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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, April 2005, p. 1987-1995, Vol. 71, No. 4
0099-2240/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AEM.71.4.1987-1995.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Department of Biochemistry and Cell Biology, Rice University, Houston, Texas
Received 17 September 2004/ Accepted 15 November 2004
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The genes and enzymes involved in the central acidogenic and solventogenic metabolic pathway have been identified and are well characterized. Less well understood is the control of gene expression at the transition between acidogenic and solventogenic growth, during which the expression of genes involved primarily in acid production is decreased and the expression of genes required for solvent production is greatly elevated, and it is on this transition that we have focused our investigations.
During acidogenesis, the expression of genes coding for phosphotransacetylase (pta), acetate kinase (ack), phosphotransbutyrylase (ptb), and butyrate kinase (buk) is high. As a result, acetate and butyrate accumulate during exponential growth. At the end of exponential growth, the transcriptome of the cell alters, resulting in the transition from acidogenesis to solventogenesis (7, 28).
Four genes located on the pSOL1 megaplasmid are essential to solvent formation (6, 30). adhE, ctfA, and ctfB are arranged in the sol operon and are hence transcribed as a single transcript from the promoter located upstream of adhE. Abutting the 3' end of the sol operon is adc, which is transcribed from its own promoter in the opposite direction of that of the sol operon (6, 10, 34). At the onset of solventogenesis, the expression of the sol operon and adc increases approximately 10-fold (9). Until relatively recently, little was known about the factors involved in the transcriptional control of these genes.
The stage 0 sporulation protein A (Spo0A) was originally identified in Bacillus subtilis as a key regulator of the onset of sporulation (8). When phosphorylated, Spo0A is activated and binds directly to a conserved DNA promoter motif, designated the 0A box (19, 20). A recent survey of the B. subtilis genome indicated that the expression of 121 genes is directly regulated by activated Spo0A, with 40 of these genes, including spo0A, being upregulated and 81 being downregulated in response to Spo0A binding (29).
Spo0A has been shown to affect the expression of genes at the transition from acidogenic to solventogenic growth in solventogenic clostridia. In strain SKO1 of C. acetobutylicum, in which spo0A has been disrupted, severely decreased levels of the adhE-ctfA-ctfB and adc transcripts were detected, which correlated with extremely low concentrations of acetone and butanol (16, 17). With Clostridium beijerinckii, it was shown that the temporal control of adc and ptb expression was disrupted in the absence of the 0A box motifs (35). A microarray analysis of the C. acetobutylicum transcriptome has identified 123 genes whose expression is significantly altered in strains overexpressing spo0A, compared to the control strain (1). As yet, the Spo0A regulons in B. subtilis and C. acetobutylicum have not been subjected to a detailed comparison.
In our effort to identify putative transcription factors that may interact with Spo0A or may affect the regulation of solventogenesis in C. acetobutylicum, we have adopted a comparative genomics approach using B. subtilis. Spo0A in B. subtilis has been shown to act in concert with several other transcription factors, including AbrB and SinR (14). abrB encodes a 94-amino-acid DNA-binding protein which is expressed during vegetative growth and is positively autoregulated by the binding of AbrB homotetramers to its promoter. The primary function of AbrB is to prevent the premature onset of sporulation by repressing the expression of several sporulation-associated genes (4, 33, 42, 43, 46). As the cell enters the transition phase between growth and sporulation, activated Spo0A binds to two 0A boxes in the abrB promoter independently of AbrB binding, causing repression of abrB expression (41).
For the purposes of this study, AbrB can be described as an inhibitor of sporulation that acts in opposition to Spo0A, but its functions are broader than this description implies. AbrB modulates catabolite repression in circumstances of carbon-source limitation and acts as both a positive and negative regulator of cell competence at various stages in the life cycle (11, 15). AbrB from B. subtilis also controls the expression of anthrax toxin genes, and the gene coding for the antibiotic tyrocidine when expressed in Bacillus anthracis and Bacillus brevis, respectively (37, 38).
In B. subtilis, sinR encodes a 111-amino-acid, helix-turn-helix DNA-binding protein that is transcribed through both vegetative growth and sporulation. In vivo, SinR forms homodimers and directly inhibits the expression of key initiators of sporulation, including spo0A (5, 25). SinR activity is repressed at the onset of sporulation by the binding of its antagonist, SinI, the expression of which is induced at the onset of sporulation (3). The sin operon is arranged such that sinI lies upstream of sinR. Upstream of sinI are two promoters, designated P1 and P2, and a third promoter, P3, is located upstream of sinR but downstream of sinI. P3 is constitutively active and is responsible for the continuous synthesis of SinR. P1 and P2 require functional Spo0A and
H (coded by spo0H) for correct expression; hence, the expression of sinI and the subsequent repression of SinR are under developmental control (3, 12, 13).
