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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, January 2005, p. 569-573, Vol. 71, No. 1
0099-2240/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AEM.71.1.569-573.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Mutation of a LysR-Type Regulator of Antifungal Activity Results in a Growth Advantage in Stationary Phase Phenotype in Pseudomonas aureofaciens PA147-2
Mark W. Silby,1,2*
Stephen R. Giddens,1,2,
and
H. Khris Mahanty1
Department of Plant and Microbial Sciences,1
New Zealand Institute for Gene Ecology, University of Canterbury, Christchurch, New Zealand2
Received 6 May 2004/
Accepted 16 August 2004

ABSTRACT
The growth advantage in stationary phase (GASP) phenotype was
shown to be present in two mutants lacking the antifungal phenotype
(Af
mutants) of
Pseudomonas aureofaciens PA147-2. Complementation
demonstrated a correlation between GASP and the antifungal defect
in one strain but not in the second. Sequence analysis revealed
the Af
GASP strain had a mutation in a gene (
finR) encoding
a LysR-type regulator. Antifungal-minus mutants arose in starved
cultures, and those aged cultures had increased fitness. Taken
together, the results show that there are at least two paths
to the GASP phenotype in
P. aureofaciens, one of which results
in a concomitant loss of the antifungal phenotype.

INTRODUCTION
Fluorescent
Pseudomonas spp. are ubiquitous inhabitants of bulk
soil and the plant rhizosphere and are well adapted to the complex
conditions found in these environments. Their success can be
at least partly attributed to a range of strategies that enhance
their competitive fitness, such as the ability to efficiently
scavenge trace materials. An additional characteristic of many
soil pseudomonads is the ability to produce antifungal metabolites,
enabling them to reduce or eliminate fungal competitors from
their shared niche (
8,
16,
17,
32). Fungal inhibition by pseudomonads
is more than just an ecologically interesting trait; strains
capable of producing antifungal metabolites are potential biological
alternatives to chemical control of agricultural diseases (
35),
as demonstrated by experiments with mutants lacking the antifungal
phenotype (Af
mutants) (
2,
10,
32). However, it has been
shown that after inoculation into soils, the population of biocontrol
bacteria can decline, probably due to the cost of producing
secondary metabolites such as antifungal compounds (
15,
34).
Pseudomonas aureofaciens PA147-2 has been shown to inhibit the in vitro growth of phytopathogenic fungi (5) and to suppress Phytophthora rot of asparagus in glasshouse and field trials (6, 15). In a field test P. aureofaciens PA147-2 showed significant protection of asparagus plants from Phytophthora rot; however, this was significantly less effective than treatment with a chemical fungicide. Since it has been demonstrated that colonization is essential for effective biocontrol by a number of different Pseudomonas spp. (PCL1391, WCS365, and SBW25 [9, 12, 27]), it is likely that the lower efficacy of the biological control treatment may have resulted from a decrease in the population size of PA147-2 during the 6-month field trial. Given that PA147-2 forms strong biofilms (26) and adheres strongly to plant roots (unpublished data), we reasoned that the inability to maintain a high population under field conditions might be due to a competitive disadvantage associated with the cost of antifungal metabolite production. Accordingly, mutants of PA147-2 that are defective in antifungal activity should have increased fitness relative to the parental strain. Therefore, we initiated studies to examine the relative fitness of PA147-2 and Af mutants generated previously (4). The in vitro experiments reported here were designed to assess the fitness cost of antifungal compound production and were undertaken under conditions that gave no measured advantage to any strain in monoculture.
Over the last decade or so, bacteria have been used in experimental systems to study the evolution of "increased fitness" that results from adaptation to defined conditions. In static cultures of P. fluorescens, i.e., under starvation conditions, adaptive radiation of niche specialists has been shown (30). Under both starvation conditions and continuous exponential culture conditions, Escherichia coli strains with higher fitness than the parental strain have evolved (14, 33, 37). Since the conditions encountered in soil over many months are likely to be nutrient deprived, we assessed the relative fitness of PA147-2 Af+ and Af strains in 10-day "starvation" cultures. During these experiments we observed that two antifungal minus mutants exhibited a GASP-like phenotype in competition with the wild type. The so-called GASP phenomenon (named for growth advantage in stationary phase) refers to bacteria with higher fitness for long-term starvation conditions than their parental strain. GASP has been well-studied in E. coli (14, 37-39) and was recently shown to occur in Enterobacter cloacae, Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium, Providencia stuartii, and Shigella dysenteriae (24). However, to our knowledge the genetic basis has only been described in E. coli.

