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Journal of Bacteriology, June 2003, p . 3558-3566, Vol . 185,
No . 12
Posttranscriptional Control of Quorum-Sensing-Dependent Virulence Genes by DksA
in Pseudomonas aeruginosa
Florence Jude,1,2 Thilo Köhler,1 Pavel Branny,1,3
Karl Perron,1 Matthias P . Mayer,4 Rachel Comte,1
and Christian van Delden1*
Department of Genetics and Microbiology, Centre Médical Universitaire,
University of Geneva, Geneva, Switzerland,1 Laboratoire
d'Océanographie Biologique, Université Bordeaux I, Bordeaux, France,2
Institute of Microbiology, Czech Academy of Sciences, Prague, Czech Republic,3
Zentrum für Molekulare Biologie, Universität Heidelberg, Heidelberg, Germany4
Received 7 October 2002/ Accepted 26 March 2003
Pseudomonas aeruginosa controls the secretion of extracellular
virulence factors, including rhamnolipids and LasB elastase, by the
las and rhl quorum-sensing systems . Here, we mutated
the dksA gene of P . aeruginosa by insertion of an
-Hg
cassette . The mutant displayed growth rates similar to that of the
wild type in rich medium but was impaired in growth in defined
minimal medium . Production of rhamnolipids and LasB elastase by the
dksA mutant was only 4 and 10%, respectively, of wild-type levels .
These defects could be partially complemented by introduction
of the plasmid-encoded dksA genes from P . aeruginosa or
Escherichia coli . In the dksA mutant, the expression of
rhlI was increased early during exponential growth, but
expression of other quorum-sensing regulator genes—lasR,
lasI, and rhlR—was not affected . Although the
transcription of the lasB and rhlAB genes was comparable
between the dksA mutant and the wild-type strain in peptone
tryptic soy broth medium, we observed reduced translation of
both genes in the dksA mutant . Similarly, we found that full
translation of lasB and rhlAB genes in E . coli also
requires the dksA gene . DksA is therefore a novel regulator
involved in the posttranscriptional control of extracellular
virulence factor production in P . aeruginosa .
The opportunistic pathogen Pseudomonas aeruginosa is responsible
for severe nosocomial infections in immunocompromised and intubated
patients (4) . In addition, P . aeruginosa is the
most commonly found pathogen in cystic fibrosis (CF) patients and is
responsible for progressive lung tissue destruction leading to
respiratory failure (4) . P . aeruginosa
produces a wide spectrum of secreted virulence factors, including
LasB elastase, rhamnolipids, pyocyanin, lipase, and hydrogen cyanide
(30) . The las and rhl quorum-sensing
systems regulate the production of these factors in a cell density-dependent
manner . This regulation relies on the accumulation in the medium
of two autoinducer (AI) molecules, 3-oxo-C12-homoserine lactone
(3-oxo-C12-HSL) and C4-HSL, that induce the las
and rhl quorum-sensing systems when the bacterial cell density
reaches a certain threshold (quorum), leading to transcription of
specific genes and the production of the virulence factors cited
above . Both systems involve a transcriptional regulator (RhlR and
LasR, respectively) and an AI synthase (RhlI and LasI, respectively)
(30) . A hierarchy was proposed in which the las
system activates the rhl system by inducing the transcription
of the activator gene rhlR (12,
20) .
Additional layers of regulation of the quorum-sensing circuitry
have been described . These include the transcriptional regulator
vfr (1), a homologue of the Escherichia coli cyclic
AMP-binding protein, the GacA two-component regulator (23),
the enzyme polyphosphate kinase (22), and the
mvaT gene product which modulates the timing of quorum-sensing
activation (5) . Recently, we have shown that
overexpression of the starvation response regulator encoded by
relA, leading to increased production of the nutrient stress
signal ppGpp, is able to induce the quorum-sensing circuitry of P .
aeruginosa even at low cell densities (29) . Furthermore,
we also demonstrated that overexpressing dksA reduces the
expression of the rhlI gene by an as-yet-unknown mechanism (2) .
DksA was discovered initially as a protein able to suppress the
temperature-sensitive growth of an E . coli dnaK mutant (10) .
