Effector Specificity Mutants of the Transcriptional Activator NahR of Naphthalene Degrading Pseudomonas Define Protein Sites Involved in Binding of Aromatic Inducers*

(Received for publication, September 6, 1996, and in revised form, October 28, 1996)

Angel Cebolla Dagger , Carolina Sousa Dagger and Víctor de Lorenzo §

From the Centro Nacional de Biotecnología, Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas, Campus de Cantoblanco, 28049 Madrid, Spain

ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
MATERIALS AND METHODS
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
FOOTNOTES
Acknowledgments
REFERENCES


ABSTRACT

This work reports a genetic analysis of the interactions between NahR, the LysR-type regulator of the NAH operons for biodegradation of naphthalene in Pseudomonas, and its aromatic effectors. Six mutants encoding NahR variants responsive to salicylate analogs such as benzoate, which is not an inducer for the wild type regulator, were isolated with a polymerase chain reaction-based saturation mutagenesis protocol. Most mutants displaying a specific change of effector profile bore single amino acid substitutions within a short protein segment of 60 residues located at the central portion of the NahR sequence. Some of the protein variants exhibited an increased affinity for salicylate and also for otherwise suboptimal effectors, with apparent Ks' values 5-100-fold lower than those of the wild type NahR protein. In addition, all mutants were activated by inducers bearing novel substituents at positions 1 or 2 of the aromatic ring and displayed also an enhanced tolerance to changes at positions 3 and 4. Correlation between mutations in NahR and the structures of the new effectors suggested that protein sites Met116, Arg132, Asn169, and Arg248 are involved in effector recognition and binding during the earlier steps of the process leading to transcriptional activation of cognate NAH promoters.


INTRODUCTION

Transcriptional regulators belonging to the LysR-type family (hereafter referred to as LTTRs)1 have protein sizes ranging from 276 to 324 amino acids, and they are widely distributed among prokaryotes (1). Individual members of the family share their being responsive to chemical effectors, their being transcribed divergently from the genes that they regulate (frequently accompanying an autorepression mechanism), and their mode of transcriptional activation of target promoters. All LTTRs studied so far in this respect remain bound to equivalent promoter-proximal target DNA sequences regardless of the presence or absence of inducer. Effector binding and subsequent transcriptional activation seem to result in the relief of the DNA bending caused by LTTR binding under noninduced conditions (reviewed in Ref. 2). In fact, the most conserved portion of LTTRs is precisely the N-terminal segment that contains the helix-turn-helix DNA-binding motif that accounts for binding to DNA (3).

Apart from changes in DNA structure, the precise mechanism by which inducer binding is ultimately translated in transcriptional activation remains largely unknown. LTTRs contain a poorly conserved central domain (see Fig. 1) believed to interact with the chemical inducers. The divergence of the central portions of LTTRs seems to reflect the variety of inducers to which these proteins respond (1). This notion is supported by comparisons between various NodD proteins of Rhizobium species. These LTTRs are similar and bind the same target DNA sequences, but minor differences in their central domain account for their responsiveness to distinct flavonoid derivatives (4, 5). Furthermore, constitutive, inducer-independent mutants of various LTTRs have been found to bear changes in their central domain (6-9). However, evidence of direct interactions between specific residues of LTTRs and their cognate inducers is generally scarce. A particularly useful LTTR to address this issue is the NahR protein of Pseudomonas, the salicylate-responsive transcriptional regulator of two operons for biodegradation of naphthalene by strains carrying the catabolic plasmid NAH7 (Refs. 1, 3, and 10; see Fig. 1). Because the native effector of NahR is a simple aromatic compound, an entire variety of salicylate analogs is commercially available to search for altered effector specificities. In this work, we show that mutations at the central domain of NahR expand the range of aromatic compounds that can activate the protein into a transcriptionally competent form. On the basis of these results, we have identified a region of the NahR protein that may interact with the aromatic inducers and tentatively pinpoint those amino acid residues involved in effector specificity.


