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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, July 2004, p. 4136-4143, Vol. 70, No. 7
0099-2240/04/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/AEM.70.7.4136-4143.2004
Copyright © 2004, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Wei Yang,2 and Scott D. Mills2*
Department of Biology, Northeastern University, Boston, Massachusetts 02115,1 Molecular Sciences, AstraZeneca R&D Boston, Waltham, Massachusetts 024512
Received 21 January 2004/ Accepted 5 April 2004
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The bacterial genomic era began in 1995, when the first complete genome of a free-living organism, H. influenzae, was published (5). Since then, genomics has played an increasingly significant role in the identification and validation of novel targets for antibacterial drug discovery (9). In this sense, "target validation" refers to experimental confirmation that a specific gene product is essential for the viability of an organism during growth and infection (9). Although the H. influenzae genome sequence was completed several years ago, the function and essentiality of many of its annotated genes remain unknown. Genome scale studies have been performed with H. influenzae in order to identify genes essential for growth and survival (1, 13). These studies focused on the identification of nonessential genes by performing transposon mutagenesis so that essential genes (EGs) could be deduced by mutant exclusion and zero-time analysis (1, 13). Akerley et al. (1) estimated that H. influenzae carries 478 EGs (no insertions) of which greater than 50% (259 genes) had no ascribed function (1). This is an efficient way to generate an inventory of potentially EGs; however, more directed studies are required to fully validate targets for antimicrobial drug discovery.
It is critical to develop genetic tools that will allow one to conclusively define gene essentiality, as well as address questions related to physiological functions. In many cases, a gene disruption can impact neighboring genes (e.g., operon structure), leading to pleiotropic effects and false interpretations of experimental data. Therefore, it is equally important to complement the disrupted gene in trans with a second copy of the gene to restore, as closely as possible, the original phenotype of the strain. Here we report the development of an efficient complementation system useful in assessing gene essentiality and function in H. influenzae.
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TABLE 1. Bacterial strains and plasmids used in this study
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H. influenzae competent cell preparation and transformation.
Competent cells were prepared and transformed as previously described (4). Briefly, H. influenzae cells were grown overnight on sBHI agar. Riboflavin and kanamycin were added to the medium for the ribC KO strain. Cells were scraped from the plates, suspended in brucella broth, and used to inoculate 100 ml of sBHI broth to a starting optical density at 600 nm of about 0.07 to 0.08. Cells were grown with shaking (160 rpm) at 37°C to an optical density at 600 nm of about 0.3, at which time they were centrifuged (15 min at 3,000 x g), and the pellet was washed by gentle pipetting in 50 ml of freshly prepared MIV medium (4). The washed cells were centrifuged as described above, resuspended in 80 ml of MIV medium, and grown with shaking (100 rpm) for 100 min at 37°C for competence development. Competent cells were frozen in 1-ml aliquots containing 20% (vol/vol) glycerol at 80°C.
One-milliliter aliquots of frozen cells were thawed on ice and transferred into 15-ml screw-cap tubes. Cells were pelleted, and each aliquot was resuspended in 1 ml of fresh MIV medium. For each transformation, approximately 1 µg of DNA was added to the cells and incubated at 37°C. After 30 min, 5 ml of sBHI broth was added to each transformation and incubation was continued for an additional 3 h. Finally, the cells were pelleted, resuspended in 100 µl of brucella broth, and plated on sBHI agar plates containing the appropriate supplements. Transformants were obtained after overnight incubation of the plates at 37°C.
Molecular biology procedures.
