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Chapter 2 The Prc and RseP proteases control bacterial Cell-Surface Signalling activity Karlijn C. Bastiaansen1,2, Aurelia Ibañez1, Juan L. Ramos1, Wilbert Bitter2, and María A. Llamas1 Department of Environmental Protection, Estación Experimental del Zaidín-Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas, C/ Profesor Albareda 1, 18008 Granada, Spain; and 2Section of Molecular Microbiology, Department of Molecular Cell Biology, VU University Amsterdam, De Boelelaan 1085, 1081HV Amsterdam, the Netherlands. 1 Published as: Bastiaansen, K.C., Ibañez, A., Ramos, J.L., Bitter, W., and Llamas, M.A. (2014) The Prc and RseP proteases control bacterial cell-surface signalling activity. Environmental Microbiology 16: 2433-2443. 24 | Chapter 2 Summary Extracytoplasmic function (ECF) sigma factors play a key role in the regulation of vital functions in the bacterial response to the environment. In Gram-negative bacteria, activity of these sigma factors is often controlled by cell-surface signalling (CSS), a regulatory system that also involves an outer membrane receptor and a transmembrane anti-sigma factor. To get more insight into the molecular mechanism behind CSS regulation, we have focused on the unique Iut system of Pseudomonas. This system contains a hybrid protein containing both a cytoplasmic ECF sigma domain and a periplasmic anti-sigma domain, apparently leading to a permanent interaction between the sigma and anti-sigma factor. We show that the Iut ECF sigma factor regulates the response to aerobactin under iron deficiency conditions and is activated by a proteolytic pathway that involves the sequential action of two proteases: Prc, which removes the periplasmic anti-sigma domain, and RseP, which subsequently removes the transmembrane domain and thereby generates the ECF active transcriptional form. We furthermore demonstrate the role of these proteases in the regulation of classical CSS systems in which the sigma and anti-sigma factors are two different proteins. Prc and RseP proteases control CSS | 25 Introduction Regulation of gene expression is an essential mechanism that allows bacteria to rapidly adapt to alterations in their environment. Gene expression in bacteria is mainly controlled at the level of transcription initiation. To achieve this control a number of different mechanisms have evolved, one of which is the utilization of alternative sigma factors. Sigma factors are small proteins that associate with the RNA polymerase core (RNAPc) enzyme and direct it to specific promoter sequences, thereby initiating gene transcription. All bacteria contain a constitutively expressed primary sigma factor (σ70), which is responsible for the transcription of essential housekeeping genes. Moreover, most bacteria also encode alternative sigma factors, which recognize alternative promoter consensus sequences (Paget and Helmann, 2003). The activity of these alternative sigma factors is transcriptionally and/or posttranslationally controlled in response to specific environmental signals. The largest group of alternative sigma factors includes the so-called extracytoplasmic function (ECF) sigma factors (Lonetto et al., 1994; Bastiaansen et al., 2012). Most ECF sigma factors are co-transcribed with an anti-sigma factor that controls the activity of the sigma factor posttranscriptionally. In Gram-negative bacteria, the anti-sigma factors are usually transmembrane proteins that contain a large periplasmic C-terminal domain and a short cytoplasmic N-terminal region that binds and sequesters the sigma factor in absence of the stimulus. A special subclass of ECF sigma factors is formed by the iron starvation group. Expression of these sigma factors is usually controlled by iron through the Fur protein. In iron sufficient conditions the Fur-Fe2+ protein complex binds to the Fur box in the promoter region of these sigma factor genes leading to repression of their expression. This binding, and thus repression, is removed in iron deficient conditions when Fur is no longer loaded with iron ions (Escolar et al., 1999). Iron starvation ECF sigma factors usually regulate the (siderophore-mediated) uptake of iron (Staroń et al., 2009; Bastiaansen et al., 2012) via a regulatory cascade that involves not only the ECF sigma and anti-sigma factors but also a specific outer membrane receptor. Together, these three proteins form the so-called cell-surface signalling (CSS) regulatory system (Braun et al., 2006; Llamas and Bitter, 2010). The CSS outer membrane receptors belong to the family of TonB-dependent receptors and they have a dual role: they participate both in signal transduction and in siderophore uptake. Siderophores are produced and secreted by most bacteria under low iron conditions to sequester and solubilize minute quantities of iron present in the environment. In addition, bacteria can use siderophores produced by other organisms, referred to as heterologous siderophores, and host iron complexes (i.e. transferrin, lactoferrin, haem or haemoglobin), as iron sources (Wandersman and Delepelaire, 2004). After binding iron, these iron-siderophore/haemophore complexes are recaptured by the bacterium through TonB-dependent receptors. However, not all TonBdependent receptors are involved in CSS, only a subfamily known as TonB-dependent transducers (Koebnik, 2005). This subfamily can be easily distinguished from other TonBdependent receptors on the basis of an N-terminal extension of approximately 70-80 amino acids (Schalk et al., 2004). This periplasmic extension interacts with the C-terminal domain of the anti-sigma factor, but has no effect on the recognition and transport of the siderophore (Koster et al., 1994). Binding of the environmental signal (i.e. ironsiderophore) to the outer membrane receptor activates the CSS pathway, which ultimately leads to the activation of the ECF sigma factor and thereby to the transcription of a small number of genes, usually including the one encoding the TonB-dependent transducer 2 26 | Chapter 2 (Llamas et al., 2006; Llamas et al., 2008). However, the exact mode of action of CSS is not completely understood. To get more insight into the mechanism of CSS ECF sigma factor activation, we have focused on a unique, newly identified, CSS ECF sigma factor of Pseudomonas putida. This sigma factor consists of a hybrid gene that seems to code for a natural chimeric protein, combining both an ECF sigma factor and an anti-sigma factor in a single polypeptide (Fig. 1A and S1). Our experiments show that this CSS ECF sigma factor is functional and regulates the uptake of the heterologous siderophore aerobactin. Activation of this ECF sigma factor occurs via a proteolytic cascade that involves both the Prc and RseP proteases. We also demonstrate that these proteases are involved in the regulation of classical CSS systems in which the ECF sigma and anti-sigma factors are two different proteins, showing the general role of these