Fig. 1. Biodegradation of naphthalene and organization of LysR-type transcriptional regulators. Naphthalene catabolism by Pseudomonas strains carrying plasmid NAH7 is determined by two operons. The upper operon gives rise to the various activities required for the oxidative transformation of naphthalene into salicylate, whereas the lower operon determines the subsequent metabolism of this compound onto Krebs cycle intermediates. Transcription of these two operons requires NahR, a member of the LysR family of regulators (1). The salicylate produced from naphthalene as the result of the low constitutive expression of the upper operon allows NahR to activate the promoters of both the upper (Pnah) and the lower (Psal) operons through a positive feedback mechanism (3, 10). Some of the regulatory elements of the pathway are included in the mini-Tn5 Psal::lacZ and mini-Tn5 nahR/Psal-lacZ transposons shown below the pathway. Their scheme shows (not to scale) the arrangement of other segments, i.e. Sm or Km resistance genes, the transcriptional terminator at the end of the lacZ reporter, and the I and O terminal 19-base pair sequences of the wild type transposon Tn5. The figure at the bottom summarizes the location of potential functional domains in LTTRs, which are distributed along protein sizes of 276-324 amino acids (1, 6), NahR being 300 amino acids (3). As discussed in the text, the multimerization domain may also participate in effector recognition.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS

Strains, Plasmids, Media, and General Procedures

The bacterial strains and plasmids used in this work are listed in Table I. Plasmids bearing an R6K origin of replication (i.e. mini-Tn5 delivery vectors) were always propagated in Escherichia coli CC118lambda pir. Bacteria were grown in rich LB medium (11) supplemented where required with 150 µg/ml ampicillin (Ap), 50 µg/ml kanamycin (Km), 25 µg/ml streptomycin (Sm), and 40 µg/ml 5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indolyl beta -D-galactopyranoside (X-Gal). Recombinant DNA techniques were made following published protocols (12). Insertion of hybrid mini-transposons into the chromosome of target bacteria was made as described in detail elsewhere (13) using E. coli S17-1lambda pir as the donor strain of suicide delivery plasmids. DNA sequencing of NahR variants was carried out on double-stranded templates with an automatic Applied Biosystems instrument and a dye terminator cycle protocol with Taq polymerase.

Table I.

Bacteria and plasmids


E. coli K12 strain Relevant genotype/characteristics Reference

CC118  Delta (ara-leu), araD, Delta lacX74, galE, galK, phoA 17
CC118lambda pir CC118 lysogenized with lambda pir phage 17
S17-1lambda pir Tpr Smr recA, thi, hsdRM+, RP4::2-Tc::Mu::Km Tn7, lambda pir phage lysogen 31
SAL1 Smr, CC118 bearing a chromosomal insertion of mini-Tn5 Sm/Psal::lacZ This work
RSL9 Kmr, CC118 bearing a chromosomal insertion of mini-Tn5 nahR/Psal-lacZ This work
R3SL1 Kmr, same as RSL9, but mini-Tn5 nahR/Psal-lacZ insertion bearing mutant nahR3 variant This work
R4SL1 Kmr, same as RSL9, but mini-Tn5 nahR/Psal-lacZ insertion bearing mutant nahR4 variant This work
Plasmids Genotype/phenotype/characteristics Reference
pMS15 Apr, nahR/Psal sequence from NAH7 plasmid of Pseudomonas cloned as a 1.6-kb HindIII-PstI insert in pUC8 3
pNM482 Apr, 'lacZ promoter probe vector 14
pUJ9 Apr, 'lacZ promoter probe vector, entire fusion excisable as a NotI restriction fragment 15
pUT/mini-Tn5 Sm Apr, Smr, R6KoriV, RP4oriT, mini-Tn5 Sm transposon vector delivery plasmid 15
pTSAL1 Apr, Smr, Psal-nahG'-'lacZ (Psal::lacZ) fusion inserted as a NotI fragment in pUT/mini-Tn5 Sm This work
pFH2 Apr, identical to pBKT7-0 but with NotI sites flanking the multiple cloning site 16
pNR Apr nahR gene cloned as a NcoI-HindIII fragment in pFH2. pNR series (pNR3, pNR4 ...) encode nahR variants nahR3, nahR4, etc. This work
pNR3Km Apr, Kmr, pNR3 inserted with an Omega -Km interposon at the HindIII site downstream of the nahR3 sequence of pNR This work
pNR4Km Apr, Kmr, same as pNR3, but bearing nahR4 This work
pUC18Not Apr, same as pUC18 (32) but with NotI sites flanking the multiple cloning site 17
pUC/NRC Apr, pUC18Not inserted with the HindIII/EcoRI segment of pCNB4 (19) bearing the wild type nahR sequence This work
pUC/NR Apr, pUC18Not inserted with the wild type nahR gene. pUC/NR series encode numbered nahR variants This work
pCNB4 Apr, Kmr, oriR6K, mobRP4, delivery vector for mini-Tn5 nahR/Psal 19
pCNB4lacZ Same as pCNB4, but inserted with a promoterless trp'-'lacZ reporter downstream of the Psal promoter 19
pCNB43lacZ Same as pCNB4lacZ, but bearing the nahR3 mutant This work
pCNB44lacZ Same than pCNB4lacZ, but bearing the nahR4 mutant This work