Subsequently, dksA homologues were identified in Salmonella
enterica serovar Typhimurium (28) and recently
in Shigella flexneri (16) . DksA plays a role in
virulence of both organisms . In serovar Typhimurium, dksA controls
the expression of the stationary-phase sigma factor rpoS (33),
and a dksA mutant was less virulent than the parental strain
when tested in 3-week-old hatched chickens (28) . In
S . flexneri, dksA is involved in intercellular spread upon
infection of epithelial cell layers . Unlike in Salmonella, the
effect of dksA does not depend on the rpoS sigma factor
in S . flexneri (16) . From these
observations, it appears that dksA could be a general regulator
of virulence . In P . aeruginosa, regulation of rpoS
expression is extremely complex and controversial . Earlier work
suggested that RhlR regulates the transcription of the
stationary-phase sigma factor RpoS (12), whereas
it was proposed more recently that rhlI expression is
inhibited early during exponential growth by RpoS (34) .
In E . coli, RpoS is regulated by the nutrient stress signal
ppGpp . Furthermore, deletion of dksA in E . coli was
shown to block rpoS induction by ppGpp (3), suggesting
that DksA indirectly regulates rpoS expression .
To further characterize the role of DksA in the nosocomial pathogen
P . aeruginosa, we constructed a dksA knockout mutant and
analyzed its quorum-sensing-dependent virulence properties . We found
that DksA is required for full translation of the lasB elastase
gene and the rhamnosyltransferase encoding rhlAB gene .
Strains, plasmids, and growth conditions. The bacterial strains
and plasmids used in this work are described in Table 1 .
Bacteria were grown at 37°C with aeration in peptone tryptic soy
broth (PTSB) (17), unless otherwise indicated .
| TABLE 1 . Bacterial strains, plasmids, and bacteriophage
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DNA techniques. Restriction endonucleases and DNA-modifying
enzymes were purchased from Q-BioGene or Gibco-BRL . Plasmids were
introduced into E . coli by transformation (13)
and into P . aeruginosa by conjugation or electroporation (27) .
Other DNA manipulations were performed according to standard
protocols (13) .
Construction of a P . aeruginosa dksA mutant. To
generate a P . aeruginosa dksA mutant, a 960-bp SmaI fragment
from plasmid pVD99.3 (2), carrying the dksA gene,
was cloned into the suicide vector pME3088 (32),
yielding plasmid pPB101 . A 130-bp deletion between the EcoRI
and SphI sites within the dksA gene was generated .
After end polishing with T4 polymerase, the
-Hg
cassette from plasmid pHP45 Hg
(6) was inserted as a SmaI fragment . The
resulting plasmid, pPB102, was mobilized by conjugation from
E . coli strain S17-1 into P . aeruginosa wild-type
strain PT5 . Clones which were mercury resistant (Hgr;
encoded by the dksA::Hgr allele) and tetracycline susceptible
(encoded by the plasmid vector) were considered putative dksA
mutants . The replacement of the wild-type dksA gene with the
dksA::Hgr allele was verified by Southern hybridization
(data not shown) . One clone presenting the expected hybridization
pattern was selected for further studies and named PAO-RC1 .
Construction of an E . coli dksA mutant. The E .
coli dksA deletion allele was transferred from E . coli
strain PK201 (MG1655 dksA::Kan) (10) to E . coli
strain MC1061 by P1 transduction . Growth of phage P1 on dksA
deletion strain PK201 was obtained after 3 h of culture in
Luria-Bertani (LB) medium with aeration . The lysate was filtered
(0.22-µm pore size) and conserved at 4°C . Recipient strain MC1061
(108 CFU/ml) was incubated in TNC buffer (0.01 M Tris-HCl, pH
7.4; 0.15 M NaCl, 0.01 M CaCl2) with P1 lysate (5
x 108 PFU/ml) for 15
min at 42°C . P1 transductants appeared on plates containing 25 µg of
kanamycin/ml and 0.001 M sodium citrate after incubation at 37°C for
48 h . Replacement of the wild-type dksA gene by the dksA::Kan
allele was verified by Southern hybridization with three different
restriction endonucleases (data not shown) . The obtained
hybridization patterns were identical between the three transductants
and the original dksA mutant PK201 . One transductant, MC1061D,
was used for further experiments .
