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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, April 2004, p. 2146-2153, Vol. 70, No. 4
0099-2240/04/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/AEM.70.4.2146-2153.2004
Copyright © 2004, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Laboratoire de Microbiologie UMR UB/INRA 1232, ENSBANA, Université de Bourgogne, 21000 Dijon, France
Received 28 August 2003/ Accepted 22 December 2003
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In previous work (3, 7), it has been shown that the ubiquitous lactic acid bacterium Lactobacillus plantarum exhibits an inducible phenolic acid decarboxylase (PAD) activity which converts these substrates into less-toxic vinyl phenol derivatives (called volatile phenols). These volatile phenols are valuable intermediates in the biotechnological production of new flavor and fragrance chemicals, but they are also regarded as sources of phenolic off-flavors in beers, wines, and other fermented vegetable products due to their characteristic aroma and their low detection threshold (6). The strong, rapid, and inducible Pad enzyme synthesis following exposure to phenolic acids can be considered a specific chemical stress response to overcome this phenolic acid toxicity. This was proved by disruption of this padA gene, which renders the bacterium sensitive to these substrates and makes it unable to grow at a low pH in the presence of p-coumaric acid (4). To date four bacterial pad genes have been cloned and characterized. The substrate-inducible enzymes display decarboxylase activities of about 0.5 µmol · min1 · mg1 (7, 8, 41). Transcriptional analyses showed that pad mRNA could be detected only in phenolic acid-induced cell extracts. The expression of pad genes is transcriptionally activated by phenolic acids (7, 8).
Recently, Barthelmebs et al. found in the lactic acid bacterium Pediococcus pentosaceus (isolated from wine) a gene, organized in an autoregulated bicistronic operon with padA, which, when heterologously coexpressed in an Escherichia coli strain, was responsible for the repression of padA gene expression (4). This gene was named padR, because these results made it the putative transcriptional repressor of the padA gene in P. pentosaceus. However, no demonstration in the original host was done due to the impossibility of interrupting the chromosomal padR gene in this bacterium. No electroporation or other transformation procedure exists, to our knowledge, for this species (4). These PadR proteins form a new class of transcriptional regulator (Pfam PF03551). Only AphA (31% identity with P. pentosaceus PadR), which activates the transcription of tcpPH and initiates the expression of the virulence cascade in Vibrio cholerae (25, 27), has been well characterized, but it does not seem to play a role in the regulation of Pad (24).
In the present work, we report the cloning of the putative padR gene from L. plantarum, using the knowledge of the sequence of padR in P. pentosaceus. We demonstrate its role as a repressor of padA gene expression in the phenolic acid stress response, by disruption, mutant characterization, and mobility shift DNA binding assays with both native protein extract and recombinant purified His-tagged PadR.
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TABLE 1. Bacterial strains and plasmids
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TABLE 2. Primers
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Northern blot, slot blot, and primer extension analysis.
Total RNA was separated by denaturing formaldehyde agarose gel electrophoresis and transferred to nylon membranes (NytranN; Schleicher and Schuell, Dassel, Germany) by using the Pharmacia vacuum system. The formaldehyde-denatured RNA was also spotted onto a nylon membrane by using a Hybrid-Slot manifold. Putative padR and padA gene-specific probes were generated by PCR amplification using primer pairs LP
PDC1-LPD6 and LPD3-LPD8, respectively, designed from L. plantarum NC8 chromosomal DNA. The probes were labeled using a random-priming kit (Invitrogen, Paisley, United Kingdom) and [
-32P]dATP (3,000 Ci/mmol; Perkin-Elmer, Boston, Mass.). Transcript size was determined by comparison with an RNA ladder (0.24 to 9.5 kb; Invitrogen). Primer extension analysis was performed with two antisense primers, LPD9 and LP
PDC1. Reverse transcription was performed with 10 U of Superscript II reverse transcriptase (Invitrogen) at 42°C as previously described (8). The mixture was loaded onto a 6% polyacrylamide manual sequencing gel in parallel with sequencing reactions with the padR DNA as the template and the same primers.
