| Literature DB >> 18489737 |
Anna Münch1, Lavinia Stingl, Kirsten Jung, Ralf Heermann.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Photorhabdus luminescens is a Gram-negative luminescent enterobacterium and a symbiote to soil nematodes belonging to the species Heterorhabditis bacteriophora. P.luminescens is simultaneously highly pathogenic to insects. This bacterium exhibits a complex life cycle, including one symbiotic stage characterized by colonization of the upper nematode gut, and a pathogenic stage, characterized by release from the nematode into the hemocoel of insect larvae, resulting in rapid insect death caused by bacterial toxins. P. luminescens appears to sense and adapt to the novel host environment upon changing hosts, which facilitates the production of factors involved in survival within the host, host-killing, and -exploitation.Entities:
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Year: 2008 PMID: 18489737 PMCID: PMC2422844 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2164-9-229
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Genomics ISSN: 1471-2164 Impact factor: 3.969
Figure 1Cells of . P. luminescens TT01 transformants carrying plasmid pBR-Cherry (no promoter, negative control), pBR-Cherry-rpsM (rpsM-promoter, positive control), and pBR-Cherry-PluLib (promoter-trap library) were cultivated in complex medium. Cells were analyzed by fluorescence- (left panel) and phase contrast microscopy (right panel).
Figure 2Schematic presentation of the Differential Fluorescence Induction screen. Approximately 13,000 clones of the P. luminescens promoter-trap library, based on the reporter gene mcherry encoding the Red Fluorescent Protein mCherry, were analyzed for induced fluorescence in the presence of G. mellonella larvae homogenate. Positive clones were verified in triplicate before sequencing the DNA-fragment upstream of the reporter gene. When no native promoter was present within the DNA-fragment, a promoter motif search was performed. The P. luminescens genome was then searched for similar promoter motifs. DNA-sequences containing the predicted promoter motifs were cloned upstream of the reporter gene mcherry, and induction was analyzed after exposure of P. luminescens to insect homogenate (in vitro) or in viable G. mellonella larvae (in vivo).
Inducible promoter motifs in P. luminescens in presence of insect larvae homogenate
| 1 | 12.7-fold (± 3.0) | 1 | No | ||
| 2 | 3.2-fold (± 0.3) | 1 | no | ||
| 3 | 2.8-fold (± 0.1) | 1 | no | ||
| 4 | 3.5-fold (± 0.2) | 1 | no | ||
| 5 | 4.3-fold (± 1.2) | 1 | no | ||
| 6 | 10.1-fold (± 1.8) | 1 | no | ||
| 7 | 6.4-fold (± 3.3) | 1 | no | ||
| 8 | 10.3-fold (± 3.9) | 2 | no | ||
| 9 | 13.6-fold (± 5.3) | 1 | no | ||
| 10 | 7.9 (± 3.4) | 1 | no | ||
| 11 | 10.2-fold (± 4.6) | 1 | yes | ||
| 12 | 4.5-fold (± 0.3) | 1 | yes | ||
| 13 | 13.6-fold (± 5.3) | 1 | no | ||
| 14 | 3.3-fold (± 0.3) | 1 | yes | ||
| 15 | 4.0-fold (± 0.4) | 1 | yes | ||
| 16 | 3.7-fold (± 0.8) | 1 | no | ||
| 17 | 6.9-fold (± 2.1) | 1 | no | ||
| 18 | 3.2-fold (± 0.3) | 1 | no | ||
The clones were identified by DFI and the sequence upstream the reporter gene was determined by DNA-sequencing. Fluorescence induction factors were determined by three independent measurements, experimental standard deviation is given in the brackets. The promoter motifs were identified with the Softberry BProm analysis tool and homologous promoter motifs were searched within the intergenic regions of the P. luminescens genome. The -10 and the -35 regions are highlighted in bold, and the mismatches compared to the identified promoter motifs are highlighted in italics. The genes downstream of the promoter motifs are marked.
