| Literature DB >> 27010837 |
Travis A Witkowski1, Alison N Grice1, DeAnna B Stinnett1, Whitney K Wells1, Megan A Peterson1, Janelle M Hare1.
Abstract
In many bacteria, the DNA damage response induces genes (SOS genes) that were repressed by LexA. LexA represses transcription by binding to SOS promoters via a helix-turn-helix motif in its N-terminal domain (NTD). Upon DNA damage, LexA cleaves itself and allows induction of transcription. In Acinetobacter baumannii and Acinetobacter baylyi, multiple genes are induced by DNA damage, and although the Acinetobacter genus lacks LexA, a homolog of the error-prone polymerase subunit UmuD, called UmuDAb, regulates some DNA damage-induced genes. The mechanism of UmuDAb regulation has not been determined. We constructed UmuDAb mutant strains of A. baylyi to test whether UmuDAb mediates gene regulation through LexA-like repressor actions consisting of relief of repression through self-cleavage after DNA damage. Real-time quantitative PCR experiments in both a null umuDAb mutant and an NTD mutant showed that the DNA damage-inducible, UmuDAb-regulated gene ddrR was highly expressed even in the absence of DNA damage. Protein modeling identified a potential LexA-like helix-turn-helix structure in the UmuDAb NTD, which when disrupted, also relieved ddrR and umuDAb repression under non-inducing conditions. Mutations in a putative SOS box in the shared umuDAb-ddrR promoter region similarly relieved these genes' repression under non-inducing conditions. Conversely, cells possessing a cleavage-deficient UmuDAb were unable to induce gene expression after MMC-mediated DNA damage. This evidence of a UmuDAb repressor mechanism was contrasted with the failure of umuDAb to complement an Escherichia coli umuD mutant for UmuD error-prone DNA replication activity. Similarly, A. baumannii null umuDAb mutant cells did not have a reduced UmuD'2UmuC-mediated mutation rate after DNA damage, suggesting that although this UmuDAb protein may have evolved from a umuDC operon in this genus, it now performs a LexA-like repressor function for a sub-set of DNA damage-induced genes.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27010837 PMCID: PMC4807011 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0152013
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Bacterial strains and plasmids used in this study.
| Strain or plasmid | Description or genotype | Source/Reference |
|---|---|---|
| AB1157 | P. Beuning | |
| 315 | P. Beuning | |
| ADP1 | This study | |
| ACIAD2729 | [ | |
| ACIAD2730 | [ | |
| JHTW1 | This study | |
| JHKW1 | This study | |
| JHDS1 | This study | |
| JHTW2 | This study | |
| JHDT1 | This study | |
| JHMP1 | This study | |
| JH100 | This study | |
| JH101 | This study | |
| JH102 | This study | |
| JH103 | This study | |
| JH104 | This study | |
| 17978 | ATCC | |
| 17978 Δ | [ | |
| 17978 | This study | |
| pGEM®-T Easy | TA cloning vector; AmpR | Promega |
| pTW1 | This study | |
| pIX3.0 | Expression vector; AmpR | Qiagen |
| pIX2b | pIX2; pIX3.0 carrying | [ |
| pIX2AtoY | pIX2 bearing site directed mutation of | [ |
| pIX2bˊ | pIX3.0 carrying | This study |
| pIXUDEC | pIX3.0 carrying | This study |
Oligonucleotide primers used in this study.
