Download Induction of light emission by luminescent bacteria treated with UV

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts

Cell culture wikipedia , lookup

Biofilm wikipedia , lookup

Flagellum wikipedia , lookup

Type three secretion system wikipedia , lookup

Chemotaxis wikipedia , lookup

Lipopolysaccharide wikipedia , lookup

Quorum sensing wikipedia , lookup

Transcript
J. Appl. Genet. 43(3), 2002, pp. 377-389
Induction of light emission by luminescent bacteria treated
with UV light and chemical mutagens
Agata CZY¯1, Konrad PLATA2, Grzegorz WÊGRZYN2,3
1
Laboratory of Molecular Biology (affiliated with the University of Gdañsk), Institute
of Biochemistry and Biophysics, Polish Academy of Sciences, Gdañsk, Poland
2
Department of Molecular Biology, University of Gdañsk, Gdañsk, Poland
3
Institute of Oceanology, Polish Academy of Sciences, Gdynia, Poland
Abstract. Intensity of light emission by luminescent bacteria in response to UV irradiation and chemical mutagens was tested. We demonstrated that luminescence of six
strains of marine bacteria (belonging to four species: Photobacterium leiognathi,
P. phosphoreum, Vibrio fischeri and V. harveyi) is significantly increased by UV irradiation relatively shortly after dilution of cultures. Such a stimulation of luminescence
was abolished in cells treated with chloramphenicol 15 min before UV irradiation, indicating that effective gene expression is necessary for UV-mediated induction of light
emission. These results suggest that stimulation of luminescence in UV-irradiated bacterial cells may operate independently of the quorum sensing regulation. A significant
induction of luminescence was also observed upon treatment of diluted cultures of all
investigated strains with chemical mutagens: sodium azide (SA),
2-methoxy-6-chloro-9-(3-(2-chloroethyl)aminopropylamino)acridine × 2HCl (ICR-191),
4-nitro-o-phenylenediamine (NPD), 4-nitroquinolone-N-oxide (NQNO), 2-aminofluorene (2-AF), and benzo[a]pyrene. These results support the proposal that genes involved in bioluminescence belong to the SOS regulon. The use of bacterial
luminescence systems in assays for detection of mutagenic compounds is discussed in
the light of this proposal.
Key
words:
bioluminescence, chemical mutagens, Photobacterium leiognathi,
Photobacterium phosphoreum, UV irradiation, Vibrio fischeri, Vibrio
harveyi.
Received: March 5, 2002. Accepted: May 20, 2002.
Correspondence: G. WÊGRZYN, Department of Molecular Biology, University of Gdañsk,
ul. K³adki 24, 80-822 Gdañsk, Poland, e-mail: [email protected]
378
A. Czy¿ et al.
Introduction
Light-emitting bacteria are the most abundant and widespread of luminescent organisms (MEIGHEN 1994). Most species of such bacteria live in marine environments (NEALSON 1978). It is well established that luminescent bacteria emit light
effectively only when they are at high cell density. This regulation is known as
quorum sensing (for a review see SWIFT et al. 1998). However, it has been reported that apart from this regulation, the expression of genes involved in bacterial
bioluminescence may be controlled by other factors. For example, production
of GroEL and GroES heat shock proteins, which is dependent on the activity
of the s32 factor (GROSSMAN et al. 1984), is involved in stimulation of Vibrio
fischeri luminescence (ULITZUR, KUHN 1988, ADAR et al. 1992, DOLAN,
GREENBERG 1992). When studied in E. coli cells, repression of lux operons from
luminescent marine bacteria, V. fischeri and V. harveyi, by the product of the lexA
gene has been reported (ULITZUR 1989, SHADEL et al. 1990, CZY¯ et al. 2000a).
LexA is a negative regulator of the SOS regulon, and RecA protein activation and
cleavage of the LexA repressor upon DNA damage result in SOS response induction (LITTLE, MOUNT 1982).
Despite suggestions presented previously (ULITZUR, WEISER 1981, WEISER
et al. 1981), it has not been determined whether lux genes of other luminescent
bacteria belong to the SOS regulon, and whether quorum sensing and repression
by the LexA protein operate independently or these two regulatory systems control expression of lux genes cooperatively. Therefore, in this work we aimed to answer these questions by determining the efficiency of light emission by several
strains of luminescent marine bacteria after UV irradiation of diluted cultures.