RT-PCR analysis.
Equal amounts of RNA were treated with 2 U of RNase-free DNase I (Invitrogen), and cDNA was synthesized by using 10 U of Superscript II reverse transcriptase and 2 ng of hexamers (Invitrogen)/µl. Five percent of the reverse transcription (RT) product was used as the substrate for PCR amplification with primers LPYFMUT1 and LPD6. PCR products were analyzed via standard agarose gel electrophoresis.
Deletion of the putative padR gene.
The pJRAB plasmid, which carries the putative padR gene with a deletion between the EcoRI site 106 bp downstream from the start codon and another EcoRI site 131 bp after the stop codon, was constructed by simultaneously cloning two separate fragments between the EcoRI and SmaI sites of pJPDC9. Primer LPFP3, which includes an EcoRI site, and primer LPD16 were used to amplify the 303 bp of the RA region encompassing the first 81 bp of the padA gene 5' end, the putative promoter of the putative padR gene, and the first 106 bp of the putative open reading frame 1 (ORF1) downstream of padR. The 237-bp DNA fragment of the RB region was obtained by EcoRI restriction of pJPDC1. The
R fragment, which corresponds to the RB region and the 303-bp RA region, was generated by amplification with the M13 universal primer and primer LPD16 from the pJRAB plasmid and was cloned into the SmaI site of vector pGID023 to yield the pG
R plasmid.
Preparation of cell extracts and assays for PAD activity.
L. plantarum cultures and cell disruption were performed as previously described (3). PAD activity in whole resting cells and in cell extracts was measured by the procedure of Barthelmebs et al. (3). This procedure consists of monitoring by UV spectrophotometry the disappearance of absorption peaks of the substrates (phenolic acids) and the simultaneous appearance of new peaks corresponding to vinyl derivatives. Protein concentrations in cell extracts were determined by using a protein assay kit (Bio-Rad, Richmond, Calif.) with bovine serum albumin as the standard.
Cloning of the padR gene in plasmid pET28a and purification of PadR protein.
The padR gene was cloned into plasmid pET28a by inserting a 549-bp NcoI/XhoI DNA fragment corresponding to the padR coding sequence between the NcoI and XhoI sites of pET28a. The DNA fragment corresponding to the padR sequence was generated by PCR using primers LPPADR1 and LPPADR2, thus replacing the TAA stop codon by the XhoI restriction site. This allowed the creation of a translational fusion adding six histidine residues to the carboxyl terminus of the protein and placed expression of the padR gene under the control of a T7 promoter. The resulting plasmid, pER, was used to transform E. coli BL21(DE3), in which the T7 RNA polymerase gene is under the control of the lacUV5 promoter, which is inducible with isopropyl-ß-D-thiogalactoside (IPTG; 1 mM).
IPTG was added at the mid-exponential-growth phase to a 500-ml culture of E. coli BL21 pER (0.7 OD600 unit), and incubation was continued overnight at 37°C. After centrifugation, cells were suspended in 2% of the initial culture volume in a 50 mM sodium phosphate-300 mM NaCl-10 mM imidazole buffer at pH 8 and were then disrupted with a French press as previously described (2). The crude protein extracts were loaded onto a 0.5-ml nickel-nitrilotriacetate (Ni-NTA) agarose column (Qiagen). PadR protein was eluted with an imidazole gradient (20 to 100 mM) and resolved by denaturing sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) (with a 12.5% polyacrylamide resolving gel) (29).
Partial purification of the native PadR protein from L. plantarum cells.