We identified homologues to abrB and sinR in C. acetobutylicum. Using both reporter vectors and primer extension techniques, we have characterized the expression of abrB and sinR in C. acetobutylicum. Subsequently, we have examined the effects of abrB and sinR misexpression on solvent production, sporulation, and cell morphology.
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TABLE 1. Bacterial strains and plasmidsa
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TABLE 2. Oligonucleotides used in this studya
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C. acetobutylicum was grown anaerobically in clostridial growth medium (CGM) at 37°C (18). For recombinant strains, liquid or agar-solidified medium was appropriately supplemented with ERY (40 µg/ml). Strains were stored as horse serum-supplemented lyophilized stocks at room temperature or at 80°C in medium supplemented with 10% glycerol. For the sporulation and morphology assays, strains were grown on agar-solidified clostridial basal medium (CBM) supplemented with ERY (40 µg/ml) at 37°C (32).
DNA isolation, manipulation, and transformation into C. acetobutylicum.
All commercial enzymes used in this study (Taq polymerase [Fisher Scientific, Pittsburgh, Pa.] and restriction endonucleases, calf intestinal phosphatase, T4 DNA ligase, and Klenow fragment of DNA polymerase I [New England Biolabs, Inc., Bethesda, Md.]) were used according to the manufacturers' recommendations.
Plasmids were purified from E. coli by using the QIAprep Miniprep protocols. DNA was purified from agarose gels by using a QIAquick gel extraction kit, and the PCR product or enzymatically manipulated DNA was purified by using a QIAquick PCR purification kit (QIAGEN, Inc., Valencia, Calif.). Plasmids were purified from C. acetobutylicum according to the protocol developed by Harris (16). Automated DNA sequencing was performed by automated DNA sequencing (LoneStar Laboratories Inc., Houston, Tex.).
Prior to transformation into C. acetobutylicum, plasmid was methylated by transformation of the required plasmid into E. coli DH10ß harboring vector pDHKM (47). Electrotransformation of C. acetobutylicum was carried out according the protocol developed by Mermelstein et al. (26). All transformed strains were designated 824 followed by the transformed plasmid in parentheses.
Vector construction.
The entire region upstream of abrB310, abrB1941, and abrB3647, spanning from the base immediately preceding the start codon of the open reading frame to the last base prior to the open reading frame of the upstream gene, was amplified by PCR with the following primers: abrB310-310rev and 310prom, abrB1941-1941rev and1941prom, and abrB3647-3647rev and 3647prom. The promoter fragments were cloned into the pTrcHisTOPO-TA vector (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, Calif.). If the fragment was inserted into pTrcHisTOPO-TA in the required orientation, digestion with BamHI yielded the promoter fragment with cohesive ends. The reporter vector pCATP harbors a promoterless copy of the chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT) gene, located downstream of a unique BamHI restriction site (39). Ligation of the promoter fragments into BamHI-digested pCATP formed the promoter reporter plasmids pCAT310, pCAT1941, and pCAT3647. The correct orientation of promoter insertion was confirmed by sequencing plasmids with the appropriate "rev" primer.
Primers 310rev and 310for or sinRrev and sinRfor were used to amplify by PCR the entire abrB310 or sinR open reading frames, including all upstream and downstream intergenic bases from C. acetobutylicum genomic DNA. The
0.8-kb abrB310 fragment and the
0.7-kb sinR fragment were digested by using BamHI and ligated into BamHI-digested pIMP1 (26) to form vectors pM310 and pMsinR, respectively. Plasmid constructs were confirmed by sequence analysis using both primers used in their construction.
Oligonucleotides 310astop and 310asbtm or sinRastop and sinRasbtm were used to create the abrB310 and sinR antisense constructs in plasmid pSOS94 according to the method previously described (39a, 45). Plasmids were designated pAS310 and pASsin, and the control plasmid pASsos was also used.
Batch fermentations of C. acetobutylicum.
Single colonies of transformed C. acetobutylicum were grown in closed-cap batch fermentations of 100 ml CGM supplemented with the appropriate antibiotic at 37°C in a Forma Scientific anaerobic chamber (Thermo Forma, Marietta, Ohio). To allow for differences in lag time following inoculation, zero hour (T0) was determined when the culture had reached an optical density at 600 nm (OD600) of 0.1. Fermentations were allowed to proceed for 120 h. The acid and solvent content of each sample was analyzed by gas chromatography as previously described (39).
CAT assays.
