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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, December 2005, p. 8284-8291, Vol. 71, No. 12
0099-2240/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AEM.71.12.8284-8291.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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Gerald V. Minsavage,1,
Robert E. Stall,1
Jaw-Fen Wang,2
Savita Shanker,3 and
Jeffrey B. Jones1*
Department of Plant Pathology, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida 32611,1 Asian Vegetable Research and Development Center, PO Box 42, Shanhua, Tainan 74199, Taiwan, Republic of China,2 DNA Sequencing Core/ICBR, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida 326113
Received 29 October 2004/ Accepted 2 August 2005
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Copper resistance genes in Xanthomonas campestris pv. vesicatoria were located on 188- to 200-kb self-transmissible plasmids in strains from Florida and Oklahoma (9, 41) and on a 100-kb non-self-transmissible plasmid in a strain from California(17). Although these copper resistance genes were subcloned into a cosmid, they have not been studied further. The copper resistance genes from X. arboricola pv. juglandis have the same general copABCD structure as the genes from Pseudomonas syringae (30, 31), but there are some differences in gene size and DNA sequence. The copRS regulatory genes, which are present in P. syringae pv. tomato (30), have not been found in Xanthomonas (26, 47), although copper induction has been demonstrated in X. campestris pv. vesicatoria (3).
Chromosome-encoded copper resistance was discovered in astrain of X. campestris pv. vesicatoria (strain XvP26) from Taiwan that contained only one small plasmid (15 kb) (6, 13). Since copper resistance was associated with large plasmids in this pathogen previously (25, 41), we explored the possibility that the copper resistance in this strain was similar to that associated with the chromosome of X. arboricola pv. juglandis. Furthermore, since a probe containing copper resistance genes previously isolated from a plasmid in X. campestris pv. vesicatoria did not hybridize to total genomic DNA of XvP26 under low-stringency conditions, we investigated the possibility that there is a different set of genes for resistance. The objective of this work was to compare the copper resistance genes from X.campestris pv. vesicatoria strain XvP26 with copper resistance genes from other plant-pathogenic bacteria. In addition, below we present information on the presence of putative regulatory genes associated with the copper resistance genes and evidence for copper-inducible expression of two of the genes.
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on LB medium containing tetracycline. All other strains were stored in sterile tap water at room temperature or in 30% glycerol at 70°C or both. Triparental matings (19, 21) were performed on nutrient-yeast extract-glycerol agar (45). Antimicrobial agents were added to media to maintain selection for resistance markers at the following final concentrations: tetracycline, 12.5 µg/ml; kanamycin, 25 µg/ml; spectinomycin, 50 µg/ml; ampicillin, 100µg/ml; nalidixic acid, 50 µg/ml; and rifamycin SV, 75 µg/ml. |
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TABLE 1. Bacterial strains and plasmids used for molecular transformation and conjugation
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General DNA manipulations.
Miniscale preparations of E. coli plasmid DNA were obtained by alkaline lysis as described by Sambrook et al. (38). Previously cloned DNA fragments containing copper resistance genes from different plant-pathogenic bacteria were isolated by digestion with appropriate restriction enzymes by using the conditions specified by the manufacturer (Promega Corporation, Madison, WI) for use in Southern hybridization. Restricted DNAs were separated in 0.7% agarose gels (Seakem GTG; FMC Bioproducts, Rockland, ME) in Tris-acetate-EDTA buffer by electrophoresis at 5 V cm1. The gels were stained with ethidium bromide (10 µg/ml) for 30 min and then photographed over a UV transilluminator with type 55 Polaroid film.
Isolation of copper resistance clones.
A pLAFR3 cosmid (42) library of DNA from strain XvP26 was created and maintained in E. coli DH5
. Triparental matings were carried out by mixing mid-exponential-phase cells of X. campestris pv. vesicatoria strain 82-8 as the recipient with cosmid donors and with HB101(pRK2073) as the conjugational helper on nutrient-yeast extract-glycerol agar. The ratio of recipient to donor to helper was 2:1:1 (vol/vol/vol). After 24 h of incubation at 28°C, the mating mixtures were resuspended in sterile tap water, and aliquots were spread onto nutrient agar plates containing rifamycin, tetracycline, and copper sulfate (20 µg/ml) for selection of transconjugants and induction of copper resistance. Transconjugant colonies were subsequently transferred onto nutrient agar amended with copper sulfate (200 µg/ml) to detect clones carrying copper resistance genes.