H. influenzae chromosomal DNA was prepared with a Wizard genomic DNA purification kit, and plasmid DNA was prepared with a Wizard Plus plasmid miniprep kit (Promega, Madison, Wis.). Restriction enzymes were obtained from New England Biolabs (Beverly, Mass.). Ligations were performed with a Rapid DNA ligation kit (Roche Diagnostics Corp., Indianapolis, Ind.). PCR Supermix High Fidelity (Invitrogen) was used to generate DNA fragments, and the reactions were purified with a QuickStep PCR purification kit (Edge Biosystems, Gaithersburg, Md.). All PCR-generated clones and selected PCR-generated DNA fragments were sequenced with an ABI Prism 3100 Genetic Analyzer after preparing ABI Prism BigDye Terminator Cycle Sequencing v.2.0 Ready Reactions (PE Biosystems, Foster City, Calif.). The resulting DNA sequence chromatographs were assembled and analyzed with Sequencher software v.4.0.5 (Gene Codes Corporation, Ann Arbor, Mich.). Oligonucleotide primers used for PCR and sequencing were synthesized at Invitrogen (Table 2). DNA was extracted from preparative agarose gels with a QIAEX II kit (QIAGEN Inc., Valencia, Calif.). The cloning vectors used were pGEM-T (Promega) and pUC19 (20).
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TABLE 2. Primers used for plasmid constructions
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FIG. 1. (a) Construction of ribC disruption plasmid pSM2. (i) ribC (615 bp) and flanking DNA sequences (498 bp upstream of the ATG start codon and 926 bp downstream of the TAG stop codon) were cloned as a 2,039-bp PCR product into pGEM-T. (ii) A defined 442-bp deletion was created in the ribC coding sequence by inverse PCR with primers 2F and 2R, generating a 4,597-bp product that was then digested with SmaI. (iii) An 840-bp SmaI-digested DNA fragment containing a promoterless, nonpolar kanamycin resistance cassette (aphA-3) was ligated, in frame, in place of the deleted ribC sequence to make pSM2. (b) pSM2 or a linear ribC disruption construct was transformed into H. influenzae to generate a ribC disruption strain (SM1). The linear ribC disruption construct was generated by digestion of pSM2 with SacII and PstI, followed by gel purification. Primers 3R and K2 and primers 3F and K1 were used to verify the disruption of ribC by PCR amplification. 3F and 3R bind outside of the originally cloned 2,039-bp DNA fragment of pSM1 (c) PCR products obtained from four representative Kanr colonies with primers 3R and K2 (lanes 1 to 4) and primers 3F and K1 (lanes 6 to 9) were analyzed by agarose gel electrophoresis. Only transformants grown in the presence of riboflavin carried a disrupted copy of ribC as determined by visualization of the expected 740-bp bands in lanes 1 to 4 (crossover at the 5' end) and 1,195-bp bands in lanes 6 to 9 (crossover at the 3' end). DNA size standards are shown in lane 5 with corresponding relevant sizes (base pairs) at the right.
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FIG. 2. Complementation vectors developed for H. influenzae. pUC19-based vectors pASK5 (4,918 bp) and pASK6 (5,744 bp) were constructed as described in Materials and Methods. Genomic sequences found flanking the ompP1 coding region (645 bp upstream and 606 bp downstream) were inserted into both vectors. An NdeI site located 3' to the 645-bp upstream ompP1 sequence fragment allows in-frame insertion of the gene of interest. A multiple cloning site allows directional cloning. pASK5 and pASK6 contain resistance genes for chloramphenicol (cat) and tetracycline (tetA and tetR), respectively, to allow selection of integrants. An asterisk indicates a unique restriction enzyme site.
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In all cases, both strands of each clone, including the junctions, were sequenced.
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FIG. 3. Chromosomal complementation strategy for assessing gene essentiality in H. influenzae. (i) WT H. influenzae cells are transformed with a suicide complementation vector containing a copy of a putative EG together with an antibiotic resistance (Abr) gene for selection. Integration of this copy of the EG is targeted to the nonessential ompP1 locus facilitated by ompP1 5' and 3' sequences flanking the EG-plus-Abr gene sequence. (ii) Transformants carrying the second copy of the EG, now placed under control of the ompP1 promoter, are selected on medium containing the appropriate antibiotic. Proper integration is verified by PCR analysis. (iii) A suicide disruption vector containing the EG disrupted by a nonpolar Abr gene is transformed into the strain created in step ii. KO, knockout.