proteases in CSS activity. In addition, our results suggest that besides cleavage by Prc and RseP other proteases are involved in the activation of classical CSS systems. Results Identification and analysis of a P. putida hybrid gene encoding both a sigma and an anti-sigma domain. In silico analysis of ECF sigma factors and cell-surface signalling (CSS) systems of P. putida KT2440 revealed the presence of a unique hybrid gene (PP2192) combining a cytoplasmic ECF sigma factor domain in the N-terminal part and a periplasmic anti-sigma factor domain, separated by a single transmembrane (TM) domain (Koebnik, 2005; Llamas and Bitter, 2010) (Fig. 1A and S1). This hybrid sigma/anti-sigma factor gene is located next to a gene (PP2193) putatively encoding a TonB-dependent transducer. We first wanted to determine whether this unique sigma/anti-sigma hybrid gene was coding for a functional protein. By analogy with other CSS systems (Llamas et al., 2006; Llamas et al., 2008) we hypothesized that PP2192 would regulate the expression of the PP2193 transducer and constructed a PP2193::lacZ transcriptional fusion to test PP2192 activity. Since overexpression of ECF Figure 1. The P. putida PP2192 hybrid sigma/anti-sigma protein. (A) Schematic representation of the protein domains of PP2192. The length of the K1 to K3 constructs is indicated as well as the insertion point of the miniTn5-Km in the iutY-Tn5 mutant. (B) Analysis of PP2192 activity by β-galactosidase assay. P. putida KT2440 (wildtype) cells bearing both the pMPK4 plasmid (PP2193::lacZ fusion) and the pMMB67EH-derivated plasmids pMMBK1, pMMBK2 or pMMBK3 were grown 16h in LB with and without 1 mM IPTG (to induce expression of the cloned genes from the Ptac promoter by removing the repression exerted by the LacIq repressor present in the plasmid). Sequence-based topology of the different PP2192 fragments overexpressed from pMMB67EH (K1 to K3) is shown above the graph. P, periplasm; CM, cytoplasmic membrane; C, cytoplasm. Prc and RseP proteases control CSS | sigma factors usually leads to the expression of the ECF-regulated genes (Llamas et al., 2006; Llamas et al., 2008), we analyzed PP2192 functionality by overexpressing PP2192 from a constitutive promoter (i.e. the Ptac promoter). Overexpression of the entire PP2192 gene (K1 construct) increased PP2193 promoter activity ~10-fold, indicating that PP2192 indeed encodes a functional protein with sigma factor activity (Fig. 1B). Activity of PP2192 is already quite high in absence of IPTG, this is probably due to the leakiness of the Ptac promoter allowing enough expression to measure β-galactosidase levels. Since the anti-sigma domain of the PP2192 protein could inactivate the function of the cytosolic ECF sigma factor domain, we tested the activity of two fragments of PP2192 of different length by insertion of premature stop codons (Fig. 1A and S1B). Overexpression of only the cytosolic ECF sigma factor domain of PP2192 (K2 construct) resulted in a large increase in PP2193 expression (~200-fold, Fig. 1B), confirming the role of the C-terminal domain of PP2192 as an anti-sigma factor. The other construct (K3), containing the ECF sigma factor domain and the TM region, still increased PP2193 expression ~100-fold (Fig. 1B), suggesting that the TM domain is not required for anti-sigma activity. These results show that PP2192 is an active protein and that the C-terminal periplasmic anti-sigma domain has to be removed for full activity. The heterologous siderophore aerobactin induces this unusual CSS system. Since a putative Fur box is present in the PP2192 promoter region (Fig. S2), we hypothesized that this CSS system would be involved in the regulation of iron uptake. Moreover, the PP2193 protein sequence has high sequence similarity with the aerobactin receptor IutA of both Escherichia coli and P. aeruginosa (de Lorenzo et al., 1986; Cuív et al., 2006), and it is known that P. putida is able to use the heterologous siderophore aerobactin to obtain iron (Loper and Henkels, 1999). This prompted us to investigate whether aerobactin could act as the inducing signal for the PP2192-PP2193 CSS system. Indeed, addition of the supernatant of an iron-restricted culture of the aerobactin producing strain E. coli C600 (ColV-K30), but not that of the control strain without the aerobactin biosynthetic genes (de Lorenzo et al., 1986), resulted in high expression from the PP2193 promoter in low iron conditions (Fig. 2). Addition of purified aerobactin to the medium also induced PP2193 expression, confirming that it acts as the inducing signal for this unusual CSS system (Fig. 2). Addition of iron to the medium inhibited PP2193::lacZ activity, showing that both low iron and the siderophore are needed for activity (Fig. 2). Together these results demonstrate that PP2193 expression is activated by the heterologous siderophore aerobactin. By analogy with the E. coli aerobactin receptor, we propose to name the P. putida PP2193 TonB-dependent receptor IutA and the PP2192 sigma/anti-sigma protein IutY. To examine the role of the P. putida IutA and IutY proteins in the aerobactin-mediated induction of iutA expression, we constructed null mutants and/or used miniTn5-Km mutants derived from a transposon mutant library of P. putida KT2440 (Molina-Henares et al., 2010). Deletion of the iutY gene (∆iutY mutant) abolished the response of P. putida to aerobactin, showing that IutY is indeed required for iutA expression (Fig. 2). This mutation could be fully complemented with the pMMBK1 plasmid containing the whole iutY gene (Fig. 2). In fact, lacZ activity in response to aerobactin in the strains bearing this plasmid was even higher, likely as a result of iutY overexpression. On the other hand, insertion of the miniTn5-Km in the IutY C-terminal anti-sigma domain (after codon 256) (Fig. 1A and S1B) leads to constitutive activity of IutY (Fig. 2), similar to the activity observed with the K2 and K3 constructs (Fig. 1B). Insertion of a miniTn5-Km in the iutA gene results in a P. 27 2 28 | Chapter 2 Figure 2. Identification of aerobactin as the inducing signal, and role of IutY and IutA in the signalling pathway. β-galactosidase activity of P. putida KT2440 and the iutY-Tn5, ΔiutY and iutA-Tn5 mutants bearing the pMPK4 plasmid (iutA::lacZ fusion) and the pMMB67EH-derivate plasmids pMMBK1 or pMMB-iutA, from which the iutY or iutA gene is constitutively expressed. Strains were grown under iron-restricted or iron-rich conditions without or with aerobactin containing supernatant, and/or without or with 5 µM aerobactin. putida mutant that is not able to respond to aerobactin (Fig. 2). Although Southern-blot analysis showed that the transposon insertion was correct in this mutant (Fig. S3), the mutation could, however, be only partially complemented with a plasmid bearing the full iutA gene (Fig. 2). The response of the iutA-Tn5 mutant to aerobactin could also not be restored by introducing the plasmid containing the whole iutY gene (Fig. 