| Literature DB >> 18854009 |
Christian Rückert1, Johanna Milse, Andreas Albersmeier, Daniel J Koch, Alfred Pühler, Jörn Kalinowski.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Regulation of sulphur metabolism in Corynebacterium glutamicum ATCC 13032 has been studied intensively in the last few years, due to its industrial as well as scientific importance. Previously, the gene cg0156 was shown to belong to the regulon of McbR, a global transcriptional repressor of sulphur metabolism in C. glutamicum. This gene encodes a putative ROK-type regulator, a paralogue of the activator of sulphonate utilisation, SsuR. Therefore, it is an interesting candidate for study to further the understanding of the regulation of sulphur metabolism in C. glutamicum.Entities:
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Year: 2008 PMID: 18854009 PMCID: PMC2580772 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2164-9-483
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Genomics ISSN: 1471-2164 Impact factor: 3.969
Figure 1Growth of the . The strains were cultured in liquid minimal medium containing the following sulphur source in 100 μM concentration: sulphate (◆), L-cysteine (■) and ethanesulphonate (●). Empty symbols represent the growth of C. glutamicum CR030. The growth, monitored with a nephelometer, is shown as relative turbidity, displaying the mean of three biological replicates with six technical replicates each.
Figure 2Ratio/intensity plot deduced from DNA microarrayexperiments comparing the transcriptome of . The analysed strains were grown in minimal medium with 2 mM L-cysteine as sole sulphur source to o.D.600 10 and then subjected to sulphur starvation for 30 min. Genes showing a strong (|m| ≥ 2) differential expression are named and displayed as green respectively red spots, those without significant differential expression are given as grey spots. Genes belonging to the McbR regulon are marked in bold type.
Figure 3Electrophoretic mobility shift assays using purified CysR to identify the co-activators of the protein (A) and test for specific binding (B+C). CysR was purified using the IMPACT-C system (New England Biolabs) in presence of 0.1% Triton X-100. A Cy3-labelled 523 bp fragment containing the cysI - fpr2 intergenic region was incubated with a 1,000 times molar excess of the purified protein in presence of different intermediates of sulphur metabolism (OAS, O-acetyl-L-serine; NAS, N-acetyl-L-serine; OAH, O-acetyl-L-homoserine) at 10 mM concentration, demonstrating that CysR can only bind to DNA in presence of either OAS or OAH (A). Tests with OAS-activated CysR and either a negative control (123 bp internal fragment of cg2118, B) or herring sperm blocking DNA (C) revealed that activated CysR binds non-specifically in vitro.
Figure 4Mapped (A) and predicted (B) promoter regions of CysR-controlled genes. Transcription start sites (bold, marked with an arrow and +1) were mapped using the RACE method. The -10 and -35 elements were then inferred either from this transcription start site (bold black) or the location of either McbR [7] or CysR binding sites (grey elements), based on the published consensus sequences determined by Patek et al. [29]. The potential CysR binding sites are boxed, the inverted repeat is highlighted in light green with matching bases marked with asterisks. Coloured lines mark the regions cloned into pRIM2 for in vivo promoter tests, bases mutated by transition are indicted with M.
Figure 5Sequence logos of (A) the predicted CysR binding site (n = 6) and (B) the extended SsuR binding site (n = 4). (A) The conserved TGAAtnnAAt motif of the 3'-region (gray box) has a high information content (total height of the characters), which can be assumed to be equivalent to high biological importance. In contrast, the bases flanking the motif are more or less random, resulting in a very low information content. The 5'-box is only partially conserved but still discernible from the adjacent sequences. (B) The 3'-region of the SsuR binding site (consensus TGaA [at]nnaaT) is very similar to that of recognised by CysR. Noticeable differences include the much higher degree of conservation in the 5'region as well as in the spacing of the regions of 3 bp in every known instance.
Figure 6Relative . Strains CR031-035i to CR031-048i and CR032-035i to CR032-048i carrying different promoter fragments cloned in pRIM2 in front of a promoterless cat gene were grown in MMS minimal medium with limiting amounts of sulphur. Details of the A, B, Am5 or Am3 form of the cloned promoter fragments are shown in Fig. 4. After 30 min sulphur starvation, cells were harvested, total RNA was isolated, and the relative cat mRNA amounts were determined using real-time RT-PCR. The values are the means of at least two independent biological samples with two technical replicates each.
Relative expression levels of genes belonging to the regulons of McbR, SsuR, and/or CysR measured by real-time RT-PCR
| CDS | Name | Regulona | Function | mRNA ratio WT/CR030 | comparingb CR031/CR032 |
| McbR, CysR | Transcriptional activator of sulphonate(ester) utilisation | 32.9 | 12.8 | ||
| McbR | Transcriptional activator of assimilatory sulphate reduction | 0.61 | 0.76 | ||
| McbR | 1.5 | 1.0 | |||
| CysR* | Secreted protein of unknown function | 137.9 | 158.1 | ||
| McbR, SsuR | FMNH2-dependent aliphatic sulphonate monooxygenase | 186.8 | 1.3 | ||
| McbR, CysR | Putative secondary H+/Na+ symporter | 0.39 | 0.14 | ||
| McbR, CysR | Ferredoxin-sulphite reductase | 104.7 | 93.4 | ||
| McbR, CysR | Ferredoxin-NADP+ reductase | 21.6 | 8.8 | ||
| CysR* | Putative integral membrane protein | 0.0078 | 0.018 | ||
| McbR | Transcriptional repressor of sulphur metabolism | 0.97 | 0.88 | ||
| McbR, CysR | Conserved protein of unknown function | 99.0 | 22.9 |
a According to the studies of [7,15], and this study.
b Total RNA was isolated from C. glutamicum cultures grown in minimal medium with 2 mM L-cysteine as sole sulphur source to o.D.600 10 and then subjected to sulphur starvation for 30 min. Relative expression levels were measured for two independent replicates with at least three technical replicates each.
