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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, February 2002, p. 745-755, Vol. 68, No. 2
0099-2240/02/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/AEM.68.2.745-755.2002
Copyright © 2002, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Institut für Genetik und Mikrobiologie, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität, D-80638 München,1 Abteilung für Allgemeine und Angewandte Mikrobiologie,2 Laboratorium für Genomanalyse (G2L), Institut für Mikrobiologie und Genetik, Georg-August-Universität, D-37077 Göttingen, Germany3
Received 20 August 2001/ Accepted 13 November 2001
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The process of natural transformation can be divided into four discrete steps: competence induction, DNA binding, DNA uptake, and the heritable integration of incoming DNA or reconstitution of plasmid DNA. Proteins involved in uptake of DNA via natural transformation have been studied in several gram-negative bacteria, such as Neisseria gonorrhoeae (15, 51, 57), Acinetobacter sp. strain BD413 (14, 41), Haemophilus influenzae (9), Pseudomonas stutzeri (16, 17), Helicobacter pylori (1, 21, 48), and Synechocystis sp. strain PCC6803 (58), and some gram-positive bacteria, such as Bacillus subtilis and Streptococcus pneumoniae (6, 12, 39). A common feature of the transformation machineries is the implication of proteins exhibiting significant similarity to components of type IV pilus systems (12, 20). The only exception, to our knowledge, is the transformation system in H. pylori, whose known competence proteins (HP0333, ComH, and ComB) do not share any similarity with components of type IV pilus systems.
The significant similarities of competence proteins to proteins of type IV pilus systems lead to the fundamental question of whether type IV pili are involved in DNA uptake. This question has not been settled yet, but it seems to emerge that different bacteria might have different mechanisms.
Very little is known with respect to natural transformation systems in thermophiles and hyperthermophiles, although this means of lateral gene transfer probably had a very important impact on the evolution of life. In some scenarios, the universal tree of life is not rooted to an ancestral organism but to a pool or a net of ancestors. These ancestors are assumed to be hyperthermophiles with readily exchangeable genetic material. Moreover, there is substantial evidence for massive gene exchange between archaeal and bacterial hyperthermophiles resulting from genome-scale comparisons of these organisms (2, 8).
We chose T. thermophilus HB27 as a model organism to get insights into the transformation machinery of extremely thermophilic bacteria. In this study, we identified 28 putative competence genes in the partially complete genome sequence of T. thermophilus HB27. We report the identification of nine competence genes using gene disruption and transformation studies, and we present evidence for a link between systems for pilus synthesis and natural transformation in this organism.
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DNA sequence analysis.
The nearly complete genomic sequence of T. thermophilus HB27 was determined by a whole-genome shotgun approach by the Göttingen Genomics Laboratory (G2L). Clones carrying HB27 genomic DNA of approximately 2.0 kb in length from small insert libraries representative of the whole genome were sequenced from both ends using LICOR IL-4200 and ABI PRISM 377 DNA sequencers. The generated sequence readings were assembled into contigs with the Prap software implemented in the STADEN software package. Sequence data were analyzed with BLAST programs of the National Center for Biotechnology Information database, the software package (version 10.0) of the Genetics Computer Group (University of Wisconsin Biotechnology Center), and the WIT platform (Integrated Genomics).
Generation of Thermus mutants.
To analyze the role of potential competence genes, mutants were disrupted by a kanamycin resistance marker (kat) derived from the E. coli/T. thermophilus shuttle vector pMK18 (7). For gene disruption, recombinant plasmids of the Thermus gene library were used. Based on the sequence information, 15 gene library plasmids covering 11 different loci were selected (Fig. 1). The kat gene was inserted into unique sites of orf332, orf858, orf561, orf564, and orf565 or by substitution of distinct DNA fragments within orf73 and orf1044 by the kat gene (Fig. 1). To allow insertion of the kat gene into unique cleavage sites within the putative competence genes orf562, orf563, orf1388, orf1932, and orf1998, cleavage sites within the multiple cloning site had to be eliminated by subcloning into another vector. Therefore, the inserts of pEC50, pOB80, pAY66, pEM29, and pOM86 (Fig. 1) used for disruption of orf562, orf563, orf1388, orf1932, and orf1998, respectively, were subcloned into pBluescriptII KS/SK (Stratagene).