Significant UV-mediated induction of luminescence in diluted cultures
of V. harveyi was observed previously (CZY¯ et al. 2000a). However, those observations were made after dilution of dense cultures and further long cultivation of
bacteria until their luminescence was minimal. Since shortly after dilution of
a dense culture there is still a significant amount of luciferase and its substrate in
cells and a weak production of autoinducers may occur, light emission decreases
gradually. As cell density increases, production of autoinducers also increases.
Therefore, after reaching a minimum, the efficiency of light emission per cell increases again (for reviews see MEIGHEN 1994, SWIFT et al. 1998). When effects of
UV irradiation are measured at the minimal intensity of luminescence, the influence of the quorum sensing regulation is negligible (CZY¯ et al. 2000a).
Repression of the lux operons by LexA (ULITZUR 1989, SHADEL et al. 1990,
CZY¯ et al. 2000a) indicates that bacterial luminescence can be enhanced under
stress conditions that cause DNA damage. Some previous reports suggested that
this may be the case indeed (ULITZUR, WEISER 1981, WEISER et al. 1981). Therefore, we investigated the intensity of bacterial luminescence in the presence of different chemical mutagens.
Induction of luminescence by mutagens
379
Bacterial luminescence systems are used in various mutagenicity and toxicity
assays (ULITZUR et al. 1980, BULICH, ISENBERG 1981, BEN-ITZHAK et al. 1985,
LEVI et al. 1986, ULITZUR, BARAK 1988, SUN, STAHR 1993, BAR, ULITZUR
1994, THOMULKA, LANGE 1995, 1996, LANGE, THOMULKA 1997, PTITSYN et al.
1997, VAN DER LEILE et al. 1997, BEN-ISRAEL et al. 1998, MIN et al. 1999,
VERSCHAEVE et al. 1999). The use of these assays is discussed here in the light of
regulation of expression of bacterial lux genes.
Material and methods
Bacterial strains and growth conditions
The following bacterial strains were used: Photobacterium leiognathi 721,
P. leiognathi s-i, P. phosphoreum 8265, P. phosphoreum NZ-1 (all identified by
Dr. Anatol Eberhard and kindly provided by Drs. Michael Thomas and Tom
Baldwin), Vibrio fischeri ATCC7744 (from the American Type Culture Collection) and V. harveyi BB7 (BELAS et al. 1982). V. harveyi strain was cultured in
the BOSS medium (KLEIN et al. 1998), and other strains we grown in the NaCl
complete medium, described previously by HASTINGS et al. (1987) and NEALSON
(1978). All cultures were kept at 30oC.
Chemical mutagens
The following chemical mutagens were used: 2-aminofluorene (2-AF),
4-nitro-o-phenylenediamine (NPD), 2-methoxy-6-chloro-9-(3-(2-chloroethyl)
aminopropylamino)acridine × 2HCl (ICR-191), 4-nitroquinolone-N-oxide
(NQNO), benzo[a]pyrene (B[a]p) and sodium azide (SA). The doses of used
mutagens are shown in Table 1.
Bacterial luminescence assays
To estimate effects of UV irradiation on bioluminescence, bacterial strains were
grown to a density of about 107 cells per ml. Cultures were diluted 104 times in
a fresh medium (total volume of each culture was 10 ml), and incubation was continued for 30 min. Bacteria were harvested by centrifugation (2000 × g, 5 min) and
resuspended in an equal volume of 3% NaCl. Following UV irradiation
(0-16 J/m2) samples of 0.5 ml each were withdrawn 5 minutes after irradiation and
luminescence was measured using a luminometer (Junior, EG&G Berthold). Effects of chemical mutagens on bacterial luminescence were investigated as described above but mutagenic compounds were added (to various, indicated
concentrations) directly to diluted cultures of bacteria. Luminescence of bacterial
cells was measured using a luminometer (Sirius, Berthold Detection Systems) every 10 minutes until 240 min after addition of chemicals or in cultures untreated
with chemicals.