Construction of PA147-2lacZY for competition experiments.
All competition experiments were carried out in
Pseudomonas minimal medium (PMM) (
19) as follows. For 1:1 competitions,
10 ml of PMM was inoculated with equal numbers of each competing
strain (100 µl of each from monocultures grown for the
previous 20 h), whereas a dilution of one competitor was used
to achieve a minority inoculum for minority experiments. These
cultures were grown at 30°C, with shaking at 200 rpm. Samples
(100 µl) were taken daily, and 10-fold serial dilutions
were plated onto selective media to allow enumeration of each
competing strain. To provide a selectable marker for competition
experiments, we introduced a
lacZY-bearing transposon (Tn
7-
lac7117)
(
3) into the PA147-2 genome. The Tn
7-
lac7117 insertion had no
impact on the fitness of PA147-2
lacZY relative to PA147-2 or
on the production of antifungal compound(s).

Competition between PA147-2lacZY and Af mutants.
To test whether antifungal metabolite production had an influence
on the starvation fitness of PA147-2, five Tn
5-generated Af
mutants of PA147-2 (
5) were assessed for relative fitness against
PA147-2
lacZY under defined conditions. These data show that
the mutants can be divided into two categories based upon their
competitive ability relative to PA147-2
lacZY (Fig.
1). Group
one mutants (comprising PAI95, PAH26, and PAA3) were of equivalent
fitness to PA147-2
lacZY, whereas group two mutants (PA109 and
PA138) showed an ability to outcompete PA147-2
lacZY under these
conditions in a manner that strongly resembles the GASP phenomenon.
Thus, there are at least two routes by which PA147-2 can become
Af
; one results in no loss of fitness, while the second
route does, thus supporting our original hypothesis. The possibility
that the increased fitness of PA109 and PA138 arose due to additional
transposition of Tn
5 was ruled out by hybridizing a Tn
5-specific
probe to total DNA extracted from competition cultures and demonstrating
that Tn
5 was present as a single copy and in the same-sized
DNA fragment in young (overnight) cultures and in those that
had grown for 10 days (data not shown). It is worth noting that
in competition with PA138 and PA109, PA147-2
lacZY was always
detectable. The wild type continued to persist as a minority
population for the duration of the experiment, in contrast to
the findings from Roberto Kolter's group examining prolonged
E. coli cultures (for examples, see references
14 and
37).
To further examine the competitive nature of the group two mutants
relative to PA147-2
lacZY, competition experiments were conducted
in which the initial ratio of PA138 to wild type (PA147-2
lacZY)
was 1:250. In these experiments, PA138 was able to establish
and eventually dominate the cultures (Fig.
2a). In contrast,
when PA147-2
lacZY was introduced as a minority in competition
with PA147-2, it was unable to increase its relative representation
in the population (Fig.
2b). This finding strongly supports
the argument that PA138 has increased fitness relative to the
wild type under these conditions.

