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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, March 2003, p. 1817-1826, Vol. 69, No. 3
0099-2240/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/AEM.69.3.1817-1826.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Inactivation of gacS Does Not Affect the Competitiveness of Pseudomonas chlororaphis in the Arabidopsis thaliana Rhizosphere
Heike Schmidt-Eisenlohr,1 Astrid Gast,1 and Christian Baron1,2*
Bereich Mikrobiologie, Department Biologie I, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München, D-80638 Munich, Germany,1
Department of Biology, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario LS8 4K1, Canada2
Received 1 July 2002/
Accepted 5 December 2002

ABSTRACT
Quorum-sensing-controlled processes are considered to be important
for the competitiveness of microorganisms in the rhizosphere.
They affect cell-cell communication, biofilm formation, and
antibiotic production, and the GacS-GacA two-component system
plays a role as a key regulator. In spite of the importance
of this system for the regulation of various processes, strains
with a Gac
- phenotype are readily recovered from natural habitats.
To analyze the influence of quorum sensing and the influence
of the production of the antibiotic phenazine-1-carboxamide
on rhizosphere colonization by
Pseudomonas chlororaphis, a gnotobiotic
system based on
Arabidopsis thaliana seedlings in soil was investigated.
Transposon insertion mutants of
P. chlororaphis isolate SPR044
carrying insertions in different genes required for the production
of
N-acyl-homoserine lactones and phenazine-1-carboxamide were
generated. Analysis of solitary rhizosphere colonization revealed
that after prolonged growth, the population of the wild type
was significantly larger than that of the homoserine lactone-negative
gacS mutant and that of a phenazine-1-carboxamide-overproducing
strain. In cocultivation experiments, however, the population
size of the
gacS mutant was similar to that of the wild type
after extended growth in the rhizosphere. A detailed analysis
of growth kinetics was performed to explain this phenomenon.
After cells grown to the stationary phase were transferred to
fresh medium, the
gacS mutant had a reduced lag phase, and production
of the stationary-phase-specific sigma factor RpoS was strongly
reduced. This may provide a relative competitive advantage in
cocultures with other bacteria, because it permits faster reinitiation
of growth after a change to nutrient-rich conditions. In addition,
delayed entry into the stationary phase may allow more efficient
nutrient utilization. Thus, GacS-GacA-regulated processes are
not absolutely required for efficient rhizosphere colonization
in populations containing the wild type and Gac
- mutants.

INTRODUCTION
In natural habitats microorganisms compete for nutrients to
ensure that they can multiply. Compared to the surrounding soil,
the rhizosphere of plants is a comparably nutrient-rich habitat,
and various factors have been shown to be required for successful
colonization by fluorescent pseudomonads (
10,
11,
20,
27,
32,
42). The introduction of
Pseudomonas spp. for plant growth promotion
or biocontrol is of biotechnological interest. However, the
impact of abiotic and biotic factors on the competitiveness
of these organisms with the indigenous microflora is largely
unknown. Different factors, including the production of antimicrobial
agents, contribute to bacterial competitiveness in the rhizosphere
(
7,
29,
46). Some of these factors are regulated by changes
in the cell density, a phenomenon known as quorum sensing (
15,
45). This regulation is based on the synthesis of low-molecular-mass
signals, including
N-acyl-homoserine lactones (acyl-HSLs), which
freely diffuse out of the cell. As the cell density increases,
acyl-HSLs accumulate in the environment. At intracellular concentrations
above a certain threshold concentration, the signal molecules
productively interact with transcriptional regulators of the
LuxR family, and the expression of quorum-sensing-regulated
genes is initiated (
13).
In Pseudomonas spp., the production of metabolites like HCN, 2,4-diacetylphloroglucinol, pyrrolnitrin, and extracellular proteases (8, 26), which have been shown to be important for biocontrol activity, is controlled by a conserved two-component system comprising the response regulator GacA and the sensor kinase GacS (31). The GacA-GacS two-component system and the acyl-HSL-mediated regulatory systems do not act individually, but they are part of a complex regulatory cascade (33). gacA and gacS mutants do not produce these secondary metabolites and exoenzymes and are less effective than the wild type in disease suppression in the rhizosphere (26). Whereas antibiosis is generally considered to be a competitiveness factor, spontaneous gacA and gacS mutants are isolated from bacterial cultures, which is a problem for the formulation for biocontrol agents (12). In addition, gacA mutants have been isolated from the rhizosphere, suggesting that the absence of this cascade may confer a competitive advantage under certain conditions (31, 36).