In strains harboring vectors pCATP, pCAT310, pCAT1941, or pCAT3647, samples of 5 ml were taken at 8, 18, and 24 h after T0 was reached, which corresponded to mid-acidogenic, early-solventogenic, and mid-solventogenic growth phases, respectively. For the 120-h fermentation of the strain harboring pCAT310, samples of 5 ml were taken at the time points indicated in Fig. 1.
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FIG. 1. Alignment of the amino acid sequences of AbrB and SinR in B. subtilis and C. acetobutylicum. C.ac310, C.ac1941, and C.ac3647 refer to the three homologues of AbrB identified in C. acetobutylicum as defined by their position in the genome. Alignment was performed using the CLUSTALW tool of the Biology Workbench (San Diego Supercomputer Center). White letters on black background, single, fully conserved residue in all homologues; , position with no amino acid present (23, 31). (A) Cysteine-56 in the AbrB homologues is indicated by the symbol . (B) The helix-turn-helix DNA-binding domain of sinR in B. subtilis is shown in the first box, with key residues indicated by the symbol (13). The second boxed region corresponds to the multimerization domain of sinR in B. subtilis (3). B.sub, B. subtilis; C.ac, C. acetobutylicum.
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Primer extensions.
For mRNA collection, it was determined that the transcripts of both sinR and abrB310 were most abundant in cells in the mid- to late acidogenic phase (as determined by OD600 readings and acid-solvent concentrations). Samples of 10 ml were collected and centrifuged at 6,000 rpm (4,350 x g) at 4°C for 5 min with the JA-20 rotor of a Beckman J2-21 centrifuge. Cell pellets were resuspended in 200 µl of lysis buffer (20 mg of lysozyme/ml of 25% sucrose-0.05 M Tris-HCl-0.05 M EDTA buffer) and incubated at 37°C for 5 min. One milliliter of ice-cold TRIzol solution (Invitrogen) and 0.3 ml of chloroform were added, and the lysis solution was mixed vigorously for 15 seconds and then centrifuged at 16,000 x g at 4°C for 15 min. The aqueous upper layer containing RNA (
1 ml) was collected, 0.5 ml of ice-cold isopropanol was added, and the solution was centrifuged for a further 10 min as before. The RNA pellet was washed in 1 ml of ice-cold 70% ethanol and air dried prior to resuspension in 22 µl of water.
Primer extension reactions were performed with primers 310ext or sinext by using an AMV reverse transcriptase primer extension system (Promega, Madison, Wis.). To determine the start sites of abrB310 and sinR transcription, vectors pMsinR and pM310 were sequenced by using sinext and 310ext, respectively. Sequencing, based on the Sanger dideoxy method, was performed by using a Thermo Sequenase radiolabeled terminator cycle sequencing kit (USB Corp., Cleveland, Ohio). Sequencing and primer extension products were then subjected to electrophoresis on a 6% acrylamide gel using the Otter sequencing system (Owl Separation Systems, Portsmouth, N.H.). Sequencing gels were run at 45°C at 1,100 V for 3 h. All reactions and sequencing were performed according to the manufacturers' instructions.
Morphology and sporulation assay.
Strains harboring pASsos and pAS310 were grown simultaneously in liquid medium and transferred at 16 to 24 h after T0 to CBM plates supplemented with ERY. At intervals after inoculation (24, 48, 72, and 140 h), cells were picked from the plates by using a sterile toothpick and resuspended in 20 µl of liquid CGM supplemented with 10% glycerol. Samples were frozen at 80°C until all samples had been collected.
Sample preparation and microscopy was carried out as already described (39a).
The following genomes were accessed as part of this study: B. subtilis, NC_000964; C. acetobutylicum, NC_003030; Clostridium perfringens, NC_003366; Bacillus cereus, NC_004722; B. anthracis, NC_003997; Bacillus halodurans, NC_002570; and Bacillus thuringiensis, NC_005957.
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Three putative homologues of abrB were identified in C. acetobutylicum and were designated abrB310, abrB1941, and abrB3647 based upon their genome position and CAC notation (31). Amino acid sequence homology between the clostridial AbrBs and AbrB from B. subtilis is extremely high. The most homologous regions, exhibiting 72% identity and greater than 90% similarity, are the N-terminal 50 amino acids, which form the DNA-binding domain of AbrB in B. subtilis (33, 46). The C-terminal amino acids, which have been shown in B. subtilis to be necessary for AbrB homotetramerization, exhibit a lesser degree of similarity, although the cysteine residue at position 56, which is critical for correct multimerization, is conserved through all of the AbrB homologues (4, 46). All of the AbrB homologues in C. acetobutylicum as well as the putative AbrB homologue in C. perfringens (40) lack the 10-residue DNLKLAGGKL motif present in AbrB of B. subtilis. A similar 10-residue motif is present in other AbrB homologues identified in B. cereus, B. anthracis, B. halodurans, and Bacillus thuringiensis (21, 36, 44; T. S. Brettin, D. Bruce, J. F. Challacombe, P. Gilna, C. Han, K. Hill, P. Hitchcock, P. Jackson, P. Keim, J. Longmire, S. Lucas, R. Okinaka, P. Richardson, E. Rubin, and H. Tice, submitted for publication). The significance of these differences remains to be determined.