DNA sequences flanking Tn5 insertions.
To understand the molecular basis of the GASP phenotype, we
sought to use DNA sequences to identify the genes mutated in
the five Af
Tn
5 mutants of PA147-2. The sequence adjacent
to the Tn
5 insertion in PAH26 was reported previously (
26).
To determine the sequence adjacent to Tn
5 in the remaining mutants
(PA138, PA109, PAA3, and PA195), a region encompassing 2,684
bp of Tn
5 (left of a unique SalI site) and the adjacent
P. aureofaciens DNA was ligated into the SalI site of pBluescript KS().
The resulting clones were sequenced by using a primer that anneals
to IS
50 (5'-GCACGATGAAGAGCAGAAG -3'). BLAST (
1) was used to
search GenBank for putative homologues. The group 1 mutant PAH26
has an insertion in
pstA, and in PAI95 the transposon has inserted
into a gene predicted to encode an efflux protein, whereas the
other group one mutant (PAA3) has an insertion in a sequence
that has not been described elsewhere. In the group two (GASP)
mutants, the transposon insertion was found to be in two different
classes of regulatory genes. In PA138, Tn
5 interrupted a sequence
that we named
finR (for fungal inhibition), whose predicted
translation product resembles members of the LysR family of
transcriptional regulators. The insertion in PA109 interrupted
a putative two-component regulator gene (
finT) with similarity
to sequences specifying predicted hybrid proteins that contain
both the sensor histidine kinase and response regulator (receiver)
domains in a single protein. This organization is in contrast
to the well-known GacA/GacS two-component regulator pair that
controls antifungal activity in a number of
Pseudomonas sp.,
which has the sensor (GacS) (
11,
18,
20) and response regulator
(GacA) (
23) domains on different proteins. Thus, the group 2
mutants have insertions in two different classes of putative
global regulator genes, which may lead to altered expression
of a large number of genes, any of which could influence fitness.
The DNA sequence data provide a possible explanation for the
results of the initial competition experiments. It appears as
if loss of antifungal compound production by mutation of genes
that may be directly related to antifungal production (group
one mutants) does not usually influence fitness. However, antifungal
compound production is tied into regulatory circuits that do
affect fitness (group two mutants); thus, changes in these pathways
could increase fitness in the field while reducing or inhibiting
production of antifungal compounds. Identifying the type of
gene interrupted by Tn
5 in the Af
mutants led us to propose
that regulatory networks involving antifungal activity, rather
than antifungal production per se, have an impact on fitness
during starvation conditions. Schmidt-Eisenlohr et al. (
31)
showed a fitness effect from a mutation of the two-component
regulator gene
gacS in
P. chlororaphis. The
gacS mutation resulted
in reduced numbers of bacteria in a rhizosphere colonization
experiment (relative to the wild type) and a reduced lag-phase
in culture. Interestingly, these analyses also showed that the
gacS mutation did not lead to a competitive defect in the rhizosphere
when it was in competition with the parental strain, a finding
which is in contrast to our culture-based competition experiments
with regulatory mutants that show increased fitness in competition
with the wild-type strain.

