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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, July 2006, p. 4964-4969, Vol. 72, No. 7
0099-2240/06/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AEM.02745-05
Copyright © 2006, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Expression of the 1-Aminocyclopropane-1-Carboxylic Acid Deaminase Gene Requires Symbiotic Nitrogen-Fixing Regulator Gene nifA2 in Mesorhizobium loti MAFF303099
Noriyuki Nukui,1*
Kiwamu Minamisawa,2
Shin-Ichi Ayabe,1 and
Toshio Aoki1
Department of Applied Biological Sciences, Nihon University, Fujisawa, Kanagawa 252-8510, Japan,1
Graduate School of Life Sciences, Tohoku University, Katahira, Aoba-ku, Sendai 980-8577, Japan2
Received 20 November 2005/
Accepted 25 April 2006

ABSTRACT
Many soil bacteria contain 1-aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylic
acid (ACC) deaminase, which degrades ACC, a precursor of the
phytohormone ethylene. In order to examine the regulation of
the
acdS gene encoding ACC deaminase in
Mesorhizobium loti MAFF303099
during symbiosis with the host legume
Lotus japonicus, we introduced
the ß-glucuronidase (GUS) gene into
acdS so that GUS
was expressed under control of the
acdS promoter, and we also
generated disruption mutants with mutations in a nitrogen fixation
regulator gene,
nifA. The histochemical GUS assay showed that
there was exclusive expression of
acdS in mature root nodules.
Two homologous
nifA genes, mll5857 and mll5837, were found in
the symbiosis island of
M. loti and were designated
nifA1 and
nifA2, respectively. Quantitative reverse transcription-PCR
demonstrated that
nifA2 disruption resulted in considerably
diminished expression of
acdS,
nifH, and
nifA1 in bacteroid
cells. In contrast,
nifA1 disruption slightly enhanced expression
of the
acdS transcripts and suppressed
nifH to some extent.
These results indicate that the
acdS gene and other symbiotic
genes are positively regulated by the NifA2 protein, but not
by the NifA1 protein, in
M. loti. The mode of gene expression
suggests that
M. loti acdS participates in the establishment
and/or maintenance of mature nodules by interfering with the
production of ethylene, which induces negative regulation of
nodulation.

INTRODUCTION
The formation of nitrogen-fixing root nodules is the result
of a series of interactions between (
Brady)
rhizobium and its
legume host plants (
8). The host legumes have several mechanisms
for regulating nodule formation (
28,
36). The plant hormone
ethylene is also known to have inhibitory effects on rhizobial
infection and the formation of nodule primordia and to limit
nodule number (
21,
24,
31). Rhizobia often interfere with ethylene
biosynthesis in the host plants by means of rhizobitoxine (
25,
37,
38) or 1-aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylic acid (ACC) deaminase
(
19,
33) and reduce host ethylene emission to overcome the negative
regulation.
ACC deaminase (EC 4.1.99.4) catalyzes the degradation of an ethylene precursor, ACC, into ammonium and
-ketobutyrate (13). The ACC deaminase structural gene (acdS) has been found in many rhizosphere bacteria (10, 13), including fast- and slow-growing rhizobia such as Rhizobium leguminosarum bv. viciae 128C53K (19), Bradyrhizobium japonicum USDA110 (16), Mesorhizobium loti MAFF303099 (15), and M. loti R7A (32). In the rhizobacterium Enterobacter cloacae UW4, promoter analysis of the acdS gene showed that expression of this gene requires both ACC and a leucine-responsive regulatory protein (LRP)-like protein and that anaerobic conditions enhance the expression (10). In B. japonicum USDA110 and R. leguminosarum bv. viciae 128C53K, the acdS genes are also probably regulated by an LRP-like protein and a
70 promoter (16, 19).
In M. loti MAFF303099, acdS was found in the symbiosis island (15). The enhancing effect of the acdS gene on nodulation of Lotus japonicus MG-20 Miyakojima roots was demonstrated by using an M. loti acdS disruption mutant (33). Furthermore, DNA macroarray analysis showed that a clone containing acdS (mlr5932) was upregulated in bacteroid cells. The DNA sequence upstream of acdS in M. loti includes a putative
54 RNA polymerase sigma factor recognition site and a nitrogen fixation regulator NifA protein binding site known as the upstream activating sequence (4, 33). These lines of evidence suggest that the expression of acdS in M. loti might be coupled with symbiotic nitrogen fixation. In this study, we examined the expression of M. loti acdS during symbiosis using specifically manipulated bacteria; in particular, we focused on the regulation by nifA.