* predicted from microarray data and motif search.
Figure 7Schematic model of the transcriptional regulation of sulphate reduction in . The transcriptional repressor McbR acts as a top level regulator, controlling the transcription of its regulon in dependence of the effector S-adenosyl-L-homocysteine (SAH). Absence of SAH results in repression of gene transcription by active McbR while presence of SAH leads to inactivation of McbR. This allows at least basic transcription of all McbR-controlled genes, among them those encoding the regulatory proteins CysR and SsuR as well as those involved in assimilatory sulphate reduction (fpr2 cysIXHDNYZ). The second level of regulation is monitored by CysR that controls several genes in response to the availability of either O-acetyl-L-serine (OAS) or O-acetyl-L-homoserine (OAH), activating at least five transcription units while repressing two others. Among the controlled genes are those needed for assimilatory sulphate reduction, the one encoding the transcriptional regulator SsuR, and several genes of unknown function. Transcriptional regulators are represented by circles and effector metabolites are given as diamonds. Genes are displayed as boxes with transcriptional activation marked with arrows and repression marked with dashes.
Bacterial strains and plasmids
| Name | Relevant genotype/informationa | Source/reference |
| F- | [ | |
| ER2566 | F- | New England Biolabs |
| ATCC 13032 | Wild type, NxR | ATCCb |
| CR030 | Δ | this study |
| CR031 | this study | |
| CR032 | this study | |
| CR031-035i | CR031 with integrated pCR035i, KmR | this study |
| CR031-036i | CR031 with integrated pCR036i, KmR | this study |
| CR031-037i | CR031 with integrated pCR037i, KmR | this study |
| CR031-038i | CR031 with integrated pCR038i, KmR | this study |
| CR031-039i | CR031 with integrated pCR039i, KmR | this study |
| CR031-040i | CR031 with integrated pCR040i, KmR | this study |
| CR031-041i | CR031 with integrated pCR041i, KmR | this study |
| CR031-042i | CR031 with integrated pCR042i, KmR | this study |
| CR031-043i | CR031 with integrated pCR043i, KmR | this study |
| CR031-044i | CR031 with integrated pCR044i, KmR | this study |
| CR031-045i | CR031 with integrated pCR045i, KmR | this study |
| CR031-046i | CR031 with integrated pCR046i, KmR | this study |
| CR031-047i | CR031 with integrated pCR047i, KmR | this study |
| CR031-048i | CR031 with integrated pCR048i, KmR | this study |
| CR032-035i | CR032 with integrated pCR035i, KmR | this study |
| CR032-036i | CR032 with integrated pCR036i, KmR | this study |
| CR032-037i | CR032 with integrated pCR037i, KmR | this study |
| CR032-038i | CR032 with integrated pCR038i, KmR | this study |
| CR032-039i | CR032 with integrated pCR039i, KmR | this study |
| CR032-040i | CR032 with integrated pCR040i, KmR | this study |
| CR032-041i | CR032 with integrated pCR041i, KmR | this study |
| CR032-042i | CR032 with integrated pCR042i, KmR | this study |
| CR032-043i | CR032 with integrated pCR043i, KmR | this study |
| CR032-044i | CR032 with integrated pCR044i, KmR | this study |
| CR032-045i | CR032 with integrated pCR045i, KmR | this study |
| CR032-046i | CR032 with integrated pCR046i, KmR | this study |
| CR032-047i | CR032 with integrated pCR047i, KmR | this study |
| CR032-048i | CR032 with integrated pCR048i, KmR | this study |
| Plasmids | ||
| pK18 | [ | |
| pRIM2 | promoterless | [ |
| pTYB1 | ApR, carrying an intein-coupled chitin binding domain | New England Biolabs |
| pCR030d | pK18 | this study |
| pCR031d | pK18 | this study |
| pCR032d | pK18 | this study |
| pCR033d | pK18 | this study |
| pCR034d | pK18 | this study |
| pCR035i | pRIM2 carrying P | this study |
| pCR036i | pRIM2 carrying P | this study |
| pCR037i | pRIM2 carrying P | this study |
| pCR038i | pRIM2 carrying P | this study |
| pCR039i | pRIM2 carrying P | this study |
| pCR040i | pRIM2 carrying P | this study |
| pCR041i | pRIM2 carrying P | this study |
| pCR042i | pRIM2 carrying P | this study |
| pCR043i | pRIM2 carrying P | this study |
| pCR044i | pRIM2 carrying P | this study |
| pCR045i | pRIM2 carrying P | this study |
| pCR046i | pRIM2 carrying P | this study |
| pCR047i | pRIM2 carrying P | this study |
| pCR048i | pRIM2 carrying P | this study |
| pCR050 | pTYB1 carrying a | this study |
a r superscript indicates resistance. Nx, Nalidixic acid; Km, Kanamycin
b ATCC; American Type Culture Collection, Rockville, MD
c the postfix del indicates inserts used for targeted gene deletion.
d the postfix const indicates inserts used for promoter replacement