| Literature DB >> 25187417 |
Jolanta Godziszewska, Anna Kulińska, Grażyna Jagura-Burdzy.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The IncU conjugative transfer module represents highly efficient promiscuous system widespread among conjugative plasmids of different incompatibility groups. Despite its frequent occurrence the mechanisms of relaxosome formation/action are far from understood. Here we analyzed the putative transfer auxiliary protein MobC of the conjugative plasmid RA3 from the IncU incompatibility group.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25187417 PMCID: PMC4175270 DOI: 10.1186/s12866-014-0235-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Microbiol ISSN: 1471-2180 Impact factor: 3.605
Figure 1Organization of the RA3 conjugative transfer module. A. Transcriptional organization of the RA3 conjugative transfer module with orfs labeled according to the predicted function in the conjugation process: light grey arrows indicate homologs of Mpf system, dark grey arrows indicate proteins presumably involved in DNA replication and transfer (Dtr), and the black one marks a homolog of coupling protein VirD4. B. DNA sequence of mobCp/oriT/parS region between 9400 and 9869 nt of RA3 coordinates [GenBank: DQ401103]. Thin arrows correspond to primers used in the construction of deletion derivatives by PCR. Putative promoter motifs are boxed, and putative regulatory sequences are indicated by arrows. The inverted repeat IR-SnaBI is a part of the centromere-like sequence as the binding site for partitioning protein KorB (OB) [43]. Highly conserved nick site is circled and the ribosome binding site and initiation codon for MobC are in bold. The oligonucleotides tested as oriTs (61 nt and 45 nt) are shown.
Figure 2Amino acid sequence of MobC protein from RA3 (IncU). A. Ribbon-helix-helix (RHH) motifs of the plasmid proteins involved in conjugative transfer or stable maintenance: TraY of F [Uniprot:P06627]; ParG of TP228 [Uniprot: Q70W75], CopG of Streptococcus plasmid pLS1 [Uniprot:P13920], TrwA of R388 [Uniprot: Q04229], Omega of pSM19035 [Uniprot: Q83UM6], MbeC of ColE1 [Uniprot: P13657] and NikA of R64 [Uniprot: Q79VV8]. The numbers in brackets correspond to the first amino acid residue of RHH motif. Similar residues in seven to nine representatives are shadowed in white on black, those similar in four to six representatives are shadowed grey. B. MobC family of putative conjugative auxiliary proteins from the IncU plasmids (due to the high similarity only MobC of RA3 is shown as the representative of IncU group) [GenBank: ABD64841] and PromA groups (Orf15 of pSB102 [GenBank: NP_361029], MobC of pTer331 [GenBank: YP_001672038] and MobC of pMRAD02 [GenBank: ACB28263]. Putative RHH motif and a highly conserved “mobilization protein motif” are shown. Similar residues in three or four representatives are shadowed in white on black, those similar in two are shadowed grey. Black arrows mark the C-termini of truncated MobCs analyzed in this work.
