| Literature DB >> 23028612 |
Jacob P Bitoun1, Sumei Liao, Xin Yao, Gary G Xie, Zezhang T Wen.
Abstract
The Rex repressor has been implicated in regulation of central carbon and energy metabolism in gram-positive bacteria. We have previously shown that Streptococcus mutans, the primary causative agent of dental caries, alters its transcriptome upon Rex-deficiency and renders S. mutans to have increased susceptibility to oxidative stress, aberrations in glucan production, and poor biofilm formation. In this study, we showed that rex in S. mutans is co-transcribed as an operon with downstream guaA, encoding a putative glutamine amidotransferase. Electrophoretic mobility shift assays showed that recombinant Rex bound promoters of target genes avidly and specifically, including those down-regulated in response to Rex-deficiency, and that the ability of recombinant Rex to bind to selected promoters was modulated by NADH and NAD(+). Results suggest that Rex in S. mutans can function as an activator in response to intracellular NADH/NAD(+) level, although the exact binding site for activator Rex remains unclear. Consistent with a role in oxidative stress tolerance, hydrogen peroxide challenge assays showed that the Rex-deficient mutant, TW239, and the Rex/GuaA double mutant, JB314, were more susceptible to hydrogen peroxide killing than the wildtype, UA159. Relative to UA159, JB314 displayed major defects in biofilm formation, with a decrease of more than 50-fold in biomass after 48-hours. Collectively, these results further suggest that Rex in S. mutans regulates fermentation pathways, oxidative stress tolerance, and biofilm formation in response to intracellular NADH/NAD(+) level. Current effort is being directed to further investigation of the role of GuaA in S. mutans cellular physiology.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 23028612 PMCID: PMC3441419 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0044766
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Bacterial strains and plasmids used in this study.
| Strains/plasmids | Major properties | References |
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| wildtype, serotype c |
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| UA159 derivative, Δ |
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| TW239 carrying rex in pDL278, Kanr, Sp |
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| UA159 derivative, Δ | This study |
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| TW263 carrying | This study |
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| UA159 derivative, Δ | This study |
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| JB314 complemented with | This study |
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| JB314 complemented with | This study |
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| Cloning host, Δ | Invitrogen |
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| Expression strain, carrying pRep4, Kanr | Qiagen, Inc. |
| pDL278 | Shuttle vector, Spr |
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| pQE30 | Expression vector, AmpR | Qiagen, Inc. |
Note: Kanr, Spr, and Ampr are kanamycin, spectinomycin and ampicillin resistant, respectively.
Primers used in this study.
| Name | Nucleotide Sequence | Applications |
| Rex-Fw | Forward, | RT-PCR analysis |
| GuaA-Rv | Reverse, | RT-PCR analysis |
| 148Fw | Forward, | Rex-binding site #1 oligo |
| 148Rv | Reverse, | Rex-binding site #1 oligo |
| m148Fw | Forward, | Mutation of Rex-binding site #1 oligo |
| m148Rv | Reverse, | Mutation of Rex-binding site #1 oligo |
| 140Fw | Forward, | 20 bp oligo within |
| 140Rev | Reverse, | 20 bp oligo within |
| 1363cFw | Forward, | 18 bp oligo within |
| 1363cRev | Reverse, | 18 bp oligo within |
| p1053Fw | Forward, |
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| p1053Rev | Reverse, |
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| p148Fw | Forward, |
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| p148Rev | Reverse, |
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| p1410Fw | Forward, |
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| p1410Rev | Reverse, |
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| p1363Fw | Forward, |
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| p1363Rev | Reverse, |
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| p140Fw | Forward, |
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| p140Rev | Reverse, |
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| p1115Fw | Forward, |
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| p1115Rev | Reverse, |
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| 1054 55′ | Forward, | PCR of region 5′ to |
| 1054 53′RI | Reverse, | PCR of region 5′ to |
| 1054 35′RI | Forward, | PCR of region 3′ to |
| 1053 53′ Bm | Reverse, | PCR for |
| 1054 35′ Hd | Forward, | PCR for |
| 1053comp-5RI | Forward, | PCR of |
| 1053comp-3Bm | Reverse, | PCR of |
| 1054comp-5Bm | Forward, | PCR of |
| 1054comp-3Hd | Reverse, | PCR of |
| 5′-1053 | Forward, | For Rex expression |
| 3′-1053 | Reverse, | For Rex expression |
| Biotin- | Forward, | “Hot” Oligo for Chemiluminescent EMSA |
| adhE1 Fw | Forward, | “Cold” Oligo for Chemiluminescent EMSA |
| adhE1 Rev | Reverse, | “Cold” Oligo for Chemiluminescent EMSA |
| 1053 55′ | Forward, | PCR for |
| 1054 33′ | Reverse, | PCR for |
Figure 1Schematic diagram of the rex flanking region and transcriptional analysis of the rex operon.