| Primer name | Purpose | Primer sequence |
|---|---|---|
| CL-N | Amplification from pTW1 to construct mutant strains | ATAGTGTTGGTATGATGCG |
| ToJH1Hd | Amplification from pTW1 to construct mutant strains | GACAAGCTTAGAGTTGAATA |
| TJ2b | JHTW1 ( | GTCCAGGCGATACAGCCCAA |
| TJ1 | JHKW1 ( | CATCAGCCCTCCTAACACAA |
| umuD’For | JHKW1 ( | GGTTTGCCATCACCTGCACA |
| CL0 | JHDS1 ( | AGCCAACTAAAGTCATTCG |
| CL10 | JHDS1 ( | TTTTCATCCGCCTAAAG |
| CLK | JHDS1 ( | TAACGCATAGGTTTCAGATTG |
| a118c-a119c_g122c_For | JHTW2 ( | CGAGTGCCAGAATCTCAGGTTGCTTTTATTCCGCCTTGGCTTTTAGATAAC |
| a118c-a119c_g122c_Rev | JHTW2 ( | GTTATCTAAAAGCCAAGGCGGAATAAAAGCAACCTGAGATTCTGGCACTCG |
| DSumuDfor | JHDT1 ( | TCTTATTGATTTTAATTCGGC |
| CL-4 | JHDT1 ( | CCTGCTTATGCAATGACAG |
| ExtraUDRev | JHDT1 ( | GCCTGGACTTTCAGTGC |
| To81Rev | JHDT1 ( | CTGAACGTATTTGATTGAGC |
| g70a | JHMP1 ( | CTGGACGTAAGGCCAAATACCAAAAGCCAACTAAAGT |
| g70 | JHMP1 ( | ACTTTAGTTGGCTTTTGGTATTTGGCCTTACGTCCAG |
| SDMFirF | JH100 promoter mutation construction | TTATCGTGCGTCTCTCAACGTTTGTAACGA |
| SDMFirR | JH100 promoter mutation construction | TCGTTACAAACGTTGAGAGACGCACGATAA |
| SDMPromIR2For | JH101 promoter mutation construction | TGAATTTGTAACGATGAGCTAGCAGATTATTTTAACTTG |
| SDMPromIR2Rev | JH101 promoter mutation construction | CAAGTTAAAATAATCTGCTAGCTCATCGTTACAAATTCA |
| SDMFir1AFor | JH102 promoter mutation construction | ATTATCGTGCGTCTCTTTGAATTTGTAACGA |
| SDMFir1ARev | JH102 promoter mutation construction | TCGTTACAAATTCAAAGAGACGCACGATAAT |
| SDMPstPromFor | JH103 promoter mutation construction | CTTGAATCTGCAGCGATTTCAAGTTAGATT |
| SDMPstPromRev | JH103 promoter mutation construction | GAAATCGCTGCAGATTCAAGTTGACGCACGATAA |
| SDMMidEndFor | JH104 promoter mutation construction | AATAATCTAACTTGGCGCACTTACAAATCAAGT |
| SDMMidEndRev | JH104 promoter mutation construction | ACTTGAATTTGTAAGTGCGCCAAGTTAGATTATT |
| 2731RTFor2 | JH100-JH104 promoter mutation construction | ACGATGGGCATGGATGAAGTGG |
| 17TJ1analog | 17978 | CATAATCGCCTCCATTTCAC |
| 17TJ1analogFor | 17978 | GGTTTCCCATCACCAGC |
| E.coliNHisumuDS | ACCCACGCGCATGTCGTAAAAAGCACCCAATTGTTTATCAAGCCTGC | |
| E.coliNHisumuDAS | CTTGGTTAGTTAGTTATTATCAGCGCATCGCCTTAACGA | |
| ddrR#RTFor | RT-qPCR on | ATACCGAACAAGCCGAGCAT |
| ddrR#2RTRev | RT-qPCR on | AGGCATGACTAAAGCCAGCA |
| umuDAb#RTFor | RT-qPCR on | GGAGCATGTCGAGCAGAGTC |
| umuDAb#2RTRev | RT-qPCR on | TCACCTGCTTTGGCCGTAAT |
| 0445RTFor | RT-qPCR on | ACCTGTACTCACTGATGGCG |
| 0445RTRev | RT-qPCR on | ACAGACCTCGTTTCGGATCA |
| ADP0724RTFor | RT-qPCR on | ATGACCGTCGTCGTACTCAC |
| ADP0724RTRev | RT-qPCR on | GCTGTGCAAATTCTTCGCCA |
| 16SrRNA#RTFor | RT-qPCR reference primer | CCACACTGGGACTGAGACAC |
| 16SrRNA#2RTRev | RT-qPCR reference primer | AACCAGGTAAGCCTCCTCCT |
Fig 1A. baylyi UmuDAb is required for repression of a sub-set of DNA damage-induced genes.
RT-qPCR experiments measured expression of the umuDAb-regulated ddrR gene (ACIAD2730), and the non-umuDAb regulated genes gst (ACIAD0445) and nrdA (ACIAD0724) in the ΔumuDAb mutant strain ACIAD2729. The transcription of each gene was induced by DNA damage incurred by growth in 2 μg/mL MMC-containing medium. Each gene was assayed in one RT-qPCR experiment (plate), with error bars indicating standard error of the mean from technical triplicates of biological triplicates. Each gene was significantly induced in the wild type ADP1 strain (p < 0.05 designated by *; p < 0.01 designated by **). However, deletion of umuDAb (in ACIAD2729) resulted in a significant difference in the transcription of ddrR in MMC vs no MMC treatment (p < 0.01, as measured by 2−ΔΔCT), but not in the transcription of either gst or nrdA (p > 0.05).