380
A. Czy¿ et al.
Results
Effect of UV irradiation on bacterial luminescence
To test whether stimulation of luminescence by UV irradiation operates independently of quorum sensing or these two regulatory systems cooperate, we tested effects of UV irradiation relatively shortly after dilution of cultures. A typical curve
of luminescence intensity per cell after dilution of a dense V. harveyi culture is
shown in Figure 1. We measured effects of UV light on bacteria 30 min after culture dilution, i.e. at the stage when luminescence is less intensive than in the case
of dense culture, but still significant. Since maximal UV-mediated induction of lu-
Figure 1. Luminescence of the V. harveyi BB7 culture after its 104-fold dilution (at time 0) in
a fresh BOSS medium. Relative luminescence was calculated as counts per one cell. The value
measured at time 0 was considered to be 100.
minescence is detected 5 min after irradiation (CZY¯ et al. 2000a, and results not
shown), we measured efficiency of light emission at that time. We found effective
induction of luminescence under these conditions (Figure 2). When
chloramphenicol, an antibiotic that inhibits protein synthesis in bacteria, was
added (up to 200 mg/ml) to a bacterial culture 15 min before UV irradiation, no
significant increase in luminescence was observed (data not shown), indicating
that expression of genes, most probably the lux genes, is necessary to enhance luminescence by UV light. These results, together with our previous report (CZY¯ et
al. 2000a), suggest that the UV-mediated induction of light emission by V. harveyi
may operate independently of quorum sensing. Such a conclusion was supported
by observation of an increase in luminescence intensity in cultures without their
Figure 2. Induction of luminescence in bacterial cultures upon UV irradiation. Exponentially
growing cultures of P. leiognathi 721 (open circles), P. leiognathi s-i (closed circles),
P. phosphoreum 8265 (open squares), P. phosphoreum NZ-1 (closed squares), V. fischeri
(open triangles) and V. harveyi (closed triangles) were diluted 104 times in fresh media
and incubation was continued for 30 min. Then, bacteria were irradiated with indicated doses
of UV. Luminescence was measured 5 min after irradiation. The value measured in a control
(non-irradiated) culture of each strain was considered to be 1.
Figure 3. Induction of luminescence of P. leiognathi s-i (panel A) and P. phosphoreum 8265
(panel B) upon treatment of diluted cultures with 2-methoxy-6-chloro-9-(3-(2-chloroethyl)
aminopropylamino)acridine × 2HCl (ICR-191). Luminescence of untreated cultures (open
circles) and cultures treated with ICR-191 at final concentrations of 0.1 mg/ml (closed circles)
or 1 mg/ml (closed squares) is shown. The mutagen was added at time 0, and exponentially
growing cultures were diluted 104 times 30 min earlier.
Table 1. Induction of luminescence of marine bacteria by chemical mutagens
Mutagena
Induction of luminescenceb
P.l. 721
P.l. s-i
0.1
<2
<2
1
<2
(m/ml)
P.p. 8265
P.p. NZ-1
V.f. 7744
V.h. BB7
2-AF
10
100
6.8
INH
<2
<2
<2
<2
3.2
<2
<2
<2
<2
64.6
<2
<2
INH
<2
INH
INH
2.2
4.2
INH
NPD
0.0002
<2
<2
<2
<2
<2
<2
<2
<2
<2
<2
<2
8.4
<2
<2
9.15
<2
11.3
<2
<2
2.0
<2
0.002
2.5
0.02
3.8
0.2
3.8
2
3.7
11.5
<2
20
4.2
11.3
200
2.3
231.0
2.7
INH
INH
2.4
INH
INH
INH
INH
<2
<2
0.0001
<2
<2
<2
<2
<2
<2
0.001
<2
2.7
<2
<2
<2
<2
0.01
<2
4.9
<2
<2
<2
<2
2.2
5.0
<2
<2
12.0
94.8
INH
ICR-191
0.1
1
10.2
2.1
<2
<2
<2
<2
NQNO
0.0001
<2
<2
<2
<2
<2
0.001
<2
2.9
<2
<2
<2
<2
<2
0.01
4.2
<2
<2
<2
<2
<2
0.1
2.2
<2
<2
<2
<2
<2
1
3.5
<2
<2
<2
<2
2.0
10
INH
2.0
INH
INH
INH
IMH
100
INH
2.8
INH
INH
INH
INH
<2
<2
B[a]p
0.001
<2
<2
<2
<2
0.01
<2
<2
<2
<2
3.2
<2
0.1
<2
122.3
<2
<2
9.9
<2
<2
<2
15.3
<2
44.7
<2
1
2.8
15.3
10
48.1
4.4
3.1
2.0
NaN3
0.001
<2
0.01
<2
0.1
<2
1
<2
10
6.39
<2
<2
<2
<2
<2
3.5
<2
<2
<2
<2
4.16
<2
INH
2.3
INH
9.0
<2
<2
<2
<2
<2
<2
<2
<2
3.6
Induction of luminescence by mutagens
383
incubation between dilution and UV-irradiation (data not shown). However, since
dilution of a bacterial culture may cause a kind of transient cellular stress, we regard the measurements performed with samples from cultures grown for some
time after dilution as more conclusive.