2), which shows that IutA acts upstream IutY in the signalling pathway. The RseP protease is required for activity of the Iut CSS system. Our previous results showed that IutY sigma activity (σIutY) is induced by aerobactin and that full activity is only obtained when removing (part of) the C-terminal antisigma domain of the IutY protein. This encouraged us to investigate whether proteolytic activities were involved in the activation of σIutY. In E. coli and Pseudomonas aeruginosa three proteases (namely RseP/MucP, DegS/AlgW and DegP) have been known to play a role in the activation of stress-responsive ECF sigma factors (Bastiaansen et al., 2012), and recently RseP has been shown to be involved in the activation of three CSS systems in P. aeruginosa (Draper et al., 2011). Therefore, we decided to construct single knockouts and check the function of these proteases. The ∆degP and ∆degS mutants responded similarly to aerobactin as the wild-type strain (Fig. S4A), indicating that these proteases do not play a role in the activation of σIutY. Interestingly, the deletion of the rseP gene completely abolished the ability of P. putida to respond to aerobactin (Fig. 3A). This response was restored when the ∆rseP mutation was complemented in trans (Fig. 3A). The Prc protease is required for activity of the Iut CSS system. Since RseP is a cytoplasmic membrane-located protease known to cleave transmembrane domains of target proteins (Akiyama et al., 2004), we anticipated that another protease might be responsible for the degradation of the periplasmic anti-sigma domain of IutY. Therefore, we selected specific P. putida miniTn5-Km mutants from a library (MolinaHenares et al., 2010) with insertions in genes encoding putative proteases and tested in Prc and RseP proteases control CSS | total 14 mutants with transposons inserted in 11 different loci (Table S1). This screening identified a mutant with a transposon insertion in the PP1719 gene that did not respond to aerobactin (Fig. S4B). PP1719 codes for the tail-specific protease Prc (also known as Tsp), a periplasmic serine endoprotease that recognizes non-polar C-terminal ends of target proteins (Silber et al., 1992; Keiler et al., 1995). This result was confirmed by constructing a null P. putida prc mutant (∆prc mutant). Total removal of prc indeed abolished the aerobactin-mediated expression of iutA (Fig. 3A). Complementation of the ∆prc mutation with a plasmid in which the prc gene is constitutively expressed restored the ability of P. putida to respond to aerobactin (Fig. 3A). Interestingly, constitutive expression of prc causes expression from the iutA promoter even in the absence of aerobactin (Fig. 3A), which shows that the Prc protease has a direct effect on the P. putida aerobactin-mediated CSS pathway. The Prc and RseP proteases sequentially process the IutY protein. These results suggest that IutY is subjected to RseP- and Prc-mediated proteolysis. To investigate this further we constructed an N-terminally HA-tagged IutY protein. The addition of the HA-tag did not affect the ability of the protein to respond to aerobactin Figure 3. Function of the Prc and RseP proteases in the P. putida Iut CSS system. (A) β-galactosidase activity of P. putida KT2440 and its isogenic Δprc and ΔrseP mutants, bearing the pMPK4 plasmid (iutA::lacZ fusion) and the complementation construct pBBR-PPprc and pBBR-PPrseP or the original pBBR1MCS-5 plasmid. Strains were grown under iron-restricted conditions without or with aerobactin containing supernatant. (B) Prc- and RseP-mediated cleavage of the IutY protein. The indicated strains, all containing the pMMBK1-HA plasmid, and the indicated pBBR1MCS-5 derivatives, were grown overnight under iron-restricted conditions without (-) or with (+) aerobactin containing supernatant. Proteins were detected using a monoclonal antiHA-tag antibody. The positions of the molecular size marker (in kDa) and the IutY protein fragments are indicated. UC, uncleaved; CL, cleaved. 29 2 30 | Chapter 2 (Fig. S5). HA-IutY has a predicted molecular mass of 41 kDa and a protein band of this molecular weight was detected in all strains and conditions tested (Fig. 3B). Interestingly, an N-IutY sub-fragment of approximately 23 kDa was also detected. This band was present in increased amounts in cells grown in the presence of aerobactin and/or cells overexpressing prc (Fig. 3B). Importantly, this protein fragment was not detected in the ∆prc mutant (Fig. 3B). Since the presence of the N-terminal IutY 23 kDa sub-fragment correlates with maximal expression from the iutA promoter (Fig. 3A), it is likely that this fragment, which contains the σIutY domain, is the one binding to the RNAPc and initiating iutA transcription. Western-blot analyses in the ∆rseP mutant showed the presence of a new N-IutY subfragment of approximately ~25 kDa when ∆rseP was grown with aerobactin (Fig. 3B). This fragment is slightly larger than the previously observed N-IutY fragment (~23 kDa) and probably represents the sigma factor domain with (part of the) TM domain. In contrast to overexpression of Prc, overexpression of rseP did not result in constitutive iutA expression (Fig. 3A). Moreover, activity was also not detectable upon overexpression of prc in the ∆rseP mutant (Fig. 3A). Together these results suggest that RseP is involved in the proteolytic cascade, but acts after Prc. To determine if the P. putida IutY site-2 cleavage site was indeed located within the TM domain, the IutY-K2 (without TM domain) and IutY-K3 (with TM domain) (Fig. 1A and S1B) protein constructs were N-terminally HA-tagged and expressed in the different P. putida strains (wild-type, ∆prc and ∆rseP). Introduction of the HA-tag did not affect the activity of these proteins (Fig. S5). Expression of the HA-IutY-K2 construct resulted in the appearance of a single protein band of ~21 kDa in all strains (Fig. 4). The size of this protein band corresponds to the expected size of the complete HA-tagged IutY-K2 protein and is smaller than the natural cleavage product of IutY (~23 kDa), indicating that the IutY-K2 protein is not subjected to proteolysis. However, expression of the HA-IutY-K3 construct resulted in the production of two protein bands in the wild-type strain and the ∆prc mutant upon induction with aerobactin (Fig. 4). The upper band (~24.5 kDa) corresponds to the predicted size of the full HA-tagged IutY-K3 protein (uncleaved, UC), whereas the lower band corresponds to the N-IutY cleaved subfragment of ~23 kDa (Fig. 4). Importantly, only the upper band was detected in the ∆rseP mutant, showing that the IutY-K3 protein is cleaved by RseP. These results strongly suggest that the RseP site-2 cleavage of IutY, which produces an active σIutY protein, occurs in the region comprising the K2 and K3 IutY-derivative proteins, and therefore within or near the IutY TM domain (Fig. 1A and S1B). Figure 4. Mapping the site2 RseP cleavage of IutY. The indicated strains bearing the pMMBK1-HA, pMMBK2-HA