The limited success of biocontrol field experiments has often been shown to correlate with poor colonization of the roots (47). Thus, when the production of antimicrobial metabolites by Pseudomonas fluorescens strain 79-2 was exploited to suppress the fungus Graeumannomyces graminis var. tricitii in the wheat rhizosphere, the functionality of quorum sensing was shown to be positively correlated with the population size (2). However, despite the obvious importance of quorum sensing for cell-cell communication, there is relatively little information concerning the influence of quorum sensing on rhizosphere colonization. To address this issue, we used a microcosm-based closed system with low intrinsic variability, which was suitable for detection of subtle differences in rhizosphere colonization. A natural isolate of Pseudomonas chlororaphis, strain SPR044 (40), was used as a model for studies on the influence of quorum sensing and phenazine-1-carboxamide (PCN) production. Rhizosphere colonization by the wild type and rhizosphere colonization by mutants carrying insertions in genes required for homoserine lactone and/or PCN biosynthesis were compared, and the results showed that these traits per se do not offer competitive advantages. In contrast, defects in the quorum-sensing system may be advantageous under certain conditions.

MATERIALS AND METHODS
Organisms, plasmids, and growth conditions.
Escherichia coli JM109 and HB101 were grown at 37°C in Luria-Bertani
(LB) medium, whereas
Pseudomonas spp.,
Bacillus subtilis,
Chromobacterium violaceum, and
Agrobacterium tumefaciens were grown in LB medium
at 26°C. Alternatively,
P. chlororaphis was grown at 26°C
in liquid M9 minimal medium supplemented with 0.5% glucose or
0.5%
myo-inosit (
35). For plasmid propagation and selection
of transformants media were supplemented with the following
antibiotics: carbenicillin (100 µg/ml), chloramphenicol
(20 µg/ml), tetracycline (5 µg/ml), kanamycin (50
µg/ml for
E. coli and
C. violaceum and 100 µg/ml
for
P. chlororaphis), streptomycin (50 µg/ml for
E. coli and 200 µg/ml for
P. chlororaphis), and spectinomycin
(50 µg/ml for
E. coli and 200 µg/ml for
P. chlororaphis).
The strains and plasmids used in this study are described in
Table
1.
TnMod mutagenesis and mutant analysis.
Tn
Mod was introduced into
P. chlororaphis by triparental mating.
The recipient, the donor
E. coli JM109 harboring pTn
Mod-OKm,
and
E. coli HB101 containing the helper plasmid RK600 were propagated
in LB medium supplemented with antibiotics to the mid-log phase,
sedimented by centrifugation, and resuspended in LB medium.
Equal amounts of donor, recipient, and helper (10 µl of
each, corresponding to 10
7 cells) were mixed on prewarmed LB
agar plates and incubated for 16 h at 26°C to allow plasmid
transfer. The cells were washed from the plates with LB medium
and plated on agar supplemented with 100 µg of kanamycin
per ml and 100 µg of carbenicillin per ml to select for
transposon insertions into the
P. chlororaphis chromosome. Transposon-carrying
derivatives affected in acyl-HSL production were identified
due to their inability to restore orange pigment production
to
phzI-deficient
Pseudomonas aureofaciens 30-84I streaked in
close proximity on LB agar (
48). Strains affected in PCN production
were identified by visual inspection for colonies with altered
amounts of green PCN crystals. To determine the chromosomal
site of insertion, the replication-competent plasposon and flanking
DNA were recloned from the chromosome. DNA was isolated (Quantum
Prep AquaPure genomic DNA isolation kit; Bio-Rad) and cleaved
with
SalI or
PstI; this was followed by religation, electroporation
into JM109, and selection for kanamycin resistance. The resulting
plasmids were sequenced by using primers Ori5seq (5'-GCCTTTTGCTCACATGTTCTTTCC-3')
and Ori3seq (5'-CCCCGAGCTCTTAATTAATTTAAATC-3'), which anneal
to the two ends of the Tn
Mod insertion, which allows identification
of the insertion site.
TLC analysis of acyl-HSLs released by P. chlororaphis SP044.
Acyl-HSLs produced by SPR044 and its TnMod insertion derivatives were isolated essentially as described previously (52). Briefly, after ethyl acetate extraction of cell-free supernatant and subsequent evaporation to dryness, the samples were dissolved in 50 µl of ethyl acetate. Ten-microliter aliquots were applied to C18 reversed-phase thin-layer chromatography (TLC) plates (RP18 F254; Merck) and developed in 60% methanol-40% water. After chromatography, the plates were each dried and overlaid with 300 ml of LB agar inoculated with 10 ml of an exponentially growing culture of the indicator strain P. aureofaciens 30-84I (phzI negative) (49) or the indicator strain A. tumefaciens A136(pCF218)(pCF372) (14). Acyl-HSL-induced orange phenazine production by P. aureofaciens 30-84I was determined by visual inspection, whereas ß-galactosidase activity in the A. tumefaciens indicator strain was monitored in agar supplemented with 40 µg of X-Gal (5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indolyl-ß-D-galactoside) per ml. For identification of inducing compounds from strain SPR044, the positions of the compounds after TLC separation were compared to those of the reference compounds butyryl-homoserine lactone (BHSL), hexanoyl-homoserine lactone (HHSL), and octanoyl-homoserine lactone (OHSL) (Sigma).