Plasmids used in this study
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| pBBR1MCS-1 | BHR1, IncA/C | Medium | [ |
| pBGS18 |
| High | [ |
| pET28a |
| Medium | Novagen |
| pGBT30 |
| High | [ |
| pJSB1.24 |
| High | [ |
| pKGB4 | pUT18 with MCS modified | High | Głąbski K.2 |
| pKGB5 | pKNT25 with MCS modified | Medium | Głąbski K.2 |
| pKNT25 |
| Medium | [ |
| pKT25 |
| Medium | [ |
| pKT25-zip |
| Medium | [ |
| pLKB2 | pKT25 with MCS modified | Medium | Kusiak L.2 |
| pLKB4 | pUT18C with MCS modified | High | Kusiak L.2 |
| pMPB13.3 |
| Low | Przyłuski M.2 |
| pMPB13.4 |
| Low | Przyłuski M.2 |
| pPT01 |
| Medium | [ |
| RA3 | BHR1, IncU, CmR , SmR , SuR | Low | Hayes F.3 |
| pUC18 |
| High | [ |
| pUT18 |
| High | [ |
| pUT18C |
| High | [ |
| pUT18C-zip |
| High | [ |
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| pJSB2.1 | pUC18- | ||
| pJSB2.2 | pUC18- | ||
| pJSB2.9 | pUC18- | ||
| pJSB2.11 | pUC18 with 116 bp SphI-BamHI PCR fragment amplified by PCR with the use of primers #6 and #8 (RA3 coordinates 9736-9852 nt) | ||
| pJSB2.12 | pUC18 with 116 bp SphI-BamHI PCR fragment amplified by PCR with the use of primers #5 and #8 (RA3 coordinates 9736-9852 nt), mutation in a putative | ||
| pJSB2.13 | pUC18 with 100 bp SphI-BamHI PCR fragment amplified with the use of primers #5 and #4 (RA3 coordinates 9736-9836 nt), mutation in a putative | ||
| pJSB2.14 | pUC18 with 100 bp SphI-BamHI PCR fragment amplified with the use of primers #6 and #4 (RA3 coordinates 9736-9836 nt) | ||
| pJSB2.15 | PCR mutagenesis of pJSB2.9 with the use of primers #9 and #10 (mutVI) | ||
| pJSB2.16 | PCR mutagenesis of pJSB2.9 with the use of primers #13 and #14 (mutVII) | ||
| pJSB2.17 | PCR mutagenesis of pJSB2.9 with the use of primers #11 and #12 (mutVIII) | ||
| pJSB2.18 | PCR mutagenesis of pJSB2.9 with the use of primers #15 and #16 (mutIX) | ||
| pJSB2.30 | pUC18 | ||
| pJSB2.43 | pUC18 with 61 bp oligonucleotides (primer #19 and #20), oligonucleotides are inserted in SmaI site in of pUC18 | ||
| pJSB2.44 | pJSB2.43 digested by NheI and EcoRI, blunt-ended with the use of Klenow fragment and self-ligated, to remove IRIV | ||
| pJSB2.55 | pJSB2.44 | ||
| pJSB2.56 | pJSB2.44 | ||
| pJSB2.57 | pJSB2.55 | ||
| pJSB2.58 | pJSB2.56 | ||
| pJSB4.1 | pBBR1MCS-1 | ||
| pJSB4.2 | pBBR1MCS-1 | ||
| pJSB5.1 | pGBT30 | ||
| pJSB5.2 | pGBT30 | ||
| pJSB6.1 | pET28a T7 | ||
| pJSB6.2 | pET28a T7 | ||
| pJSB6.30 | pET28a T7 | ||
| pJSB7.9 | pPT0I | ||
| pJSB7.10 | pPT0I | ||
| pJSB7.11 | pPT0I | ||
| pJSB7.12 | pPT0I | ||
| pJSB7.13 | pPT0I | ||
| pJSB7.14 | pPT0I | ||
| pJSB7.15 | pPT0I | ||
| pJSB7.16 | pPT0I | ||
| pJSB7.17 | pPT0I | ||
| pJSB7.18 | pPT0I | ||
| pJSB8.1 | pLKB4 | ||
| pJSB8.30 | pJSB8.1 digested by ClaI and self-ligated to remove 3′ end of | ||
| pJSB9.1 | pKGB4 | ||
| pJSB10.1 | pLKB2 | ||
| pJSB10.2 | pLKB2 | ||
| pJSB11.1 | pKGB5 | ||
1BHR-broad-host-range.
2Institute of Biochemistry and Biophysics, Department of Microbial Biochemistry, Polish Academy of Sciences.
3Faculty of Life Sciences and Manchester Interdisciplinary Biocentre, The University of Manchester, Manchester, UK.