Construction and Analysis of Reporter Strains

Activity of NahR was monitored in all cases by following its ability to cause accumulation of beta -galactosidase in an E. coli strain bearing a transcriptional Psal::lacZ fusion. To this end, a hybrid between nahG (the first gene transcribed from Psal; see Fig. 1) and lacZ was made by cloning a 0.5-kb SalI-PstI fragment of pMS15 (spanning the Psal promoter; Ref. 3) in the corresponding sites of lacZ vector pNM482 plasmid (14). This fused the first 70 codons of nahG to the eighth codon of lacZ. The same fusion was recloned in pUJ9 (13) by exchange of EcoRI-SacI segments between the two plasmids. The entire Psal::nahG'-'lacZ fusion (simplified, Psal::lacZ) was then excised as a NotI fragment from the resulting plasmid and placed into the NotI site of pUT/mini-Tn5Sm (15). This gave rise to pTSAL1, a delivery vector for a hybrid mini-transposon bearing the Psal::lacZ fusion, which was placed into the chromosome of E. coli CC118 as explained in de Lorenzo and Timmis (13). Such an arrangement places strong transcriptional terminators upstream and downstream of the reporter cassette (see Fig. 1) to prevent readthrough transcription from nearby chromosomal promoters after insertion. The resulting strain (E. coli SAL1) was used as the recipient of plasmids bearing the nahR variants as described below. Induction of the Psal promoter in E. coli cells bearing Psal::lacZ fusions was made by growing the corresponding cultures in LB medium at 37 °C up to an A600 of 0.4, after which inducers were added at the concentrations indicated in each case. Incubation was then continued for 5 h, and the accumulation of beta -galactosidase was measured in cells permeabilized with chloroform and sodium dodecyl sulfate as described by Miller (11). beta -Galactosidase activity values given throughout this paper represent the average of at least three independent experiments, each of which was conducted in duplicate samples, with deviations being less than 15-20%.

Mutagenesis of the nahR Gene

The plasmid pNR, used as the DNA template for the protocol described below, was produced by transferring an 1.2-kb NcoI-HindIII fragment from pMS15 (3) bearing the entire nahR sequence to the same sites of vector pFH2 (16). For mutagenesis, the DNA regions of interest within pNR were amplified with the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) using the oligos NRBgl (5'-ACCGACATTGGCGAGATCT-3') and NRSph (5'-CTTGTGGTACTTCGCATGC-3') under conditions favoring errors of the Taq DNA polymerase. 100-µl PCR reactions were set up in a buffer containing 0.1 mM MgCl2, 0.5 mM MnCl2, 1 mM dGTP, 1 mM dTTP, 1 mM dCTP, 0.25 mM dATP, 0.5 µg of each of the primers, and 5 units of Taq DNA polymerase. 1-50 ng of pNR template was added to the reactions, the amount depending on the rate of mutations desired. The resulting 0.6-kb amplification products were digested with BglII and SphI, purified, and used to replace the equivalent segment of pNR. A second DNA template, namely plasmid pUC/NR, was alternatively employed for mutagenesis of a different nahR portion (see Fig. 2). pUC/NR bears also the entire nahR gene assembled as the result of a tripartite ligation between NotI-digested pUC18Not (17), a 0.6-kb NotI-BglII fragment of pUC/NRC (see Table I) and a 0.4-kb BglII-NotI fragment of pNR. pUC/NR has an unique HindIII site that simplifies insertion when required of the 0.6-kb HindIII-SphI segment of nahR sequence resulting from error-prone PCR with primers NRH5 (5'-ATCTGGCCGAGCCCGTC-3') and NRSph. As before, the mutated HindIII-SphI DNA segments were purified and cloned in the same sites of the larger fragment of pUC/NR. After mutagenesis, screening for NahR variants with altered effector specificity included the individual culture of each of the E. coli SAL1 transformants with the reconstructed nahR+ plasmids in microtiter plates, followed by their replication on separate LB plates amended with Ap, X-Gal, and 1 mM of each of the aromatic compounds under scrutiny. Differences in the intensity of the color developed in equivalent spots in each plate after incubation was considered an indication of altered NahR activity.