Assays for production of secondary metabolites.
Assays to examine production of BHSL, antimicrobial agents, and extracellular proteases were performed by the method of Ravn et al. (34), with minor modifications. Briefly, cell-free supernatants from cultures grown for 17 h in M9 minimal medium with glucose were screened in agar well diffusion assays. For quantitation of acyl-HSL production, synthetic BHSL (1 to 100,000 pmol) was analyzed simultaneously. The agar was inoculated with 10 ml of an exponentially growing culture of P. aureofaciens 30-84I or with B. subtilis for monitoring antimicrobial agents. The plates were incubated at 26°C for 48 h before the diameters of the zones induced by acyl-HSLs (color produced by indicators) or antimicrobial metabolites (growth inhibition) were measured. For the analysis of extracellular proteases, an agar containing 0.3% yeast extract, 0.5% K2HPO4, and 1% skim milk powder (pH 7) was used, and lysis zones were monitored as described above. Phenazine production was analyzed after chloroform extraction (1:1, vol/vol) of cell-free supernatants from cultures grown to the stationary phase in LB medium. After evaporation to dryness, samples were each suspended in 1 ml of chloroform, and the production of phenazines was assessed after spectral analyses (200 to 500 nm) (28).
DNA manipulations.
DNA purification, modification, and cloning were performed by using standard protocols (35) with enzymes purchased from MBI Fermentas and New England Biolabs. DNA sequence analyses were performed with an ABI Prism 377 sequencer. The GacS coding region was PCR amplified with Taq polymerase from 1 ng of chromosomal DNA of P. chlororaphis SPR044 by using oligonucleotides GacS5' (5'-GGCAGAGCTCGTTAGCAGGAGAGTTGCGTGCTTAAG-3') and GacS3' (5'-GCGGGTCTAGATCAGGCGTTGATGCGGGCCT-3') and the following cycling conditions: 2 min at 95°C for one cycle; 44°C for 1 min, 72°C for 1 min, and 95°C for 30 s for 30 cycles; and 44°C for 3 min and 72°C for 7 min for one cycle. The resulting 2.7-kb fragment was cleaved with SacI and XbaI and ligated into SacI- and XbaI-cleaved pUC19, resulting in pUC-GacS. The sequence of the insert was determined with specific primers. For expression of gacS in P. chlororaphis, pTrc200 (39) was cut with NcoI, and the overhanging single-stranded DNA was removed with S1 nuclease and religated, resulting in vector pTrc300. The GacS coding sequence was excised from pUC-GacS by using SacI and HindIII and was ligated into SacI- and HindIII-cleaved pTrc300, resulting in pTrcGacS.
SDS-PAGE and protein analysis.
Protein lysates were analyzed after sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) in acrylamide-containing gels (23) followed by Western blotting, incubation with specific polyclonal antisera, and detection with anti-rabbit horseradish peroxidase-conjugated secondary antibody (Bio-Rad) by using a chemiluminescence-based detection system (NEN). RpoS-specific antiserum was used at a 1:5,000 dilution.
Microcosm design and sampling procedure.
Seed sterilization, coating with bacteria, and growth of Arabidopsis thaliana were performed as described previously (40). Ten plants were harvested randomly after 14, 28, and 42 days. After removal of unattached soil, the root weight was determined. The roots were transferred into flasks containing 10 ml of phosphate-buffered saline (pH 7.2) and 0.5 g of glass beads (diameter, 0.25 to 0.3 mm; B. Braun Biotech International) and subjected to vigorous shaking for 20 min. Serial dilutions were plated on LB medium supplemented with kanamycin if required for discrimination of SPR044 and the TnMod derivatives. After 36 h of incubation at 26°C colonies were counted, and the number of CFU per gram of root was determined.
Statistical methods.
Data were analyzed for significance by using the software SPSS10 for Macintosh. Normal distribution of the data was analyzed with the Kolmogorov-Smirnov test, and the homogeneity of the variances was analyzed with the Levene test. Since the doubling times and lag phases in the growth experiments showed normal distribution and homogeneity of the variances, they were compared by analysis of variance. Pairwise comparisons between the wild type and mutants were performed with the post hoc test of Bonferroni. The values for log CFU per gram of root obtained in the plant colonization assays did not show a normal distribution and therefore were compared by using the Kruskal-Wallis test. With this nonparametric test we compared the medians of multiple samples for each derivative and each time point. Pairwise comparisons between the wild type and mutants were performed with the Mann-Whitney U test.