Four liters of LPNC8 culture in MRS medium in the mid-logarithmic-growth phase (0.8 OD600 unit) was divided into two individual cultures. The first was incubated under the same conditions without any change, while the second was induced by addition of 2.4 mM p-coumaric acid. After incubation for 30 min, cells were harvested, washed with saline, and disrupted with a French press as previously described. The two crude protein extracts obtained by centrifugation were fractionated by adding (NH4)2SO4 (30, 40, and 50% [wt/vol] [near saturation] at 0°C) as previously described (6). The crude extracts and these fractions, dialyzed against 25 mM phosphate buffer at pH 6, were tested in binding assays with the padA gene promoter. Fractions presenting interactions with the padA DNA probe (see Results) were subjected to an additional purification step. Size exclusion chromatography with a Sephacryl S 200 HR (Amersham Biosciences Europe, Orsay, France) column (10 by 400 mm), eluted with 25 mM sodium phosphate buffer and 0.15 M NaCl at pH 6, was applied to these fractions in order to obtain, after elution of the dead volume, eight 2-ml fractions containing the purified proteins. This was done also to enrich the native PadR in one of these fractions. Fractions were dialyzed to eliminate NaCl and were concentrated by spreading flakes of polyethylene glycol 20000 (Sigma-Aldrich, Steinheim, Germany) on the dialysis tubes. Fractions were characterized by SDS-PAGE, and their protein concentrations were determined by using the Bio-Rad kit for protein analysis. Only four significantly different SDS-PAGE profiles were obtained (data not shown), and some fractions were pooled to obtain four purified protein samples at the same protein concentration (5 mg/ml). These fractions were kept at 20°C until use for binding assays.
Gel mobility shift assays.
The 115-bp DNA probe corresponding to the promoter region of the padA gene was generated by PCR with primers LPGS1 and LPGS2. This fragment was labeled by 10 cycles of PCR with [
-32P]dATP and was used as the probe for binding assays. Binding of PadR to DNA was carried out in a 20-µl reaction mixture containing 3 x 107 M
-32P-labeled padA promoter region DNA, 25 µg of salmon sperm DNA/µl, 10 mM Tris-HCl, 10 mM HEPES-NaOH, 50 mM KCl, 2 mM MgCl2, 2 mM dithiotreitol, 0.2 mM Na2 EDTA, and 5 g of glycerol/liter at pH 7.8. The DNA binding reaction was initiated by the addition of either purified His-tagged PadR produced in a recombinant E. coli strain or native PadR protein produced in L. plantarum. The mixture was incubated at room temperature for 30 min, and 10-µl samples were then loaded directly onto a 5% polyacrylamide gel that was run in a 20 mM Tris-HCl-400 mM glycine-1 mM EDTA (pH 7.8) buffer at 12 V · cm1 for 1 h at room temperature. Then the gel was dried and analyzed by autoradiography. Competitor DNA consisted of the 273-bp DNA from the L-lactate dehydrogenase constitutive promoter region (19) (ldhL gene sequence, TrEMBL accession no. X70926), which was obtained by PCR amplification using the two primers LPLDH1 and LPLDH2 (Table 2). The PCR product was resolved by agarose gel electrophoresis, purified with the Qiagel extraction kit (Qiagen), and added to the mixture at 3 x 107 M in some binding assays.
Glutaraldehyde cross-linking of PadR.
The procedure of Derré et al. (15) was modified as follows. Twenty microliters of purified PadR (0.5 µg/µl) was incubated with 20 µl of the glutaraldehyde cross-linking reagent containing 20 mM glutaraldehyde, 100 mM NaH2PO4 (pH 7.5), 100 mM NaCl, and 200 g of glycerol/liter. After incubation for 1 h at 37°C, the reaction was stopped by the addition of SDS loading buffer. The samples were boiled and analyzed by SDS-PAGE on a 12% polyacrylamide gel. The gel was stained with Coomassie blue.
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FIG. 1. Alignment of amino acid sequences of PadR. LPPADR, PadR of L. plantarum (accession no. AJ289188); BSPADR, PadR of B. subtilis (accession no. P94443) (unpublished data); PPPADR, PadR of P. pentosaceus (accession no. AJ276891). Asterisks designate identical residues, colons designate conserved substitutions, and periods designate semiconserved substitutions. Predicted coiled-coil domains, obtained by using the COILS computer program with a 21-amino-acid window (32-34), are boxed. Gaps in the alignment (dashes) are indicated.