Mapping of restriction endonuclease sites and subcloning of the DNA insert from a cosmid carrying the copper resistance gene cluster were performed by restriction digestion of the original clone with various enzymes and purification of fragments from an agarose gel by using the Wizard PCR Preps DNA purification system (Promega). Ligation of fragments into pUFR051 (18) was performed with T4 DNA ligase used according to the manufacturer's instructions. Ligation products were transformed into competent cells of E. coli DH5
produced by the calcium chloride procedure as described by Sambrook et al. (38).
Insertion mutagenesis was performed using Tn3-uidA as previously described (11). Individual insertion derivatives were analyzed by restriction enzyme digestion and mobilized into X. campestris pv. vesicatoria strain 91-118 for copper sensitivity testing. Selected insertion derivatives were used to generate marker exchange gene replacement mutants in the wild-type strain X. campestris pv. vesicatoria XvP26 as described by Bonas et al. (10) for use in complementation experiments.
In addition, pLAFR6 clones containing open reading frame 1 (ORF1) were constructed for use in complementation assays. PCR products generated using custom oligonucleotide primers (Fig. 1) BOX+25 (5'-CACCCTGTCACTCAGATGTTCC-3'), BOX+90 (5'-GAAGTGACCATGGTTTCCTCTGC-3'), and ORF1STOP (5'-GTCGCTGCACCTTTATTCCTCC-3') were first cloned into the pGEM-T Easy vector (Promega) for sequencing and subsequently excised from the vector using EcoRI for subcloning into pLAFR6.
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FIG. 1. Nucleotide sequence of ORF1 (boldface type) and the upstream region, showing the locations of the copper box homology (bases enclosed in boxes) and the divergent translational start of ORF3 [( CAT)]. Oligonucleotide primers used for subcloning and primer extension are underlined. Bases added to primers for generation of new restriction sites are indicated by lowercase superscript letters. The position of the Tn3 insertion in ORF1 marker exchange mutant ME5 is indicated by an inverted solid triangle.
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ß-Glucuronidase reporter assays.
ß-Glucuronidase activities expressed in several X. campestris pv. vesicatoria strain backgrounds were measured by using CYE broth cultures containing 5 µM CuSO4 · 5H2O, 3CdSO4 · 8H2O, CoCl2 · 6H2O, or ZnSO4 · 7H2O to test the inducibility of ORF1, ORF3, and ORF4. In-frame fusions of uidA with ORF3 and ORF4 were constructed by excision of the uidA gene from pBSGUS clones and insertion into the pBluescript subclone pBCuSX using available restriction enzyme sites. Correct fusions were confirmed by sequencing before the fused genes were cut from the clones and moved into the vector pLAFR6 for conjugation into X. campestris pv. vesicatoria for GUS assay experiments. An ORF1-uidA fusion was obtained by cloning a 665-bp KpnI/EcoRI ORF1 PCR fragment upstream of the uidA gene in pLAFR6. Custom primers (Fig. 1) ORF1KPN (5'-CCAATCTGGCATGAGTGGTACCCAATCCC-3') and ORF1ECO (5'-CCGAATTCATGACGTCCAGGATCACCAGGTC-3') were used to obtain ORF1 DNA.
To assess the possible role of ORF1 and ORF2 in the regulation of expression of ORF3, a derivative reporter clone of pORF3uidA (p
KXORF3uidA) was constructed by deletion of the 3.5-kb KpnI/XbaI fragment containing ORF1 and ORF2 and subsequent replacement of the 480-bp ORF3 upstream region with a KpnI/XbaI fragment generated by PCR using custom primers (Fig. 1) ORF1KPN and ORF1XBA (5'-CCTCTAGAGTGTGCCGAACTCAAAGCGTCC-3').
Cells from 18-h plate cultures of transconjugants grown on CYE media containing tetracycline were suspended in fresh CYE broth, and the concentrations were standardized to an optical density at 600 nm of 0.3 for induction assays. One-milliliter portions of suspensions with or without copper were incubated at 28°C for 3 h to allow induction. The cells were then pelleted from the suspensions by centrifugation and washed once in sterile deionized water to remove the residual copper. The cell pellets were resuspended in 250 µl of MUG extraction buffer (24) and incubated at 37°C. The reactions in aliquots (25 µl) were terminated at 30-min intervals by addition of 225 µl of 0.2 M Na2CO3. Fluorescence was measured using a Cytofluor II fluorescence multiwell plate reader (PerSeptive Biosystems, Framingham, MA) calibrated with known concentrations of methyl-umbelliferone (MU) (Sigma Chemical Company) in MicroFluor B flat-bottom microtiter plates (Dynatech Laboratories, Inc., Chantilly, VA). The results were expressed as the number of units (nanomoles of MU produced per minute) normalized for CFU of bacteria in the reactions. Transconjugants carrying pL6uidA and transconjugants carrying pL3uidA were included in assays as controls for background and constitutive expression, respectively.