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TABLE 3. Transformation efficiencya of ribC disruption constructs
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Since transformation with pSM2 yielded a large number of false-positive (putatively disrupted ribC) colonies when ribC was treated as an EG (selection without riboflavin), we tested linear DNA (containing the disrupted ribC gene) excised from pSM2 with PstI and SacII and gel purified. Molar equivalent amounts of linear and plasmid (pSM2) DNAs were transformed into H. influenzae. Compared to transformation with plasmid DNA, transformation with linear DNA yielded much fewer background colonies when ribC was treated as an EG (selection without riboflavin; Table 3). When selection for Kanr was done in the presence of riboflavin, similar transformation numbers were obtained for linear and circular DNAs (Table 3). Therefore, when testing the essentiality of a gene it appears that transformation with linear DNA significantly reduces potential false positives due to single-crossover recombination events (plasmid integration) since the linear DNA must integrate via double homologous recombination to yield a kanamycin-resistant phenotype. The magnitude of the difference in recovering false-positive colonies when transforming with linear versus plasmid is shown in Table 3.
Follow-up experiments revealed that the linear DNA version of the ribC disruption construct could be prepared by PCR amplification from pSM2 with primers 1F and 1R to achieve the same result as with restriction enzyme-generated linear DNA (data not shown).
Selection of a chromosomal site for complementation.
In order to identify a nonessential gene that would provide a suitable site for integrating a second copy of a gene of interest, we reviewed the available literature for well-characterized, nonessential H. influenzae genes. We identified 16 candidates of which the outer membrane protein OmpP1 was the most suitable for our purposes. The ompP1 gene is under control of a strong, constitutively active promoter that has been shown also to be active in E. coli (12). The ability to place a gene of interest under the control of this promoter would ensure robust expression in vivo, allowing effective screening in the complementation analysis. Further, the nonessential nature of this gene was confirmed by Tn5 mutagenesis in H. influenzae type b and biogroup aegyptius, where OmpP1 has been extensively studied to assess its potential as a vaccine candidate (11). Strains with ompP1 disrupted were observed to grow normally and did not exhibit any detectable phenotypic differences from the WT parent strain (11).
Complementation with pASK8 and pASK9 of an H. influenzae strain with ribC disrupted.
Competent WT KW20 cells were transformed with either pASK8 or pASK9 (both carry ribC). Chloramphenicol (pASK8)- and tetracycline (pASK9)-resistant colonies were checked for specific homologous recombination by PCR with the primer pairs indicated in Fig. 4 and Table 2. For chloramphenicol-resistant transformants (pASK8 derived), proper integration at the 5' and 3' ends was verified in individual reaction mixtures containing primers 5'ompP1 and Cmr3 or primers Cmr4 and 3'ompP1, respectively. Agarose gel electrophoresis of the PCR products confirmed the presence of the 977-bp (3' end) and 1,683-bp (5' end) fragments expected upon integration of the complementing construct at the ompP1 locus (Fig. 4a, lanes 1 and 2). Tetracycline-resistant integrants (pASK9 derived) were similarly analyzed with primers 5'ompP1 and HI-1613-2R (5' end) or primers TetAF and 3'ompP1 (3' end). Recombination at both the 3' and 5' ends of ompP1 was verified upon agarose gel visualization of 2,151- and 803-bp DNA fragments, respectively (Fig. 4b, lanes 1 and 2). All of the resistant colonies analyzed exhibited double homologous recombination of pASK8 and pASK9 at the ompP1 locus. One H. influenzae colony each from the pASK8 (strain ASK3) and pASK9 (strain ASK4) transformations described above was subcultured, and competent cells were made for transformation with ribC disruption construct pSM2.