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FIG. 2. (A) Physical map of the padA locus in a wild-type strain of L. plantarum and characterization of physical deletion in an LPNC8 R strain. Large open arrows represent the different genes and ORF1 and their orientation. Small bars indicate the restriction sites. Small horizontal arrows indicate primers for PCR. (B) PCR of the padR region with two primer pairs on chromosomal DNAs of a mutant strain and a wild-type strain, respectively. Lanes 1 and 2, LPMINV2-LPD8 amplification. Lanes 3 and 4, LPREP2-LPD8 amplification. Smart ladder (Eurogentec). (C) Nucleotide sequence of the overlapping diverging promoter region of the padA gene and the padR-ORF1 operonic structure (accession no. AJ289188). Putative promoters are indicated with their putative 10 and 35 boxes. ATG start codons of padA and padR genes are boldfaced. The two putative ribosome binding site (RBS) regions are underlined. The transcription starting points (+1) of padA (6) and padR (see Fig. 4A) are underlined. The inverted-repeat (IR) sequence of the PadR putative DNA binding site is boldfaced and underlined.
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R and used in this work.
The LPNC8
R mutant constitutively overexpresses PAD activity.
In order to test the PAD activity of the mutant strain, noninduced and induced (by addition of 2.4 mM p-coumaric acid) cultures of LPNC8 and noninduced LPNC8
R mutant culture were performed. Corresponding crude cell extracts were analyzed for PAD activity and were subjected to SDS-PAGE (Fig. 3A). No PAD activity was detected in the extract from noninduced LPNC8 cells (detection threshold, 104 µmol · min1 · mg1), while an activity of about 0.5 µmol · min1 · mg1 was observed in the p-coumaric acid-induced LPNC8 cell extract. The noninduced extract from the LPNC8
R mutant displayed a very high PAD specific activity of 31 µmol · min1 · mg1 on p-coumaric acid, indicating constitutive overexpression of the padA gene. SDS-PAGE of these crude extracts showed the presence of a strong protein band of about 25 kDa, corresponding to the PadA enzyme, that is not detectable as a protein band in the crude extract from the noninduced culture of the wild-type strain LPNC8 and is masked by other proteins in the crude extract of the induced wild-type strain. Increasing the brightness and contrast of the corresponding digital photograph (Fig. 3B) allows proportional subtraction of less-intense protein bands and reveals that the PadA enzyme is one of three main proteins in the LPNC8
R mutant. These results indicate that the disruption of padR results in a strong and constitutive overexpression of the PadA protein without p-coumaric acid induction. Slot blot analysis with whole RNA from noninduced LPNC8
R cells allowed the detection of the padA transcript, which was not detectable in noninduced cells of the wild-type strain LPNC8 (data not shown). These results demonstrate that the putative padR gene encodes the transcriptional repressor of padA gene expression and that the padA gene is under the control of a very tightly inducible promoter.
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FIG. 3. (A) SDS-PAGE of crude protein extracts from noninduced (lane 3) and 2.4 mM p-coumaric acid-induced (lane 2) LPNC8 cells and from the noninduced LPNC8 R mutant (lane 1). M, SDS-PAGE molecular mass standards (Invitrogen). Arrow indicates the protein band corresponding to the constitutively overexpressed PadA enzyme in the LPNC8 R mutant. (B) Identical to panel A, with a simple increase in brightness and contrast to enable evaluation of the relative concentration of PadA in the LPNC8 R mutant compared to the concentrations of the other two main protein bands (indicated by arrowheads) that are constitutively expressed in the wild-type and mutant strains.