Plasmid constructions. For complementation experiments, the
P . aeruginosa dksA gene was cloned as a 960-bp SmaI
fragment, obtained from plasmid pVD99.3, into the SmaI site of
pBluescript II SK(+) . The resulting construct was then digested with
HindIII and BamHI, and the generated fragment,
containing the dksA gene, was subsequently ligated into HindIII-BamHI-digested
cosmid vector pRK7813 (9), yielding plasmid pRKD1 .
In this construct, the P . aeruginosa dksA gene conserved its
own promoter and Shine-Dalgarno sequence .
Similarly, the E . coli dksA gene was cloned into plasmid pRK7813
by first ligating the 520-bp NheI-PstI fragment from plasmid
pMPM31 into EcoRV-PstI-digested pBluescript II SK(+) after
the NheI 5' protruding end was filled in with the Klenow
fragment . From this construct, a 530-bp HindIII-BamHI
fragment, which contains the E . coli dksA ORF with its own
Shine-Dalgarno sequence, was ligated into the HindIII-BamHI-digested
plasmid pRK7813, downstream of the plac promoter, yielding
plasmid pRKDE1 .
To construct a transcriptional lasB::lacZ fusion containing
the same regulatory DNA sequence as the translational lacZ fusion
pTS400, a 400-bp fragment was amplified by PCR with pTS400 plasmid
DNA as a template . An EcoRI and a BamHI site were inserted
at the 5' and 3' ends, respectively, by using the primers LasBEco
(5'-CGGAATTCCAGAAAGCGTGCAACTGAT-3') and LacZPoly (5'-GACGGGATCCCCGGG-3') .
The PCR fragment was digested with these enzymes and ligated
into EcoRI-BamHI-cleaved pLP170 to yield plasmid p101.170 .
Insertion sites were verified by DNA sequencing .
Elastase and rhamnolipid production assays. Elastase
production was measured by elastin Congo red assays as previously
described (31) . Rhamnolipid production was measured
on SW blue plates by inoculating strains in M9-based (13)
agar plates supplemented with 0.2% glycerol (vol/vol), 2 mM MgSO4,
trace elements, 5 mM KNO3 instead of NH4Cl as an N
source, 0.0005% (vol/vol) methylene blue, and 0.02% (vol/vol)
cetyltrimethylammonium bromide (25) . Plates were
incubated first at 37°C for 24 h and then for at least 48 h at room
temperature until a blue halo appeared around the colony . For
quantitative assays, rhamnolipids were extracted from culture
supernatants and then grown in M9 minimal medium supplemented with 2%
glycerol (vol/vol), 2 mM MgSO4, trace elements, 0.05%
glutamate (instead of NH4Cl), and 0.05% Casamino Acids .
After ether extraction, rhamnolipids were quantified by the orcinol
procedure (19) .
ß-Galactosidase activity assays. ß-Galactosidase activity
was measured as previously described (15), with
the following modifications . P . aeruginosa cultures harboring
lacZ fusion plasmids were grown for 18 h at 37°C with vigorous
shaking in PTSB medium (17) containing the
appropriate antibiotics and then inoculated into the same medium
without antibiotic to a starting optical density at 660 nm (OD660)
of 0.05 . Samples were harvested at regular intervals during growth
for determination of the turbidity at 660 nm and ß-galactosidase
measurements . All experiments were done in triplicate and performed
at least twice .
Overnight cultures of E . coli strains MC1061 and MC1061D containing
plasmid pECP61.5 or pECP64 were diluted to an OD600 of 0.08
and grown at 37°C with shaking to an OD600 of 0.3 . Then,
1-ml aliquots of cultures were then grown for 90 min with 1 mM
IPTG (isopropyl-ß-D-thiogalactopyranoside) in the
presence or absence of AIs . The ß-galactosidase activity was
measured as described previously (15) .
Determination of AI concentrations. Culture supernatants
were extracted with ethyl acetate, and AI concentrations were
determined in bioassays as previously described, by using E . coli
MG4 I14(pPCS1)
for 3-oxo-C12-HSL (24) and P .
aeruginosa PAO-JP2(pECP61.5) for C4-HSL (29) .