Complementation of group 2 (GASP) mutants.
To confirm our refined hypothesis that mutations in the putative
LysR (PA138) and two-component regulator (PA109) genes (called
finR and
finT, respectively) were responsible for the observed
GASP phenotype, we undertook complementation experiments. Carruthers
et al. (
5) previously showed that antifungal activity was restored
in PA109 by replacing the mutated region with the wild-type
sequence by allele exchange (
5). We found that the complemented
PA109 still exhibited the GASP phenotype, indicating that the
finT mutation is responsible for the loss of antifungal activity,
but that an additional unknown mutation must cause the GASP
effect in this strain. Similarly, the Tn
5 insertion in PA138
was replaced by allele exchange with wild-type sequences present
in a cosmid that hybridized with a probe flanking Tn
5 in PA138
as described previously (
5). Southern hybridizations confirmed
the allele exchange, and fungal inhibition assays showed that
the restored PA138 strain had regained wild-type antifungal
activity (data not shown). However, in contrast to PA109, removal
of Tn
5 in PA138 eliminated the fitness advantage of this strain
over PA147-2
lacZY, demonstrating that the Tn
5 insertion was
responsible for the GASP phenotype of this mutant. These data
show that our hypothesis was partly correct; a regulator of
antifungal activity is also involved in fitness. Furthermore,
this experiment demonstrates that only a subset of antifungal
activity regulators in PA147-2 are involved in fitness, indicating
that there is limited overlap in the genetics underlying these
two phenotypes. Given that a
finR mutation impacts upon fitness,
whereas a
finT mutation does not, we can conclude that FinR
and FinT are clearly independent regulators controlling aspects
of antifungal activity. The finding that
finT does not contribute
to the increased fitness of PA109 is consistent with the observation
that inactivation of the two-component regulator gene
gacS has
no impact on the competitive fitness of
P. chlororaphis (
31)
and did not result in a competitive advantage for
P. aureofaciens 30-84 in rhizosphere colonization experiments conducted in live
soil (
7). Furthermore,
gacA mutations in
P. fluorescens CHAO
had a negative impact on persistence of viable and culturable
cells in bulk soil (
25,
28). In contrast, Duffy and Defago (
13)
observed an accumulation of spontaneous
gac mutants (1.3% of
cells) after 12 days in a rich medium. Upon stepwise scale-up
to increasingly larger cultures (48 h of growth in each culture
prior to transfer to the next culture), the
gac mutants could
accumulate to 7, 23, and 61% of the total viable cells in 20-,
100-, and 500-ml cultures, indicating a fitness advantage. However,
whether this is similar to a GASP phenotype is unclear since
the cultures were serially transferred rather than grown to
starvation. Since the genetic basis for enhanced fitness and
lack of antifungal production was known for PA138 (
finR::Tn
5),
it was the strain of choice for the following experiments.

PA138 versus "aged" PA147-2lacZY.
Based upon previous findings in experiments with
E. coli (
14,
37), we predicted that GASP evolution would occur in long-term
cultures of
P. aureofaciens, in which case it follows that aged
cultures of PA147-2 (and PA147-2
lacZY) would have accumulated
mutants of greater fitness than the original parental strain.
Accordingly, PA138 would be less able to displace populations
derived from aged cultures than it can displace "young" PA147-2
(ancestors) in competition experiments. To test this hypothesis,
competition experiments were started with PA138 and 10-day-old
"evolved" PA147-2
lacZY. As predicted, PA138 was not as competitive
against the "evolved" PA147-2
lacZY (Fig.
3). In competition
against PA147-2
lacZY progenitors, we have shown that PA138 eventually
establishes a population up to 4 orders of magnitude higher
than that of PA147-2
lacZY. However, in these competitions against
evolved PA147-2
lacZY, the difference was negligible. This experiment
provides an independent line of evidence correlating loss of
antifungal activity with increased fitness.