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PDC1 (same results) (data not shown) and using the RNA samples from induced or noninduced cultures as templates allowed the identification of a single guanine as a putative transcription starting point, located 27 nucleotides upstream from the putative initiation codon ATG, and of putative 10 and 35 boxes (Fig. 2C). Evaluation of relative concentrations of primer extension products by using a Bio-Rad digital gel documentation system indicates that the level of mRNA from the padR gene in the induced cell extract was about 20-fold higher than that in noninduced cells. Northern blot hybridization using the same templates was performed to determine the size of the corresponding mRNA with the padR probe (Fig. 4B). Signals were detected in RNA extracts from both p-coumarate-induced and noninduced L. plantarum cultures. As observed with the 5' mapping results, the Northern blot band corresponding to the padR transcript for the induced condition was about 20-fold more intense than that for the noninduced condition. A single transcript of approximately 1.4 kb was detected in both RNA extracts. This size is about twice the expected size of the padR gene transcript, indicating that the padR gene is probably cotranscribed with another putative gene. A putative ORF1 was observed 181 bp downstream from the TAA stop codon of padR. Since the analysis was done on a pJPDC1 library sequence (6), only 180 bp of this putative ORF1 was observed. Screening of the L. plantarum genomic DNA library (7) with a probe consisting of the partial DNA sequence of this putative ORF1 failed to produce a signal. PCR gene walking experiments were recently successful at cloning the 0.7-kbp 3' downstream region of ORF1 (data not shown) (accession no. AJ289188). To confirm this hypothetical cotranscription of padR and ORF1, RT-PCR amplification experiments were carried out with mRNAs prepared from noninduced L. plantarum cells and from L. plantarum cells induced by addition of 2.4 mM p-coumaric acid; cDNA synthesis was performed with random hexamers as primers and by PCR using primers LPYFMUT1 and LPD6, located in ORF1 and the padR gene, respectively. A PCR product of the expected size (812 bp) was obtained by use of either of the mRNA extracts as a template (Fig. 4C), supporting the hypothesis of an operon arrangement of padR and ORF1. Forty-four nucleotides downstream from ORF1, a putative rho-independent transcriptional terminator with a
G of 26.9 kcal/mol was found. ORF1 displays a significant identity with Listeria monocytogenes Lmo1580 protein (accession no. AL591979), a putative Usp (universal stress protein) of unknown function.
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FIG. 4. Transcriptional analysis of padR gene. (A) Mapping of the 5' end of padR mRNA by extension analysis using primer LPD9 with total L. plantarum RNA from noninduced (NI) and 2.4 mM p-coumaric acid-induced (I) cells. The products of the reverse transcriptase reactions were analyzed by 6% sequencing gel reactions (ACGT) with the same primer. Arrow indicates the 5' end of padR gene mRNA (C for the coding sequence). (B) Northern blot analysis of total RNAs purified from NI and I cultures of L. plantarum. A padR-specific probe was used. (C) RT-PCR of the padR gene and the 5'-most 180 bp of putative ORF1 by using total RNAs purified from NI and I cells of L. plantarum as the matrix. This region of interest was amplified by PCR using LPYFMUT1 and LPD6. Lane 1, positive control from chromosomal DNA; lanes 2 and 3, RT-PCR with total RNAs from NI and I cells, respectively; lanes 4 and 5, negative controls with no RT step; M, DNA Smart ladder (Eurogentec).
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FIG. 5. Overexpression, purification, and mobility shift assays with purified PadR. (A) SDS-PAGE analysis of crude extracts and purified His-tagged PadR from E. coli BL21(DE3) carrying the pER plasmid. Lane 1, molecular mass standards; lane 2, crude protein extract from noninduced E. coli; lane 3, crude protein extract from 1 mM IPTG-induced E. coli; lane 4, PadR purified by Ni-NTA affinity chromatography; lane 5, purified PadR treated with 10 mM glutaraldehyde. Dimer PadR, protein band corresponding to the putative dimerized purified PadR with a molecular mass of about 45 kDa. (B) Mobility shift assays of the DNA probe corresponding to the padA promoter region, generated and labeled by PCR amplification with [ -32P]dATP, with or without purified PadR. Lane 1, probe (3 x 107 M pad promoter DNA) without protein; lanes 2 to 7, probes with increasing concentrations of purified PadR (lane 2, 106 M; lane 3, 2 x 106 M; lane 4, 3 x 106 M; lane 5, 4 x 106 M; lane 6, 5 x 106 M; lane 7, 6 x 106 M).