We tested whether stimulation of luminescence by UV irradiation occurs also
in other luminescent marine bacteria (Figure 2). Six strains belonging to four bacterial species were investigated. In all cases we observed a significant induction of
luminescence upon treatment of bacteria with UV light, though levels of this induction were different. Again, addition of chloramphenicol before UV-irradiation
abolished the induction of luminescence in all tested strains (data not shown).
These results strongly suggest that gene-expression-dependent stimulation of
light emission by UV irradiation is a general phenomenon rather than an unusual
reaction of one or two bacterial species.
Effect of chemical mutagens on bacterial luminescence
We measured the efficiency of luminescence upon treatment of six strains of marine bacteria with different chemical mutagens. It is generally accepted that in assays for testing mutagenic compounds, at least a two-fold increase in a measured
parameter (usually the number of mutants) above the value observed in a control
experiment should be considered significant. Therefore, in our experiments induction of luminescence was considered significant when equal to or higher than
two-fold relative to control cultures. Examples of responses of luminescent bacteria to such a treatment are shown in Figure 3. The results are summarized in Table 1. Almost all strains responded to the treatment with chemical mutagens by
stimulation of luminescence at relatively low concentrations or by its inhibition
when higher amounts of these agents were added. The weakest effects were observed in V. harveyi and the greatest stimulation of luminescence occurred in
strains of P. leiognathi (Table 1).
a
Following mutagens were added to indicated final concentrations into diluted cultures of bacteria:
2-aminofluorene (2-AF), 4-nitro-o-phenylenediamine (NPD), 2-methoxy-6-chloro-9-(3-(2-chloroethyl)
aminopropylamino)acridine x 2HCl (ICR-191), 4-nitroquinolone-N-oxide (NQNO), benzo[a]pyrene (B[a]p)
and sodium azide (SA). Benzo[a]pyrene and 2-aminofluorene were added together with 4% S9 mix (rat liver
microsomal enzymes and cofactors), as described previously (MARON, AMES 1983).
b
Luminescence of bacterial strains (abbreviations: P.l., Photobacterium leiognathi; P.p., Photobacterium
phosphoreum; V.f., Vibrio fischeri; V.h., Vibrio harveyi) in cultures untreated and treated with mutagens was
measured 240 min after addition of chemicals. The results represent the ratio of luminescence of treated cultures
to that of untreated cultures.
INH = inhibition of luminescence upon treatment with a mutagen, which resulted from toxicity of chemicals at
particular mutagen concentrations.
384
A. Czy¿ et al.
Discussion
The results presented in this report indicate that UV-mediated stimulation of bacterial luminescence is a general phenomenon, not restricted to one species. A significant increase in luminescence was found in all strains of marine luminescent
bacteria tested (Figure 2). Since for two species, V. fischeri and V. harveyi,
LexA-mediated repression of lux operons has been shown (ULITZUR 1989, CZY¯
et al. 2000a), it is likely that a similar regulation operates also in P. leiognathi and
P. phosphoreum. UV-mediated stimulation of luminescence was observed both
relatively shortly after dilution of a dense bacterial culture (Figure 2) and at
the stage of minimal luminescence of the diluted culture (CZY¯ et al. 2000a).
These results suggest that two processes of stimulation of lux operon expression
(quorum sensing and inactivation of the LexA repressor) operate independently.
This hypothesis is supported by our observation of an increase in luminescence intensity in cultures without their incubation between dilution and UV-irradiation.