Production of DksA antibodies. The E . coli dksA gene
was expressed in E . coli strain MC1061 under the control of an
arabinose-inducible promoter (14) . Exponentially
growing cells were induced for 5 to 6 h at 37°C by the addition of 67
µM (final concentration) L-arabinose . The cell paste
(12.5 g) was resuspended in 375 ml of buffer A (50 mM Tris-HCl
[pH 7.5], 1 mM EDTA, 10 mM ß-mercaptoethanol) containing 1 mM
phenylmethylsulfonide fluoride and then disrupted by sonication . Cell
debris was removed by centrifugation, and the supernatant was
subjected to fractionated polyethyleneimine precipitation (0.003 and
0.008%) . The 0.008% pellet was extracted twice with 15 ml of 1 M NaCl
in buffer A, and the pooled supernatants were precipitated with 60%
ammonium sulfate . The ammonium sulfate pellet was dissolved in 1 ml
of buffer B (100 mM Tris-HCl [pH 7.5], 0.5 mM EDTA, 10 mM
ß-mercaptoethanol) and loaded onto a Superdex 200 (Hiload 16/60;
Amersham) gelfiltration column equilibrated in buffer B . The
DksA-containing fractions were pooled, dialyzed against buffer C (20
mM NaxHyPO4 [pH 7.0], 10% glycerol),
and loaded onto a heparin-agarose column (Bio-Rad) . DksA was eluted
with a linear gradient from 50 to 400 mM NaCl . The DksA-containing
fractions were dialyzed against 10 mM NaxHyPO4
(pH 7.0)-10% glycerol, loaded onto a hydroxyapatite column, and
eluted with 100 mM NaxHyPO4 (pH 7.0)-10%
glycerol . Purified DksA protein (63 mg) was frozen in liquid N2
and stored at -80°C . The purity, estimated by sodium dodecyl sulfate
(SDS)-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, was >95% . For antiserum
production, 100 µg of purified DksA protein was mixed with aluminum
hydroxide and injected into New Zealand White rabbits . After
three injections, the antibody titer was sufficient, and the final
bleed was made after a fourth injection .
Protein extraction, electrophoresis, and Western blot analyses.
To prepare cell lysates for such assays, overnight cultures in LB
medium were diluted 1:100 into fresh LB medium, and the cultures were
incubated at the appropriate temperature with shaking until the OD600
(E . coli) or OD660 (P . aeruginosa) of the
cultures reached ca . 0.6 to 0.7 . The cells were then harvested and
washed in 30 mM MOPS (morpholinepropanesulfonic acid) and 200 mM NaCl
(pH 8.0) buffer . Cells were resuspended in 30 mM MOPS, 200 mM NaCl, 1
mM phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride, 2 mM benzamidine, and 10 mM
2-ß-mercaptoethanol buffer, with a concentration of 0.1 g of
cells/ml . Cells were broken by sonication on ice, and cytoplasmic and
membrane extracts were separated by ultracentrifugation at 35,000 rpm
during 1 h at 4°C .
Protein samples were subjected to electrophoresis in 12.5% polyacrylamide
gels containing 0.4% SDS . Equal amounts of protein samples (10
µg) were loaded per lane, except for purified E . coli DksA
protein (50 ng/lane) . Gels were stained with Coomassie brilliant
blue . Alternatively, the proteins were transferred to nitrocellulose
membrane and detected by using polyclonal rabbit anti-DksA serum
diluted 1:1,000 . Protein-antibody complexes were visualized by using
a chemiluminescent detection method (Lumi-Light Western blotting
substrate; Roche) .
Cellular localization of the DksA protein. Despite the
increasing amount of data regarding DksA, the cellular localization
of this protein has never been analyzed . We therefore attempted to
detect the DksA protein in cytoplasmic and membrane fractions from
exponentially growing E . coli and P . aeruginosa cells .
A polyclonal antiserum raised against the E . coli DksA protein
was used to detect the protein in Western blots . The antiserum
strongly reacted with the purified DksA protein from E . coli
(deduced molecular weight of 17,528) (Fig . 1) and with
a protein of similar molecular weight present in cytosolic but
not in membrane fractions of E . coli strain MC1061 (Fig . 1) .
As expected, this protein band was absent in extracts from the
dksA mutant MC1061D . A 20-kDa protein reacting with DksA antiserum
was also found in cytosolic extracts of the P . aeruginosa wild-type
strain PT5, albeit with lower signal intensity (Fig . 1) .