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These results indicate that the L. plantarum PadR protein that is produced by recombinant E. coli is in the active form. In order to see if inactivation of the PadR repressor could be possible in vitro or in recombinant E. coli strains expressing His-tagged PadR, p-coumaric acid was added either to the purified PadR protein or, before extraction, to the recombinant E. coli strain in the mid-logarithmic-growth phase. No change in binding was observed either with the recombinant PadR protein preincubated with 2.4 mM p-coumaric acid or with purified L. plantarum PadR protein from recombinant E. coli cells induced with 2.4 mM p-coumaric acid (data not shown). It has already been demonstrated that p-coumaric acid enters E. coli cells very easily and is not metabolized by this bacterium (2, 4). Burlingame and Chapman (5) have previously shown that E. coli is not able to grow on cinnamic acid or 2- or 4-hydroxycinnamic acid (p-coumarate). The lack of inactivation of PadR in E. coli could not result from a p-coumaric acid uptake problem in this species. Moreover, previous studies have shown that padA mRNA levels decrease rapidly after complete degradation of p-coumarate (7), indicating that products of p-coumarate metabolism which accumulated in the culture medium were not able to induce the Pad system in L. plantarum. These results indicate that p-coumaric acid cannot directly inactivate the PadR transcriptional repressor in vitro or in recombinant living E. coli cells, in contrast to what was observed in the living L. plantarum host. These results suggest the existence of a mechanism or a gene present in this host and absent in E. coli that mediates the transduction of the p-coumaric acid signal responsible for the inactivation of PadR.
The native PadR repressor is indirectly inactivated in L. plantarum cells by addition of p-coumaric acid.
To confirm the hypothesis for a biological mechanism through which p-coumaric acid inactivates the PadR repressor in growing cells of L. plantarum, binding assays with the same DNA probe were performed by using partially purified [with (NH4)2SO4] protein extracts from noninduced and induced LPNC8 cells (Fig. 6A). Specific binding (C1 complex) with the padA promoter DNA probe was observed only for the 50% (NH4)2SO4 protein extract fraction from the noninduced culture. Binding assays with the three corresponding protein fractions from p-coumaric acid-induced cells revealed the absence of a C1 complex and the presence of a second complex, designated C2, which did not migrate in PAGE. This complex corresponds to the DNA probe and a high-molecular-mass protein present in crude cell extracts. One candidate for this protein should be the RNA polymerase, a protein of about 400 kDa (13), which is able to form a complex with the DNA probe, as previously described, in gel mobility shift assays with crude cell extracts of Staphylococcus aureus (21). Addition of nonlabeled ldhL promoter competitor DNA, which displays a strong affinity for the RNA polymerase, reinforced this hypothesis. As demonstrated in Fig. 6B, lane 2+, this competitor was able to mobilize the protein responsible for C2 formation and liberate the probe for PadR binding.
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FIG. 6. Mobility shift assay of a DNA probe corresponding to the padA promoter region (2 x 108 M), generated and labeled by PCR with [ -32P]dATP, with crude protein extracts, partially purified with (NH4)2SO4 and by gel filtration, from noninduced (NI) or p-coumaric acid-induced (I) L. plantarum cells. (A) Binding assay with (NH4)2SO4 fractions from NI or I cells. P, DNA probe without protein extract; lane 1, crude extract from NI cells; lanes 2 and 5, 30% (NH4)2SO4 fraction; lanes 3 and 6, 40% (NH4)2SO4 fraction; lanes 4 and 7, 50% (NH4)2SO4 fraction. (B) Binding assays with 50% (NH4)2SO4 fractions from NI and I cells preincubated with (+) or without () 3 x 107 M unlabeled ldhL promoter DNA as a competitor (see Materials and Methods). P, DNA probe without protein extract; lanes 1 and 3, 0.025 µg of protein/µl; lanes 2 and 4, 0.075 µg of protein/µl. (C) Binding assays with the four pools of protein obtained by gel filtration (GF) of the 50% (NH4)2SO4 protein fraction from the NI protein extract with (+) or without () ldhL promoter DNA as a competitor. P, probe without protein extract; lanes 1, 2, 3, and 4, respectively, the first, second, third, and fourth pools of proteins collected by gel filtration elution. The protein concentration of the pools was the same as that in the binding assays (0.025 µg/µl). C1, band corresponding to a specific binding of the probe with a protein in extracts or protein fractions exclusively from NI cells; C2, band corresponding to the binding of the probe with a high-molecular-mass protein.