or pMMBK3-HA plasmids were grown in iron-restricted medium with aerobactin containing supernatant and 1 mM IPTG. Proteins were detected using a monoclonal anti-HA-tag antibody. The positions of the molecular size marker (in kDa) and the IutY protein fragments are indicated. UC, uncleaved; CL, cleaved. Prc and RseP proteases control CSS | The Prc and RseP proteases are involved in the activation of other P. putida CSS regulatory pathways. To investigate whether the Prc and RseP proteases play a more general role in CSS regulation in P. putida, we analyzed the effect of the prc and rseP mutations on the predicted ferrioxamine (PP0160-PP0162) and ferrichrome (PP0350-PP0352) CSS pathways (Llamas and Bitter, 2010). To check the activity of these P. putida CSS systems, first the promoter region of the putative ferrioxamine and ferrichrome TonB-dependent outer membrane transducers (PP0160-FoxA and PP0350-FiuA, respectively) was placed in front of a promoterless lacZ reporter gene. Measurement of the activity of these constructs showed that their expression was indeed induced by ferrioxamine and ferrichrome, respectively (Fig. 5A and S6). To confirm that PP0160-FoxA and PP0350-FiuA are the receptors of these signalling pathways, the lacZ activity was also measured in miniTn5-Km mutants in these genes. As expected, activity of the foxA::lacZ and fiuA::lacZ transcriptional fusions was completely abolished in their respective receptor mutants (foxA-Tn5 and fiuA-Tn5) (Fig. 5A), which shows that these genes encode functional P. putida outer membrane transducers similar to their orthologues in P. aeruginosa (Llamas et al., 2006). Importantly, the activity of these transcriptional fusions in presence of their inducing siderophore was significantly reduced in the ∆prc mutant and completely abolished in the ∆rseP mutant (Fig. 5A), whereas it was not affected in the ∆degP and ∆degS mutants (S6A). Both the prc and rseP mutations could be complemented by introducing an intact copy of these genes (Fig. S6B). Together these results confirm the involvement of both proteases in the activation of the P. putida ferrioxamine and ferrichrome CSS pathways and their general role in the regulation of CSS systems in this bacterium. Role of Prc and RseP proteases in CSS regulation of other bacteria. Next, we analyzed whether the two identified proteases were involved in CSS regulation in another bacterial species. Therefore, we made prc and rseP deletion mutants in P. aeruginosa. P. aeruginosa foxA::lacZ and fiuA::lacZ transcriptional fusions (Llamas et al., 2006) were used to check the response of these mutants to the siderophores. As shown in Figure 5B, lacZ expression from the foxA and fiuA promoters was strongly induced by ferrioxamine and ferrichrome, respectively, in the PAO1 wild-type strain. However, this induction was significantly lower in the ∆prc mutant of P. aeruginosa (Fig. 5B), similar to the effect observed with the ∆prc mutant of P. putida (Fig. 5A), and completely abolished in the P. aeruginosa ∆rseP mutant as recently described by Draper et al. (Draper et al., 2011). These results imply a requirement for Prc and confirm the role of RseP in the activity of these P. aeruginosa CSS pathways, indicating that both these proteases have a broad role in bacterial CSS regulation. Discussion Cell-surface signalling (CSS) is an important mechanism used by Gram-negative bacteria to respond to the environment by translating a specific extracellular signal into a cytoplasmic regulatory response. The importance of CSS lies not only in its crucial role in regulating a vital function such as iron uptake, but also in controlling the expression of virulence functions in response to pathogen’s hosts (Aldon et al., 2000; Llamas et al., 2009). Previously it was hypothesized that conformational changes of the CSS proteins were responsible for this signal transduction pathway (Braun et al., 2003). In this work 31 2 32 | Chapter 2 Figure 5. Function of Prc and RseP in the P. putida and P. aeruginosa ferrioxamine- and ferrichromemediated CSS pathways. β-galactosidase activity of (A) P. putida KT2440 and its indicated isogenic mutants bearing the pMP-PPfoxA or pMP-PPfiuA plasmids (P. putida foxA::lacZ and fiuA::lacZ transcriptional fusions, respectively) and (B) P. aeruginosa PAO1 and its isogenic Δprc and ΔrseP mutants bearing the pMPR8b or pMPFiuA plasmids (P. aeruginosa foxA::lacZ and fiuA::lacZ transcriptional fusions, respectively). The strains bearing the foxA::lacZ fusions were grown under ironrestricted conditions with 1 µM (for P. aeruginosa) or 5 µM (for P. putida) ferrioxamine, and the ones bearing the fiuA::lacZ fusions with 40 µM ferrichrome. The p-values obtained when comparing the mutant activity with the wild-type are indicated by asterisks (*** p < 0.001, ** p < 0.01, and * p < 0.05). we report that, in response to its cognate environmental signal, CSS is activated by a proteolytic cascade that requires the function of at least two proteases, Prc and RseP. To determine this, we focused on the unique Iut CSS system of P. putida, which contains a protein that combines a sigma and an anti-sigma factor domain in a single polypeptide. This system responds to the heterologous siderophore aerobactin, which results in the cleavage of the hybrid protein IutY and a concomitant activation of the IutY ECF sigma factor domain (σIutY). The C-IutY anti-sigma domain is removed by these proteases in a sequential manner, a model that is represented in Figure 6. The involvement of RseP is perhaps not unexpected, because it has been documented previously to be implicated in the activation of various ECF sigma factors. However, the crucial role of Prc in CSS regulation shown in this work is more surprising. Prc proteases, also known as tail-specific proteases (Tsp) or carboxyl-terminal processing proteases (Ctp), have been reported previously to be implicated in the activation of two stress-responsive ECF sigma factors, but these systems are (i) not controlled by CSS and (ii) Prc is not involved in the first cleavage event and only in trimming the product of the site-1 protease (Reiling et al., 2005; Qiu et al., 2007; Heinrich et al., 2009) (Fig. S7A). In our system, Prc seems to be however directly responsible for the site-1 cleavage of C-IutY: deletion of the P. putida prc gene completely abolished the cleavage of IutY and no additional products besides the 41 kDa full-length IutY protein can be detected (Fig. 3B). Moreover, overexpression of Prc results in the activation of σIutY even in absence of aerobactin (Fig. 3), suggesting that a prior site-1 proteolytic event is not required. In addition, the two site-1 proteases with a role in ECF sigma factor activation identified to date, PrsW in B. subtilis and DegS/AlgW in E. coli and P. aeruginosa (Fig. S7), do not seem to be involved in the aerobactin-mediated CSS pathway of P. putida. A P. putida ∆degS mutant responds to aerobactin in a similar manner as the wild-type strain (Fig. S4A), and in silico analyses show that this bacterium does not contain a homologue of the PrsW protease. How exactly Prc is activated to cleave IutY in response to aerobactin remains an open question. The DegS site-1 protease, involved in the activation of the stress-responsive σE factor, is activated by the binding of unfolded proteins, present in the periplasm of stressed cells, to its PDZ domain (Fig. S7B) (Ades, 2008). A similar mechanism might lead to the activation of Prc. Alternatively, IutY could be protected from proteolysis by an additional protein that would bind the C-IutY domain in the absence of aerobactin, thereby blocking Prc-mediated degradation and preventing the system from being activated in the absence of the siderophore (Fig. 6). This situation is Prc and RseP proteases control CSS | found in the mechanism activating E. coli σE, in which a periplasmic protein (RseB) binds to the periplasmic domain of the anti-σE factor RseA and inhibits the proteolytic cascade and σE activation in unstressed cells (Fig. S7B) (Ades, 2008). The involvement of such a protein could also explain why overexpression of IutY results in ~10-fold induction of the iutA promoter activity in the absence of aerobactin (Fig. 1B and 2, pMMBK1 plasmid). In this situation, there might simply not be enough of the protecting protein in the periplasm to prevent the C-terminal degradation and the activation of the excess amounts of IutY. Prc-mediated degradation of C-IutY produces the substrate for the site-2 RseP protease, a second proteolytic step necessary to render an active σIutY protein. Using shorter versions of the IutY protein, in which the C-terminal domain was partially removed (IutY-K2 and -K3 constructs), we could roughly map the RseP cutting site (Fig. 4). Our results strongly suggests that RseP cleaves into the TM region of IutY, which is in agreement with previous results showing that this cytoplasmic membrane protease cleaves TM sequences of several proteins, including the anti-σE factor RseA (Akiyama et al., 2004) (Fig. S7B). Our analyses also show that cytoplasmic proteases, such as Clp and Lon, are not involved in the activation of σIutY (Fig. S4). Clp proteases have been shown to degrade the cytoplasmic domain of some anti-sigma factors upon perception of the inducing signal, a last proteolytic step that releases and activates the ECF sigma factor (Fig. S7). It is not surprising that this step is not necessary to activate σIutY since the IutY hybrid protein does not contain the cytoplasmic domain of classical anti-sigma factors (Fig. S1D). Importantly, our work shows the involvement of the Prc and RseP proteases in the activation of other, more conventional, CSS systems (Fig. 5). The involvement of RseP in the control of CSS activity was already proposed for the E. coli iron-citrate uptake system (Braun et al., 2006), and the haem-uptake pathway of Bordetella bronchiseptica (KingLyons et al., 2007). Recently, its role in CSS activation was experimentally demonstrated for three different systems of P. aeruginosa: the pyoverdine (Pvd), ferrioxamine (Fox) and ferrichrome (Fiu) CSS systems (Draper et al., 2011). In addition these authors showed, quite unexpectedly, that the anti-sigma factors of these CSS systems are already cleaved prior to perception of the inducing signal. However, the protease responsible for this initial cleavage has not been identified yet. The site-1 DegS/AlgW and the DegP proteases did not seem to be involved in this process, since mutations in these genes do not affect the bacterial response to ferrioxamine and ferrichrome (Fig. S6A). On the other hand, since Prc did not seem to be involved in the P. aeruginosa pyoverdine CSS pathway, the authors assumed that Prc also does not play a role in the activation of the Fox and Fiu CSS pathways (Draper et al., 2011). Our work has, however, demonstrated that Prc is involved in the activation of these CSS systems in both P. putida and P. aeruginosa (Fig. 5). Interestingly, overexpression of Prc not only strongly induces the aerobactin system in the absence of a signal, but has a similar, albeit if more moderate, effect on the activity of the P. putida ferrichrome system (Fig. S6B). While deletion of the prc gene completely abolishes the P. putida aerobactin-induced signalling activity, it was not essential for the activity of the ferrioxamine and ferrichrome signalling systems in both P. putida and P. aeruginosa (Fig. 5). However, in all cases a highly significant reduction in activity was observed. Therefore, Prc seems to play an important, but less clear-cut role in the activation of the P. aeruginosa ferrioxamine CSS system, as compared to the aerobactin-mediated pathway of P. putida. It is likely that there is a case of redundancy and that other proteases (partly) take over the role of Prc. Therefore, it seems that the regulation of classical CSS systems is more 33 2 34 | Chapter 2 complex and involves additional proteases that will hopefully be identified in the future. In conclusion, our results indicate that activation of bacterial CSS ECF sigma factors is controlled by a proteolytic network consisting of multiple proteases, including RseP and Prc. Figure 6. Scheme of the proteolytic cascade involved in the activation of the P. putida aerobactinmediated CSS system. In the uninduced state (left panel, absence of aerobactin) the C-terminal part of the IutY sigma/anti-sigma hybrid protein is protected from proteolysis via an unknown mechanism. The extracellular presence of aerobactin (right panel) is sensed by the IutA receptor and transduced to the IutY protein. This induces a proteolytic cascade that involves two proteases: Prc first degrades the C-terminal periplasmic part of IutY and produces the substrate for RseP, which subsequently removes the TM region of the protein. These proteolytic steps produce an active σIutY protein that associates with the core of the RNAP and initiates transcription of the iutA gene. OM, outer membrane; P, periplasm; CM, cytoplasmic membrane; C, cytoplasm. Experimental procedures Bacterial growth conditions. Bacteria were grown in liquid LB or CAS media (Llamas et al., 2006), the latter supplemented with 100-200 mM of 2,2’-bipyridyl (iron-restricted conditions) or with 50 µM FeCl3 (iron-rich conditions). Aerobactin containing supernatant was obtained from iron-restricted cultures of E. coli C600 (ColV-K30) (de Lorenzo et al., 1986), and aerobactin-negative supernatant from E. coli C600 lacking the ColV-K30 plasmid. For induction experiments, supernatants were added in 1:1 proportion to ironrestricted cultures. Pure iron-free aerobactin was obtained from EMC microcollections GmbH, and iron-free ferrichrome and ferrioxamine B from Sigma-Aldrich. When required, antibiotics were used at the following final concentrations (µg ml-1): ampicillin (Ap), 100; kanamycin (Km), 50; piperacillin (Pip), 25; gentamycin (Gm), 10; streptomycin (Sm), 100; tetracycline (Tc), 20. Plasmid construction and