MATERIALS AND METHODS
Plant materials and growth conditions.
L. japonicus MG-20 Miyakojima (
17) was grown and inoculated
with rhizobia as described previously (
22).
Bacterial strains, plasmids, transposon, and growth conditions.
The bacterial strains, plasmids, and transposon used in this study are listed in Table 1. M. loti MAFF303099 and Escherichia coli cells were cultured as described previously (22). When required, the media were supplemented with appropriate antibiotics at the following concentrations: for M. loti, 50 mg liter1 phosphomycine, 50 mg liter1 streptomycin, 50 mg liter1 spectinomycin, 20 mg liter1 gentamicin, 10 mg liter1 tetracycline, and 50 mg liter1 kanamycin; and for E. coli, 100 mg liter1 ampicillin, 50 mg liter1 streptomycin, 100 mg liter1 spectinomycin, 50 mg liter1 kanamycin, and 15 mg liter1 tetracycline. Phosphomycine was used for counterselection of M. loti against E. coli.
Construction of gusA reporter fused with acdS gene.
The
gusA gene was amplified from plasmid pmTn5SS
gusA20 with
the following primers: gusA+StuIAAA-1F (5'-AAAAGGCCTATGTTACGTCCTGTAGAAAC-3')
and gusA+StuIAAA-1801R (5'-AAAAGGCCTTCATTGTTTGCCTCCCTGCT-3').
The PCR product was cloned and inserted into StuI-digested pPD1.
The plasmid generated, pPD3, was introduced into
M. loti MAFF303099
(Fig.
1A). Single-crossover mutants were selected. One of the
mutants was designated ACD-GUS and was inoculated into the host
plant.
Construction of M. loti with constitutive gusA gene.
The constitutive
gusA gene driven by the aminoglycoside phosphotransferase
(
aph) promoter from Tn
5 was introduced into
M. loti MAFF303099
by using minitransposon mTn5SS
gusA20 (
35). A ß-glucuronidase
(GUS)-labeled strain, designated ML-GUS, was used throughout
this study because it had the same growth and nodulation capacities
as the wild-type strain.
Histochemical localization of GUS activity.
At 5 and 10 days after inoculation (DAI), plant roots inoculated with strains ML-GUS or ACD-GUS were evaluated for GUS activity, as described previously (38). The nodulation events, including infection of the host roots, were observed with a stereomicroscope, as described previously (22).
Construction of nifA1 and nifA2 mutants.
The nifA1 mutant was constructed by insertion of the gentamicin resistance gene aacC1 (Gm cassette) (1) into an NdeI site in nifA1 (mll5857) (Fig. 1B). The nifA2 mutant was constructed by deletion and insertion of the tetracycline resistance gene tet(C) (Tc cassette) (3) into a SalI site in nifA2 (mll5837) (Fig. 1C). Double-crossover mutants were selected by screening for resistance and sensitivity to appropriate antibiotics. The validity of the mutants was confirmed by reverse transcription PCR (RT-PCR); the nifA1and nifA2 transcripts from the mutants were not detected using primer sets designed on the basis of the sequence downstream of the inserted antibiotic cassette in the nifA homologues.
Complementation of the nifA2 mutant.
A 6.7-kb DNA fragment carrying the nifA2 gene from pKnifA2 was ligated into pFAJ1702 (6). The resulting plasmid, pFAJnifA2, was introduced into the nifA2 mutant by conjugation. Restoration of nifA2 transcription in the nifA2 mutant was confirmed by RT-PCR.
RNA extraction.
Total RNA was extracted from L. japonicus roots that included nodule primordia at 5 DAI and from roots with mature nodules at 10 DAI by using TRIzol (QIAGEN, Hilden, Germany). In all cases, genomic DNA was removed by DNase I treatment.
Quantification of transcripts.