Fig. 2. Strategy used for generation of benzoate-responsive NahR variants. The amino acid sequence of NahR can be matched to a 0.9-kb DNA sequence that is nearly completely included in an NcoI-SphI restriction fragment of the NAH7 plasmid (3). Oligonucleotides flanking the nahR sequence, (excluding the region corresponding to the DNA-binding protein domain) were employed to prime the region for a polymerase chain reaction under error-prone conditions. The mutagenized DNA segments were then cloned back to selected plasmids vectors in order to reconstruct the nahR sequence and transformed in E. coli SAL1 (Psal::lacZ) to reveal the phenotype of the resulting mutants (see "Results" for explanation). The lower part of the figure shows the position within the NahR sequence and the nature of the six benzoate-responsive mutants described in this work.
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Construction of nahR/Psal-lacZ Insertions

Mini-Tn5 derivatives bearing not only a Psal-lacZ fusion but also the mutant nahR variants named nahR3 and nahR4 were made as follows. pNR derivatives encoding the mutated genes (pNR3 and pNR4, respectively) were partially digested with HindIII and ligated to a 2.1-kb HindIII Omega -Km fragment (18). The location and orientation selected was the same than that present in the reference wild type nahR/Psal-lacZ mini-transposon bore by pCNB4lacZ plasmid (Ref. 19; see Fig. 1). The resulting plasmids (pNR3Km and pNR4Km, respectively) were then digested with NcoI, which produced 2.2-kb DNA fragments spanning the entire mutant nahR sequence and part of the Omega -Km fragment. The equivalent NcoI segment pCNB4lacZ was then replaced by each of these NcoI segments, thus replacing the wild type nahR sequence by the mutant variants and reconstructing Omega -Km interposon. These manipulations originated transposon delivery plasmids pCNB43lacZ and pCNB44lacZ that carry hybrid mini-transposons containing nahR3/Psal-lacZ and nahR4/Psal-lacZ reporter elements, respectively. Once inserted into the chromosome of E. coli CC118 (Table I), the accumulation of beta -galactosidase by cells exposed to aromatic inducers was carried out as described above.


RESULTS

Structural Requirements of NahR Effectors

In order to determine which specific portions of the salicylate molecule were engaged in activation of NahR, we examined the degree of structural permissiveness of the regulator toward structural variants of the natural inducer. To this end, we assembled the entire segment of the NAH7 plasmid that spans the wild type nahR gene and adjacent regions in a mini-Tn5 transposon vector (Fig. 1), thereby faithfully reconstructing in E. coli all the regulatory elements that participate in the activation of the Psal promoter in Pseudomonas. In this construct, nahR is expressed under its own promoter and transcribed divergently from the Psal promoter, followed by a promoterless lacZ reporter gene (Fig. 1). This element was then placed into the chromosome of E. coli, and the resulting strain (E. coli RSL9) was challenged with a variety of aromatic compounds as described under "Materials and Methods." Reproduction of the system in E. coli prevented any metabolism of the aromatic compounds leading to other intermediates than those added to the culture and ensured their transport to the cell cytoplasm through a broad specificity facilitated diffusion system (20).

The results of measuring accumulation of beta -galactosidase under the different inducers is summarized in Table II. One important conclusion of this experiment is that the presence of a carboxyl group in the effector is an absolute requirement for NahR activation. As shown in Table II, salicylamide (compound B), 2-hydroxy-acetophenone (compound C), and salicyl alcohol (compound D) caused no accumulation of the reporter product. On the contrary, substitutions of the 2-hydroxyl group of salicylate were more tolerated, as indicated by the beta -galactosidase activity produced after the addition of anthranilic acid (compound F), o-acetyl-salicylic acid (compound G), or to a lesser extent o-methoxy-benzoic acid (compound H). However, benzoate (compound E) or 2-chloro-benzoate (compound I) did not give rise to any significant induction of the reporter system. Chloro and methyl substituents in positions C-3, C-4, and C-5 of the aromatic ring of salicylate appeared also to be tolerated (Table II). Introduction of hydroxyl or methoxyl groups in sites C-4 or C-5 of salicylate decreased the induction ability of the compounds that were, however, still able to activate NahR to significant levels. Finally, although with reduced activity, di- or tri-chloro salicylate derivatives (compounds M and N) could induce also the reporter system.