Since this signal was absent in extracts from the dksA mutant
PAO-RC1, we considered that the protein corresponded to DksA of P .
aeruginosa . Hence, DksA is a cytosolic protein both in
exponentially growing E . coli and in P . aeruginosa
cells and therefore is expected to interact with a target also
localized in the cytosol .
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FIG . 1 . Western blot analyses of supernatants and cell sonic extracts
from E . coli and P . aeruginosa wild type (wt)
(MC1061 and PT5, respectively) and dksA mutants (dksA)
(MC1061D and PAO-RC1, respectively) . A total of 10 µg of protein from
cell membrane and cytosolic fractions was collected, separated by
SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, and transferred to
nitrocellulose membranes . The blot was probed with anti-DksA antiserum,
and reactive bands were visualized by chemiluminescence, as described in
Materials and Methods . Lanes: C, cytosolic fraction; M, membrane
fraction . The arrow indicates the 20-kDa protein corresponding to DksA .
The lane marked DksA contains 50 ng of purified E . coli DksA
protein.
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Construction and growth of a P . aeruginosa dksA mutant.
Recently, we described the effect of dksA overexpression on
the quorum-sensing circuit of P . aeruginosa . dksA expressed on
a multicopy plasmid inhibited the transcription of the rhlI
gene, leading to a reduced production of C4-HSL (2) .
In order to further analyze the role played by dksA in the
regulation of quorum-sensing-dependent virulence factor production,
we constructed a dksA deletion mutant in the P . aeruginosa
wild-type strain PT5, as described in Materials and Methods . The
dksA mutant of PT5 was designated PAO-RC1 . We first compared the
growth of this mutant in rich and defined media since growth
defects had been reported for the E . coli dksA mutant (3) .
Whereas both strains displayed similar growth rates in PTSB medium
(Fig . 2A), we observed reduced growth of the P .
aeruginosa dksA mutant in M9 minimal medium (13) (Fig.
2B) . This growth defect was almost completely
relieved by the addition of 0.05% Casamino Acids (Fig .
2C), suggesting that, as in E . coli, dksA is involved
in amino acid biosynthesis in P . aeruginosa .
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FIG . 2 . Growth curves of PT5 ( )
and dksA mutant PAO-RC1 (•) in PTSB medium (A) and in M9-glucose
medium, 2 mM MgSO4, and trace elements without (B) or with
(C) 0.05% Casamino Acids . Shown are the means ± the standard deviations
of three independent experiments.
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Production of quorum-sensing-regulated virulence factors is affected in
the dksA mutant. Since we previously found that dksA
overexpression interferes with quorum sensing (2),
we tested in both the wild-type and the dksA mutant the
production of two quorum-sensing-regulated virulence factors, namely,
rhamnolipids and LasB elastase . Surprisingly, the dksA mutant
PAO-RC1 produced no rhamnolipids, as measured by our plate assay
(data not shown) . Rhamnolipids were further extracted from 36-h
culture supernatants and then quantified by the orcinol assay . The
amount of rhamnolipid produced by the mutant was only 4% of that of
the wild-type strain (Fig . 3A) . We further
determined the production of LasB elastase after growth in PTSB
medium after 16 h growth at 37°C by using the elastin-Congo red
assay . We found that the LasB elastase activity in supernatants of
the dksA mutant was only 10% of that found in wild-type
supernatants (Fig . 3B) .
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FIG . 3 . (A) Rhamnolipid production as determined by orcinol assay .
Strains to be tested were grown for 36 h in M9-glycerol medium as
described in Materials and Methods . Means of triplicate determinations
are expressed as the percentage of wild-type production . (B) Elastase
production was determined on filtered culture supernatants of strains
grown in PTSB medium for 16 h . Elastin-Congo red determinations (OD495)
were performed on three different occasions . The means of these results,
divided by the cell density measured at OD660, are
represented as the percentage of wild-type activity . Plasmid pRKDE1 and
pRKD1 carry the dksA genes of E . coli and P . aeruginosa
on the low-copy-number plasmid pRK7813, respectively.