Primer extension analysis.
The concentration of log-phase bacteria (strain XvP26) was standardized to an optical density at 600 nm of 0.3 in fresh CYE broth with or without copper sulfate (10 µM), and the bacteria were incubated at 28°C for 1 h. Total RNA was extracted using an RNeasy Protect bacterial mini kit and an RNase-Free DNase set (QIAGEN, Valencia, CA) according to the manufacturer's instructions. Primer extension and GeneScan analysis were performed by previously described protocols (28), with some modifications, using oligonucleotides labeled at the 5' end with 6-carboxyfluorescein. Custom oligonucleotides PE1 (5'-GACTGCAAGACCTGCCAGCCATTCAACC-3') and PE2 (5'-GTCAGGAACAGGACGGGCATCTCAAGG-3') (Fig. 1) were heated at 65°C for 90 min in 1x First-Strand buffer containing 10 µg of total RNA and allowed to cool at room temperature for 5 min before they were quenched on ice for 5 min. Extension was performed at 55°C for 1 h using SuperScript III reverse transcriptase (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA), and the preparations were heated to 70°C for 15 min before RNase A treatment. To determine the 5' end of mRNA, the same oligonucleotides (unlabeled) were used as primers in sequencing reactions.
PCR and Southern hybridization analysis of strains.
Custom oligonucleotide primers JB8 (5'-GTGTGCCGAACTCAAAGCGTCC-3') and JB18 (5'-GACCTGCTTGGCATACTTGAGTGC-3'), which were designed to specifically amplify portions of ORF1, ORF3, and the intergenic region between these two ORFs, were used to screen a collection of 51 pepper and 34 tomato strains of X.campestris pv. vesicatoria isolated in Taiwan between 1987 and 2000. Also, nine copper-resistant strains from the United States and South America were tested for the presence of this unique region of DNA.
DNAs from a subset of 15 representative strains tested by PCR were also examined in hybridization tests using labeled DNA of pXv26Cu-2 as a probe. For Southern hybridization, genomic DNA was isolated using the cetyltrimethylammonium bromide method (4) and digested with restriction enzymes under the conditions recommended by the manufacturer. DNA fragments were resolved by agarose gel electrophoresis and transferred to Nytran membranes (Schleicher & Schuell, Keene, NH). The DNA for probes was labeled with digoxigenin-11 dUTP, and hybridization and detection reactions were carried out using a Genius nonradioactive kit (Boehringer Mannheim, Indianapolis, IN).
Nucleotide sequence accession number.
Nucleotide and/or amino acid sequence data for the copper resistance gene cluster have been deposited in the GenBank database under accession no. AY248746.
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FIG. 2. (A) Restriction map of pXv26Cu-2, a 7,652-bp region of DNA that confers resistance to copper in XvP26. The open arrows, arrows with bars, and solid arrows indicate transposon insertions that result in transconjugants in 91-118 (copper-sensitive strain) that are resistant to copper, have intermediate sensitivity to copper, and are sensitive to copper, respectively. (B) Subclone of pXv26Cu-2 in pBluescript used to construct fusion clones shown in panels C and D. (C and D) Reporter constructs for measuring GUS activity for copper induction of ORF3 and ORF4, respectively. Construction of additional reporter clones p KXORF3uidA and pORF1uidA (not shown) is described in detail in Materials and Methods.
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Sequence analysis of the copper resistance genes.
pXv26Cu-1was subcloned by digesting the fragment with EcoRI and XbaI to produce a 7.6-kb fragment, designated pXv26Cu-2, which conferred copper resistance in 82-8 and 91-118 transconjugants. The sequence of the 7,652-bp DNA insert of pXv26Cu-2 was obtained using a combination of pBluescript subclones, a Tn3 reverse primer, and custom oligonucleotide primers. Five major open reading frames were identified (Fig. 2A), and ORF1 and ORF2 were divergently transcribed from the other three ORFs. ORF1, ORF2, ORF3, ORF4, and ORF5 were 681, 1,341, 1,428, 1,410, and 495 bp long, respectively.