The double regulation of expression of bacterial lux genes may arise from
the presence of two independent promoters, one being regulated by quorum sensing and the other belonging to the SOS regulon. In fact, the presence of two promoters in the lux operon of V. fischeri has already been demonstrated (ULITZUR et
al. 1997, ULITZUR 1998a). Of these two promoters, only one is regulated by
the quorum sensing mechanism (ULITZUR 1998b).
One might argue that the UV-mediated induction of luminescence could be
due to formation of free radicals by UV or by reduction of H2O2, generated by UV,
which was not reversed by catalase. In fact, it has been demonstrated that
UV-irradiation my lead to generation of active oxygen species, and that luminescence resulting from the activity of bacterial luciferase may be enhanced in
the presence of H2O2 (HASTINGS, BALNY 1975, WATANABE, NAKAMURA 1976,
WATANABE, HASTINGS 1987, ICHIKI et al. 1994, ZHANG et al. 1997). However,
although our results do not negate involvement of active oxygen forms in enhancement of luminescence, the hypothesis that UV-mediated stimulation of light
emission in diluted bacterial cultures arises solely from physical effects of irradiation is unlikely. We demonstrated that this stimulation is abolished in the presence
of a translation inhibitor, chloramphenicol, thus this process in strongly dependent
on effective gene expression. Moreover, using different concentrations of
catalase, added to bacterial cultures, we were not able to observe inhibition of
UV-stimulated luminescence (our unpublished results).
Apart from UV irradiation, luminescence of marine bacteria tested in this
study was stimulated by chemical mutagens (Table 1 and Figure 3). Induction of
bacterial luminescence after treatment of cultures with DNA-damaging or DNA
synthesis-inhibiting agents was demonstrated previously (ULITZUR, WEISER
1981, WEISER et al. 1981). Interestingly, under these conditions, luminescence of
dark mutants (with dysfunction of regulatory element(s) rather than with mutations in lux genes) was also induced. It has been hypothesized that mutagenic
Induction of luminescence by mutagens
385
agents through their interactions with DNA may cause configuration changes of
the double helix resulting in derepression of transcription of the lux operon
(ULITZUR, WEISER 1981). However, in our opinion, results presented in this report, together with findings described previously by others (ULITZUR 1989,
SHADEL et al. 1990), support the proposal that bacterial lux operons belong to
SOS regulons.
The proposal of regulation of lux genes’ expression by agents inducing
the SOS response may have implications for the use of bacterial luminescence
systems in mutagenicity and toxicity tests. Although many mutagenicity assays
based on non-luminescent bacteria were developed previously, including the most
widely used Ames test (MARON, AMES 1983, MORTELMANS, ZEIGER 2000),
most of them are excellent for testing whether a given chemical is a mutagen, but
their sensitivities are too low for testing environmental samples, in which concentrations of mutagens are very low.
The use of bioluminescent bacteria in detection of toxic chemicals was proposed over 20 years ago (ULITZUR et al. 1980, BULICH, ISENBERG 1981), and various assays have been described since then (see for example: THOMULKA, LANGE
1995, 1996, LANGE, THOMULKA 1997). In those studies, the toxicity of different
chemicals was determined by a relatively simple method based on measuring a decrease in bioluminescence after addition of toxic compounds. However, toxicity
assays should be distinguished from mutagenicity tests. Toxic agents are not always mutagens, and mutagenic chemicals are often toxic only at relatively high
concentrations (compare Table 1). Therefore, although these bioluminescence assays are simple, they can be useful in detection of toxic substances rather than
mutagens that occur in natural habitats at concentrations too low to provoke serious toxic effects in bacterial cells.
In several tests, fusions consisting of lux operons under control of one of
LexA-repressed promoters are used (BAR, ULITZUR 1994, PTITSYN et al. 1997,
VAN DER LELIE et al. 1997, BEN-ISRAEL et al. 1998, MIN et al. 1999,
VERSCHAEVE et al. 1999). Strains bearing such fusions emit light upon contact
with SOS response-inducing agents, which may be a sensitive and quick indication of the presence of mutagenic compounds in the tested sample. However, these
fusions are constructed in Escherichia coli or Salmonella enterica serovar
Typhimurium. This is a disadvantage in direct testing of samples from certain
habitats, for example marine waters. These bacteria live normally in completely
different habitats and addition of marine water samples to their cultures might induce a stress response per se. Moreover, survival of E. coli and S. enterica in marine water is impaired relative to marine bacteria. Therefore, for monitoring of
marine habitats an organism that naturally lives in these habitats should be used
(CZY¯ et al. 2000b).