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The production of both rhamnolipids (Fig . 3A) and elastase
(Fig . 3B) could be partially restored in the
dksA mutant by complementation in trans with the
low-copy-number plasmid pRKD1 containing the P . aeruginosa dksA
gene and with the E . coli dksA gene provided on plasmid
pRKDE1 . In agreement with the high degree of sequence similarity,
this result further demonstrates a functional conservation between
the two DksA homologues . The lack of complete complementation of
PAO-RC1 might be due to nonoptimal expression of dksA from the
plasmid constructs . Together with our previous observations from
overexpression of dksA (2), these results suggest that
the precise amount of DksA during growth is crucial for its
regulatory effects .
Expression of quorum-sensing regulator genes in the dksA
mutant. Both lasB and rhlAB are controlled by the las
and rhl quorum-sensing systems . To determine whether the
dramatically decreased expression of rhamnolipids and elastase
resulted from altered expression of the quorum-sensing regulatory
genes, we introduced plasmid encoded transcriptional lacZ
fusions to the lasR (pPCS1001), rhlR (pPCS1002),
lasI (pPCS223), and rhlI (pLPRI) genes into wild-type PT5
and mutant PAO-RC1 . No differences in the transcription of lasR,
rhlR, and lasI were found when ß-galactosidase levels
were measured during growth in PTSB medium (Fig . 4A to C) .
rhlI transcription was increased in mutant PAO-RC1 compared
to PT5 during early growth, but this difference decreased after
an OD660 of 1.0 (Fig . 4D) . The increase in rhlI
expression in the dksA mutant correlates with our previous
observation of decreased rhlI expression when dksA was
overexpressed from a plasmid (2) . These experiments
suggest that dksA does not influence the transcription of
lasR, lasI, and rhlR under these conditions but
seems to inhibit the transcription of rhlI during the early
logarithmic phase .
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FIG . 4 . ß-Galactosidase activities, expressed from lasR-lacZ
(pPCS1001) (A), rhlR-lacZ (pPCS1002) (B), lasI-lacZ
(pPCS223) (C), and rhlI-lacZ (pLPRI) (D) fusions, were determined
during growth in PTSB medium . Experiments were repeated on three
different occasions in triplicate . Error bars represent the standard
deviations of three determinations.
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DksA affects translation but not transcription of lasB and
rhlAB genes. Since the transcription of the quorum-sensing
regulatory genes was not reduced in mutant PAO-RC1, we measured the
transcription of the elastase (lasB) and rhamnosyltransferase
(rhlAB) genes in the wild-type PT5 and the dksA mutant
PAO-RC1 . For the lasB gene, the transcriptional lacZ
fusion p101.170 was constructed and introduced into the two strains .
Surprisingly, in PTSB medium we observed the same levels of
expression in the wild type and in the dksA mutant (Fig.
5A), suggesting that transcription of lasB
was not affected by the dksA mutation . To test the transcription
of rhlAB, we introduced plasmid pECP65 (kindly provided by E .
Pesci) carrying a rhlAB-lacZ fusion, into the wild type and
the dksA mutant . Again, there was no significant difference
in the expression profile of the rhlAB-lacZ fusion between the
two strains (Fig . 5B) .
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FIG . 5 . ß-Galactosidase activities expressed from transcriptional
lasB-lacZ (A) and rhlAB-lacZ (B) fusions . Expression was
monitored during growth in PTSB medium by using the plasmids p101.170
and pECP65, respectively . Experiments were repeated on three different
occasions and performed in triplicate . Error bars represent the standard
deviations of three determinations.
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Since it has been suggested that the mechanism of action of DksA
could involve translational control in S . enterica serovar
Typhimurium (28), we decided to measure translational fusions
to the lasB and rhlAB genes carried on plasmids pTS400 and
pECP60, respectively . This time we observed an almost fourfold
reduction of lasB expression in the dksA mutant
compared to the wild type toward the end of the exponential growth
phase in PTSB medium (Fig . 6A) . Likewise,
expression of the rhlAB operon encoding rhamnosyltransferase
was decreased threefold in the dksA mutant PAO-RC1 compared to
the levels detected in the parent strain PT5 (Fig . 6B) .
These results suggest that the drastically reduced LasB elastase and
rhamnolipid production in mutant PAO-RC1 (Fig . 2)
might be caused by a reduction in both lasB and rhlAB translation
and under these conditions support a role for DksA in the
posttranscriptional control of lasB and rhlAB gene
expression .