Table II.

In summary, it seems that specific contacts between substituents of the aromatic ring and the protein engage exclusively positions C-1 and C-2 of the salicylate, the minimal apparent requirements being the presence of a carboxyl group in C-1 and the presence of a small functional group with available electrons in C-2. NahR appeared to accept a wide variety of salicylate structural analogs as effectors, thus reflecting the permissiveness of the protein domain(s) that interacts with the aromatic molecules. The decrease and even lack of activity observed when bulkier groups are entered in other positions may reflect a steric hindrance related to the size of the "effector pocket" in the regulator and not to the disruption of specific protein-inducer interactions.

Isolation of NahR Mutants with Altered Effector Specificity

Once the structural requirements of NahR effectors were determined, we set out to probe the location of the protein segments involved in interactions with the aromatic compounds. We assumed that changes in the amino acid residues involved in effector recognition may result in NahR variants that can be activated by otherwise nonproductive inducers. On this basis, we designed a genetic strategy to identify NahR mutants that could respond to compounds found to be unable to act as effectors of wild type NahR (Fig. 2). In particular, we pursued the isolation of mutants responsive to benzoate, because we reasoned that NahR variants lacking the interactions with the quite permissive yet important position C-2 should appear at a reasonable frequency. To this end, we constructed an E. coli strain (named E. coli SAL1) bearing a chromosomal Psal::lacZ fusion, which was used as the recipient of plasmids bearing mutagenized nahR sequences. With the protocol described under "Materials and Methods," we first targeted the portion of NahR spanning amino acids 110-277, corresponding to a DNA segment of 0.49 kb (Fig. 2). This region was amplified through error-prone PCR from plasmid pNR. The ligation of the resulting BglII-SphI fragment with pNR digested with the same enzymes was then electroporated in E. coli SAL1 and plated out on LB/Ap/benzoate/X-Gal plates. After incubation, about 1% of the Ap-resistant colonies were intense blue. In order to discard constitutive mutants, these blue colonies bearing plasmids encoding putative NahR mutants were replicated in LB/Ap/X-Gal plates with or without benzoate, and only those clearly regulated by the aromatic compound were kept for further analysis. This was the case with two-thirds of all colonies tested, i.e. only about one-third of all mutants gave a constitutive, effector-independent phenotype, whereas the rest were genuinely responsive to benzoate. In addition, none of the benzoate-responsive mutants lacked their responsiveness to salicylate.

Characterization of Benzoate-responsive NahR Variants

Twenty of the nahR+ pNR derivatives present in E. coli colonies giving a benzoate-responsive color in X-Gal plates were subjected to DNA sequencing. This revealed the existence of at least six independent mutations (in all cases single-base transitions) in the nahR sequence (Fig. 2) accountable for the distinct phenotype observed. Mutants NahR3 (R248C) and NahR4 (N169D) bore a single-amino acid change that made the resulting proteins to respond to benzoate to the same extent as the wild type responds to salicylate (Table III). In contrast, mutants NahR5 (M116I), NahR6 (M116T), and NahR8 (M116V) displayed a remarkably high basal level of activity in the absence of any inducer, whereas they reached a similar degree of beta -gal accumulation with either benzoate or salicylate (Table III). This semiconstitutive phenotype was caused in all three cases by the exchange of the Met116 residue for neutral amino acids. Mutants NahR3 and NahR4 will be termed hereafter as variants type I, whereas mutants NahR5, NahR6, and NahR8 will be named variants type II. Interestingly, the same amino acid change bore by NahR5 was found by Huang and Schell (21) in their quest for salicylate-independent NahR proteins.

Table III.