ORF1 and ORF2 were selected using the alternate GTG start codon. ORF1 encodes a predicted 227-amino-acid polypeptide with the deduced amino acid sequence of a gene product exhibiting 66 and 63% identity to CopR from P. syringae(33) and to PcoR from E. coli (12), respectively. Using primer extension, the probable transcriptional start of ORF1 was identified 57 bases upstream (G) of the predicted GTG start codon and was associated with a conserved palindrome previously identified as a copper box within copper-responsive promoters (33, 34, 36) (Fig. 3C). The selected transcriptional site for ORF1 relative to the copper box aligned most closely with that of the copper-responsive repressor CopY of Enterococcus hirae (Fig. 3A). In several repeat extension reactions the presence of this strong transcript signal was sometimes accompanied by additional weak transcripts originating at a position either 42 (G), 39 (C), or 13 (A) residues upstream of the GTG codon (Fig. 3A). Two additional peaks appearing at 106 and 407 bases in the GeneScan blue (6-carboxyfluorescein) channel (Fig. 3B) were eliminated as possible ORF1 transcript sites based on subclone complementation tests. No significant differences were found in comparisons of transcript levels from total RNA obtained from uninduced and copper-induced cells (data not shown).
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FIG. 3. (A) Comparison of the ORF1 sequence with copper- and silver-inducible promoters preceded by the palindromic copper box. The upstream regions of E. coli promoters PpcoE, PcusC, and PpcoA, P. syringae promoter PcopA, and Salmonella enterica promoters PsilE and PsilS (obtained from reference 34) are aligned to highlight the copper boxes (indicated by arrows) that are found upstream of the copper- or silver-inducible promoters. Predicted 35 and 10 hexamers are indicated by single and double underlining, respectively. Transcriptional start sites that have been determined are indicated by boldface underlining. The positions of weak additional transcriptional start sites in ORF1 are indicated for the nonboldface underlined nucleotides. For comparative purposes the conserved copper box for copY of E. hirae (obtained from reference 36) is also shown (Hirae1/2). (B and C) Primer extension electropherogram (B) and image of a sequencing gel (C) used to analyze the primer extension product generated using primer PE2. Peaks corresponding to several of the GeneScan-500 ROX internal size standards (red in the actual analysis) are indicated next to the ORF1 primer extension product labeled with G* near the standard peak at 250 (blue in the actual analysis). The sequence shown is the sequence of the coding strand of ORF1.
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Mutation and complementation analyses.
Transposon mutagenesis of pXv26Cu-2 resulted in inserts that were randomly and extensively distributed throughout the sequence based on physical mapping (Fig. 2A). Insertions in ORF1, ORF3, or ORF4 resulted in a complete loss of resistance to copper in the transconjugants screened. Insertions in ORF5 resulted in intermediate resistance to copper, and insertions in ORF2 had no noticeable effect on resistance to copper.
Marker exchange mutants generated in parental strain XvP26 were tested for resistance to copper. On solid media containing copper sulfate at a concentration of 120 µg/ml, only the ORF1 mutant (strain ME5) failed to grow (Fig. 4). Resistance to copper was restored in ME5 by transcomplementation with clone pORF1(BOX+90), but not by transcomplementation with clone pORF1(BOX+25). The growth of mutant ME16 (ORF5) was reduced compared to that of the wild-type strain, whereas ME12, ME25, and ME23 (representing ORF2, ORF3, and ORF4, respectively) were not affected. When the CYE broth method was used, ME25 (ORF3 mutant) appeared to be more like the wild type than ME12, ME23, and ME16 (data not shown).
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FIG. 4. Growth of wild-type strain XvP26 (WT) and marker exchange mutants on nutrient agar containing copper sulfate (120 µg/ml).
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TABLE 2. Effect of copper on induction of ORF3 and ORF4 in 91-118, XvP26, and XvP26 marker exchange transconjugant backgrounds
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KXORF3uidA reporter clone (lacking ORF1 and ORF2) was used in the 91-118 and mutant ME5 backgrounds (Table 2). This reporter indicated that there were various levels of constitutive expression in the XvP26, ME12, and ME25 strains, with no significant induction by addition of copper. Strains ME23 and ME16 both exhibited copper-inducible expression of GUS activity for this reporter. No GUS activity was found for pORF1uidA in the 91-118 background in our assay. A low level of constitutive activity was found for this reporter construct in XvP26 (8 ± 0.3 U) compared to the pL3uidA constitutive control (454 ± 3 U), and no significant increase was evident for either construct following addition of copper (8 ± 0.7 and 464 ± 14 U, respectively).