Nucleotide sequence accession numbers.
The nucleotide sequences of complete genes have been deposited in the GenBank database under accession numbers AF517687 (gacS) and AF517688 (putative glycosyl transferase gene).

RESULTS
Isolation and characterization of mutants affected in acyl-HSL and/or PCN biosynthesis.
P. chlororaphis SPR044 was mutagenized by triparental mating
(
9). Screening of 4,000 exconjugants carrying Tn
ModKm-O resulted
in detection of three classes of mutants (Table
1). The first
class comprised two mutants deficient in acyl-HSL production
(SPR144 and SPR244) (
48). The second class contained four PCN-deficient
mutants (SPR544, SPR644, SPR744, and SPR844), and the third
class contained a single mutant which produced a significantly
larger amount of green PCN crystals (SPR344). Southern blot
analyses demonstrated that each isolate had a different chromosomal
insertion site for Tn
ModKm-O (data not shown). The DNA regions
flanking the insertion were cloned in
E. coli JM109 and sequenced
with primers annealing to the ends of Tn
Mod to determine the
plasposon's point of insertion. Database searches indicated
that all of the clones carried Tn
Mod-OKm insertions in genes
encoding proteins with significant similarity to proteins from
Pseudomonas aeruginosa PAO1 or to proteins from different
P. chlororaphis strains (Table
2).
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TABLE 2. Putative functions of gene products affected by TnMod insertions in P. chlororaphis derivatives deduced from database searches
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The deduced amino acid sequence of the gene product affected
by the Tn
Mod insertion in SPR144 most closely resembled an RNA
3'-terminal phosphate cyclase. Such enzymes catalyze the conversion
of 3'-phosphate to a 2',3'-cyclic phosphodiester at the end
of RNA (
44). SPR244 carried the insertion in the
gacS gene encoding
a two-component sensor kinase, which has been sequenced previously
in a different
P. chlororaphis strain. The gene flanking the
Tn
Mod insertion in SPR344 probably codes for a glycosyl transferase,
and there are two classes of glycosyl transferases. The processive
glycosyl transferases transfer multiple sugar residues, and
the nonprocessive glycosyl transferases catalyze the transfer
of a single sugar to the repeat unit of a polysaccharide. Hydrophobic
cluster analysis revealed that there are two conserved regions
(
37). Whereas domain A is conserved in all glycosyl transferases,
domain B is present only in processive enzymes. Since the QXXRW
motif characteristic of domain B is not present in the SPR044
glycosyl transferase, this protein probably belongs to the class
of nonprocessive enzymes (
37). In the case of SPR544 the gene
flanking the insertion most likely encodes a transcriptional
regulator. The gene product shows 58% similarity and 42% identity
to VanR of
Acinetobacter sp. strain ADP1, a member of the GntR
family of repressors (
30). The Tn
Mod insertion in strain SPR644
is located in
htpX, which encodes a putative heat shock protein.
This protein exhibits 64% similarity and 49% identity to HtpX
of
E. coli. Production of the 32-kDa HtpX protein is induced
by a temperature upshift in
E. coli. However, its role in the
heat shock response is not obvious, because
E. coli cells carrying
an
htpX disruption have no apparent phenotype at temperatures
up to 47°C (
22). The Tn
Mod insertions of SPR744 and SPR844
are located in
phzF and
phzE, respectively. The gene products
were previously identified as components of the phenazine biosynthesis
pathway.
Identification of autoinducers produced by P. chlororaphis.
To analyze the production of autoinducers by SPR044 and its TnMod insertion derivatives, ethyl acetate extracts of the cell-free supernatants of stationary-phase cultures were separated by TLC. The plates were overlaid with A. tumefaciens A136(pCF218)(pCF372) seeded in LB agar. Two bioactive compounds that induced ß-galactosidase activity were detected in extracts from SPR044 and all of the insertion mutants except SPR144 and SPR244 (Fig. 1A). The most prominent signal was the signal caused by compound A (Rf, 0.5), which migrated at a position between the positions of synthetic HHSL and OHSL. Compound B caused a relatively weak response of the test strain and migrated faster than synthetic HHSL. Synthetic BHSL was not detected, which is in accord with the low sensitivity of the detection strain for BHSL (52). The Rf values and the spot-like migration of compounds A and B detected by A136(pCF218)(pCF372), as well as the inability of these compounds to induce the quorum-sensing system of P. aureofaciens 30-84I (see below), suggest that they are probably C-3-hydroxy-substituted acyl-HSLs. Based on the relative Rf values of acyl-HSLs from P. fluorescens 2-79, compound A probably corresponds to N-(3-hydroxy-octanoyl)-homoserine lactone (3). However, compound B could not be identified, and its Rf is similar to that of an unidentified acyl-HSL produced by strain 2-79. To identify additional acyl-HSLs, TLC overlay assays were performed with P. aureofaciens 30-84I. With this analysis we identified an acyl-HSL with an Rf identical to that of synthetic BHSL in supernatants of SPR044 and all of the TnMod insertion mutants except SPR144 and SPR244 (Fig. 1B). Compounds similar to HHSL and OHSL were not detected in ethyl acetate extracts of supernatants from SPR044 cultures, even though the sensitivity of the test strains allowed detection of these compounds at concentrations as low as 0.5 and 50 µM, respectively.