Figure 3Deletion mapping of MobC binding site in the region. A. Schematic representation of deletion and point mutation derivatives. Coordinates of RA3 fragments used in the analysis and structural motifs identified in the region are shown. Sequences of modified motifs (nick site and IR2b) are shown with the modifications underlined and in bold. B. MobC regulation of mobCp in vivo. DH5α strains carrying pJSB7.9 (mobC xylE) or mobCp mutant derivatives (labeled according to scheme A) were transformed with empty expression vector pGBT30 or with pJSB5.1 tacp-mobC. Diagram presents XylE activities assayed in extracts of the various double transformants relative to the XylE activity detected in extract of control strain DH5α(pJSB7.9)(pGBT30). Light grey bars correspond to the results obtained for the double transformants with derivatives of pPT01 and the empty vector pGBT30, dark grey bars demonstrate results obtained for thestrains with the same pPT01 derivatives but with pJSB5.1 tacp-mobC. Mean values with standard deviation of at least three assays are shown. C. DH5α(RA3) strain was transformed with pPT01 derivatives carrying deletion variants of mobCp region. Double transformants were used as donors in conjugation with DH5α RifR strain as the recipient. The frequency of mobilization is indicated on a semi-logarithmic scale as the number of transconjugants/donor cells, where vector corresponds to empty pPT01, wt to pJSB7.9, and roman numerals to the mutants presented in panel A. Mean values with standard deviation of at least three experiments are shown.
Figure 4Modifications of MobC operator. A. Scheme of PCR site-directed modifications in mobCp region. Sequences of modified motifs (IR3 and IR4) are shown with the modifications underlined and in bold. Mutant alleles (mutVI-IX) were PCR-amplified and analyzed in EMSA (panel B), cloned into promoter-probe vector pPT01 upstream of xylE cassette (panel C and D). B. DNA binding activity of MobC in vitro. Two picomoles of 417-bp DNA fragments amplified by PCR on templates shown in panel A were incubated with 0 to 20 picomoles of His-tagged MobC in 20 μl of binding buffer at 37°C for 15 minutes. The complexes were separated on 1.2% agarose gels run in 1xTBE and visualized by ethidium bromide staining. The bottom panel refers to EMSA of MobC with unspecific DNA fragment, PCR-amplified klcAp of RA3 (coordinates 2336-2704 nt). C. MobC regulation of mobCp derivatives in vivo. DH5α strains carrying pJSB7.9 (wt 417 bp fragment) or its mutant derivatives (labeled according to panel A) were transformed with empty vector pGBT30 (light grey bars) or pJSB5.1 tacp-mobC (dark grey bars). Diagram presents XylE activities in extracts of the double transformants relative to the XylE activity detected in extract of DH5α(pJSB7.9)(pGBT30) strain. Mean values with standard deviation of at least three assays are shown. D. DH5α (RA3) strain was transformed with pPT01 derivatives carrying substitution mutant variants of mobCp region. Double transformants were used as donors in conjugation with DH5α RifR strain as the recipient. The frequency of mobilization is indicated on a semi-logarithmic scale as the number of transconjugants/donor cell, where vector corresponds to empty pPT01, wt to pJSB7.9 (mobCp-xylE), and roman numerals to the mutants presented in panel A. Mean values with standard deviation of at least three experiments are shown.