The transcripts of gusA, acdS (mlr5932), nifH (mlr5905), nifA1 (mll5857), and nifA2 (mll5837) in symbiotic cells were determined by real-time RT-PCR. For quantification of the transcripts, the assay was performed with an ABI PRISM 7000 sequence detection system (Applied Biosystems, Foster City, CA). The sequences of the gusA, acdS, nifH, nifA1, and nifA2 genes were used to design primers and TaqMan probes specific for these genes. The nifH gene was used as the representative gene; this gene is induced by the NifA protein under nitrogen-fixing conditions in many diazotrophic bacteria, including rhizobia (34). The PCR primers and TaqMan probes used are listed in Table 2. Relative levels of gene expression were determined using gusA as the reference gene. Three independent experiments were performed.

RESULTS
ACC deaminase gene expression.
The GUS activity was monitored during nodulation in
L. japonicus roots inoculated with the ACD-GUS strain at 5 and 10 DAI. At
5 DAI, no significant GUS activity was detected in either infection
threads or nodule primordia (Fig.
2B and D). At 10 DAI, GUS
activity was detected in bacteroids in the mature nodules (Fig.
2F) but not in infection threads, nodule primordia, or immature
white nodules (data not shown). The free-living cells of strain
ACD-GUS grown aerobically never exhibited GUS activity. In contrast,
the ML-GUS strain in free-living cultures and the infection
threads, nodule primordia, and immature and mature nodules of
L. japonicus inoculated with the same strain consistently exhibited
GUS activity (Fig.
2A, C, and E).
Construction of nifA1 and nifA2 mutants and their symbiotic phenotypes.
The genome of
M. loti MAFF303099 was found to contain two
nifA homologue genes, designated
nifA1 and
nifA2. Therefore, we constructed
nifA1 and
nifA2 mutants (Fig.
1B and C). Plants inoculated with
the
nifA1 mutant exhibited a wild-type phenotype (green plants
and normal red nodules) (Fig.
3B), like ML-GUS-inoculated plants
(Fig.
3A). On the other hand,
nifA2 mutant-inoculated plants
had tiny white nodules on the roots and yellow leaves (Fig.
3C). The typical Fix
phenotype indicated that
nifA2 is
essential for symbiotic nitrogen fixation.
Transcription of acdS, nifH, nifA1, and nifA2 genes during infection.
To investigate the expression profiles of the
acdS and nitrogen
fixation (
nif) genes, the transcript levels of these genes in
symbiotic cells of
M. loti MAFF303099 were determined by quantitative
RT-PCR. The analysis with the ML-GUS strain showed that transcripts
of all four genes had accumulated at 10 DAI (Fig.
4), when mature
nodules were present, but not at 5 DAI, when the roots lacked
mature nodules (data not shown). The
acdS expression in mature
nodules was consistent with our previous findings (
33). The
patterns of
nifA homologues and
nifH were also consistent with
the well-known regulation of
nif genes dependent on nitrogen
fixation.
As shown in Fig.
4, the
nifA2 mutant was not able to transcribe
acdS,
nifA1, or
nifH at 10 DAI. On the other hand, complementation
of the
nifA2 mutant with pFAJnifA2 restored
acdS,
nifH and
nifA1expression,
indicating that the
nifA2 gene is required for transcription
of these genes. In contrast, inoculation with the
nifA1 mutant
resulted in a significant increase (2.3-fold) in the
acdS transcript
level and a slight increase (1.3-fold) in the
nifA2 transcript
level, whereas there was a significant decrease (0.37-fold)
in the
nifH transcript level (Fig.
4). This result implies that
NifA1 may play a secondary role compared with the role of NifA2.

DISCUSSION
Mature nodule-specific and nifA-dependent expression of acdS in M. loti.
In this study, we examined the transcriptional regulation and
nodulation stage-specific transcription of the
acdS gene of
M. loti MAFF303099 under symbiotic conditions. The ACD-GUS construct
clearly demonstrated that
acdS is exclusively transcribed in
bacteroids (Fig.
2). Consistent with the other results, quantitative
real-time RT-PCR analysis showed that
acdS transcription occurred
in roots with mature nodules at 10 DAI (Fig.
4) but not in roots
at 5 DAI (data not shown), which lacked mature nodules. These
results are also consistent with our previous report which showed
that the level of transcription of the
acdS gene was higher
under symbiosis conditions than in free-living cells (
33).