Quantification of BHSL production by P. chlororaphis and its insertion derivatives.
After identification of acyl-HSLs produced by strain SPR044
and its Tn
Mod insertion derivatives, well diffusion assays with
P. aureofaciens 30-84 were performed to quantify BHSL production
(
34). Based on the colored surface areas induced by reference
amounts of synthetic BHSL, the amounts produced by strain SPR044
and its Tn
Mod insertion derivatives were determined (Table
3).
SPR044 produced 16 µM BSHL in supernatants of cells grown
to the stationary phase, whereas the two acyl-HSL-deficient
mutants did not produce detectable amounts of this compound.
The acyl-HSL production by SPR344 was 26% of the production
by the wild type. Similarly, the PCN-negative mutants with Tn
Mod insertions in the
phz genes produced much smaller amounts. Strain
SPR644 produced amounts of BHSL comparable to the amounts produced
by the wild type, whereas the amount produced by SPR544 was
65% of the amount produced by the wild type. These results indicate
that other acyl-HSL-regulated traits may be affected in a quantitative
manner in the different Tn
Mod insertion mutants.
Analysis of the production of protease, phenazine, and antimicrobial secondary metabolites.
Since protease production and antibiotic production are often
quorum sensing controlled and are considered to be important
for root colonization, they were analyzed in SPR044 and its
derivatives. Agar well diffusion assays (
34) were used to assess
the inhibition of
C. violaceum as an example of gram-negative
bacteria and the inhibition of
B. subtilis as an example of
gram-positive bacteria. In both assays, the inhibition caused
by cell-free supernatant of SPR644 was similar to that of the
wild type, whereas SPR144 and SPR244 did not produce antibiotics
and the other derivatives produced reduced amounts (Table
4).
The presence of proteases in cell-free supernatants was analyzed
in agar supplemented with skim milk powder, and proteases were
present in all strains except SPR144 and SPR244 (Table
4). Protease
production could not be analyzed in a semiquantitative manner,
because increasing the amount of supernatant did not lead to
larger diameters of the lysis zones (data not shown). Production
of antibiotics was clearly correlated with acyl-HSL production,
showing that the biosynthesis is probably quorum sensing regulated.
Phenazine production was scored based on colony pigmentation,
and the pigments were identified by measuring the absorption
spectra of chloroform extracts from culture supernatants (
28).
As expected, the two acyl-HSL-deficient mutants, as well as
SPR744 and SPR844 carrying insertions in
phzF and
phzE, did
not produce PCN and its precursor, phenazine-1-carboxylic acid
(PCA).
Influence of the production of acyl-HSLs and PCN on rhizosphere colonization by P. chlororaphis.
Many quorum-sensing-regulated metabolic activities are important
for rhizosphere colonization. We chose one mutant from each
class of plasposon derivatives to assess the effects of acyl-HSL
and phenazine production on colonization. SPR244 carrying the
Tn
Mod insertion in the gene encoding the sensor GacS was chosen
as an acyl-HSL-negative mutant. SPR644 was chosen for the analysis
of the effects of PCN production on colonization because it
produced PCA. The amounts of acyl-HSLs and antimicrobial agents
produced were similar to the amounts produced by the wild type,
whereas the other PCN-deficient mutants had pleiotropic defects.
SPR344 was used to assess the effects of PCN overproduction.
The growth rates of the Tn
Mod insertion derivatives in LB medium
were identical to the growth rate of the wild type (data not
shown). This was a prerequisite for further studies since a
slightly reduced growth rate was shown previously to negatively
affect rhizosphere growth (
43). Strains were inoculated into
sterile soil microcosms, and colonization of the rhizosphere
of
A. thaliana was monitored. After 14 days the size of the
population of SPR044 was approximately 10
7.3 CFU/g of root and
did not differ significantly from the sizes of the populations
of the variants (Fig.