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FIG.1. Structural organization and gene disruption strategy of conserved ORFs within potential competence loci in the genome of T. thermophilus HB27. Physical map of mutant loci that are involved (A) and not involved (B) in natural transformation. In the restriction maps of gene bank plasmids covering different conserved ORFs of the potential competence loci, only selected restriction sites are shown. The triangle indicating the kat gene denotes the insertion site of the Kmr marker gene. The arrows denote direction of transcription. +, wild-type transformation frequencies; ±, 100-fold-reduced transformation frequencies; -, not transformable. BI, BamHI; BII, BglII; EV, EcoRV; HII, HincII; HIII, HindIII; N, NcoI; P, PstI; XI, XbaI.
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The plasmids carrying the disrupted conserved open reading frames (ORFs) were transformed into E. coli DH5
, and transformants were selected on LB medium containing 100 µg of ampicillin/ml and 20 µg of kanamycin/ml. Plasmids were prepared, and the inserts were purified and transformed into T. thermophilus HB27 by natural transformation. Thermus transformants were selected on TM medium containing 40 µg of kanamycin/ml. The correct allelic replacement of chromosomal wild-type DNA by disrupted ORFs was verified by Southern hybridization.
Transformation studies.
For transformation of T. thermophilus HB27, a modified protocol of Koyama et al. (27) was used. For transformation studies with T. thermophilus HB27, spontaneous streptomycin-resistant mutants were selected by plating 108 cells on TM medium containing streptomycin (500 µg/ml). The genomic DNA of one selected streptomycin-resistant mutant was isolated and used as donor DNA for transformation studies. To enable parallel analyses of several Thermus mutants, a rapid transformation test system was established. One colony of a Thermus mutant, disrupted in one of the potential competence genes, was mixed with 20 µl of chromosomal DNA (100 ng/µl) of the streptomycin-resistant Thermus strain, plated on TM agar, and incubated for at least 8 h at 70°C to allow expression of the streptomycin marker. To select for transformants that had acquired the genes mediating the streptomycin resistance phenotype, the cells were plated on TM agar containing 100 µg of streptomycin/ml and subsequently incubated at 70°C overnight. The T. thermophilus HB27 wild-type strain was used as a transformation control.
Electron microscopy.
Thermus wild-type and mutant strains grown overnight on freshly prepared TM plates were negatively stained with 4% (wt/vol) uranylacetate. After drying on Formvar-coated copper grids, the cells were viewed with a Philips model EM301 transmission electron microscope at 80 kV.
Nucleotide sequence accession number.
The sequence data have been submitted to the GenBank database and the accession numbers are listed below in Table 2.
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TABLE 2. Identified competence genes in T. thermophilus HB27
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TABLE 1. Putative competence genes identified via homology searches in the genome sequence of T. thermophilus HB27
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Three potential competence loci are comprised of genes whose deduced proteins show similarities to the type IV pilus factor PilT. To address the question of a role for the three pilT loci in natural transformation, single ORFs for each of these loci, orf332, orf1388, and orf831 (Fig. 1), were subjected to gene disruption. (Fig. 1). Analyses of the transformation phenotypes of the resulting mutants revealed that the natural transformation phenotype is completely abolished in mutant Tt1 (orf332::kat), whereas Tt11 (orf831::kat) and Tt12 (orf1388::kat) exhibit wild-type transformation frequencies (Table 2; Fig. 1). From these results, we conclude that orf831 and orf1388 are not implicated in natural transformation. Downstream of orf332, an ORF designated orf333 is present whose deduced protein shows similarities to PilT in N. gonorrhoeae and P. aeruginosa. Thus, it cannot be excluded that the noncompetent phenotype of the orf332 mutant is due to a polar effect on orf333 (Table 2; Fig. 1). However, since orf333 is flanked by the known T. thermophilus gene encoding a glutamyl-tRNA-amidotransferase (3), a polar effect on potential competence genes located downstream of orf332 and orf333 can be excluded.
