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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, April 2007, p. 2085-2092, Vol. 73, No. 7
0099-2240/07/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AEM.02755-06
Copyright © 2007, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
,
Erik Vijgenboom, and
Gilles P. van Wezel*
Microbial Development, Leiden Institute of Chemistry, Leiden University, P.O. Box 9502, 2300 RA Leiden, The Netherlands
Received 24 November 2006/ Accepted 30 January 2007
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The SsgA-like proteins (SALPs) form a family of developmental regulators occurring exclusively in sporulating actinomycetes. The genome of Streptomyces coelicolor (2) encodes seven SsgA-like proteins (SALPs), with specific tasks in the control of the sporulation process, each protein playing distinct and important roles (13, 20, 29). SsgA plays an important role in the control of morphogenesis in both liquid- and solid-grown cultures and is a known activator of sporulation-specific cell division (11, 28). The overproduction of SsgA in S. griseus and S. coelicolor results in mycelial fragmentation (12, 28). The industrial importance of ssgA for a number of Streptomyces species was recently highlighted, and increased expression of ssgA results in fragmented growth of S. coelicolor, "S. lividans," and S. roseosporus and enhanced growth rates in batch fermentations, with strongly improved enzyme production by S. lividans (27). The SALPs do not share significant homology to other proteins and are one of the few protein families that lack any clear protein motif, and so far the three-dimensional structure is unknown. A mutational analysis of the SsgA protein would provide more insight into the functional importance of individual residues. However, screening a library of perhaps thousands of transformants is feasible only when microtiter plate (MTP)-based screening and colony PCR are an option. While the growth of streptomycetes on microtiter plates has been reported previously (19), PCR-based screening is difficult and often requires mycelium pretreatment (lysis) and DNA isolation steps, and the direct screening of transformants has been reported only for transformants carrying high-copy-number plasmids (23, 26).
In this work, we describe an efficient method to create, propagate, and screen a large strain collection of random ssgA mutants and present a way to amplify and sequence the individual mutant clones directly from deep-frozen samples stored on microtiter plates. For each of the amino acid residues of the SsgA protein, the importance for in vivo function of the protein was analyzed.
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TABLE 1. Bacterial strains, plasmids, and libraries
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TABLE 2. Oligonucleotides used in this studya
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Plasmids and constructs. (i) General cloning vectors.
pIJ2925 (10) is a pUC19-derived plasmid used for routine subcloning. For cloning in Streptomyces, we used shuttle vector pHJL401 (16), containing an E. coli pUC19 origin of replication (ori) and a Streptomyces SCP2* ori (17) (approximately five copies per chromosome). pIJ2925 and pHJL401 contain an ampicillin resistance marker for selection in E. coli. For Streptomyces transformants, thiostrepton was used for the selection of pHJL401. Plasmid DNA was isolated from ET12567 (Table 1) prior to the transformation of Streptomyces.
(ii) Construction of ssgA clone pGWS32.
For the construction of pGWS32, a DNA fragment of approximately 2 kb was PCR amplified from genomic DNA of S. coelicolor M145 by using primers Q1 to Q6 and was inserted as an EcoRI-HindIII fragment into pHJL401 digested with the same enzymes. The introduction of this plasmid into the ssgA null mutant GSA3 fully restored sporulation (see Results). pGWS32 was used as a basis for the cloning of the plasmid library of ssgA variants.
(iii) Construction of mutant libraries.
Mutations in ssgA of S. coelicolor were introduced by random mutagenic PCR. PCR-generated mutant libraries were cloned as EcoRI-HindIII-digested fragments into EcoRI-HindIII-digested pIJ2925 (Table 1). Subsequently, E. coli TG1 cells were transformed by electroporation. Colonies were grown separately in 96-well MTPs in 200 µl of Luria-Bertani medium overnight. All cultures reached similar optical densities (fully grown) and were therefore expected to contribute approximately equal amounts of plasmid DNA. After replication of the cultures on fresh MTPs containing 200 µl of Luria-Bertani medium with 10% glycerol for storage, the biomasses were pooled and DNA purified in batches. ssgA variants were inserted as BamHI-HindIII fragments into pGWS32 (Table 1) by using the BamHI restriction site present approximately 60 bp downstream of the translational start site of ssgA and the HindIII restriction site from the multiple cloning site. After the transformation of E. coli TG1 cells, colonies were grown separately on 96-well MTPs in 200 µl of Luria-Bertani medium overnight. Cultures were replicated for storage before being pooled and DNA purified in batches. This process resulted in plasmid library pGWS280 (Table 1). Prior to the transformation of Streptomyces, E. coli ET12567 was transformed with the library DNA by electroporation and plated onto 12-cm-square petri dishes, giving around 2 x 104 colonies per transformation, after which cells were harvested and DNA was isolated. GSA3 was transformed with this DNA (Table 1) and plated onto R2YE agar plates; transformants were selected by screening for thiostrepton resistance.