Transcriptional activity of NahR variants induced with various salicylate analoges

Measured as accumulation of beta -galactosidase by E. coli SAL1 (Psal-lacZ) transformed with each of the plasmids indicated, encoding the nahR variants specified in each case.
Plasmid Gene Codon exchanged Amino acid substitution Psal::lacZ activitya
None B 2HB SA 2HBA 2ClB 3ClB 4ClB

Miller units
pNR nahR None None 58 60 1100 106 31 169 483 48
pNR3 nahR3 CGT right-arrow TGT Arg248 right-arrow Cys 64 923 1499 552 44 837 1008 146
pNR4 nahR4 AAT right-arrow GAT Asn169 right-arrow Asp 51 1158 1067 71 33 1104 840 40
pNR7 nahR7 CGC right-arrow TGC Arg132 right-arrow Cys 104 400 1061 1258 61 682 848 186
pNR5 nahR5 ATG right-arrow ATA Met116 right-arrow Ile 375 1050 1765 1109 330 1526 1303 983
pNR6 nahR6 ATG right-arrow ACG Met116 right-arrow Thr 359 1101 1247 288 268 1416 1326 949
pNR8 nahR8 ATG right-arrow GTG Met116 right-arrow Val 432 1049 1419 1330 344 1416 1387 1201

a  Units of beta -galactosidase (11) assayed in permeabilized cells from LB cultures induced for 5 h with 2 mM of the following inducers: B, benzoate; 2HB, salicylate; SA, salicylamide; 2HBA, 2-OH benzylalcohol; 2ClB, 2-chloro-benzoate; 3ClB, 3-chloro-benzoate; 4ClB, 4-chloro-benzoate.

Mutant NahR7 (R132C), albeit similar to type I mutants, showed an intermediate phenotype because its basal activity was about twice that of the wild type and its induction by benzoate was significantly less than its responsiveness to salicylate. However, it gained a remarkable inducibility by other effectors. In fact, further analysis of the ability of various compounds to activate mutant NahR variants revealed that mutants type I and NahR7 (which bear single amino acid changes) had generally broadened their effector profile while maintaining a tight regulation. For instance, as indicated in Table III, NahR3 and NahR7 acquired the ability of being activated by salicylamide, and they displayed also an enhanced induction by chloro-derivatives, whereas NahR4 seemed to be more specific in gain of responsiveness to benzoate. Similarly, mutants type II generally broadened their effector profile. However, because these mutants display an up phenotype, it was difficult to distinguish which compounds became authentic inducers because of a gain of function in NahR and which behaved as such because of an unspecific amplification of an otherwise residual responsiveness. At least in the case of salicylamide and 4 chloro-benzoate, it seems that two of the type II mutants acquired a genuine ability to respond to these aromatic compounds that was totally missing in the wild type regulator.

Affinity of Group I Mutants for Inducer Compounds

To gain some insight in the mechanism by which group I mutants broadened their effector profile, they were subjected to a series of experiments to compare the apparent affinities of NahR for four representative effectors, namely salicylate, benzoate, 3-chloro-benzoate and 3-methyl salicylate. To this end, we employed the procedure developed by Ramos et al. (20) to estimate in vivo the apparent Ks' values of effectors for prokaryotic transcriptional regulators. The procedure depends on the assumptions that (i) benzoate analogs are transported into E. coli cell through nonlimiting facilitated diffusion and (ii) the output of the reporter lacZ fusion reflects faithfully the activity of the regulator. Because these two conditions can be safely assumed in our system, we set out to examine the induction of a reporter Psal-lacZ fusion by varying effector concentrations. In order to decrease the number of variables in the procedure, we engineered the mutant nahR3 and nahR4 genes along with the reporter Psal-lacZ fusion within a mini-Tn5 vector (Fig. 1). These elements, along with that bearing wild type nahR (19), were introduced into E. coli CC118 by transposition, giving rise to strains E. coli RSL9 (wild type nahR), E. coli R3SL1 (nahR3), and E. coli R4SL1 (nahR4). As shown in Fig. 3, each of the strains was subjected to induction experiments with concentrations of the aromatic compounds ranging from 10-5 to 1 mM. It is interesting to note that the fully induced cells displayed a responsiveness to each of the aromatic compounds virtually identical to that observed when the reporter system carries the nahR variants in a multicopy plasmid (Table III). This ruled out that the phenotypes raised by the nahR mutants were simply due to different expression levels. On the other hand, the shape of the dose-response curves in Fig. 3 clearly indicated that the mutations did increase the affinity of NahR for specific aromatic compounds. This is particularly true for benzoate: as shown in Fig. 3C, the affinity increased from virtually nil to an apparent Ks ' value in the range of 0.5 mM. The operative affinities of NahR3 for 3-chloro-benzoate and 3-methyl salicylate increased >100-fold and >10-fold, respectively, as compared with wild type NahR. Interestingly, NahR4 also seemed to remarkably increase its affinity toward salicylate. These results suggested that the mutations carried by NahR variants type I affected amino acid residues involved in inducer binding.