(A) Schematic diagram of regions flanking rex, with the arrows indicating the direction of transcription and the numbers above indicating the sizes of the respective open reading frames in base pairs. Gene assignments and gene numbers above the diagram are based on Oralgen annotation. (B) RT-PCR analysis of rex operon. Following reverse transcription with iScriptase using primer GuaA-Rv, PCR amplification was performed with the primers Rex-Fw and GuaA-Rv, with RT products with and without iScriptase and genomic DNA as a positive control. Panel shows agarose gel electrophoresis of the PCR products. Lanes M, 1, 2, and 3 are MW marker, RT-PCR product, negative control without RT, and positive control with gDNA as a template. (C) EMSA analysis shows interaction of rex promoter with recombinant Rex. Inclusion of rRex resulted in mobility shift and such interaction was concentration-dependent. (D) Alignment of promoter regions of selected genes identified in TW239 that contain putative Rex binding sites. −10 and −35 regions as determined by BPROM program are in bold faces and putative Rex-binding sites are underlined or double-underlined in case where more than one site is identified. Positions of these elements were shown in numbers relative to start codon ATG of the respective genes. Consensus sequence was the conserved Rex-binding sites identified in B. subtilis and S. aureus. (E) Alignment of the putative and proven Rex-binding sites of the up-regulated genes in TW239. Promoters were scanned and aligned to the consensus Rex-binding site from S. aureus and B. subtilis. The indentified nucleotide sequences were then subjected to analysis using WebLogo (University of California, Berkeley) to generate the S. mutans consensus. Results showed that the Rex-binding site in S. mutans possesses more variability in the nucleotide composition than the other model organisms.
Figure 2EMSA analysis with selected promoters.
Promoters of selected genes were mixed with rRex and the impact of the presence of Rex on mobility was visualized via SYBR Gold staining. Data presented here show that rRex specifically binds the promoters of adhE (A), frdC (B), gshR (C), tpn (D), and ldh (E), respectively, and when added at different concentrations, causes mobility shift as a result of formation of rRex-promoter complexes.
Figure 3rRex binding with and without the inclusion of NAD+ and NADH.
(A) rRex interactions with the promoter of gshR in the presence of 10 mM NAD+ or 10 mM NADH. The binding affinity between rRex and the gshR promoter is enhanced in the presence of NAD+ while the presence of NADH inhibits complex formation. (B) rRex interactions with the promoter of frdC in the presence of 10 mM NAD+ or 10 mM NADH. At low concentrations, rRex binds better to the repressor site of frdC when compared to gshR (A). Inclusion of NAD+ did not change the mobility pattern; however, NADH causes the complex to dissociate.
Figure 4In vitro reconstitution of Rex with NAD+ and NADH.
(A) The UV-Vis spectra of rRex after purification (light line). Incubation of rRex with 20-fold excess NADH (dark line) overnight at 4°C generates a different UV-Vis spectrum with a spectral peak at 340 nm, indicative of NADH binding to rRex. (B) SDS-PAGE after rRex reconstitution with either NAD+ or NADH verifies the presence of rRex. (C) EMSA analysis with the adhE promoter with NAD+-loaded (lane 2) and NADH-loaded (lane 3) rRex, or rRex as a negative control (lane 1). No additional NAD+ or NADH was included in the EMSA reactions.