molecular biology. Plasmids used are listed in Table S1 and primers in Table S2. PCR amplifications were performed using Phusion® Hot Start HighFidelity DNA Polymerase (Finnzymes) or Expand High Fidelity DNA polymerase (Roche). All constructs were confirmed by DNA sequencing and transferred to P. putida or P. aeruginosa by electroporation (Choi et al., 2006). Southern blot analyses were performed as described (Llamas et al., 2000). Bacterial strains and mutants construction. Strains used are listed in Table S1. P. putida KT2440 and the miniTn5-Km transposon mutants were derived from the P. putida transposon mutant library at the EEZ-CSIC (Molina-Henares et al., 2010). Mutation was confirmed by PCR and sequencing, and Southern blot. Construction of null mutants was performed by allelic exchange using the suicide vector pKNG101, which contains both a Sm resistance gene as a selectable marker for the cointegration event and the Bacillus Prc and RseP proteases control CSS | subtilis sacB gene as a counter selectable marker to select for the allelic exchange (Kaniga et al., 1991). The pKNG101 derivative plasmids were constructed by amplifying ~1-1.4 Kb DNA fragments upstream and downstream of the respective deleted gene. These fragments were ligated using an EcoRI site generated in the PCR reactions, and used as template in a second PCR reaction with the outer set of the primers of the first reactions. The final fragment, which contains XbaI-BamHI restriction sites, was cloned into the compatible restriction sites of pKNG101 (Kaniga et al., 1991). All constructs were sequenced to exclude the presence of point mutations in the sequences flanking the chromosomal deletion, and transferred to P. putida or P. aeruginosa by triparental mating using the E. coli HB101 (pRK600) helper strain (de Lorenzo and Timmis, 1994). Pseudomonas transconjugants bearing a cointegrate of the plasmid into the chromosome were selected on M9 minimal medium (Sambrook et al., 1989) with 0.3% (w/v) citrate as the sole carbon source and 100 µg/ml Sm. Sm-resistant transconjugants were analysed by PCR with primers flanking the gene to be deleted. Those in which both the wild-type and the mutated gene product were amplified were selected and cultured in liquid LB medium without antibiotic during 5-6 h to promote the second crossover and the allelic exchange to occur. To select this process, colonies were plated on LB with 15 % (w/v) sucrose. Sm-sensitive/sucroseresistant colonies were analysed by PCR and southern-blot to confirm the chromosomal gene deletion. Enzyme assay. β-galactosidase activities in soluble cell extracts were determined using ONPG (Sigma-Aldrich) as described (Llamas et al., 2006). Activity is expressed in Miller units. Each assay was run in duplicate at least three times and the data given are the average. Error bars in all graphs indicate SD. SDS-PAGE and immunoblot. Bacteria were grown until late log phase and pelleted by centrifugation. The pellets were solubilized in Laemmli buffer and heated for 5 min at 95°C. Protein levels were normalized according to the OD660 of the bacterial cultures and 0.1 OD unit was loaded in each lane. Proteins were separated by SDS-PAGE containing 12-15% (w/v) acrylamide, electrotransferred to nitrocellulose membranes and immunodetected with a monoclonal antibody directed against the influenza hemagglutinin epitope (HA.11, Covance). The second antibody, horseradish peroxidase-conjugated rabbit anti-mouse (DAKO), was detected using the SuperSignal® West Femto Chemiluminescent Substrate (Thermo Scientific). Blots were scanned and analyzed using the Quantity One version 4.6.5 (Bio-Rad). Computer-assisted analyses. Sequence analyses of the Pseudomonas genomes were performed at http://www.pseudomonas.com, BLAST analyses at NCBI, prediction of transmembrane domains with HMMTOP, and sequence alignments with ClustalW. P-values were calculated by unpaired Two-tailed t-Test using GraphPad Prism version 5.01 for Windows; *** p < 0.001, ** p < 0.01, and * p < 0.05. Acknowledgements We thank E. Duque and J. de la Torre for providing us with the P. putida miniTn5-Km mutants and J. Luirink and P. van Ulsen for helpful discussions. KCB acknowledges financial support from the Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO) through an ECHO grant (2951201). Research in MAL’s lab is supported by the EU through a Marie Curie CIG grant (3038130), and the Spanish Ministry of Economy with grants inside the Ramon&Cajal (RYC2011-08874) and the Plan Nacional for I+D+i (SAF2012-31919) programs. 35 2 KT2440 carrying a miniTn5-Km in the iutY (PP2192) gene (insertion after codon 256); RifR, KmR KT2440 carrying a miniTn5-Km in the clpB gene (insertion after codon 279); RifR, KmR KT2440 carrying a miniTn5-Km in a gene encoding a putative cytoplasmic protease (insertion after codon 403); RifR, KmR KT2440 carrying a miniTn5-Km in the sspB gene (insertion after codon 148); RifR, KmR PP0680-Tn5 KT2440 carrying a miniTn5-Km in the prc gene (insertion after codon 624); RifR, KmR KT2440 carrying a miniTn5-Km in the lon-1 gene (insertion after codon 105); RifR, KmR PP1719-Tn5 PP1443-Tn5(2) KT2440 carrying a miniTn5-Km in the lon-1 gene (insertion after codon 11); RifR, KmR KT2440 carrying a miniTn5-Km in the clpB gene (insertion after codon 610); RifR, KmR PP1443-Tn5(1) PP1321-Tn5 PP0625-Tn5(2) KT2440 carrying a miniTn5-Km in the fiuA gene (insertion after codon 253); RifR, KmR PP0625-Tn5(1) PP0350-Tn5 KT2440 carrying a miniTn5-Km in the foxA gene (insertion after codon 205); RifR, KmR PP0160-Tn5 hsdR1, wild-type strain; RifR KT2440 carrying a miniTn5-Km in the iutA (PP2193) gene (insertion after codon 438); RifR, KmR iutY-Tn5 KT2440 iutA-Tn5 Wild-type strain Markerless PAO1 null mutant in the prc (PA3257) gene Markerless PAO1 null mutant in the rseP (PA3649) gene PAO1 ∆prc ∆rseP P. putida P. aeruginosa F- tonA21 thi-1 thr-1 leuB6 lacY1 glnV44 rfbC1 fhuA1 λ-; RifR ∆(ara-leu) araD ∆lacX74 galE galK phoA20 thi-1 rpsE rpoB argE recA1, lysogenized with lpir; RifR supE44 ∆(lacZYA-argF)U169 f80 lacZ∆M15 hsdR17 (rK- mK+) recA1 endA1 gyrA96 thi1 relA1; NalR F´[lacIq, Tn10 (TetR)] mcrA Δ(mrr-hsdRMS-mcrBC) Φ80lacZΔM15 ΔlacX74 recA1 araD139 Δ(ara leu) 7697 galU galK rpsL (StrR) endA1 nupG; TcR (Molina-Henares et al., 2010) and this study (Molina-Henares et al., 2010) and this study (Molina-Henares et al., 2010) and this study (Molina-Henares et al., 2010) and this study (Molina-Henares et al., 2010) and this study (Molina-Henares et al., 2010) and this study (Molina-Henares et al., 2010) and this study (Molina-Henares et al., 2010) and this study (Franklin et al., 1981) (Molina-Henares et al., 2010) and this study (Molina-Henares et al., 2010) and this study (Molina-Henares et al., 2010) and this study (Jacobs et al., 2003) This study This study (Hanahan, 1983) (Herrero et al., 1990) (Hanahan, 1983) Invitrogen Reference | C600 CC118lpir DH5a TOP10F’ Table S1. Bacterial strains and plasmids used in this studya Strain