Using nifA mutants, we also demonstrated that the transcriptional regulation of the acdS gene of M. loti MAFF303099 is dependent on a functional nifA2 gene under symbiotic conditions (Fig. 4). This result is consistent with the DNA sequence upstream of acdS, which contains two 24/12 type promoters (5) and one upstream activating sequence. The acdS gene is present in many soil bacteria, and this gene is known to be regulated mainly by an LRP-like protein, which is an important regulator for amino acid metabolism and related processes (2), even in rhizobia (16, 19). Therefore, the mature nodule-specific and nifA-dependent mechanism of acdS regulation in M. loti is quite different from the mechanism of acdS regulation in other bacteria. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report of the molecular mechanism of symbiosis-specific suppression of ethylene biosynthesis leading to enhancement of rhizobial nodulation.
M. loti acdS seems to have acquired symbiosis-specific functions during its coevolution with the host legume L. japonicus. Two physiological effects of ethylene biosynthesis suppressers, such as ACC deaminase and rhizobitoxine, in the establishment of symbiosis have been proposed. One of these effects is enhancement of early infection events on host roots (for reviews see references 24 and 31). The other effect is a positive effect on the establishment and/or maintenance of mature nodules (7, 23). In Glycine max, ACC deaminase protein was reported to accumulate in the bacteroid (12). In canola roots, ACC deaminase-producing E. cloacae changed the expression of host genes involved in the defense response and cell division (14). Moreover, ethylene application suppressed nitrogenase activity in legume nodules (9). Taken together, the data show that although the detailed physiological functions of ACC deaminase in nodule bacteroids are not clear, ACC deaminase may control the host defense response, mitosis, and nitrogenase activity by lowering the ethylene level around the bacteroids.
Duplicated nifA genes.
Since two nifA genes were found in the M. loti MAFF303099 genome, we analyzed the accumulation of acdS and nifH transcripts in each nifA mutant. nifA2-dependent nifH regulation suggests that nifA2 encodes the canonical NifA protein, which may regulate other nif genes by collaborating with RNA polymerase
54, similar to NifA proteins of other nitrogen-fixing bacteria (4). In contrast, regulation by nifA1 is complicated, and NifA1 may have roles different from those of NifA2 (Fig. 3 and 4). It is interesting that nifA1 is located in a gene cluster consisting of nif and fix genes (nifS, nifW, fixA, fixB, fixC, fixX, nifA1, nifB) (Fig. 1B), and this structure is similar to that of R. leguminosarum bv. viciae (20) and the symbiosis island in M. loti R7A (32). On the other hand, nifA2 is located 18 kb from nifA1, and it seems to be unaccompanied by other nif and fix genes. These gene structures suggest that nifA1 is the original nifA gene in M. loti.
Two bacteria other than M. loti have been reported to possess two nifA genes. A nonsulfur phototropic purple bacterium, Rhodobacter capsulatus, has two functional copies of nifA encoding NifA proteins. However, the amino acid identities and functions of the two NifA proteins are almost the same (26, 27). In Frankia sp. strain EuIK1, which forms nitrogen-fixing nodules on an actinorhizal plant, Elaeagnus umbellatata, nifA1 encodes a typical NifA protein, whereas the NifA encoded by nifA2 is rather similar to AnfA, the alternative nitrogen fixation regulator (18). Our findings and previous reports suggest that symbiotic interactions with host plants may have led to differentiation of the duplicated nifA genes.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We thank K. Saeki (Nara Women's University, Nara, Japan) for
providing ordered cosmid clones and H. Mitsui (Tohoku University)
for providing several plasmids. We are also grateful to M. Sugawara
(Tohoku University), Y. Kawaharada (Tohoku University), and
N. Shimada (Nihon University) for valuable comments.
This work was supported by the 21st century COE program "Bioresource Utilization Based on Microbial Symbiotic Systems" from the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Sciences and Technology of Japan. This work was also supported by Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research on Priority Areas "Comparative Genomics" and by grants 15380002 and 17380046 to K.M. from the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology of Japan.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of Applied Biological Sciences, Nihon University, Fujisawa, Kanagawa 252-8510, Japan. Phone: 81 466 84 3939. Fax: 81 466 84 3353. E-mail:
nukui01{at}brs.nihon-u.ac.jp.


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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, July 2006, p. 4964-4969, Vol. 72, No. 7
0099-2240/06/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AEM.02745-05
Copyright © 2006, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.