The deduced protein of orf1044 is similar to the Pseudomonas PilC and the Neisseria PilG proteins (35, 50). Disruption of this ORF, designated pilC, resulted in the noncompetent mutant Tt9 (Fig. 1; Table 2). Since the ORF located immediately downstream of orf1044 is transcribed in the opposite direction, this finding clearly shows that orf1044 is essential for natural transformation.
Disruption of the pilD-like orf2072 (Table 1) resulted in mutant Tt3 (Fig. 1A), which was found to be noncompetent (Table 2). It is interesting that the Thermus pilD-like gene, in contrast to pilD genes in other proteobacteria, such as P. aeruginosa, P. stutzeri, H. influenzae, and N. gonorrhoea, is not clustered with other pil genes (Fig. 2A). PilD homologues are also present in nonproteobacteria such as D. radiodurans, Synechocystis strain PCC6803, and B. subtilis (4, 34, 56, 58). Interestingly, the pilD-like genes in these transformable phylogenetically distant nonproteobacteria are, analogously to the Thermus pilD-like gene, not associated with other pil genes (Fig. 2A). The differences in the organization of the pilD-like gene in Thermus and pilD homologues in the genomes of transformable proteobacteria (Fig. 2A) might reflect potential distinct horizontal gene transfer events or internal recombination events in Thermus.
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FIG. 2. (A) Comparison of the pilD locus in different gram-negative proteobacteria and nonproteobacteria. orf2073 encodes a thermostable carboxypeptidase and orf2071 encodes a hypothetical protein in Thermus. ssr1853 encodes a hypothetical Synechocystis protein, and sll1059 encodes an adenylate cyclase. DR2065 is a pilD homologue in Deinococcus. The Deinococcus ORFs DR2063, DR2064, and DR2066 encode a polynucleotide phosphorylase, a hypothetical 17.3-kDa protein, and a conserved hypothetical protein, respectively. comC is a pilD homologue in B. subtilis. spoIIB and folC encode a sporulation factor and the enzyme folypoly- -glutamate synthetase-dihydrofolate synthetase, respectively. (B) Comparison of the genetic organization of the pilQ cluster in different gram-negative proteobacteria and nonproteobacteria. The Thermus ORFs orf559, orf566, and orf567 encode isopropylmalate dehydrogenase, chorismate synthase, and shikimate kinase, respectively. DR0775 is an aroC homologue and DR0776 is an aroK homologue in Deinococcus. slr1273 and sll1174 are predicted to encode hypothetical proteins in Synechocystis.
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Disruption of the H. influenzae dprA homologue orf858 resulted in mutant Tt2, which was found to exhibit a 100-fold reduced transformation frequency of 5 x 10-5 transformants/viable count (Fig. 1A; Table 2), whereas the wild type exhibited transformation frequencies of 6 x 10-3. Since the flanking ORF downstream of the dprA-like gene is orientated in the opposite direction, this result provides clear evidence that orf858 is essential for natural transformation of T. thermophilus HB27.
The disruption of the three additional selected ORFs, orf73, orf1932, and orf1998 (Fig. 1B), resulted in mutants exhibiting wild-type transformation frequencies, which leads to the conclusion that these ORFs are not implicated in the natural transformation of T. thermophilus.
Piliation phenotypes of Thermus wild-type cells and noncompetent mutants.