A very useful group of genotoxicity tests employing light emission by bacteria
is that based on detection of restoration of luminescence of dark mutants, including the commercially available Mutatox test (ULITZUR et al. 1980, BEN-ITZHAK
386
A. Czy¿ et al.
et al. 1985, LEVI et al. 1986, ULITZUR, BARAK 1988, SUN, STAHR 1993). These
assays are often significantly (up to 103 times) more sensitive than the Ames test,
and have been demonstrated to be useful in environmental studies (BRENNER et
al. 1993a, b, 1994, BELKIN et al. 1994). Their only disadvantage seems to be that
effective restoration of luminescence of dark mutants caused by mutagens is usually observed about 24 h after addition of tested compounds. In this report we
show that mutagen-mediated induction of luminescence of diluted cultures of
wild-type bacterial strains is effective 6 h after addition of a mutagenic compound.
Therefore, one might consider the use of wild-type luminescent bacteria, especially P. leiognathi strains, for modification and/or improvement of mutagenicity
assays. In the light of the proposal that bacerial lux operons belong to SOS
regulons, this suggestion may be of particular interest.
Conclusions
Results presented in this report, together with previous reports, indicate that bacterial luminescence systems, apart from being regulated by quorum sensing, are
stimulated by factors inducing the SOS response. It is likely that lux operons of
most, if not all, luminescent bacteria are repressed by the lexA gene product, and
thus belong to SOS regulons. The two processes of stimulation of lux operon expression mentioned above, operate independently rather than coordinately. Such
a double regulation of expression of genes involved in bacterial luminescence has
implications for the use of luminescent bacteria in mutagenicity assays.
Acknowledgments. We are grateful to Michael THOMAS and Tom BALDWIN for
providing bacterial strains, and to Shimon ULITZUR for discussions. This work was
supported by the University of Gdañsk (project grant no. BW-1190-5-0033-1 to
A.C.), Polish State Committee for Scientific Research (project grant no. 6 P04G 033
19 to Hanna SZPILEWSKA, Institute of Oceanology of the Polish Academy of Sciences), Provincial Nature Protection Fund in Gdañsk (project grant no.
WFOŒ/D/210/3/2001 to G.W.), Institute of Oceanology of the Polish Academy of
Sciences (task grant to G.W.), and Foundation for Polish Science (subsidy 14/2000 to
G.W. and a stipend to A.C.).
REFERENCES
ADAR Y., SIMAAN M., ULITZUR S. (1992). Formation of the LuxR protein in the Vibrio
fischeri lux system is controlled by HtpR through the GroESL proteins. J. Bacteriol.
174: 7138-7143.
BAR R., ULITZUR S. (1994). Bacterial toxicity of cyclodextrins: luminous Escherichia
coli as a model. Appl. Microbiol. Biotechnol. 41: 574-577.
Induction of luminescence by mutagens
387
BELAS R., MILEHAM A., COHN D., HILMEN M., SIMON M., SILVERMAN M. (1982). Bacterial luminescence: isolation and expression of the luciferase genes from Vibrio
harveyi. Science 218: 791-793.
BELKIN S., STEIBER M., TIEHM A., FRIMMEL F.H., ABELIOVICH A., WERNER P.,
ULITZUR S. (1994). Toxicity and genotoxicity enhancement during polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons biodegradation. Environ. Tox. Wat. Qual. 9: 303-309.
BEL-ISRAEL O., BEN-ISRAEL H., ULITZUR S. (1998). Identification and quantification of
toxic chemicals by use of Escherichia coli carrying lux genes fused to stress promoters. Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 64: 4346-4352.
BEN-ITZHAK J., LEVI B.Z., SHOR R., LANIR A., BASSAN H.M., ULITZUR S. (1985).
The formation of genotoxic metabolites of benzo[a]pyrene by the isolated perfused rat
liver, as detected by the bioluminescent assay. Mutat. Res. 147: 107-112.
BRENNER A., BELKIN S., ULITZUR S., ABELIOVICH A. (1993a). Fast assessment of toxicants adsorption on activated carbon using a luminous bacteria bioassay. Wat. Sci.
Technol. 27: 113-120.