Fluorescence induction of P. luminescens carrying different promoter-reporter gene fusions in presence of insect larvae homogenate
| insecticidal toxin complex TccC1 | ||
| similar to photopexin A und B (hemopexin-domain) | ||
| homologous to C-terminal region of dermonecrotic toxin (DNT) of | ||
| contains Fascin domain, function unknown | ||
| | tagatose-6-phosphate-Kinase | |
| | tagatose-6-phosphate ketose/aldose isomerase | |
| | PTS-system, N-acetylgalactosamine-specific IIB component 2 (EIIB-AGA') | |
| | PTS-system, N-acetylgalactosamine-specific IIC component 1 (EIIC-AGA) | |
| | PTS-System, N-acetylgalactosamine-specific IID component (EIID-AGA) | |
| | unknown, putative PTS permease | |
| | tagatose-bisphosphate aldolase GatY | |
| | ethanolamine degradation | |
| | ethanolamine-ammonia-lyase heavy chain | |
| | ethanolamine-ammonia-lyase light chain | |
| | urocanate hydratase (urocanase) | |
| | histidine ammonia lyase (histidase) | |
| | α-oxoglutarate dehydrogenase E1 component | |
| | dihydrolipoamid succinyltransferase component of α-oxoglutarate dehydrogenase complex (E2) | |
| | succinyl-CoA synthetase β chain | |
| | succinyl-CoA synthetase α-chain | |
| similarities to phosphoenolpyruvat phosphomutase | 1.0-fold (± 0.3) | |
| similar to glutarredoxin Protein YdhD | ||
| „making large colonies" protein, involved in regulation of sugar metabolism | ||
| transposase, IS630 family | ||
| putative relaxase | ||
| putative integrase/recombinase | ||
| lipoprotein spr precursor | ||
| similar to N-acetylmuramoyl-L-alanine amidase YbjR precursor of | ||
| similar to DNA inversion product and tail-fiber protein of lambdoid prophage | ||
| multidrug-resistance permease | ||
| similar to bacitracin permease of | ||
| | similar to N-formimidoyl fortimicin A synthase | |
| | similar to putative methylase and protoporphyrinogen oxidase | |
| | similar to class II aminotransferase and 5-aminolevulinic acid synthase | |
| | weakly similar to PapB protein and to chorismate mutase/prephenate dehydrogenase | |
| | similar to p-aminobenzoic acid synthase | |
| | similar to dehydrogenase PapC of | |
| | probable transport protein | |
| PrK012399-domain, similar to Plu1012 and Plu1017 | ||
| | PrK012399-domain, similar to Plu0801 and Plu1017 | |
| | „TIM-br_sig_trns"-Domain, putative sigma54-dependent transcriptional activator | |
| | unknown | |
| PrK012399-domain, similar to Plu0801 and Plu1012 | ||
| similar to Plu1691 of | ||
| similar to Plu2538 of | ||
| function unknown | ||
| similar to protein YcfD of | ||
| unknown | 1.1-fold (± 0.2) | |
| similar to protein Plu3387 of | ||
| "makes caterpillars floppy" toxin | ||
| "makes caterpillars floppy" toxin 2 | 0.9 (± 0.2) | |
| insecticidal toxin complex TcdA1 | ||
| insecticidal toxin complex TcaA/TcaB | 1.25 (± 0.2) | |
| insecticidal toxin complex TcaZ | 1.3 (± 0.3) | |
| insecticidal toxin complex TccA1 | 1.6 (± 0.2) | |
| alkaline metalloprotease PrtA | ||
P. luminescens carrying the indicated reporter gene plasmid was grown in complex medium and in complex medium containing insect homogenate (in vitro). Each single reporter strain was tested on differential fluorescence induction in presence of insect homogenate. In the left panel, the genes or operons located downstream of the promoters tested are listed, along with putative functions for the gene products (middle panel). At the right panel, the fluorescence induction factors in presence of G. mellonella insect homogenate are shown. Enhanced activity is emphasized by bold numbers. Experimental standard deviation of at least three independent measurements is presented (in brackets).
Figure 3Fluorescence induction of . P. luminescens TT01 transformants carrying plasmid pBR-Cherry with the promoters of the genes indicated were grown in complex medium, and in vivo, in G. mellonella larvae. Last instar larvae were infected with approximately 10,000 cells, and after 48–72 h the larvae were bled. The fluorescence of the bacteria present in the hemolymph was analyzed by microscopy, and compared to the fluorescence of cells incubated for an equal time in complex medium. Induced: cells grown in G. mellonella; non-induced: cells grown in complex medium. A - no fluorescence under non-induced conditions, fluorescence under induced conditions; B - fluorescence under non-induced conditions, but higher fluorescence under induced conditions; C - equal numbers of bright fluorescent cells under non-inducing and inducing conditions, but additional cells with low fluorescence intensity under inducing conditions;D - fluorescence was equal under non-inducing and inducing conditions; E - bright fluorescence under non-inducing conditions, and low fluorescence under inducing conditions; F - no fluorescence under non-inducing or inducing conditions. Strains carrying the indicated promoter-reporter gene fusions were grouped. The examples shown are underlined; the control promoters are shaded in grey. In the left panels, cells were observed through a fluorescence filter, in the right panels cells were observed with phase contrast.