Recovering ssgA variants and DNA sequencing.
To sequence the individual clones of the mutant library, the ssgA gene was amplified by PCR in 96-well PCR plates. As a template, we used 3 µl of frozen mycelial or spore stock, replicated from deep-frozen 96-deep-well plates by using a metal pin replicator (Enzyscreen, Leiden, The Netherlands). Pretreatment of the mycelium and/or spores was not required. All DNA sequencing was performed directly with PCR-amplified DNA fragments by BaseClear BV (Leiden, The Netherlands).
Statistics to determine the cutoff for the analysis of multiple mutants.
Of the 790 sequenced clones, 348 ssgA mutant clones (approximately 44%) failed to complement the sporulation-deficient phenotype of the ssgA mutant. This figure therefore illustrates the chance that any clone in the library would be noncomplementing. This figure was used to get a statistically relevant indication of the number of independent clones required to judge the importance of a certain residue for protein function. If a particular residue was mutated in n independent clones, the approximate probability of this being coincidental becomes P = (0.44)n. To obtain a reliability score above 0.95, a minimum of four independent clones was required.
Computing.
Alignments were done using ClustalW software (24). Figure S1 in the supplemental material was generated using Boxshade software (http://www.ch.embnet.org/software/BOX_form.html). Sequences of SsgA variants were aligned with the wild-type sequence of SsgA by the commercial SeqScape package at BaseClear, allowing the rapid identification of amino acid changes. The data were then introduced into Excel (Microsoft).
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Creation of a library of ssgA variants.
The strict alignment (100% conservation) (Fig. S1A in the supplemental material) highlighted a number of residues that are conserved among all SALPs. To further address the question of which residues are crucial for SsgA function, we set out to create a mutant library of SsgA.
In order to create mutant variants of S. coelicolor ssgA as a basis for a mutant library, we performed mutagenic PCR in four reactions with mixtures containing an excess of either dATP, dCTP, dGTP, or dTTP and in the presence of 0.1 mM or 0.5 mM MnCl2 (inducing amplification errors). Reaction mixtures containing additional dGTP and dTTP were much more efficient than those with dCTP or dATP (not shown). The PCR products were cloned as EcoR-HindIII-digested fragments into pIJ2925 (Table 1) digested with the same enzymes, and E. coli JM109 was transformed by electroporation. As a test of each transformation, five individual clones were sequenced; this sequencing revealed the desired two to seven nucleotide changes in the region of interest when 0.1 mM MnCl2 was used in the initial PCRs and 15 to 20 nucleotide changes when 0.5 mM MnCl2 was used. The products of the latter reaction were discarded. A total of 1,056 transformants (528 transformants derived from the excess-dGTP PCR and another 528 from the excess-dTTP PCR) representing the maximum number of independent mutants in our library were grown separately in 96-well MTPs overnight. To ensure satisfactory recovery of the different mutants, a large excess (at least fivefold) of this number of colonies was grown in the subsequent cloning steps (Fig. 1). DNA was purified in batches, resulting in plasmid libraries pGWS278 (generated with an excess of dGTP) and pGWS279 (generated with an excess of dTTP) (Table 1).
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FIG. 1. A schematic overview of cloning and propagation in E. coli of the plasmid library of ssgA variants.
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Protoplasts of the ssgA null mutant GSA3 (Table 1) were transformed with pGWS280 and plated on R2YE agar plates. After approximately 3 days, thiostrepton-resistant colonies were individually transferred to solid SFM cultures on 24-well plates. After 7 days, biomass samples (mycelia and, where relevant, spores) from each of the GSA3 transformants were individually prepared. Due to the high number of transformants (around 1,500), the standard procedures to harvest mycelia and spores were not feasible and a new and much more efficient method was required, which was developed based on the following procedure.
A novel method to prepare and maintain Streptomyces libraries.
Spores and/or mycelia were harvested with sterile cotton swabs from the wells of 24-well tissue culture plates in glycerol (20%, wt/vol), and large debris was removed by taking up the suspensions with a syringe through the cotton of the swab. Suspensions were stored separately at 80°C in 96-deep-well MTPs. In this manner, 1,440 samples were produced. By using a spring-loaded replicator (19), individual transformants from deep-frozen MTPs were replicated onto squared SFM plates (12 by 12 cm) for phenotypic screening. When a functional ssgA clone was present in GSA3, the colonies had a typical gray, sporulation phenotype, while colonies of GSA3 with an inactive copy of ssgA remained white (no gray spores); occasionally, an intermediate (light gray) phenotype was observed. In this way, the abilities of individual clones to restore sporulation to the ssgA mutant could be assessed. A typical example is shown in Fig. 2A. The replicator was used to transfer approximately 3 µl from the deep-frozen suspensions directly onto 96-well PCR plates for colony PCR (for details, see "Recovering ssgA variants and DNA sequencing" in Materials and Methods). To optimize the yield, all PCR products were amplified once more using proofreading Pfu DNA polymerase with 2 µl of the initial reaction mixtures as templates. This led to saturated amounts of product for all reactions as confirmed by gel electrophoresis (Fig. 2B). While successful PCRs with Streptomyces biomass have been described previously (26), the authors of the previous report used colonies harboring high-copy-number plasmids (based on pIJ486 [30]). Finally, 790 PCR products were sequenced using the same primers used for amplifications and linked to the phenotypes of their respective transformants.