BRENNER A., BELKIN S., ULITZUR S., ABELIOVICH A. (1993b). Evaluation of activated
carbon adsorption capacity by a toxicity bioassay. Wat. Sci. Technol. 27: 1577-1583.
BRENNER A., BELKIN S., ULITZUR S., ABELIOVICH A. (1994). Utilization of a bioluminescence toxicity assay for optimal design of biological and physico-chemical
wastewater treatment processes. Environ. Tox. Wat. Qual. 9: 311-316.
BULICH A.A., ISENBERG D.L. (1981). Use of luminescent bacterial system for the rapid
assessment of aquatic toxicity. ISA Trans. 20: 29-33.
CZY¯ A., WRÓBEL W., WÊGRZYN G. (2000a). Vibrio harveyi bioluminescence plays
a role in stimulation of DNA repair. Microbiology 146: 283-288.
CZY¯ A., JASIECKI J., BOGDAN A., SZPILEWSKA H., WÊGRZYN G. (2000b). Genetically
modified Vibrio harveyi strains as potential bioindicators of mutagenic pollution of
marine environments. Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 66: 599-605.
DOLAN K.M., GREENBERG E.P. (1992). Evidence that GroEL, not s32, is involved in
transcriptional regulation of the Vibrio fischeri luminescence genes in Escherichia
coli. J. Bacteriol. 174: 5132-5135.
GROSSMAN A.D., ERICKSON J.W., GROSS C.A. (1984). The htpR gene product of E. coli
is a sigma factor for heat-shock promoters. Cell 38: 383-390.
HASTINGS J.W., BALNY C. (1975). Two oxygenated bacterial luciferase-flavin intermediate: reaction products via the light and dark pathways. J. Biol. Chem. 250: 7288-7293.
HASTINGS J.W., BALDWIN T.O., NICOLI M.Z. (1987). Bacterial luciferase: assay, purification, and properties. Meth. Enzymol. 57: 135-152.
ICHIKI H., SAKURADA H., KAMO N., TAKAHASHI T.A., SEKIGUCHI S. (1994). Generation
of active oxygens, cell deformation and membrane potential changes upon UV-B irradiation in human blood cells. Biol. Pharm. Bull. 17: 1065-1069.
KLEIN G., ¯MIJEWSKI M., KRZEWSKA J., CZECZATKA M., LIPIÑSKA B. (1998). Cloning
and characterization of the dnaK heat shock operon of the marine bacterium Vibrio
harveyi. Mol. Gen. Genet. 259: 179-189.
LANGE J.H., THOMULKA K.W. (1997). Use of the Vibrio harveyi toxicity test for evaluating mixture interactions of nitrobenzene and dinitrobenzene. Ecotoxicol. Environ.
Safety 38: 2-12.
388
A. Czy¿ et al.
LEVI B.Z., KUHN J.C., ULITZUR S. (1986). Determination of the activity of 16 hydrazine
derivatives in the bioluminescence test for genotoxic agents. Mutat. Res. 173:
233-237.
LITTLE J.W., MOUNT D.W. (1982). The SOS regulatory system of Escherichia coli. Cell
29: 11-22.
MARON D.M., AMES B.N. (1983). Revised methods for the Salmonella mutagenicity test.
Mutation. Res. 113: 173-215.
MEIGHEN E.A. (1994). Genetics of bacterial bioluminescence. Annu. Rev. Genet. 28:
117-139.
MIN J., KIM E.J., LAROSSA R.A., GU M.B. (1999). Distinct responses of
a recA::luxCDABE Escherichia coli strain to direct and indirect DNA damaging
agents. Mutat. Res. 442: 61-68.
MORTELMANS K., ZEIGER E. (2000). The Ames Salmonella/microsome mutagenicity assay. Mutation. Res. 455: 29-60.
NEALSON K.H. (1978). Isolation, identification, and manipulation of luminous bacteria.
Meth. Enzymol. 57: 153-166.
PTITSYN L.R., HORNECK G., KOMOVA O., KOZUBEK S., KRASAVIN E.A., BONEV M.,
RETTBERG P. (1997). A biosensor for environmental genotoxin screening based on
an SOS lux assay in recombinant Escherichia coli cells. Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 63:
4377-4384.