PCR analysis of strains.
No PCR product was amplified from the Taiwan, United States, or South American strains of X. campestris pv. vesicatoria whether they were resistant to copper or not. Only DNA from XvP26 was amplified using primers JB8 and JB18 or hybridized with the pXv26Cu-2 probe (data not shown).
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As a result of sequencing of the 7.6-kb fragment, five ORFs were identified in the cluster of genes associated with copper resistance. Three of these five ORFs were required for a high level of resistance in transconjugant screening. Insertional mutation of ORF2, which exhibits homology to the CopS gene, had no observable effect on copper resistance when it was tested in the 91-118 transconjugant background. ORF5, which exhibits homology to the gene encoding a putative copper-containing oxidoreductase signal peptide protein in S. meliloti (14), was not essential for resistance to copper in plate assays, but there was delayed growth of transconjugants when it was knocked out. These results were similar to those reported for PcoE in E. coli, which has been reported to not be strictly required for copper resistance but reduced the time needed for E. coli strains to recover from copper stress (33). Francki et al. (22) observed that copper tolerance was slightly reduced by one mutation in A. veronii, similar to ORF4. A similar situation was observed when copper resistance was reduced to an intermediate level in X. campestris pv. juglandis when two ORFs whose products exhibit high levels of amino acid identity to CopC and CopD of P. syringae pv. tomato were deleted (26).
Two of the five ORFs, ORF3 and ORF4, were determined to be inducible when cultures were exposed to small amounts of copper. Although copper induction has previously been shown to occur in xanthomonads, the regulatory genes were not located (26, 46). The ORF1 product exhibits significant amino acid identity to CopR of P. syringae pv. tomato, and ORF1 contains a putative copper box motif, which previously was shown to be essential for copper-inducible activity at the PpcoA and PpcoE promoters in E. coli (37). It is unusual to find a copper box upstream of a putative copR gene in X. campestris pv. vesicatoria, considering that based on in vitro DNase I footprinting, CopR binds to the copper box upstream of PcopA (33). Munson et al. (34) provided strong proof that copper boxes upstream of PpcoA and PpcoE are the binding sites for CusR, a CopR homolog. Further confounding with regard to the copper boxes was the finding that neither ORF3 nor ORF4 contained a conserved copper box. Clearly, ORF1 is essential for copper resistance and plays a role in regulation of the system in strain XvP26.
In insertion mutant studies ORF2 (homologous to the CopS gene) was determined to be unnecessary for functional copper resistance in the 91-118 transconjugant background. One plausible explanation for this is that some region(s) outside the fragment may play a regulatory role in expression of copper resistance genes to complete the two-component signal transduction system in X. campestris pv. vesicatoria. Lee et al. (26) speculated that regulation of the copper resistance in X. arboricola pv. juglandis may be associated with a different region of the chromosome. This may also be the case in X. campestris pv. vesicatoria since ORF2, which exhibits homology to CopS, has no effect on copper resistance when it is knocked out. However, in our expression studies mutation of ORF2 resulted in lower basal expression levels and loss of the copper inducibility of ORF3 in the trans reporter, indicating that this gene has a regulatory role. There may be another gene somewhere else in the genome that functions like the CopS gene. This has been shown in E. coli, in which the pcoRS and cusRS genes encode homologous copper-responsive regulatory systems, although they cannot substitute for each other (34). Further detailed analysis, beyond the scope of this study, is needed to fully understand regulation of this system in strain XvP26.
PCR amplification analysis of strains from Taiwan collected over several years and strains from a number of regions revealed that none of the strains contained the uniquely oriented copper gene cluster found in XvP26. This could indicate that there was a rare introduction of this strain into Taiwan or chromosomal transfer from another organism or organisms. Horizontal transfer of the copper resistance gene in XvP26 has been demonstrated among strains of X. campestris pv. vesicatoria (6). The latter hypothesis may be plausible given the inability to detect the copper resistance genes in a representative collection of strains from Taiwan.
H.B. and G.V.M. contributed equally to this work. ![]()
Present address: University of Akdeniz, Faculty of Agriculture, Department of Plant Protection, 07058 Antalya, Turkey. ![]()
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