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FIG. 4. Genetic complementation with complementation vectors pASK8 (a) and pASK9 (b) of strains with ribC disrupted. Site-specific integration of the ribC gene supplied on complementation vectors pASK8 and pASK9 into the ompP1 locus to create strains ASK3 and ASK4 was verified by PCR analysis after transformation of WT strain KW20. Subsequently, targeted disruption of the authentic copy of ribC (but not the complementing copy at the ompP1 locus) by transformation with pSM2 was also verified by PCR. This disruption resulted in the creation of H. influenzae strains ASK5 and SM2. The specific primer pairs shown in the schematics were used for PCR amplifications from chromosomal DNAs prepared from H. influenzae strains ASK3, ASK4, ASK5, and SM2. Schematic representations of the gene arrangements resulting from the transformations described above and the resulting agarose gel electrophoresis patterns for the PCR products obtained are shown. In lanes 1 and 3, the 977-bp ASK3 and ASK5 (a) and the 2,151-bp ASK4 and SM2 (b) products are indicative of integration of ribC at the 3' end of ompP1, while in lanes 2 and 4, the 1,683-bp ASK3 and ASK5 (a) and the 803-bp ASK4 and SM2 (b) fragments result from recombination at the 5' end of the ompP1 locus. The 740- and 1,195-bp PCR products in lanes 5 and 6 of both gels verify disruption of the WT copy of the ribC gene. Std = size standards in kilobase pairs (Kb) are shown. Lane numbers are bracketed.
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The ability of the ribC gene placed under control of the ompP1 promoter to complement the ribC disruption was further characterized by growth on media with and without riboflavin. H. influenzae strain SM1 grew well on medium supplemented with riboflavin but was entirely unable to grow in the absence of riboflavin (Fig. 5, top). This conditional lethal phenotype was reversed when a complementing copy of the ribC gene, supplied on complementation vector pASK8 or pASK9, recombined at the nonessential ompP1 locus, indicating that expression of ribC was being driven by the ompP1 promoter (Fig. 5, bottom). ribC can therefore be said to be essential for H. influenzae because of its participation in the essential riboflavin biosynthesis pathway.
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FIG. 5. Growth behavior of complemented versus noncomplemented H. influenzae strains with ribC disrupted. The growth behavior of WT H. influenzae cells transformed with complementation vector pASK8 and/or ribC disruption plasmid pSM2 was recorded in the presence and absence of riboflavin. Twelve colonies from each transformation were patched in duplicate onto media with and without riboflavin. pSM2-mediated disruption of the ribC gene rendered the cells dependent on an exogenous supply of riboflavin for survival (strain SM1). Introduction of a functional ribC gene at the ompP1 locus as a result of transformation with the complementation vector successfully restored the WT phenotype and allowed cells to grow equally well both in the presence and in the absence of riboflavin in the growth medium (strain ASK5).
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subunit gene, ribC, was identified as a model gene to test the efficiency and robustness of our system. Riboflavin, a precursor molecule of the coenzymes flavin adenine dinucleotide and flavin mononucleotide, is essential for basic cellular metabolism (2). It is produced endogenously in plants and most microbes but must be acquired exogenously by higher animals (2). Riboflavin biosynthesis has been proposed as a potential target for chemotherapy of gram-negative bacterial infections because E. coli and other gram-negative pathogens lack a transport system for riboflavin, and as a result, riboflavin auxotrophs only survive if grown in the presence of nonphysiologically high concentrations of the vitamin (3, 17). Little is known about riboflavin biosynthesis in H. influenzae other than what can be construed on the basis of homology to other tested systems. H. influenzae is an important human pathogen. It is amenable to DNA manipulations and therefore an attractive model organism. Its genome has been completely sequenced, greatly facilitating cloning and expression of most genes of interest (5). It is naturally competent for DNA uptake and integration (15), and strain KW20 is highly sensitive to most antibiotics for which resistance cassettes are available (14, 18). The gene disruption and complementation system reported here should serve as a useful tool in evaluating gene function and essentiality in H. influenzae. It should find applications in the identification of genes as potential targets for drug discovery. A large number of genes can be screened, and their associated effects and functions can be studied. The use of linear versus plasmid disruption constructs greatly improves the yield of the correct double recombinants. In vivo expression of the complementing gene allows a clearer interpretation of the resultant phenotype without contending with issues of plasmid copy number, polar effects, and interference from or of other overlapping genetic elements (operon effects). We have validated the system with the conditionally essential ribC gene and found that our method allows efficient evaluation of putative EGs.
The AstraZeneca R&D Boston summer internship program supported this work.
Present address: Biogen, Inc., Cambridge, MA 02142. ![]()
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