2A). After 28 days, however, the size
of the population of SPR044 (10
7.3 CFU/g of root) was similar
to that of PCN-negative strain SPR644 but significantly larger
than that of SPR244 or SPR344. After 42 days the sizes of the
populations of the wild type and SPR644 were still similar,
whereas the sizes of the populations of SPR244 and SPR344 were
significantly smaller. The difference between the sizes of the
populations of strains SPR344 and SPR044 increased with each
harvest cycle, until after 42 days the size of the population
of SPR344 was 1 order of magnitude smaller than the size of
the population of the wild type. In contrast, after 42 days
the size of the population of SPR244 was only fourfold smaller
than the size of the population of SPR044. To determine the
cultivation success, the cell numbers were analyzed by a culture-independent
method in parallel as described previously (
40). No divergence
between the results obtained by the culture-dependent method
and the results obtained by the culture-independent method was
observed (data not shown) (
38). This indicates that rhizosphere
colonization is strongly affected by increased PCN production,
whereas defects in acyl-HSL production do not have similarly
pronounced effects.
Influence of acyl-HSL and PCN production on rhizosphere colonization in coinoculation experiments.
When SPR044 was coinoculated with the variants, comparable population
sizes for this strain were obtained for all three combinations,
and the sizes ranged from 10
7.3 CFU/g of root after 14 days
to 10
6.4 CFU/g of root after 42 days (Fig.
2B). The significantly
reduced growth compared to the growth observed after solitary
colonization as described above may have been due to competition
between the coinoculated strains for limiting nutrients. Compared
to solitary growth, the difference in population sizes between
SPR044 and SPR344 was even more pronounced under these conditions.
The size of the population of SPR344 was almost 2 orders of
magnitude smaller than the size of the population of the wild
type after 42 days. The sizes of the populations of SPR244 and
SPR644, however, were similar to the size of the wild-type population
even after 42 days. Since in solitary growth experiments the
size of the population of SPR244 was significantly less than
the size of the population of the wild type, it was quite surprising
that the population sizes were similar in coinoculation experiments.
These results suggest that the absence of GacS per se is not
detrimental to the fitness of rhizosphere-grown cells.
Acyl-HSL-deficient mutants have a significantly reduced lag phase.
To gain further insight into the physiological basis for this phenomenon and into the relative fitness of SPR044, growth was analyzed in M9 minimal medium supplemented with 0.5% glucose. Bacterial multiplication was strongly reduced under these conditions compared to growth in LB medium, and this permitted a more detailed analysis. The mean generation time was determined in the logarithmic growth phase, and the analysis included a minimum of five independent experiments. The growth rates of the variants were similar to the growth rate of SPR044, and a typical sigmoidal growth curve was observed in all cases (Fig. 3). In the case of SPR144 and SPR244, however, the lag phase was significantly reduced to less than 1 h instead of the 3 h observed for the wild type and the other derivatives. This effect was independent of the medium used for growth of the overnight cultures (LB medium or M9 minimal medium), and it was still observed when conditioned medium was used (that is, in the presence of wild-type acyl-HSLs) (data not shown).
Complementation of the TnMod insertion in the gacS gene.
To analyze this effect in more detail, complementation of SPR244
by expression of
gacS in
trans was assessed.
gacS was PCR amplified
from SPR044 genomic DNA, and the PCR product was cloned into
pTrc300 under control of the
trc promoter. Transformation of
SPR244 with pTrcGacS restored acyl-HSL production, as well as
PCN production, even in the absence of isopropyl-ß-
D-thiogalactopyranoside
(IPTG), which was probably due to leakiness of the promoter
(data not shown). To further slow bacterial growth down and
to avoid possible effects of catabolite repression, the growth
of SPR044 and the growth of SPR244, as well as the growth of
SPR244 carrying pTrc300 or pTrcGacS, were analyzed in M9 minimal
medium supplemented with 0.5%
myo-inosit (Fig.
4). Under these
conditions, SPR244 had a lag phase of 3 h, compared to a lag
phase of 6 h in case of the wild type, which is in accord with
the results described above. Expression of
gacS in
trans increased
the lag phase of SPR244(pTrcGacS) to 8 h, which is even longer
than that of the wild type. The prolonged lag phase of SPR244(pTrcGacS)
probably was a consequence of overexpression of
gacS. However,
the observed reduction in the lag phase (i.e., the fast restart
of growth) of SPR244 in fresh medium indicated that only minor
adaptations of the physiology of this organism are necessary.
One possible explanation is that the cells are still in the
exponential phase or do not fully enter the stationary phase.
Synthesis of
s protein in SPR044 and its derivatives.