Electron microscopic studies of T. thermophilus HB27 cells led to the identification of individual pilus structures on the cell surface that were 6 nm in diameter and 1 to 3 µm in length (Fig. 3).
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FIG. 3. Representative sample showing the pilus structures on the surface of T. thermophilus HB27 wild-type cells. Electron microscopic investigations were conducted with uranylacetate-stained cells.
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Genetic organization of competence genes.
The genes of the pil competence locus in Thermus, comprising pilM, pilN, pilO, pilW (DR0773), and pilQ (Fig. 1A), are analogously orientated and tightly clustered, such that all adjacent genes have overlapping stop and start codons. This Thermus locus is related to pilMNOPQ loci implicated in type IV pilus biogenesis in P. aeruginosa and in pilus biogenesis and natural transformation in N. gonorrhoeae (10, 31, 32). In N. gonorrhoeae and P. aeruginosa, the pilMNOPQ cluster is preceded by ponA, which encodes a penicillin-binding protein (33, 46). Downstream of the Neisseria and Pseudomonas pilMNOPQ cluster is aroK, a shikimate kinase gene (31, 37). In contrast to this organization, there is no ponA homologue in the close vicinity of the conserved pilM-Q cluster of T. thermophilus, Synechocystis strain PCC6803, and D. radiodurans (Fig. 2B). aroK homologues are present downstream of the conserved pilM-Q cluster in the Thermus-Deinococcus group and are separated from the conserved pilM-Q cluster by a chorismate synthase gene. No aroK homologue was found in the close vicinity of the pil cluster in Synechocystis. The analogous organization of the genes within the conserved pilM-Q cluster in Thermus, Synechocystis, Pseudomonas, and Neisseria suggests that this conserved pil module in these distantly related bacteria has been acquired via horizontal gene transfer; and the differences in the flanking DNA regions might be due to an integration of the complete pil module in different genomic loci of the host genomes. The protein product of the fourth gene within the Thermus pilM-Q cluster, designated pilW, is similar to the hypothetical protein of D. radiodurans R1, encoded by the fourth ORF, DR0773, of the putative pilM-Q cluster in D. radiodurans. In P. aeruginosa and Neisseria, the fourth gene of the conserved gene cluster, pilP, encodes a lipoprotein which is predicted to be implicated in stabilization of PilQ multimers (11). ORFs encoding PilP homologues are missing in the genome sequence of T. thermophilus HB27.
Characterization and possible functions of the identified competence genes.
The deduced protein of the first gene in this Thermus cluster is similar to PilM in P. aeruginosa and N. gonorrhoeae (Table 1). The PilM proteins in P. aeruginosa, N. gonorrhoeae, and T. thermophilus HB27 share a highly conserved C-terminal domain characteristic for FtsA cell division proteins. The presence of a total of three hydrophobic domains distributed over the whole Thermus PilM suggests that PilM is a cytoplasmic membrane protein. No clues to the function of PilN and PilO in Thermus can be derived from their homologues in P. aeruginosa and N. gonorrhoeae since their function in type IV pilus biogenesis is still unknown.
PilQ is similar to members of the secretin family, such as PilQ in Myxococcus xanthus (54), ExeD in Aeromonas salmonicida (24), PilQ in P. aeruginosa (31), and PilQ in N. gonorrhoeae (10). Secretins are conserved within a 250-amino acid (aa) C-terminal stretch, whereas the N-terminal and central parts are variable. As shown by Guilvout et al. (18), the C terminus of the Klebsiella secretin PulD is required for multimer formation, and it is concluded from their experiments that the ß-domain of the C-terminal part is the major determinant of multimer stability. For the gonococcal PilQ, a dependence of multimerization on conserved C-terminal residues was also demonstrated (10). Since the C terminus in Thermus PilQ is well conserved, we conclude that the Thermus PilQ also forms ring-like structures which mediate DNA transport into the periplasm.