A single homologue of sinR (CAC0549) in C. acetobutylicum was identified, but no obvious homologue to sinI was identified either directly upstream of sinR or elsewhere on the genome (31). Excluding the C-terminal 20 amino acids in the C. acetobutylicum homologue, the sequence is 29% identical and 68% similar to the B. subtilis counterpart. Within the DNA-binding domain, there is strong homology between the essential hydrophobic residues required for the formation of the helix-turn-helix motif (13). Additionally, the multimerization domain sequence is highly homologous, although residues critical for multimerization have not been identified in B. subtilis (3).
CAT assays of abrB homologue promoters.
CAT reporter vector analysis of the promoters of abrB310, abrB1941, and abrB3647 was used to determine whether any of the abrB homologues in C. acetobutylicum were transcriptionally active. In strains 824(pCAT1941) or 824(pCAT3647), CAT activity did not differ significantly from that in the control strain 824(pCATP). In strain 824(pCAT310), CAT activity was elevated during all stages of growth that were assayed. This finding indicated that abrB310 is the active copy of abrB in C. acetobutylicum under the growth conditions tested.
Figure 2 shows CAT activity in strain 824(pCAT310) throughout the course of 120-h culture. During the first 12 to 16 h, CAT activity is detectable at a high basal level of 100 to 150 U of CAT/mg of protein. Between 12 and 24 h, CAT activity rapidly increases from approximately 100 U of CAT/mg of protein at 12 h to a maximum of approximately 285 U of CAT/mg of protein at 24 h. This increase in CAT activity is coincident with the onset of solventogenesis and the transition between the exponential and stationary phases of growth (data not shown in Fig. 2). Between 24 and 72 h, CAT activity declines at an approximate rate of 3 U of CAT/mg of protein per h. From 72 h to 120 h, CAT activity remains relatively constant, between 100 and 150 U of CAT/mg of protein.
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FIG. 2. CAT activity and solvent production in strain 824(pCAT310). , CAT activity; , acetone; and , butanol. Other products and OD600 are omitted for clarity. Data are shown ± 1 standard error; n = 9.
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FIG. 3. Transcription start sites and promoter region sequence of abrB310 and sinR. The transcripts identified by primer extension for abrB310 (panel A) and sinR (panel B) correspond to the transcription start sites shown on the sequences. The sequencing reaction products (lanes A, T, G, and C) were generated with the same primers as those used for the extension reactions. Also identified within the promoter region sequences are putative 35 and 10 consensus motifs, a potential binding site for Spo0A in abrB310 (0A box) and ribosome-binding sites (RBS). The arrows on both sequences indicate the first codon (ATG) of the open reading frame.
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Phenotypic effects of altered sinR expression.
mRNA extracted from the control strains 824(pIMP1) and 824(pASsos), strain 824(pASsin) harboring the sinR antisense construct and the sinR overexpression strain 824(pMsinR) was probed with the sinext primer for sinR transcript. Figure 4 shows that a single weak transcript was detected in the control strains, no transcript could be detected in 824(pASsin), and a significantly elevated level of the sinR transcript was detected in 824(pMsinR). Throughout the 120-h culture, there were no significant differences in growth or acid and solvent production between the control strains and 824(pASsin) or 824(pMsinR) (data not shown).
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FIG. 4. Transcript levels in strains 824(pMsinR), 824(pASsin) and 824(pAS310). sinR transcript was probed with primer sinext in mRNA extracted from the following strains: lane 1, 824(pMsinR); lane 2, 824(pIMP1); lane 3, 824(pASsos); and lane 4, 824(pASsin). abrB310 transcript was probed with primer 310ext in mRNA extracted from the following strains: lane 5, 824(pAS310); and lane 6, 824(pASsos). Arrows indicate the approximate sizes of transcripts (in bases).
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Growth and product formation in strains 824(pASsos) and 824(pAS310) are shown in Fig. 5. In both strains, growth is similar, with a peak OD600 of approximately 4.5 after 16 h of exponential growth, followed by a slight decline throughout the remainder of the 120-h fermentation.