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400-kDa molecular mass with other high-molecular-mass proteins, revealed a C2 binding complex, which was less intense in the presence of competitor DNA than the C1 binding complex for reasons previously given. The other fractions (fractions 2, 3, and 4), corresponding to the elution of progressively lower molecular mass proteins, displayed the specific and intense C1 binding complex, without the C2 binding complex. |
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G of about 20 kcal/mol was identified downstream of the stop codon, whereas the L. plantarum padR gene is cotranscribed with another putative gene, ORF1, a 462-bp region encoding a protein of 153 amino acid residues whose function is unknown.
Deletion of the padR gene leads to the constitutive overexpression of the PadA enzyme, and the specific activity of the LPNC8
R crude extract is about 60-fold higher than the highest specific activity previously measured in the p-coumaric acid-induced wild-type strain of L. plantarum. The PadA protein is one of the three main proteins of the LPNC8
R mutant (Fig. 3B), indicating that the padA gene promoter is one of the three most tightly regulated gene promoters so far observed in L. plantarum. This food-grade mutant obtained by double crossing over could be useful for biotechnology applications to constitutively overproduce any protein of interest. The wild-type L. plantarum strain is suitable for inducible overexpression by food-grade natural inducers (phenolic acids) of any gene inserted downstream of the padA promoter. The interest of this expression system is reinforced by the absence of detectable basal expression in noninduced bacteria.
The padR gene of L. plantarum is regulated at a transcriptional level with about a 20-fold increase in cells induced by p-coumaric acid. The PadR repressor could interact with its own promoter due to the padR 35 sequence included in the putative PadR binding site (Fig. 2C). When PadR binds to the padA gene promoter, it might mask, in part, the promoter of its coding gene by simple steric inhibition due to the overlapping promoters, thus reducing its own transcription. When p-coumaric acid is added to the medium, the inactivation of PadR releases it from the padA promoter region, as shown in binding assays, and allows increased transcription of the padR gene (Fig. 4B). Results obtained in binding assays indicate that recombinant PadR binds specifically and strongly to the padA gene promoter and that contact with the PadR protein cannot be inactivated by preincubation with phenolic acids before binding assays (Fig. 5B). Binding assays performed with native protein extracts from noninduced and p-coumaric acid-induced L. plantarum cells indicate that the p-coumaric acid response may need a specific mediator which is responsible for PadR inactivation and which is absent in E. coli. The regulation may be as complex as that of tcpPH expression, which needs both AphA and AphB (25) and which is transcriptionally regulated by quorum sensing through the repressive action of HapR (26). Nevertheless, no significant difference was observed in induction with p-coumarate at low or high cell densities in L. plantarum. Even if the AphA and PadR amino acid sequences are quite homologous, PadR does not follow the same regulation as AphA. The mechanism of PadR derepression by p-coumarate is currently under study.
The analysis of the PadR amino acid sequence reveals a coiled-coil structure with a putative leucine zipper-like dimerization motif between leucine 117 and leucine 138 (Fig. 1) (32-34). This hypothesis is reinforced by the results of in vitro dimerization (Fig. 5A), generating a coiled-coil structure for binding to the padA DNA promoter in homodimeric form. No "helix-turn-helix" DNA binding type motif was found in PadR. A structure-function analysis of PadR should allow determination of the regions involved in inactivation and DNA binding. The role of the putative Usp ORF1 gene, which forms a putative operon with padR and whose expression is increased in the presence of phenolic acids, is currently under study, because it may be a component of the phenolic acid response. The recent bioinformatics data from whole-genome sequencing projects make the Usp's a growing family of proteins. In most cases these Usp's are produced in response to a large number of environmental stresses, but their exact role remains enigmatic today (28).
J. Gury, a Ph.D student, is supported by a grant from INRA and the Conseil Régional de Bourgogne.
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