SHADEL G.S., DEVINE J.H., BALDWIN T.O. (1990). Control of the lux regulon of Vibrio
fischeri. J. Biolumin. Chemilumin. 5: 99-106.
SUN T.S., STAHR H.M. (1993). Evaluation and application of a bioluminescent bacterial
genotoxicity test. J. AOAC Int. 76: 893-898.
SWIFT S., THROUP J., BYCROFT B., WILLIMAS P., STEWART G. (1998). Quorum sensing:
bacterial cell-cell signaling from bioluminescence to pathogenicity. In: Molecular Microbiology (S.J.W. Busby, C.M. Thomas, N.L. Brown, eds.). Springer-Verlag,
Berlin-Heidelberg: 185-207.
THOMULKA K.W., LANGE J.H. (1995). Use of the bioluminescent bacterium Vibrio
harveyi to detect biohazardous chemicals in soil and water extractions with and without acid. Ecotoxicol. Environ. Safety 32: 201-204.
THOMULKA K.W., LANGE J.H. (1996). A mixture toxicity study employing combinations
of tributylin chloride, dibutylin dichloride, and tin chloride using the marine bacterium
Vibrio harveyi as the test organism. Ecotoxicol. Environ. Safety 34: 76-84.
ULITZUR S. (1989). The regulatory control of the bacterial luminescence system – a new
view. J. Biolumin. Chemilumin. 4: 317-325.
ULITZUR S. (1998a). H-NS controls the transcription of three promoters of Vibrio fischeri
lux cloned in Escherichia coli. J. Biolumin. Chemilumin. 13: 185-188.
ULITZUR S. (1998b). LuxR controls the expression of Vibrio fischeri luxCDABE clone
in Escherichia coli in the absence of luxI gene. J. Biolumin. Chemilumin. 13: 365-369.
ULITZUR S., BARAK M. (1988). Detection of genotoxicity of metallic compounds by
the bacterial bioluminescence test. J. Biolumin. Chemilumin. 2: 95-99.
ULITZUR S., KUHN J. (1988). The transcription of bacterial luminescence is regulated by
sigma 32. J. Biolumin. Chemilumin. 2: 91-93.
Induction of luminescence by mutagens
389
ULITZUR S., WEISER I. (1981). Acridine dyes and other DNA-intercalating agents induce
the luminescence system of luminous bacteria and their dark variants. Proc. Natl.
Acad. Sci. USA 78: 3338-3342.
ULITZUR S., MATIN A., FRALEY C., MEIGHEN E. (1997). H-NS protein represses
transcritpion of the lux systems of Vibrio fischeri and other luminous bacteria cloned
into Escherichia coli. Curr. Microbiol. 35: 336-342.
ULITZUR S., WEISER I., YANNAI S. (1980). A new, sensitive and simple bioluminescent
test for mutagenic compounds. Mutat. Res. 74: 113-124.
VAN DER LEILE D., REGNIERS L., BORREMANS B., PROVOOST A., VERSCHAEVE L. (1997).
The VITOTOX test, and SOS bioluminescence Salmonella typhimurium test to measure
genotoxicity kinetics. Mutat. Res. 389: 279-290.
VERSCHAEVE L., VAN GOMPEL J., THILEMANS L., REGNIERS L., VANPARYS P.,
VAN DER LELIE D. (1999). VITOTOX bacterial genotoxicity and toxicity test for the
rapid screening of chemicals. Environ. Mol. Mutagen. 33: 240-248.
WATANABE H., HASTINGS J.W. (1987). Enhancement of light emission in the bacterial
luciferase reaction by H2O2. J. Biochem. 101: 279-282.
WATANABE T., NAKAMURA T. (1976). Studies on luciferase from Photobacterium
phosphoreum. VIII. FNM-H2O2 initiated bioluminescence and the thermodynamics of
the elementary steps of the luciferase reaction. J. Biochem. 79: 489-495.
WEISER I., ULITZUR S., YANNAI S. (1981). DNA-damaging agents and DNA-synthesis
inhibitors induce luminescence in dark variants of luminous bacteria. Mutat. Res. 91:
433-450.
ZHANG X., ROSENSTEIN B.S., WANG Y., LEBWOHL M., WEI H. (1997). Identification of
possible reactive oxygen species involved in ultraviolet radiation-induced oxidative
DNA damage. Free Radicals Biol. Med. 23: 980-985.