To test this hypothesis, the cellular level of the stationary-phase-specific
sigma factor
s was analyzed. It is well established that
s (RpoS)
is unstable in the exponential phase (half-life, 14 min) but
is stabilized at the onset of the stationary phase in
E. coli (
19,
24). To determine the level of cell-bound
s in
P. chlororaphis,
samples were taken periodically from cells grown in minimal
medium as described above, and cell lysates were analyzed with
RpoS-specific antiserum. This analysis revealed that there were
significant differences in the cellular
s levels in SPR044 and
SPR244 carrying pTrc300 or pTrcGacS (Fig.
5). The RpoS-specific
signal strongly increased after 18 h of growth in SPR044 and
in SPR244(pTrcGacS) cultures. In SPR244 and SPR244(pTrc300)
cultures, however, the RpoS-specific signal remained constant
or even decreased after 24 h. This supports the assumption that
the GacS-negative strains do not fully enter the stationary
phase under these conditions, which may permit a faster restart
of growth after inoculation into fresh media.

DISCUSSION
The aim of this study was to analyze the importance of acyl-HSL
and PCN production for rhizosphere colonization by
P. chlororaphis SPR044. As a first step, acyl-HSLs produced by strain SPR044
and variants of this strain defective in acyl-HSL and/or PCN
biosynthesis were characterized, and their regulatory functions
for production of antimicrobial agents and extracellular enzymes
were assessed (
29). Analysis of cell-free culture supernatants
revealed that SPR044 produces three acyl-HSLs, but HHSL, the
main autoinducer described for
P. chlororaphis PCL1391 (
6),
was not detected. In contrast, BHSL was identified as a major
acyl-HSL in strain SPR044, but it was also present in strain
PCL1391 in addition to HHSL. Although a detailed chemical analysis
was beyond the scope of this work, the identities of acyl-HSLs
from strain SPR044 could be partially determined by using previously
described criteria (
3,
41). Based on the spot-like migration
during TLC (3-oxo derivatives give comet-like signals), the
failure to induce the quorum-sensing system of
P. aureofaciens 30-84I, and the deviation of the
Rf values from the
Rf values
of nonsubstituted HHSL and OHSL, compounds A and B are probably
C-3-hydroxy acyl-HSLs. The
Rf of 0.5 observed in the case of
compound A suggests that it is probably 3-hydroxy-OHSL (
3).
In contrast, fractionation of compound B did not allow assignment,
and more extensive analytical chemistry is required to identify
the structure of this compound.
Quantitative analysis of acyl-HSL production by the different TnMod insertion derivatives revealed a correlation between the amounts of autoinducer and the amounts of antimicrobial metabolites, phenazines, and extracellular proteases, showing that the regulation is similar to that of strain PCL1391 (6). Strain SPR344, isolated because of the increased amounts of green PCN crystals per colony, deviated from this scheme. The production of acyl-HSLs and antimicrobial agents was not greater, suggesting that acyl-HSL-controlled processes are not generally up-regulated. Possibly, overproduction of PCN results in down-regulation of different biochemical pathways at the expense of other metabolites. A similar effect was described in the case of a PCN-overproducing phzM mutant of P. aeruginosa, which synthesizes reduced amounts of other phenazines (28). Based on sequence analysis of the gene affected by the insertion, however, an alternative explanation is likely. The gene product exhibits 55% similarity to the protein encoded by lpsE of Sinorhizobium meliloti and 55% similarity to an RbfU-related protein from E. coli. These proteins are glycosyl transferases involved in lipopolysaccharide (LPS) core biosynthesis. Overproduction of green PCN crystals could be a consequence of the altered LPS, favoring the efflux of PCN and/or the formation of green crystals. In support of this hypothesis, LPS was isolated and, indeed, the LPS from SPR344 proved to be different from the LPS from the wild type (data not shown).
One mutant belonging to each phenotypic class (acyl-HSL negative, PCN negative, PCN overproducer) was chosen for studies of A. thaliana rhizosphere colonization. The goal of our work was to analyze subtle effects caused by alterations of such colonization factors. We therefore chose a gnotobiotic system due to its relative simplicity and reproducibility and to the fact that the results obtained with such systems mimic those obtained with natural soil (43). The absence of PCN production by strain SPR644 did not negatively affect its ability to colonize. In addition, coculture with other efficient colonizers was not affected (38). This is in contrast to previous results showing that a complete loss of phenazine production reduced the ability of P. aureofaciens to survive in soil (29). However, SPR644 lost only the ability to produce PCN, and it was still able to synthesize PCA. Conversion to the last product of the pathway is obviously not required for efficient colonization. The antifungal activity, which was reduced in a PCN-negative PCL391 derivative, was not examined in the present study (4).