PilF (orf332) and PilT (orf333) are similar to pilus assembly proteins and to proteins of the general secretion pathway (Table 1). pilF (orf332) and pilT (orf333) are tightly clustered and analogously orientated (Fig. 1A). Both proteins contain a Walker A motif (53) and a conserved aspartate box (Fig. 4), and they are very similar to each other (49% similarity). Both motifs, the Walker A motif and the aspartate box (Fig. 4), are highly conserved in proteins of the PilT family (43). The two short motifs (TXEDPXE and RXXPDXXXGEI/MRD), containing at least one aspartate residue and therefore referred to as aspartate boxes, are typical for PulE-PilF-PilB and PilT homologues and are not found in other proteins with ATP-binding sites, such as ABC transporters (23, 43). The Walker A motif GXXXXGK(S/T)T of the Thermus PilF contains a phenylalanine in place of the second conserved threonine (Fig. 4). It has to be noted that this threonine residue is generally less conserved in PulE homologues, such as PilB in P. aeruginosa and PilF in Neisseria, which contain a valine instead. It has been shown by Possot and Pugsley (43) that replacement of key amino acids within the Walker A box of PulE, such as exchange of the conserved last glycine residue by alanine or of the conserved lysine residue by arginine, abolishes protein secretion in K. oxytoca. Analogously, Turner et al. (52) demonstrated that the highly conserved glycine residues within the Walker A box of the Pseudomonas proteins XcpR and PilB are essential for protein secretion and type IV pilus biogenesis, respectively, in P. aeruginosa. Likewise, the replacement of aspartate residues within each of the two aspartate boxes in PulE led to reduction of secretion efficiency in K. oxytoca (43). Although PilF and PilT share conserved regions, such as the Walker A motif and the conserved aspartate boxes, they are different in size (Fig. 1). Furthermore, a tetracysteine motif found in PilF is missing in PilT. This tetracysteine motif present in the C terminus of PilF (Fig. 4) resembles a zinc-binding motif. Such tetracysteine motifs are generally present in members of the PulE-PilB-PilF subgroup and some kinases such as adenylate kinases, but they are absent in proteins of the PilT subgroup. Since it was demonstrated in Klebsiella that this Cys motif is required for proper PulE function (44), we propose that this motif is important for the function of the Thermus PilF.
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FIG. 4. Alignment of the conserved central and C-terminal part of PilT-like proteins. Identical residues are indicated by grey shadows. The conserved cysteine residues found in PulE homologues are marked by a star (*) and are boxed. B.s., B. subtilis; K.o., K. oxytoca; N.g. N. gonorrhoeae; T.t., T. thermophilus HB27.
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The Thermus competence factor PilC (Table 2), which is closely related to the P. aeruginosa PilC type IV pilus protein (Table 1), is comprised of extended hydrophobic domains spanning the central region from aa 210 to 270 and spanning the last 40 C-terminal amino acids. It has been proposed that PilC-like proteins are polytopic integral membrane proteins, probably located in the cytoplasmic membrane (35, 42). The exact function of PilC-like proteins remains to be established, but it has been proposed that the Pseudomonas PilC and the Klebsiella homologue, PulF, are required for specific interactions with other type IV pilus assembly proteins (26, 43) and might be essential for their optimal localization or stabilization (26).
The product of orf2072 (PilD) is similar to prepilin peptidases. It has at least eight hydrophobic domains, which indicates a localization in the inner membrane. The highest identities of the Thermus PilD and prepilin peptidases are present within the N and C termini of the proteins. The N-terminal domain includes two pairs of cysteines which are required for the leader peptidase and methyltransferase activities of the bifunctional enzyme PilD, as demonstrated in P. aeruginosa (49). This motif is highly conserved, with the exception of XspO in Xanthomonas campestris (22), in all PilD proteins (30), and it is required for the proper function of prepilin peptidase proteins (44). The significant similarities, together with the highly conserved cysteine cluster, lead to the conclusion that PilD in T. thermophilus HB27 represents a prepilin peptidase most likely involved in proteolytic processing and methylation of prepilin-like proteins. It should be mentioned that no other prepilin peptidase was detected in the Thermus genome. Therefore, PilD should be implicated in the processing of all prepilins and prepilin-like proteins of T. thermophilus HB27.