RealTime-PCR analysis of selected genes.
| Gene name | Locus | Description and putative function | UA159 | TW239 | Fold-change |
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| 16S rRNA | rRNA-16S | 16S ribosome RNA | 5.88E+07 | 5.68E+07 | −1.04 | 0.62 |
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| SMU.1410 | Fumarate reductase | 7.16E+04 | 2.45E+05 | 3.46 | 0.001 |
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| SMU.127 | Acetoin dehydrogenase | 3.32E+06 | 9.04E+06 | 2.72 | 0.05 |
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| SMU.137 | Malolactic enzyme | 8.32E+05 | 1.48E+05 | −5.61 | 0.05 |
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| SMU.138 | Malate permease | 2.69E+05 | 3.27E+04 | −8.24 | 0.05 |
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| SMU.1001 | DNA processing protein | 1.50E+03 | 2.49E+03 | 1.67 | 0.02 |
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| SMU.838 | Glutathione reductase | 2.00E+05 | 8.04E+04 | −2.49 | 0.05 |
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| SMU.140 | Glutathione reductase | 8.72E+08 | 4.44E+07 | −19.64 | 0.01 |
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| SMU.1117c | NADH oxidase (H2O forming) | 6.08E+05 | 2.80E+05 | −2.67 | 0.01 |
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| SMU.764 | Alkyl hydroperoxide reductase (C) | 7.75E+05 | 4.17E+05 | −1.86 | 0.01 |
Note:
Description and putative function of the selected genes are based upon the published S. mutans database.
, The levels of expression are presented as copy numbers of the respective transcripts per µg of total RNA.
, Fold-change is defined as level of expression in the Rex-deficient mutant TW239 relative to those of the wildtype UA159, with a – representing down-regulation.
Figure 5End-point pH analysis and acid killing.
(A) Panel shows results of End-point pH analysis of S. mutans wildtype, UA159 and mutants deficient of Rex (TW239), GuaA (TW263) and both Rex and GuaA (JB314) grown in BM with glucose (18 mM) and sucrose (2 mM) under aerobic (grey bars) and anaerobic conditions (open bars), with * and # indicating significant differences between the wildtype and the particular mutants under the same conditions at a level of P<0.05 and P<0.001, respectively. Rex-deficiency increases the final resting pH, especially under aerobic conditions. (B) Panel illustrates survival rates of UA159 (diamond), TW239 (square), TW263 (triangle) and JB314 (circle) after acid -killing at pH 2.8 for 45 minutes. Symbols *, indicating significant difference between UA159 and JB314 at the level of P<0.01. The Rex/GuaA double mutant is approximately 2-logs more susceptible to acid than UA159.
Figure 6Hydrogen peroxide killing and methyl viologen challenge assays.
(A) Panel shows survival rates of S. mutans UA159 (diamonds), TW239 (squares), TW263 (triangles) and JB314 (circles) biofilms after hydrogen peroxide treatment for 90 minutes at room temperature. Biofilms were grown in 50 mL tubes on sterile glass slides in BMGS. Symbols # and * indicate differences between UA159 and the particular mutant at significant level of P<0.01 and 0.001, respectively. (B) Panel B shows growth curves of S. mutans strain grown in BHI in the presence of 10 mM methyl viologen (also paraquat). Strain labels are the same as in panel (A).
Figure 7Biofilm analysis by confocal laser scanning microscope.
S. mutans biofilms were grown anaerobically on hydroxylapatite discs in 12-well plates in BM medium supplemented with 10 mM sucrose for 48 hours. Following proper staining using LIVE/DEAD BacLight fluorescent dye, biofilms were subjected to optical dissection using an Olympus laser scanning confocal microscope. Images were taken at 600× using a water immersion objective. Post-acquisition analyses were performed using SLIDEBOOK 5.0 (Olympus) and COMSTAT 2.0. Data presented here are representative xyz, xz and yz images (512×512) of UA159, TW239, TW263 and JB314 from more than three independent experiments.