Figure 5MobC C-terminus is required for oligomerization but not DNA binding. A. Bacterial two-hybrid system in vivo. The mobC orf was cloned into two sets of BACTH vectors to be linked with CyaA fragments by N-or C-terminus. Photographs document the ability to ferment maltose by double transformants of BTH101cyaA strain with plasmid encoding CyaA fragments linked to N-termini of MobC derivatives. The pLKB2 and pLKB4 represent modified empty BACTH vectors pKT25 and pUT18C, respectively. Similar results were obtained for plasmids encoding CyaA fragments linked to C- termini of MobC derivatives (data not shown). B. Glutaraldehyde cross-linking in vitro. His-tagged MobC derivatives (0.1 mg ml-1) were incubated with increasing concentrations of glutaraldehyde (0.001%, 0.005% and 0.01%). The complexes were separated on 20% polyacrylamide gels by SDS-PAGE, transferred onto a nitrocellulose membrane and visualized byWestern blotting with anti-His tag antibodies. Bands corresponding to monomeric (m), dimeric (d) and terameric (t) form of the MobC variants analyzed are marked. The protein migrating faster than MobC1-129 is probably a degradation product. C. Regulation of mobCp by truncated MobC1-129. Allele mobC1-129 was cloned into pGBT30 under tacp (pJSB5.2) and introduced into DH5α(pJSB7.9) strain. The double transformant strains were grown without IPTG. The XylE activity is expressed relative to the activity detected in DH5α(pJSB7.9)(pGBT30) strain. DH5α(pJSB7.9)(pJSB5.1 tacp-mobC) strain was used as the control. Mean values with standard deviation of at least three assays are shown. D. DNA binding by MobC1-129 in vitro. Two picomoles of 417-bp DNA fragment containing mobCp were incubated with increasing quantities (0 to 20 picomoles) of His-tagged MobC derivatives in 20 μl of binding buffer at 37°C for 15 minutes. The complexes were separated on 1.2% agarose gels run in 1xTBE and visualized by ethidium bromide staining.
Figure 6MobC influence on efficiency of self-transmission of plasmids with RA3 conjugative module. A. DNA binding of MobC in vitro. Plasmid DNAs of pJSB2.43 (61 nt insert with OM) and pJSB2.44 (45 nt insert without OM) were digested by PvuII and incubated with different amounts of His6-MobC in 20 μl of binding buffer at 37°C for 15 minutes (0-20 pmoles). The complexes were separated on 1% agarose gels run in 1xTBE and visualized by ethidium bromide staining. Fragment 2364 nt corresponds to “unspecific” vector DNA, small fragments in both plasmid DNAs contain oriT RA3 with OM (383 nt) or without MobC binding site (367 nt). B. Schematic presentation of tested vectors carrying the RA3 conjugative module with mobCp substituted by lacI q tacp (no OM). Dark grey regions correspond to the contiguous TraRA3 region and light grey parts indicate korCp-korC fragment from RA3 maintenance module. Black regions show mobC-nic or nic genes under tac promoter control. The 45 nt oriT RA3 is indicated by black rectangular. Restriction sites used during construction of pJSB2.57 and pJSB2.58 are listed. Numbers in brackets correspond to RA3 coordinates. C. The effect of MobC presence on the conjugation frequency. The strains: DH5α(pUC18), DH5α(pJSB2.57), DH5α(pJSB2.58)(pBBR1MCS-1), DH5α(pJSB2.58)(pJSB4.1) and DH5α(pJSB2.58)(pJSB4.2) served as donors in conjugation with the recipient strain DH5α RifR. Conjugation frequency is indicated on the semilogarithmic scale as the number of transconjugants per total number of donor cells. Mean values with standard deviation of at least three experiments are shown.
Figure 7The regions from RA3 of the IncU group and PromA plasmids. Alignment of DNA sequences of the mobCp/oriT region of RA3 ( [GenBank: DQ401103] coordinates 9703 – 9837 nt), pMRAD02 ([GenBank: CP001003.1]; coordinates 40344–40226) pSB102 ([GenBank: NC_003122]; coordinates 11373 – 11494 nt), pMOL98 ([GenBank; FJ 666348]; coordinates 45941 – 45808 nt), pIPO2 ([GenBank: NC_003213]; coordinates 11035 – 11167 nt) and pTer331 ([GenBank: EU 315244]; coordinates 10744 – 10877 nt). Identical nucleotides in all six plasmids are in white on black, those identical in three to five representatives shadowed grey. Putative promoter sequences and regulatory motifs are marked above the RA3 and below the PromA plasmid sequences. Black arrows indicate MobC binding site in RA3 identified in this work, grey arrows correspond to the arms of palindromes IR2 (GC-rich, conserved in PromA group) and IR3. Putative operators for auxiliary proteins in PromA plasmids are underlined and in italics. Start codons for homologs of MobC are in bold and italics.