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FIG . 6 . ß-Galactosidase activities expressed from translational
lasB-lacZ (A) and rhlAB-lacZ (B) fusions . Expression was
monitored during growth in PTSB medium by using plasmids pTS400 and
pECP60, respectively . Experiments were repeated on three different
occasions and performed in triplicate . Error bars represent the standard
deviations of three determinations.
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DksA is required for translation of lasB and rhlAB in
E . coli. In order to confirm the effect of dksA on lasB
and rhlAB expression in a heterologous background, we decided
to measure the expression of the lasB-lacZ and rhlAB-lacZ
translational reporter fusions in an E . coli dksA mutant . We
therefore monitored ß-galactosidase activities in E . coli
strain MC1061 and in its dksA mutant derivative MC1061D (see
Materials and Methods) containing plasmid pECP64 (lasB-lacZ ptac-lasR)
or plasmid pECP61.5 (rhlAB-lacZ ptac-rhlR) in the
presence or absence of synthetic 3-oxo-C12-HSL or C4-HSL,
respectively . As previously described (18), we found
that E . coli containing either pECP64 or pECP61.5 in the
absence of exogenous AIs yielded a low basal expression of
lasB-lacZ and rhlAB-lacZ (Fig . 7) . The
addition of 3-oxo-C12-HSL at a final concentration of 50
nM caused LasR to activate lasB-lacZ ca . 10-fold in the
wild-type MC1061(pECP64), whereas no activation was observed in
mutant MC1061D(pECP64) (Fig . 7A) . Similarly,
expression of rhlAB-lacZ increased 10-fold when wild-type
MC1061(pECP61.5) was grown with 1 µM C4-HSL but remained
at basal level in mutant MC1061D(pECP61.5) (Fig . 7B) .
These results clearly demonstrate that the respective
AI/transcriptional activator couples are not sufficient for full
lasB and rhlAB expression but also require the presence of
the dksA gene both in E . coli and in P . aeruginosa .
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FIG . 7 . E . coli strain MC1061 and its derived dksA mutant
MC1061D were grown to an OD600 of 0.3 . ß-Galactosidase
activities expressed from lasB-lacZ ptac-lasR (pECP64) (A)
and from rhlAB-lacZ ptac-rhlR (pECP61.5) (B) fusions were
determined after a 90-min induction with 1 mM IPTG in the presence (+)
or absence (-) of 50 nM 3-oxo-C12-HSL or 1 µM C4-HSL .
Experiments were repeated on three different occasions in triplicate .
Error bars represent the standard deviations of three determinations.
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In the present study, we show that DksA exerts a posttranscriptional
control on quorum-sensing-dependent virulence genes in P . aeruginosa .
Interestingly, expression of lasR, rhlR, and lasI was
not altered in the dksA mutant, whereas rhlI expression
was slightly increased during early logarithmic phase . Since the
lacZ fusions to these genes were all transcriptional, one cannot
completely exclude an effect of dksA on their translation .
This is, however, very unlikely, since a reduced translation of these
quorum-sensing regulators, resulting in decreased amounts of LasR and
RhlR protein, would have affected the transcription of lasB
and rhlAB . However, in our experimental conditions, we
observed no difference in lasB and rhlAB transcription
and no significant difference in the production of AIs between the
wild type and the dksA mutant (data not shown) . In view of
these results, it is more likely that DksA regulates expression of
lasB and rhlAB independently of the regulator complexes
LasR/3-oxo-C12-HSL and RhlR/C4-HSL .
Earlier results concerning the expression of quorum-sensing genes
in E . coli suggested that LasR and the corresponding AI
3-oxo-C12-HSL are required and sufficient for lasB expression
in E . coli (18) . Our results with the dksA E .
coli mutant now clearly demonstrate that dksA is also
required for full expression of lasB and rhlAB genes in
E . coli .