Fig 2Regulation of DNA damage-inducible ddrR and umuDAb expression by UmuDAb requires NTD and CTD actions.
RT-qPCR experiments measured gene expression, in the absence or presence of DNA damaging (2 μg/mL MMC) growth conditions, of (A) umuDAb (ACIAD2729) and (B) ddrR (ACIAD2730) in wild type ADP1 cells vs various umuDAb mutant strains). The specific type of mutant UmuDAb form is represented on the x-axes and comparable to each other in vertical alignment. Each gene was assayed in one RT-qPCR experiment (plate), with error bars indicating standard error of the mean from technical triplicates of biological triplicates. Statistical significance in a Student’s t-test is indicated by the symbol * for p values < 0.05, and by the symbol ** for p values < 0.01.
Fig 3Modeling of the N-terminal domains of LexA and UmuDAb monomers.
(A) The N-terminal 60 amino acids of E. coli LexA and A. baylyi UmuDAb, showing underlined alpha-helical regions predicted by the Predict Protein server [28]. In LexA, helices α1–3 span amino acids 8–20, 28–35, and 41–55 [25]. For UmuDAb, helices are predicted to form from amino acids 3–9, 22–29, and 36–46. (B) Predicted secondary structures of LexA and UmuDAb, showing alpha-helices 1–3 represented by red thin bars and beta sheets represented by thick yellow boxes; predicted by the Predict Protein server. (C) I-TASSER modeling of LexA and UmuDAb, oriented to align the NTDs (in blue shading) and showing the wing of the wHTH structures. The interdomain linker between the LexA NTD and CTD is extremely flexible [4] and is likely responsible for the variation between the two proteins’ total orientations. Arrows point to some of the amino acids in the LexA α2 helix and α3 recognition helix that are required for DNA binding [4], and the similarly located sites of directed mutations in UmuDAb.
Fig 4Mutation of potential operator site in umuDAb-ddrR promoter dysregulates UmuDAb-regulated gene expression.
(A) Underlined nucleotides are those previously identified as possible regulatory protein binding sites (an SOS box) in ADP1, due to their palindromic nature [11]. The numbering system represents the number of nucleotides upstream of the umuDAb coding region. Nucleotides -66 through -45 (similar but non-identical in A. baumannii) were identified as required for UmuDAb binding to A. baumannii DNA fragments in vitro [10]. Mutations in ADP1 mutant strains JH100-104 are represented in red boxes. RT-qPCR experiments measured ddrR (B) and umuDAb (C) expression in uninduced or induced (2 μg/mL MMC) wild type ADP1 vs mutant cells. Each gene was assayed in one RT-qPCR experiment (plate), with error bars indicating standard error of the mean from technical triplicates of biological triplicates. Statistical significance in a Student’s t-test is indicated by the symbol * for p values < 0.05, and by the symbol ** for p values < 0.01.
Fig 5DNA damage-induced mutagenesis experiments suggest that UmuDAb does not perform UmuD polymerase accessory function.
(A) DNA damage-induced mutagenesis (measured by, and represented as, the ratio of increased rifampin resistance observed in UV-treated vs untreated cells) was performed to assess whether umuDAb could complement an E. coli ΔumuD mutant. The E. coli ΔumuD772::kan strain 315 carried either: pIX3.0 (containing no DNA insert), pIX2b (pIX3.0 carrying A. baylyi umuDAb [20]), pIX2bˊ (pIX3.0 carrying A. baylyi umuDAbˊ (umuDAbΔ2–83), or pIXUDEC (pIX3.0 carrying E. coli umuD). Differences among strains were analyzed with a two-tailed, one-way Kruskal-Wallis ANOVA, followed by Dunn’s multiple comparisons post-test indicating significance denoted by * (p < 0.05 when compared to the vector carrying E. coli umuD). (B) No reduction in the induced rifampin resistance was observed in the presence of DNA damage in A. baumannii ΔumuDAb or umuDAbˊ (umuDAbΔ2–83) cells, relative to wild type cells (p < 0.05). Data are represented as the average of a minimum of four (panel A) or six (panel B) experiments with error bars representing the standard error of the mean.
Fig 6Model of amino acid motifs and domains required for UmuDAb-mediated gene repression and induction.
Results of gene expression studies with defined umuDAb mutants revealed specific amino acid motifs and protein regions required for repression (NTD) and induction (CTD) of DNA damage-inducible genes. The roles of A83-G84, S119 and K156 were established for UmuDAb self-cleavage previously [20].