The Thermus DprA (orf858) is similar to Smf and DprA proteins, which are widely distributed in transformable and nontransformable prokaryotes. DprA plays an essential role in transformation of H. influenzae, H. pylori, and S. pneumoniae (1, 6, 25). For the competence proteins of this family, a function in DNA transport through the cytoplasmic membrane and/or in recombination is postulated. The Thermus DprA and its homologues in H. influenzae have 57% similarity within a central 205-aa overlap (positions 60 to 265). This central region contains highly conserved amino acid stretches [VGXSR, positions 100 to 105; TSGLALGID(X3)H, positions 127 to 139; VLGS(X5)YP, positions 152 to 163; PRRNR, positions 190 to 194; and SGSLITA, positions 212 to 218]. The high degree of conservation indicates a critical function of these amino acid stretches.
Distinctive features of the Thermus transformation system.
The results presented here suggest that the DNA translocating machinery of T. thermophilus HB27 is related to type IV pili. In analogy to N. gonorrhoeae and P. stutzeri (15, 16), but in contrast to Acinetobacter sp. strain BD413 (28), the pili, as visible in electron micrographs, either are involved in natural transformation or pili and transformation are closely linked systems. This is concluded from the finding that the noncompetent mutants, with the exception of the pilF mutant, are devoid of pili structures. Despite the similarities of the components of the natural transformation machineries in Thermus and other transformable bacteria, the Thermus DNA translocation machinery is different from corresponding systems in other bacteria. The absence of a pilP homologue, the presence of a nonconserved pilW, and the low similarities of the Thermus PilN and PilO to homologues in other microorganisms might reflect the potential structural distinctiveness of the DNA transformation machinery in Thermus.
The suggestion that the Thermus transformation system differs from known transformation systems is also supported by the results obtained from characterization of the secretin-like PilQ protein in Thermus. Members of the secretin family form ring-like structures in the outer membrane which are implicated in type IV pilus biogenesis, protein export, and natural transformation of gram-negative bacteria, and also in phage assembly. It is suggested that the N terminus of secretins, which is implicated in protein export, folds back into the cavity of the channel that is formed by the C-terminal domain of the native complex. The N terminus of the secretin-like phage assembly protein pIV, which shows no homologies to the N termini of other secretins, is suggested to consist of a periplasmic substrate-binding domain that confers specificity to phage assembly (47). The N terminus of the Thermus PilQ shows no similarities to members of the secretin family, neither to secretins implicated in protein export or DNA import in gram-negative bacteria nor to proteins implicated in phage assembly. This finding indicates that the Thermus PilQ might interact with very distinct components.
The potential structural differences of the DNA transformation machinery in Thermus might be due to the structural distinctiveness of the cell envelope and the peptidoglycan of T. thermophilus. The murein from Thermus shows significant differences in complexity compared to the murein of other gram-negative bacteria; for example, the composition of murein and peptide cross bridges of T. thermophilus are typical for gram-positive bacteria, whereas the murein content, degree of cross-bridging, and glycan chain length are more similar to those from gram-negative bacteria. The outermost layer of the Thermus cell envelope is built by an S-layer covered by amorphous material (45). The distinct features of the Thermus cell envelope and the murein layer might have triggered the evolution of the pilMNOWQ cluster in Thermus.
We thank Caroline Wichmann and Olivia Gohl (Göttingen) for assistance with the electron microscopy studies.
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and ß subunits of ATP synthase, myosin, kinases and other ATP-requiring enzymes and a common nucleotide binding fold. EMBO J. 1:945-951.[Medline]
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