Characteristics E. coli 36 Chapter 2 KT2440 carrying a miniTn5-Km in a putative periplasmic protease (insertion after codon 107); RifR, KmR KT2440 carrying a miniTn5-Km in the hslU gene (insertion after codon 295); RifR, KmR pK∆rseP pK∆prc pK∆iutY pK∆degS pBSL141 pKNG101 pK∆degP Plasmid ColV-K30 pBBR1MCS-5 pBBR-PPprc pBBR-PPrseP ∆degP ∆degS ∆iutY ∆prc ∆rseP PP5058-Tn5 Characteristics Plasmid containing the aerobactin biosynthetic pathway oriTRK2; GmR pBBR1MCS-5 carrying in BamHI a 2.6-Kb PCR fragment containing the P. putida prc (PP1719) gene; GmR pBBR1MCS-5 carrying in XhoI-HindIII a 1.6 Kb PCR fragment containing the P. putida rseP (PP1598) gene; GmR Source of the Gm cassette; ApR, GmR Gene replacement suicide vector, oriR6K, oriTRK2, sacB; SmR pKNG101 carrying in XbaI-BamHI a 2.1-Kb PCR fragment containing the regions up- and downstream the P. putida degP (PP1430) gene; SmR pKNG101 carrying in XbaI-BamHI a 2.3-Kb PCR fragment containing the regions up- and downstream the P. putida degS (PP1301) gene; SmR pKNG101 carrying in XbaI-BamHI a 2.3-Kb PCR fragment containing the regions up- and downstream the P. putida iutY (PP2192) gene; SmR pKNG101 carrying in XbaI-BamHI a 2.6-Kb PCR fragment containing the regions up- and downstream the P. putida prc (PP1719) gene; SmR pKNG101 carrying in XbaI-BamHI a 1.9-Kb PCR fragment containing the regions up- and downstream the P. putida rseP (PP1598) gene; SmR Markerless KT2440 null mutant in the degP (PP1430) gene; RifR Markerless KT2440 null mutant in the degS (PP1301) gene; RifR Markerless KT2440 null mutant in the iutY (PP2192) gene; RifR Markerless KT2440 null mutant in the prc (PP1719) gene; RifR Markerless KT2440 null mutant in the rseP (PP1598) gene; RifR KT2440 carrying a miniTn5-Km in a putatative C-terminal protease (insertion after codon 62); RifR, KmR KT2440 carrying a miniTn5-Km in the clpA gene (insertion after codon 128); RifR, KmR PP5001-Tn5 PP4008-Tn5(2) KT2440 carrying a miniTn5-Km in the clpA gene (insertion after codon 80); RifR, KmR PP4008-Tn5(1) KT2440 carrying a miniTn5-Km in the pfpI gene (insertion after codon 18); RifR, KmR PP3922-Tn5 PP2725-Tn5 KT2440 carrying a miniTn5-Km in the lon-2 gene (insertion after codon 615); RifR, KmR PP2302-Tn5 This study This study This study This study (Alexeyev et al., 1995) (Kaniga et al., 1991) This study Reference (de Lorenzo et al., 1986) (Kovach et al., 1995) This study This study (Molina-Henares et al., 2010) and this study (Molina-Henares et al., 2010) and this study (Molina-Henares et al., 2010) and this study (Molina-Henares et al., 2010) and this study (Molina-Henares et al., 2010) and this study (Molina-Henares et al., 2010) and this study (Molina-Henares et al., 2010) and this study This study This study This study This study This study Prc and RseP proteases control CSS | 37 2 This study This study (Llamas et al., 2006) (Llamas et al., 2006) This study This study This study (Spaink et al., 1987) This study This study This study This study (Fürste et al., 1986) This study This study This study (de Lorenzo and Timmis, 1994) a ApR, GmR, KmR, NalR, RifR, SmR and TcR, resistance to ampicillin, gentamycin, kanamycin, nalidixic acid, rifampicin, streptomycin and tetracycline, respectively pRK600 pMP-PPfiuA pMP-PPfoxA pMPR8b pMPFiuA pMMBK1-HA pMMBK2-HA pMMBK3-HA pMP220 pMPK4 pMMBK3 pMMBK2 pMMBK1 pMMB67EH pMMB-iutA pK∆PArseP pKNG101 carrying in XbaI-BamHI a 2.1-Kb PCR fragment containing the regions up- and downstream the P. aeruginosa prc (PA3257) gene; SmR pKNG101 carrying in XbaI-BamHI a 1.8-Kb PCR fragment containing the regions up- and downstream the P. aeruginosa rseP (PA3649) gene; SmR IncQ broad-host range plasmid, lacIq; ApR pMMB67EH carrying in EcoRI-HindIII a 2.7-Kb PCR fragment containing the P. putida iutA (PP2193) gene; ApR pMMB67EH carrying in EcoRI-HindIII a 1.7-Kb PCR fragment containing the P. putida iutY (PP2192) gene; ApR pMMB67EH carrying in EcoRI-HindIII a 0.92-Kb PCR fragment containing a partial P. putida iutY gene (amino acids 1-171); ApR pMMB67EH carrying in EcoRI-HindIII a 0.99-Kb PCR fragment containing a partial P. putida iutY gene (amino acids 1-194); ApR pMMBK1 in which the iutY gene has been N-terminally HA-tagged; ApR pMMBK2 in which the iutY K2 fragment gene has been N-terminally HA-tagged; ApR pMMBK3 in which the iutY K3 fragment gene has been N-terminally HA-tagged; ApR IncP broad-host-range lacZ fusion vector; TcR pMP220 carrying in EcoRI-BamHI the P. putida iutA (PP2193) promoter region cloned upstream the lacZ gene; TcR pMP220 carrying in EcoRI-BamHI the P. aeruginosa fiuA (PA0470) promoter region cloned upstream the lacZ gene; TcR pMP220 carrying in EcoRI-BamHI the P. aeruginosa foxA (PA2466) promoter region cloned upstream the lacZ gene; TcR pMP220 carrying in EcoRI-BamHI the P. puitda foxA (PP0160) promoter region cloned upstream the lacZ gene; TcR pMP220 carrying in EcoRI-BamHI the P. putida fiuA (PP0350) promoter region cloned upstream the lacZ gene; TcR Helper plasmid, oriColE1, mobRK2, traRK2; CmR | pK∆PAprc 38 Chapter 2 pKΔdegP pBBR-PPrseP degP (PP1430) rseP (PP1598) pKΔrseP pKΔdegS degS (PP1301) fiuA (PP0350) pMP-PPfoxA foxA (PP0160) pMP-PPfiuA pKΔPArseP rseP (PA3649) P. putida KT2440 pKΔPAprc prc (PA3257) Pr-PP0160F-E Pr-PP0160R-X Pr-PP0350F-E Pr-PP0350R-X PP1303F-X ΔdegSR-E ΔdegSF-E PP1300R-B rseBF-X ∆degPR-E ∆degPF-E PP1431R-B PP1598F-X PP1598R-H PP1598F-X ∆PP1598R-E ∆PP1598F-E PP1598R-B PA3256F-X ΔPAprcR-E ΔPAprcF-E PA3258R-B PA3650F-X ΔPArsePR-E ΔPArsePF-E PA3648R-B Table S2. Sequence of the primers used in this study Gene (or promoter Plasmid Primer name region) P. aeruginosa PAO1 AATGAATTCTGCTACCGCAGACGTTGCC TGCTCTAGATTCGGGCTGAAAGTGTGGG AAAGAATTCGGCATACGCAGTGGTGGG AACTCTAGATATGATCAACGGCACGGG AACTCTAGATTCCTCGACCATCTTGTCGC AATGAATTCTGGCAGTGGGGCATGAGCG AAAGAATTCGCCAGGAAGAGAAATAAACCC AAAGGATCCGAGGGCTACGTGTTCGC AAATCTAGACTCAAGGGCACTGAAACCG AAAGAATTCAAAGACCCCTGCACAACGC CCAGAATTCAATAAGCAGTTTCGCAAGGC TTAGGATCCAGCGAGGAGTCGTTCAGGG AAACTCGAGATCGCGGGTATGATCGAACAGGTA TTTAAGCTTTGGCAATAAACAACCTGCCGTCAC TATTCTAGATCCTGCTTACCGCGTCCG AACGAATTCCGCTGTCATGTCCATCTCCG ATAGAATTCATAGGGGTGATGTTGCTCGC TATGGATCCTCTTCGGTCTTGGTGTTGCC AAATCTAGAGCCAGACCTTCAACCCCAG CCAGGAATTCTGGGCGCTG TAAGAATTCACTGAGTTCAGCGGGAGCG TAAGGATCCGATGGACGATGCCGATGGG AACTCTAGATCCTCTTGACCGCCTCCG AAAGAATTCGTGGAACGTCACCAGC GAGTCGTCTGTAGTCATGTTGAATTCG AATGGATCCGGTGTAGCCCTCGTTGCCC Primer sequence (5’>3’)a Prc and RseP proteases control CSS | 39 2 PP1719F-X PP1719R-B PP1720F-X ΔPP1719R-E ΔPP1719F-E PP1718R-B PP_2192F-E PP_2192R-H(1) PP_2192F-E PP_2192R-H(3) PP_2192F-E PP_2192R-H(2) NHA-PP2192-E AAATCTAGAGCAAACGCGGTCACCCACG TTTGGATCCCCCGGCCCTCATATTTCACG pKΔprc GAATCTAGACGAGGAATGACTTGCCGTT TTAGAATTCATTGATCACGCATAGTAGGC AAAGAATTCAAGAAGTAAGGCACCTCAGC TATGGATCCTACTGGCTTCTTTGAGTGCG iutY (PP2192) pMMBK1 AACGAATTCTGCCCCTGCTGGTCACTGAC GAGAAGCTTAAGTCGTAAATGAGAATGGG pMMBK2 AACGAATTCTGCCCCTGCTGGTCACTGAC GATAAGCTTCAACCCGCCTGCTTCAGCC pMMBK3 AACGAATTCTGCCCCTGCTGGTCACTGAC TCTAAGCTTCAGGCCAGCAGTATCGGGGC pMMBK1-HA