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FIG. 2. (A) Typical example of an SFM plate containing a replicate of transformants from deep-frozen 96-deep-well MTPs. The colony at position A1 is the control (GSA3 containing pHJL401 without the insert), displaying the white, nonsporulating phenotype characteristic of the ssgA null mutant. All other colonies represent different GSA3 transformants of the library. Several phenotypes are observed: nonsporulating phenotypes (no complementation) such as those in colonies in positions A4 and E1, sporulating (full complementation) phenotypes such as those in colonies in positions A5 and B2, and intermediate phenotypes (partial complementation) such as those in colonies in positions B6 and H2. (B) PCR products for DNA sequencing. An initial PCR was done using a few microliters of deep-frozen suspensions of individual mutants as the template. The amounts of product formed in different reactions were highly variable (upper panel). A second PCR was performed using products of the first PCR as the DNA template, resulting in saturated amounts for all samples (lower panel).
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A collection of SsgA mutants with single amino acid substitutions.
Out of the 790 analyzed ssgA variants, 180 specified a single amino acid substitution. For 62 out of the 111 amino acids that were encoded by the part of ssgA that was subjected to mutagenesis (residues 25 to 135), we obtained at least one single-amino-acid-substitution mutant (Table 3). For 13 residues we obtained two different substitutions, and for residue 36 we obtained three different ones (D36G, D36N, and D36V). Additionally, we replaced residues W41, S89, L94, and P106 with an alanine residue by site-directed mutagenesis (see Materials and Methods). Of the 66 mutated residues, a total of 22 resulted in an inactive SsgA protein. These loss-of-function mutations (i.e., present in noncomplementing clones) among the single-substitution mutants were mostly found in the central part of the protein (covering residues W41 to L98), with small clusters from residues W41 to G51, residues V74 to L78, and residues A85 to F87. Another small group of loss-of-function mutations was found from residues Y25 to L29. Few loss-of-function mutations were found in the C-terminal part of the protein, with only two substitutions between residues D99 and G135 resulting in nonfunctional SsgA (Table 3; Fig. 3).
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TABLE 3. Single-amino-acid mutations in a collection of clones obtained for the library expressing mutant SsgAa
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FIG. 3. Amino acid sequence of SsgA. The theoretical secondary structure is shown; barrels indicate predicted -helices, and arrows indicate predicted ß-sheets. Residues not subjected to mutagenesis in this study (and hence invariably wild type) are shown in lower case. Residues 100% conserved (identical or similar) among all 24 known Streptomyces SALPs (see the text for further explanation) are underlined. Identical amino acids are further highlighted in bold. Bullets above the sequence indicate single amino acid substitutions causing loss of function (Table 3). Asterisks above the sequence indicate amino acids which obtained an importance score of 80% or higher from this study (see Results and Fig. 4). Amino acid numbering is shown below the primary sequence (numbers correspond to the amino acid above the first digit in each number).
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FIG. 4. Graph showing the importance scores (gray bars) and specificity scores (black bars) in percentages on the y axis. The amino acid sequence of SsgA is shown along the x axis. The SsgA importance score represents the frequency at which a certain mutation occurs in a nonfunctional ssgA clone, where 100% would indicate that an amino acid is essential for SsgA function. By dividing the importance score by the conservation value, amino acids are identified as primarily important for the function of SsgA and less important for the other SALPs. A score of 100% would indicate that an amino acid is essential for SsgA function and unique for the SsgA protein. Data sets below the statistical threshold (specific residues mutated in fewer than four clones) were not included in the analysis.