The growth of SPR344 was not reduced in liquid culture under different conditions tested in this study, showing that this bacterium does not have a major fitness defect. However, its ability to survive in the A. thaliana rhizosphere was markedly reduced, which may have been due to increased PCN accumulation in the area around the cell. Diffusion of phenazines across the membrane results in acceptance of single electrons and disruption of the respiratory chain. The increased extracellular accumulation of PCN could also result in overproduction of O2- and H2O2 to levels which may exceed the capacities of the cellular superoxide dismutase (16, 17). The altered LPS composition of strain SPR344 is probably not the main reason for its reduced growth, since colonization of the higher parts of tomato roots by an O-antigenic mutant of P. fluorescens was not affected (10). In any case, this strain was unable to compete with other bacteria upon prolonged cultivation. Chin-A-Woeng et al. showed that engineering the phenazine pathway towards PCN production extends the biocontrol ability of Pseudomonas spp., which do not naturally synthesize it (5). Our results indicate that great care should be taken, because massive overproduction of PCN may negatively affect bacterial fitness.
Rhizosphere colonization by GacS-defective strain SPR244 was significantly reduced compared to rhizosphere colonization by the wild type when the two strains were inoculated separately. In contrast, after coinoculation, the population sizes were similar. To explain this observation, a detailed analysis of the growth in combination with an immunological analysis of the stationary-phase sigma factor RpoS was performed. The reduction in the lag phase observed for the quorum-sensing-negative strains was shown to be a consequence of delayed and incomplete entry into stationary-phase physiology. Our results are consistent with those of Latifi et al. (25) and You et al. (51), who showed that addition of acyl-HSLs to exponentially growing cultures leads to repression of cell growth and production of stationary-phase-specific RpoS regardless of the cell density. We thus suggest the following explanation for the finding that the size of the population of SPR244 was significantly smaller than that of the wild type in solitary growth experiments but was similar during cocultivation experiments. Due to an inability to produce quorum-sensing-regulated extracellular enzymes, the SPR244 population is dependent on readily available carbon sources. In solitary growth experiments, this leads to nutrient depletion and a decrease in the growth rate after 14 days. During cocultivation, however, extracellular enzymes from the wild type could provide access to easily degradable carbon sources, and this may relieve nutrient limitation for SPR244. Diffusion of acyl-HSLs is not likely to complement the gacS defect, because the GacA-GacS regulon affects many acyl-HSL-independent pathways (18, 33). In addition, experiments with conditioned medium also showed that there was a reduction in the lag phase and postponed entry into the stationary phase for the quorum-sensing-negative mutants (data not shown). Significantly, the postponed entry into the stationary phase may allow relatively fast growth of SPR244, whereas it may cause entry into the stationary phase by the wild type. This hypothesis is supported by the results of Bull et al., who inoculated P. fluorescens wild-type strain CHAO (99%) with the CHA89 gacA mutant (1%) and found that the proportion of gacA mutants increased to 4% before entry into the stationary phase (1). This indicates that in rich media the gacA mutants have a competitive advantage, which may be related to delayed entry into the stationary phase. Similar observations were made by Sánchez-Contreras et al., who showed that phase variation and phenotypic selection during alfalfa root colonization by P. fluorescens are often correlated with point mutations in gacA (36). In addition, Duffy and Défago observed accumulation of spontaneous gacA or gacS mutants during biocontrol inoculum production (12). The mutants may have an advantage, because they continue to grow exponentially, whereas the wild type enters the stationary phase due to the high concentration of acyl-HSLs.
Taken together, our data support the notion that the presence of the GacA-GacS system may be disadvantageous to rhizosphere bacteria under some conditions. This may be due to the fact that in addition to the regulation of colonization, this system promotes entry into the growth-retarding stationary phase. A balance of GacA-GacS-positive and -negative strains may therefore be optimal for the survival and adaptability of a community. From the applied point of view it, would be interesting to assess whether it is advantageous to use acyl-HSL-negative strains as inoculants. The insensitivity of a GacA-GacS-defective inoculum to a high concentration of acyl-HSLs may have a positive effect on the population of the inoculated strain, resulting in enhanced delivery of catabolic plasmids to an indigenous population and in stimulation of bioremediation.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We thank Clay Fuqua and Leland S. Pierson for AHL detection
strains, K. Tanaka for the gift of RpoS-specific antiserum,
and August Böck for continued support and discussions.
Natalie Domke is thanked for construction of plasmid pTrc300,
and the support of different members of the MECBAD consortium
(BIO4-CT98-0099) is gratefully acknowledged.
This work was supported by the BMBF (Biomonitor/Molekulare Mikrobenökologie grant 0311940).

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of Biology, McMaster University, 1280 Main St. West, Hamilton, ON LS8 4K1, Canada. Phone: (905) 525-9140, ext. 26692. Fax: (905) 522-6066. E-mail:
baronC{at}mcmaster.ca.


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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, March 2003, p. 1817-1826, Vol. 69, No. 3
0099-2240/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/AEM.69.3.1817-1826.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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