Since complementation with plasmid-encoded copies of the dksA
gene resulted only in partial restoration (60 to 70% of wild-type
activity) of rhamnolipids and elastase production in the mutant,
it was conceivable that this resulted from effects unrelated to
dksA inactivation, namely, (i) polar effects on genes located
downstream of dksA and (ii) mutation by the
-Hg
cassette of an overlapping ORF (ORF2 in an earlier study [2])
transcribed in opposite direction to dksA . However, these
effects can be excluded since introduction into the dksA
mutant of plasmid pVD99.1 (2), harboring a
truncated dksA gene but encoding 1.5 kbp of DNA downstream of
dksA, did not restore rhamnolipid production, and plasmid
pVD99.0 carrying dksA and 1.5 kb of downstream DNA
complemented elastase activity to the same level as did plasmid
pVD99.3 carrying only dksA (data not shown) . Furthermore, introduction
of plasmid pVD99.5 (2), harboring ORF2 and only a
truncated dksA gene, did not restore rhamnolipid production
(data not shown) . We therefore believe that the inactivation of
dksA is solely responsible for reduced production of rhamnolipid
and LasB elastase and that the correct amount of DksA protein
produced and the timing of its expression are critical for optimal
complementation .
How could DksA affect the expression of target genes? In E .
coli, dksA has been recently suggested to be required for rpoS
induction by the nutrient stress signal ppGpp (8) .
Deleting dksA blocked rpoS induction by ppGpp, whereas
overproduction of dksA induced rpoS independently of
ppGpp (8) . Since RpoS was shown to inhibit rhlI
expression during early exponential growth in P . aeruginosa (34),
it is conceivable that increased rhlI expression in the
dksA mutant during exponential growth is an indirect effect due
to reduced expression of rpoS . In the same way, these data
suggest that the decreased rhlI transcription, observed when
dksA was overexpressed in P . aeruginosa (2),
could be secondary to an increase in rpoS expression . However,
it seems unlikely that the effect of dksA on rhlI
transcription is solely responsible for the drastic reduction of both
rhamnolipid and elastase production by the dksA mutant .
Involvement of DksA on translation of rpoS was reported recently
in S . enterica serovar Typhimurium (33) . The
region required for the DksA-mediated translational regulation was
found to be located between the 8th and 73rd codons of the rpoS
reading frame (33) . In contrast, in E . coli
the region required for the same translational regulation was far
upstream of the AUG initiation codon, similar to HF-1, but different
from those required for the regulation by ppGpp (8) .
It remains unclear whether DksA binds directly to RNA or regulates
the expression of another protein exerting a translational control .
Interestingly, although dksA affected rpoS expression
in S . enterica serovar Typhimurium (33), an
RpoS-independent effect of DksA was described in S . flexneri (16) .
S . flexneri dksA mutants exhibited sensitivity to acid and
oxidative stress, and some dksA mutant cells showed abnormal
localization of the virulence protein IcsA, which is required for the
intercellular spread of Shigella bacteria (16) .
In light of the remarkable sequence conservation between the
dksA genes of different species, one could expect that the DksA
proteins play similar roles and recognize similar target(s) .
DksA contains a C4-zinc finger motif, which has been reported to be
involved in binding to RNA, DNA, or as a protein-protein interaction
site (11) . Experiments to elucidate the molecular
mechanism by which DksA affects lasB and rhlAB translation in
P . aeruginosa are under way .
DksA was shown to be required for full virulence of S . enterica
serovar Typhimurium in a hatched chicken model (28) and
for the intercellular spread of epithelial cell layers by S .
flexneri (16) . Our report on the requirement
of DksA for the expression of virulence factors in P . aeruginosa
is further evidence for a role of DksA as a global regulator of
virulence . It is likely that in P . aeruginosa DksA also
regulates the expression of genes other than lasB and rhlAB,
since the expression of at least six different proteins was altered
in a two-dimensional gel analysis of total proteins from a dksA
mutant (P . Branny et al., unpublished results) . In this respect DksA
deserves further attention as a possible novel target for
anti-infective agents that aim at the modulation of virulence
properties of pathogenic microorganisms .
We are grateful to Everett C . Pesci for providing the transcriptional
rhlAB-lacZ fusion plasmid pECP65 and to S . Raina for the gift
of P1 phage . We thank C . Georgopoulos, in whose laboratory part of
the work was performed .
This work was supported by the Swiss National Science Foundation
(grants FN 32-52189.97, 32-051940.97, and 32-67262.01 to C . van
Delden and grant FN 31-65403.01 to C . Georgopoulos) .
* Corresponding author . Mailing address: Department of Genetics
and Microbiology, CMU, 9, av . de Champel, CH-1211 Geneva 4, Switzerland . Phone:
41-22-7025639 . Fax: 41-22-7025702 . E-mail:
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