Do Af mutants arise in PA147-2 monoculture?
Since the loss of ability to produce antifunal compounds has
been associated with increased competitive fitness in broth
cultures (mutant PA138), and fitter mutants of
P. aureofaciens have been shown to accumulate in long-term culture, then Af
mutants should also arise during long-term PA147-2 monoculture.
To test this prediction, we grew two independent cultures of
PA147-2 in PMM for 20 days. The cultures were serially diluted
and plated to obtain single colonies. Individual colonies from
both cultures were tested for their ability to inhibit fungal
growth. The results (Table
1) show that Af
and antifungal-impaired
mutants arise in PA147-2 monocultures, but there is a large
variation between replicates. Previous long-term starvation
experiments have also shown considerable variation between initially
identical lines (
14). It is likely that the difference between
cultures results from the nature of the GASP mutants that initially
take over the population. The higher number of Af
mutants
in culture one could result if a
finR-type mutation (Af
,
GASP) came to dominate the population, whereas an Af
+ GASP mutant
could have taken over the second culture. Our results with the
GASP strains PA138 (
finR::Tn
5) and PA109 (
finT::Tn
5) show that
Af
and Af
+ GASP mutants are possible, and Finkel and
Kolter showed that GASP occurred by selection of different mutations
in two initially isogenic populations (
14).
The ability of PA138 to outcompete PA147-2 bears a striking
resemblance to the so-called GASP phenomenon, which is well
studied in
E. coli (
21,
36). During prolonged starvation, the
GASP mutants proliferate and take over cultures, displacing
the less-fit parental strain. This phenomenon has been associated
with a number of different mutations, notably in
rpoS (
37) and
lrp (
39). RpoS is a sigma factor involved in the regulation
of a cascade of genes in response to the transition to stationary-phase
growth (
22), and Lrp (the leucine-responsive regulatory protein)
is a transcriptional regulator of an extensive regulon of between
35 and 75 genes in
E. coli (
29). Similarly, PA138 has an insertion
in
finR, a predicted LysR-type regulator gene, and has the ability
to outcompete its parental strain. Thus, we suggest that the
mutation in PA138 has produced a GASP phenotype. The correlation
of loss of a putative regulator with increased fitness in
P. aureofaciens strengthens the relevance of this work to GASP
studies, since mutations in global regulator genes have been
implicated in the GASP phenotype in
E. coli (
37,
39). Zinser
and Kolter (
39) proposed that mutations in regulator genes are
highly beneficial during starvation conditions because they
result in the simultaneous alteration of multiple cellular activities.
PA138 is probably a regulatory mutant and thus supports their
proposal. The addition of a mutation in a LysR-type regulator
to the spectrum of potential GASP alleles strengthens the hypothesis
that fitter strains can emerge as a result of the coordinated
repression of a large number of genes (
39). It is also conceivable
that mutation of a repressor could lead to a fitness increase
by derepression of genes whose expression confers an advantage
in a given environment.
Our results suggest that under stressful conditions (e.g., starvation) the selection for fitter P. aureofaciens can result in the accumulation of strains in which antifungal production is reduced or eliminated. The fact that there is variation in fitness between replicate starvation cultures of PA147-2 indicates that the loss or reduction of antifungal activity results from mutations arising in culture. It is likely that PA147-2 has a number of different possible solutions to the problem of fitness under starvation conditions. These solutions could result in the same or a similar GASP phenotype, whereas only a subset cause a reduction or loss of antifungal activity. This is supported by PA109, which retains higher fitness even when restored to Af+, whereas PA138 does not. Thus, the increased fitness in PA138 is related to the lack of production of antifungal metabolites, whereas a similar increase of fitness in PA109 is achieved in an unrelated (and unknown) manner. Notably, the loss of Af production does not always result in a fitness advantage (i.e., the group one mutants), demonstrating that there are many routes for the loss of antifungal production, not all of them contributing equally to fitness.
PA147-2 was isolated from the plant rhizosphere, where it retained the ability to inhibit fungal growth. Presumably, the selective force provided by fungal competition in the field was sufficient for maintenance of antifungal production as a successful solution to living in this environment at the time PA147-2 was isolated. However, we have demonstrated that Af mutants of PA147-2 arise during starvation and that the loss of antifungal production in the case of PA138 led to a strain that could outcompete PA147-2 under starvation conditions. Therefore, if field conditions become unfavorable, such as between growing seasons when plant roots are dormant, starvation may result in the accumulation of starvation-fitter mutants that do not produce antifungal metabolites. Although this could be readily overcome in a biocontrol strategy by reapplication of the bacteria each season, further work to test the field relevance of these data should be performed in order to refine future biocontrol schemes.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
AGMARDT doctoral scholarships to M.W.S. and S.R.G. are gratefully
acknowledged. M.W.S. and S.R.G. were supported in part by a
University of Canterbury doctoral scholarship and a University
of Canterbury research award, respectively.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Present address: Center for Adaptation Genetics and Drug Resistance, Department of Molecular Biology and Microbiology, Tufts University School of Medicine, 136 Harrison Ave., Boston, MA 02111. Phone: (617) 636-2130. Fax: (617) 636-0458. E-mail:
mark.silby{at}tufts.edu.

Present address: Department of Plant Sciences, University of Oxford, Oxford OX1 3RB, United Kingdom. 

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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, January 2005, p. 569-573, Vol. 71, No. 1
0099-2240/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AEM.71.1.569-573.2005
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