AAAGAATTCATGTACCCGTACGACGTGCCGGAC TACGCGTGCCTGACTTCACCCATGTCGGGCC PP2192R-X TTTTCTAGATCAATGCACCACGGCCAACCACGGCAG pMMBK2-HA NHA-PP2192-E AAAGAATTCATGTACCCGTACGACGTGCCGGAC TACGCGTGCCTGACTTCACCCATGTCGGGCC PP_2192R-H(3) GATAAGCTTCAACCCGCCTGCTTCAGCC pMMBK3-HA NHA-PP2192-E AAAGAATTCATGTACCCGTACGACGTGCCGGAC TACGCGTGCCTGACTTCACCCATGTCGGGCC PP_2192R-H(2) TCTAAGCTTCAGGCCAGCAGTATCGGGGC pKΔiutY PP2190F-X TAATCTAGAACTCGTCCTCGTCAATGGG ΔPP2192R-E ATAGAATTCAGCATGATTGGGGAACAGCC ΔPP2192F-E ATTGAATTCCTGTTCCGGCCTCTTAGC PP2193R-B GTTGGATCCTAGATACCCGTGCTGCCG iutA (PP2193) pMMB-iutA PRPP_2193F TTAGAATTCATTGATCAGCCTGTTCCG PP2193R-H CCTAAGCTTGCCACCACAATCAGTAAGCC pMPK4 PRPP_2193F TTAGAATTCATTGATCAGCCTGTTCCG PRPP_2193R GGATCTAGACAAGTCGTAAATGAGAATGG a The sequences of the restriction sites are indicated in bold and the annealing region is underlined pBBR-PPprc | prc (PP1719) 40 Chapter 2 Prc and RseP proteases control CSS | 41 2 42 | Chapter 2 Figure S1. PP2192 sequence analyses. (A) Conserved domains detected in the PP2192 protein. (B) PP2192 protein sequence and motifs prediction. The predicted cytoplasmic sigma domain (amino acids 1-169) is depicted in red with the domains 2 and 4 characteristic of ECF sigma factors underlined and double underlined, respectively. The TM domain (amino acids 170-186) is shown in grey, and the predicted periplasmic anti-sigma domain (amino acids 187-374) in blue. The length of the different K1 to K3 constructs is indicated in the sequence as well as the insertion point of the miniTn5-Km in the iutY-Tn5 mutant. (C) Alignment of the PP2192 (IutY) Nterminal domain with the E. coli FecI, P. aeruginosa FoxI and P. putida PupI ECF sigma factors. The PP2192 Ndomain contains the domains 2 and 4 characteristic of sigma factors belonging to the ECF subfamily (shaded). (D) Alignment of the PP2192 (IutY) C-terminal domain with the E. coli FecR, P. aeruginosa FoxR and P. putida PupR anti-sigma factors. The PP2192 C-domain resembles the C-terminal domain of TM anti-sigma factors but lacks the N-terminal cytoplasmic domain (first 100 amino acids), which is the domain of (normal) anti-sigma factors that binds the sigma factor. The PP2192 TM domain is shaded. Prc and RseP proteases control CSS | 43 2 Figure S2. PP2192 promoter region. Sequence of the putative FUR box in the PP2192 (iutY) promoter region is surrounded. Residues matching with the FUR box consensus sequence (below) are indicated in bold. The PP2192 start codon and the putative -10 and -35 regions are indicated. 44 | Chapter 2 Figure S3. Southern-blot analyses of the iutY-Tn5 and iutA-Tn5 mutants. The restriction map of both the P. putida iutY-Tn5 and iutA-Tn5 chromosomal region at the point of the miniTn5-Km transposon insertion is shown. The kanamycin resistance gene was used as a probe to determine the size of the BamHI and PstI, respectively, chromosomal fragments. The sizes of such fragments are indicated in the scheme. For the Southern blot analyses, total DNA was prepared from P. putida KT2440 (wild-type, WT), and the iutY-Tn5 and iutATn5 mutants, and digested either with BamHI or with PstI. After electrophoresis on agarose gel, the digested DNA was transferred to a nylon hybridization membrane. The probe was labelled with digoxigenin-dUTP (Roche). For DNA prehybridization and hybridization, high-stringency conditions (42ºC, 50% [v/v] formamide) were used. The digoxigeninlabelled hybrid DNA was detected by using an enzyme immunoassay according to the manufacturer’s instructions (Roche). Prc and RseP proteases control CSS | 45 2 Figure S4. Screening to identify proteases involved in the P. putida aerobactin-mediated CSS pathway. The P. putida KT2440 wild-type strain and its isogenic null ΔdegP and ΔdegS mutants (A) and miniTn5-Km mutants (B) bearing the pMPK4 plasmid (iutA::lacZ fusion) were grown under ironrestricted conditions without or with aerobactin containing supernatant. β-galactosidase activity was measured as described in Experimental procedures. 46 | Chapter 2 Figure S5. Activity of the HA-tagged IutY proteins. The P. putida ΔiutY mutant bearing the pMPK4 plasmid (iutA::lacZ fusion) and the indicated pMMB67EHderivative plasmids, in which the inserted gene product was or not HA-tagged, were grown under iron-restricted conditions with aerobactin containing supernatant. β-galactosidase activity was measured as described in Experimental procedures. Figure S6. Activity of the P. putida ferrioxamine- and ferrichromemediated CSS pathways. (A) Activity of the ferrioxamine- and ferrichrome-mediated CSS systems in the P. putida ΔdegP and ΔdegS mutants, and (B) complementation of the Δprc and ΔrseP mutations for the ferrichrome induced pathway. The indicated strains were grown under iron-restricted conditions without or with the siderophores. β-galactosidase was measured as described in Experimental procedures. Prc and RseP proteases control CSS | 47 2 Figure S7. Model for regulated intramembrane proteolysis (RIP) in the activation of stressresponsive ECF sigma factors. (A) Activation of the B. subtilis ECF sigma factor σW. In unstressed cells, σW is bound to the RsiW anti-sigma factor and inactive. In response to stress, the site-1 protease PrsW cleaves in the C-terminal end of the periplasmic domain of RsiW. Subsequently, periplasmic bulk proteases like Prc are required for trimming the rest of the C-terminal domain of the anti-sigma factor and for producing the substrate for the site-2 protease RasP (RseP homologue). RasP cleaves in the TM region of RsiW and the remaining cytosolic portion of the protein is degraded by cytosolic proteases such as ClpXP. Consequently, σW is free to associate with the RNAP core enzyme and drive transcription of the σW regulon. (Figure adapted from Heinrich et al., 2009) (B) Activation of the E. coli ECF sigma factor σE. In unstressed cells, σE is inactive through its interaction with the RseA anti-sigma factor. The DegS and RseP proteases are inactive through inhibitory interactions with their own PDZ domains, RseB that binds and protects the periplasmic domain of RseA, and a glutamine-rich region of RseA. In stressed cells, unfolded proteins accumulate in the periplasm and activate the DegS protease by binding its PDZ domain. RseB is in this situation displaced from the RseA protein and DegS cleaves the periplasmic domain of the anti-sigma factor. This site-1 cleavage removes the inhibitory interaction between RseP and RseA, and enables RseP to cleave in the TM region of RseA. The remainder of RseA is degraded in the cytosol by ClpXP proteases, upon which σE is free to interact with the RNAP core enzyme and direct transcription of its target genes. The σE regulon mainly encodes proteins that are involved in the restoration of the proper folding of outer membrane proteins. The P. aeruginosa σE, RseA, RseB, DegS and RseP homologues (σAlgT, MucA, MucB, AlgW and MucP, respectively) are indicated between brackets. CW, cell wall; OM, outer membrane; P, periplasm; CM, cytoplasmic membrane; C, cytoplasm.