binary
complexes that are thought to scan chromosomal DNA for target
promoters .
Activators of
54-holoenzyme
generally bind to sites that are located relatively far from the
promoter and contact the closed complex through DNA looping to
activate transcription (64) . H . pylori FlgR
lacks the DNA-binding domain associated with most other
54-dependent
activators, and the results presented here demonstrate that FlgR does
not require an enhancer or upstream activation sequence to activate
transcription . We infer that FlgR binds
54-holoenzyme
directly, either before or after formation of the closed promoter
complex, to activate transcription . While mutant forms of other
54-dependent
activators have been reported to activate transcription in the
absence of DNA binding (17, 18,
20, 42), FlgR is unusual in that it
represents a naturally occurring enhancer-independent activator of
54-holoenzyme .
FlgR appears to be present at concentrations in the cell that are
higher than those of NtrC in E . coli . The glnA enhancer
facilitates oligomerization of NtrC, which is required for
transcriptional activation from glnAp2 (48) .
Thus, higher concentrations of FlgR may be needed to compensate for
the absence of enhancer binding and to allow oligomerization of the
protein .
C . trachomatis CtcC was described recently as an activator of
54-holoenzyme
that lacks a DNA-binding domain (23), and we infer
that, like FlgR, CtcC does not require sequences upstream of the
promoter to activate transcription . Search of the databases for
additional
54-dependent
activators that lack the DNA-binding domain identified activators
from Chlamydia pneumoniae, Chlamydia muridarum, and
Chlamydophila caviae with this unusual structural property (Fig.
1) . Two other potential
54-dependent
activators that appear to lack the carboxy-terminal DNA-binding
domain were found in database searches, one in Xanthomonas
campestris pv . campestris ATCC 33913 (gene designated
pilR in the database) and another in P . putida KT2440
(designated PP5166 in the database) . There is some doubt, however, as
to whether the sequences of these activators are correct or if they
encode
54-dependent
activators . The carboxy-terminal end of the deduced amino acid
sequence of X . campestris PilR corresponds to a sequence located
28 amino acids before that of H . pylori FlgR, placing it within
the conserved sensor II motif of the AAA+ domain . Since this
motif is important for function of other
54-dependent
activators, it is unlikely that such a truncation would result in an
active protein . The carboxy-terminal end of the deduced amino acid
sequence of P . putida PP5166 extends 3 residues beyond that
of H . pylori FlgR . P . putida PP5166, however, has a poor
match for the highly conserved GAFTGA motif in the C3 region of the
protein (deduced amino acid sequence of this motif in PP5166 is
GSHGGT) . The GAFTGA motif, which is diagnostic of
54-dependent
activators (45) functions in contacting
54
and coupling ATP hydrolysis to open-complex formation, and
substitutions within this motif often result in loss of activity (6,
8, 14, 28,
60, 61) . Thus, PP5166 may not
be an activator of
54-holoenzyme
but may function with another form of RNA polymerase holoenzyme .
A potential advantage to the cell for using an activator of
54-holoenzyme
that does not bind DNA is that extensive regulatory regions upstream
of target promoters which harbor binding sites for activators and
auxiliary proteins involved in transcriptional activation, such as
the integration host factor, are dispensable . A major drawback,
however, is that the cell may be limited to a single
54-dependent
activator dedicated for a particular cellular function since there is
no obvious mechanism for preventing activation from all of the
54-dependent
genes within the genome . Indeed, FlgR, CtcC, and the other chlamydial
activators are the sole
54-dependent
activators in their respective bacteria, and, at least for FlgR, the
activator appears to be dedicated for a specific cellular activity .
The metabolic savings gained by employing activators that function
without binding DNA seems small given the sacrifice in regulatory
potential that accompanies the use of such activators . Therefore, we
expect activators of
54-holoenzyme
that do not bind DNA to be restricted to bacteria with relatively
limited needs for regulatory potential . Consistent with this
hypothesis, such
54-dependent
activators have been found only in pathogens that have limited
biosynthetic capability .
All of the chlamydial genomes that have been sequenced to date
include an open reading frame that encodes a potential
54-dependent
activator that lacks the DNA-binding domain . In contrast, Helicobacter
hepaticus and Campylobacter jejuni, which are closely related
to H . pylori, each have a single
54-dependent
activator but these activators each have a potential DNA-binding
domain (Fig . 1) . This is somewhat surprising given
that these activators appear to have the same role in flagellar
biogenesis as H . pylori FlgR (15,
54, 57) . We infer from this observation
that loss of the DNA-binding domain in the chlamydial
54-dependent
activators and its loss in H . pylori FlgR occurred
independently of each other .
The crystal structure of the AAA+ domain of NtrC1, a
54-dependent
activator from "Aquifex aeolicus," was recently reported (27) .
Alignment of the FlgR, CtcC, and chlamydial activator sequences
with that of NtrC1 indicated that the carboxy termini of these
proteins correspond to residues within the last helix of the
-helical
subdomain of the NtrC1 AAA+ domain . Thus, these
54-dependent
activators appear to have lost the entire DNA-binding domain
during the course of evolution . It is unclear if the loss of the
entire DNA-binding domain reflects an economic benefit by removing as
much of the protein as possible or if there is a structural or
functional basis for the proteins to terminate at this point .
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
|---|
This work was funded by award MCB-9974558 to T.R.H . from the National
Science Foundation .
We thank Paul O'Toole for providing antiserum directed against the H . pylori flagellum .
| FOOTNOTES |
|---|
* Corresponding author . Mailing address: Department of
Microbiology, 527 Biological Sciences Building, University of Georgia, Athens,
GA 30602 . Phone: (706) 542-2675 . Fax: (706) 542-2674 . E-mail: trhoover@uga.edu .
Present address: Department of Biological Sciences, Faculty of
Science, University of Kuwait, Safat, Kuwait .
| REFERENCES |
|---|