Fig. 3. Effect of the concentration of aromatic inducers on Psal activity promoted by NahR and its mutant derivatives. Wild type nahR and its variants nahR3 and nahR4 were assembled in mini-Tn5 vectors along with a reporter Psal-lacZ fusion, as explained under "Materials and Methods." Strains E. coli RSL9 (wild type nahR+), E. coli R3SL1 (nahR3+), and E. coli R4SL1 (nahR4+), bearing each of the mobile elements in the chromosome (Table I) were then subjected to induction experiments with varying concentrations of the aromatic effector indicated in each case: salicylate (A), 3-chloro-benzoate (B), 3-methylsalicylate (C), and benzoate (D). The beta -galactosidase levels determined in permeabilized cells after 5 h of induction are shown.
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Benzoate-responsive Multiple Mutants Share the Same Key Changes in the NahR Sequence

In an attempt to identify additional residues that could simultaneously be involved in interactions with the aromatic effectors, we repeated the mutagenesis protocol under conditions in which error-prone PCR was expected to enter more than one base change per molecule of amplified DNA (see "Materials and Methods"). Furthermore, we employed primers NRH5 and NRSph, which amplified a longer portion of the NahR sequence (Fig. 2) along with plasmid pUC/NR (Table I). This facilitated the recovery of the mutagenized DNA segment. The procedure yielded 47 benzoate-responsive clones. On the basis of their responsiveness to selected inducers (salicylate, o-acetyl-salicylate, 3-methyl-benzoate, 2,3-chloro-benzoate, 2,6-chloro-benzoate, anthranylate, 5-chloro-salicylate, salicylalcohol, phenol, and salicylamide), they fell equally (23 and 24 clones) within the two types of mutants generated with the single-mutation protocol. As before also, none of the mutants lost its responsiveness to salicylate. Out of the entire collection, we selected 12 clones displaying a phenotype of low basal activity and broadening of their effector profile. All turned out to largely behave as NahR3, NahR4, or NahR7. Six of these were sequenced. The variant nahR138 was altered in five bases, three of them producing no amino acid changes, and the other two causing mutations N125S and N169D. Two other mutants were found to bear changes in two bases, both resulting in amino acid exchanges: nahR105 (R248C, A272T) and nahR141 (M139T,N169D). Finally, two mutants bore three changed residues: nahR135 (Q158R,N169D,E208G) and nahR130 (N156S,V226M,R248C), whereas the remaining one (renamed nahR123) was again, N169D. Therefore, four of the new six variants had the change N169D, already studied in nahR4, whereas the other two, alike nahR3, bore the change R248C. Therefore, the benzoate-responsive effect of the multiple mutants was attributed to the presence of mutations already identified and not because of the other amino acid changes.


DISCUSSION

A number of NahR mutants had been isolated in the past that could not activate the Psal/Pnah promoters because of their inability to bind DNA (1, 9). Not surprisingly, some of these were found to cluster within the the N-terminal portion of the protein bearing an helix-turn-helix motif (residues 23-45). However, other nondominant mutants unable to bind DNA were mapped closer to the C terminus (residues 239-291), thus suggesting that DNA binding required some multimerization through a different protein domain (1). In addition, a variety of noninducible NahR mutants were found within the region 126-206 that were still competent for DNA binding (9). This central region overlaps also with mutations that led to a constitutive, effector-independent behavior (mapping between residues 99-253; Ref. 21). These data, however, said little on whether salicylate interacts directly with the protein and, if so, which parts of the regulator are involved in such an interaction. In this work, we show that mutations that clearly alter the effector profile of NahR and affect its affinity for aromatic inducers map recurrently at distict sites of the regulator (Fig. 2). This provides an strong genetic evidence that these sites are engaged in effector binding during the earlier steps of the process leading to transcriptional activation of the Psal and Pnah promoters.