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FIG. 5. Growth and product formation in fermentations of strains 824(pASsos) and 824(pAS310). The measured quantities for each profile of strain 824(pASsos) ( ) and strain 824(pAS310) ( ) are shown. Data are shown ± 1 standard error. For each data point, n = 4.
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After 24 h of culture on CBM, the identification of cells of both 824(pASsos) and 824(pAS310) in all stages of division was possible. After 48 h, the occasional sporulating cell was present in the 824(pASsos) samples, but none was observed in samples of 824(pAS310). After 72 h, approximately 50% of the cells in the 824(pASsos) samples exhibited the typical, swollen morphology associated with sporulation, whereas no sporulating cells could be seen in any of the 824(pAS310) samples. After 140 h, both samples were composed of either sporulating cells or free endospores.
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The CAT assay data from the 120-h fermentation of strain 824(pCAT310) show a temporally specific upregulation of expression of abrB310 at the transition from acidogenesis to solventogenesis. However, beyond 24 h after T0, it is difficult to interpret the results due to high CAT concentrations. The CAT protein itself is relatively stable, hence its use in these assays, and it is possible that large amounts of residual CAT are not removed from the system rapidly enough for changes in transcriptional activity to be detected. This problem may be compounded by the cessation of growth and general decrease in cell metabolism during mid- and late solventogenic phases, which may further reduce the rate at which CAT is removed from the cell. It therefore seems likely that changes in the activity of the abrB310 promoter during mid- and late growth phases are masked by high background levels of CAT.
In B. subtilis, primer extensions performed on abrB also revealed two transcription start sites, and other regulatory elements within the abrB promoter have been identified (33). However, the transcription start sites are located only 13 bases apart, with two 0A boxes located downstream of the second site which act to repress transcription in response to spo0A binding at the onset of sporulation (41). Conversely, in C. acetobutylicum, the two transcription start sites of abrB310 are located 89 bases apart, with a single putative 0A box sequence located downstream of the A2 site. No obvious secondary structure was observed with in silico analysis of the 5'end of both transcripts of abrB310.
In stark contrast to the high expression of abrB310, primer extension showed that sinR is expressed weakly in C. acetobutylicum throughout the first 24 h of culture. Nevertheless, it is possible to identify likely promoter elements surrounding the sinR transcription start site, although it does not form part of a sin operon similar to sinR and sinI in B. subtilis. Results indicate that although sinR expression can be significantly modified in C. acetobutylicum, it has no effect on solventogenesis.
Although it is not possible to determine exactly why pM310 would not transform into C. acetobutylicum, it is possible that the overexpression of abrB310 is lethal to the cell. The CAT assay and primer extension studies showed high endogenous expression of abrB310, and the amount of AbrB310 produced from the plasmid pM310, which has an expected copy number of 8 per cell, may have been too great for the cell to survive (24, 26).
Strain 824(pAS310), which expresses no abrB310 transcript, is delayed in both the onset of solventogenesis and the conversion of acetate and butyrate into acetone and butanol. The high levels of acetate and butyrate throughout the fermentation of 824(pAS310) is similar to that observed in other nonsolventogenic mutants, such as M5 and SKO1, where the pathways to convert acids to solvents are not functional and the acids therefore accumulate (16, 30). It was also found that although strain 824(pAS310) was delayed in sporulation, the morphology of both the sporulating cells and the spores was normal.
Our data show that despite high amino acid sequence homology between AbrB310 in C. acetobutylicum and AbrB in B. subtilis, the mode of action of AbrB is subtly different between the species. In B. subtilis, increased levels of activated Spo0A cause abrB expression to be repressed at the transition between vegetative growth and sporulation (41). In C. acetobutylicum, abrB310 expression is elevated at the transition between vegetative acidogenic growth and the stationary phase of solventogenesis. When abrB310 expression is disrupted in strain 824(pAS310), the onset of solventogenesis is delayed, suggesting that AbrB plays a positive role in expediting this transition in growth phases.
In strain 824(pAS310), the onset of sporulation was delayed. Despite this delay, spores appear to develop normally, thus implying that the absence of AbrB310 does not have negative effects on sporulation. It is possible that at the transition to sporulation, AbrB310 may have a similar role to AbrB in B. subtilis in that abrB is no longer transcribed to allow the derepression of sporulation-related genes (29, 41). We are currently continuing our investigations into the relationship between abrB310 expression and the regulation of the transitions between the growth phases in C. acetobutylicum.
This paper is dedicated to the memory of Frederick B. Rudolph. ![]()
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