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An important question is, "Can we identify residues that are important for SsgA but not conserved among the other SALPs?" Such residues may be involved in a unique aspect of SsgA function. For this purpose, we calculated a specificity score (Fig. 4). We divided the importance score obtained from our library by the degree of conservation (Fig. 4), expressed as the occurrence of a particular residue in SsgA in all other SALPs of S. coelicolor, with a conservation value of 1 if a residue was unique for SsgA and a value of 7 if a residue occurred in all seven S. coelicolor SALPs. In the example described above, we calculated an importance score of 42% for residue D83. This residue occurred in two SALPs, namely, SsgA and SsgF, and hence the specificity score was 21%. Among the 111 possible candidates, residues L29, D58, and S89 obtained high specificity scores, i.e., they were found to be important for SsgA function, but they were not significantly conserved among the other SALPs. Expectedly, L29 and D58 were well conserved among all SsgA orthologues (L29 was replaced with methionine in S. griseus and S. netropsis). However, S89 was less well conserved (it was replaced with valine in S. albus, S. goldeniensis, and S. scabies and alanine in S. griseus and S. netropsis).
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Producing a mutant library in streptomycetes with high efficiency.
In this work, we detail the creation of a plasmid library of random S. coelicolor ssgA mutants and discuss a new method to efficiently maintain the colonies and screen the library. The PCR-based random mutant library resulted in a maximum of more than 1,000 different E. coli clones, a figure that represents the maximum number of different mutant clones. Since the standard procedure of harvesting mycelia and spores is time-consuming (and thus costly), the daunting task of producing a library of thousands of transformants required a novel approach. We were able to produce 1,440 individual transformants, stored as spore and/or mycelium suspensions in 96-deep-well MTPs at 80°C, in a short time. By using a spring-loaded replicator (19), these suspensions were efficiently replicated onto SFM plates to analyze the phenotypes (sporulating or nonsporulating) of transformants of the ssgA null mutant GSA3 harboring ssgA mutant clones (Table 1). The same replicator was used to transfer a few microliters of deep-frozen samples into PCR mixtures. In this way, a total of 790 ssgA variants were amplified and sequenced while steps involving DNA purification or pretreatment of the mycelium were eliminated.
Amino acid clusters important for SsgA function.
A comparison of the data obtained from the single-substitution mutants and the data obtained from the complete library shows that similar results were found. However, while mutants with the single-amino-acid mutations Y25C, G51R, I63T, P70Q, L75P, A85P, and L104P were all inactive, the respective residues were not highlighted by the analysis of multiple mutants. This apparent discrepancy is at least in part explained by the lack of sufficient data for some residues. For instance, the single mutation G51R failed to complement the ssgA null mutant but since G51 was mutated in fewer than four clones it was excluded from the analysis. Alternatively, the differences can be explained by the nature of particular amino acid changes; SsgA with P70Q was inactive, while SsgA with P70V was active and the corresponding clone restored sporulation to an ssgA mutant.
We identified several residues that are required for proper SsgA function, or at least for its ability to activate sporulation-specific cell division. A combination of all data highlights three particularly interesting regions, namely, clusters of residues V39 to G51 and residues P55 to I63 and a larger region covering residues V74 to L98. These regions are of great interest as they possibly represent one or more motifs essential for the function of SsgA. The penalty for mutations in the C-terminal third of the protein is much lower, highlighted by the fact that only two of the single mutations in this region inactivated SsgA, both of which involved a leucine residue changed into a much more bulky proline residue (L104P and L124P).
Most of the important residues considered show high levels of conservation among all SALPs. Therefore, we compared SsgA to the other six SALPs of S. coelicolor to try and identify residues that are important for the function of SsgA but not conserved among the other SALPs. Thorough analysis revealed that particularly residues L29, D58, and S89 stood out as candidates. Of these, L29 and D58 were particularly highly conserved among the SsgA orthologues of different organisms, while S89 was less well conserved. For residue L29, both the L29P and L29Q single mutations failed to restore sporulation to GSA3. For residues D58 and S89, no single mutants were obtained, but an S89A substitution introduced by site-directed mutagenesis did result in a functional protein, restoring sporulation to GSA3. Hence, out of all the residues identified as crucial for SsgA function in sporulation, only two residues are of particular importance for the function of only SsgA itself.
In conclusion, we designed a new method to efficiently create, maintain, and screen mutant libraries for the industrially important streptomycetes. The technology was successfully applied to create a diverse mutant library of SsgA, with half of all SsgA residues mutated in single mutants, and a large collection of multiple mutants. Obviously, the full potential of this library will be unlocked once the three-dimensional structure of the SsgA protein is available, which is a prerequisite to learning more on the structure-function relationship. This insight will better our understanding of the role of SsgA in the control of the growth and development of streptomycetes and will provide new means to exploit SsgA in strain development to further improve streptomycetes as industrial production hosts.
This work was supported by a grant from the Royal Academy for Arts and Sciences to G.P.V.W.
Published ahead of print on 9 February 2007. ![]()
Supplemental material for this article may be found at http://aem.asm.org/. ![]()
Present address: Institut de Genetique et Microbiologie, UMR CNRS 8621, Batiment 400 de l'Universite Paris 11, 91405 Orsay, France. ![]()
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