NahR mutants type I and the very related variant NahR7 appear to be genuinely affected in residues that participate in inducer recognition, because they show an altered effector specificity without any other detectable phenotypic change. Mutants NahR4 and NahR7 are particularly meaningful in this respect. As shown in Table III and Fig. 3, NahR4 appeared to gain the ability to respond to benzoate in a fashion that seemed to affect only the OH substituent at position C-2 of salicylate. On the contrary, NahR7 gained a remarkable ability of induction by salicylamide, suggesting that the protein residue(s) interacting with the otherwise essential carboxyl group of salicylate have also undergone some change. Mutant NahR3 seems, on the other hand, to increase its general reponsiveness to virtually all salicylate analogs examined, which may reflect a flexibilization of the effector pocket in NahR but not so much the change of a residue directly involved in effector recognition. Finally, mutants type II pinpoint the pivotal role of amino acid 116 in both effector recognition and NahR activation. That the mutations in this residue lock the protein in an intermediate activation step is indicated by the degree of inducer-independent activity observed. But that the 116 residue may also participate in interactions with the carboxyl group of salicylate is suggested by the observation (Table III) that the changes M116I and M116V make the proteins respond to salicylamide, whereas M116T does not. A number of amino acid residues critical for effector binding are therefore placed in a protein segment not larger than 60 amino acids, spanning positions 116 and 169. However, the contribution of more distant locations (i.e. 248) cannot be ruled out. These conclusions generally fit those found in the OccR protein of Agrobacterium tumefaciens, another archetypical LTTR, in which mutations within the central portion of OccR (F113L and G148D) increased the affinity of the protein for its natural effector, octopine (8). Ours is, however, the first case reported of single mutations within an LTTR that alter the effector profile of a protein of this type.

It would be highly speculative to draw structural or mechanistic conclusions from the data presented in this work. However, the remarkable similarity (approximately 50%) between two segments present in NahR and NodD proteins (residues 140-200 and 207-266; Ref. 3) allows some considerations. These two regions, which include NahR variants N169D and R248C, span a potential beta -turn-beta motif in NodD that might be a ligand-binding crevice (1, 22). In fact, segments 109-171 and 189-216 of NodD resemble a consensus steroid-binding domain, thus suggesting an involvement in effector binding (22). Furthermore, residue 248 of NahR, which is mutated in variant nahR3, is located within a region conserved in many LTTRs that could be involved in multimerization (1). Perhaps the protein segment around 248 links effector binding to a multimer conformation shift that leads to activation, as has been suggested for CysB (23).

The ease for obtaining variants with novel effector specificities makes NahR a system of choice for the generation of proteins responsive to predetermined aromatic molecules, a task of considerable interest for biotechnological applications (19, 24-27). In fact, the proneness of NahR to mutate to forms with a broader effector specificity might not be alien to the fact that LTTRs are frequently found as regulators of bacterial operons for biodegradation of xenobiotic compounds (28), the assembly of which requires a very fast protein evolution (29). This is true also for the NodD proteins of rhizobia, another well known case of LTTR, which are necessary for specific interactions with plants (5). NodD proteins must interact with similar DNA targets (the so-called nod boxes) in response to an array of flavonoid derivatives present in the plant exudates. The sequences available from various NodD proteins indicate that the ability to recognize novel flavonoids resides in the divergence of the amino acid sequences of the central protein domains (4, 30). This substantiates the notion that changes within a few amino acid residues in LTTRs give rise to repertoires of regulators responsive to chemical signals that become instrumental for transcriptional control of many different genes or operons along evolution (29).


FOOTNOTES

*   This work was funded by the ENV4-CT95-0141 (Environment) contract of the European Union and by Grant BIO95-0788 of the Comisión Interministerial de Ciencia y Tecnología. The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. The article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.
Dagger    Present address: Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, Institut des Sciences Végétales, Avenue de la Terrasse, 91198 Gif-sur-Yvette, France.
§   To whom correspondence should be addressed: Centro Nacional de Biotecnología del CSIC, Campus de Cantoblanco, Madrid 28049 (Spain). Tel.: 341-585-4536; Fax: 341-585-4506; E-mail: vdlorenzo{at}samba.cnb.uam.es.
1    The abbreviations used are: LTTR, LysR-type transcriptional regulator; Ap, ampicillin; Km, kanamycin; Sm, streptomycin; X-Gal, 5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indolyl beta -D-galactopyranoside; kb, kilobase pair(s); PCR, polymerase chain reaction.

Acknowledgments

We are indebted to M. Schell for various materials used in this study.


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