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Infection and Immunity, May 2002, p. 2730-2733, Vol. 70, No. 5
0019-9567/02/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/IAI.70.5.2730-2733.2002
Copyright © 2002, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Autonomous Expression of the slo Gene of the Bicistronic nga-slo Operon of Streptococcus pyogenes
Dragutin J. Savic,* William M. McShan, and Joseph J. Ferretti
Department of Microbiology and Immunology, University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma 73190
Received 2 October 2001/
Returned for modification 21 December 2001/
Accepted 7 February 2002

ABSTRACT
A recent model for cytolysin-mediated translocation in
Streptococcus pyogenes proposes that NAD-glycohydrolase is translocated through
streptolysin O-generated pores into a host cell (J. Madden,
N. Ruiz, and M. Caparon, Cell 104:143-152, 2001). This model
also assumes that the NAD-glycohydrolase (
nga) and streptolysin
O (
slo) genes that code for these products are organized in
an operon-like structure expressed from a single promoter only
(
nga). We expand this model by showing that
slo possesses its
own autonomous promoter, which is located 155 bp upstream of
the
slo gene. Under experimental conditions in which
S. pyogenes is grown in THY medium, the strength of the
slo promoter, as
measured by the activity of a
lacZ reporter gene, resulted in
low but highly reproducible values. Finally, we demonstrated
that
sloR, a
S. pyogenes gene that closely resembles the
Clostridium perfringens pfoR gene, exerts a negative effect on the expression
of the
slo gene.

TEXT
Streptolysin O (SLO) is an extracellular protein produced by
most strains of
Streptococcus pyogenes. It belongs to a large
group of highly conserved cholesterol-dependent cytolysins found
in species of four genera, including
Streptococcus,
Clostridium,
Listeria, and
Bacillus (
2). SLO exerts its cytolytic function
by forming large homopolymeric pores in the membranes of the
targeted cells. The pores are formed by binding of SLO monomers
to cholesterol receptors in the cell membrane followed by their
aggregation into supramolecular complexes containing up to 50
monomers (
11,
13).
In contrast to rather extensive research on the SLO toxin and its mode of action, little information is available on the regulation of the slo gene. The original studies of Kehoe, Timmis, and colleagues were centered mainly on the cloning, sequencing, and analysis of the slo gene in comparison with other cytolysin-coding genes. However, these studies also provided some information on the regulatory role of a certain DNA segment in the upstream region of the slo gene (6, 7). Their deletion and transposon mutagenesis analysis of the slo region produced three distinct phenotypes: Slo+, Slo-, and Slo±, the last of which was obtained by transposon insertion into the chromosome region later shown to be occupied by the nga gene and deletions which cover the nga promoter but not the slo promoter (Fig. 1). These results suggested the existence of a weak slo promoter (6) located, as has been predicted, 155 bp upstream of the structural gene (7). The most recent report by Caparon and colleagues describes for the first time a cytolysin-mediated translocation system in gram-positive bacteria which is a functional equivalent to the type III secretion system found in gram-negative bacteria (8). Their data support a model in which the effector NAD-glycohydrolase, encoded by nga (spn), the gene immediately upstream of the slo gene (4) (Fig. 1), is transported through the SLO pore into the host cell (8). Results of that study also suggest that the slo gene is a part of a bicistronic nga-slo operon transcribed from a promoter immediately upstream of the nga gene, implying that they are regulated in common at the transcriptional level (8) (Fig. 1). Here we show that the regulation of these two products is possibly more complicated and that the slo gene, in accordance with the reports cited in references 6 and 7, may also possess its own independently regulated promoter.
To test the authenticity of the previously predicted
slo promoter
(
7), a set of strains carrying fragments of different lengths
of the
slo upstream region fused to the
lacZ reporter gene of
vector pCAMP17 was constructed. The pCAMP17 vector contains
the attachment site for and the integrase gene of
S. pyogenes phage T12, which enable it to integrate irreversibly into a
specific site in the
S. pyogenes chromosome (
5). The fragments
were obtained by PCR amplification of chromosomal DNA from strain
NZ131 (M49) with mutagenic oligonucleotides containing
PstI
and
BamHI restriction sites. Upon treatment with
PstI and
BamHI
enzymes, the fragments were cloned into the
PstI- and
BamHI-treated
vector pCAMP17. The
BamHI restriction site is found at locations
inside both the
lacZ and
slo genes, and the obtained products
encompass the ribosome binding site, the ATG initiation codon,
and the first four codons of the
slo gene (Fig.
2). All constructs
(data not presented) were confirmed by DNA sequence analysis
before they were integrated into the chromosome of strain NZ131
(the resulting strains: OK88, OK89, OK103, OK129, OK130, and
OK153) (Fig.
2). The DNA recombinant techniques and measurement
of ß-galactosidase (ß-Gal) activity were
performed as described previously (
10). The advantage of this
system is that the
slo upstream DNA in all constructs ends far
below the hypothetical Spy166 gene promoter (
4) (Fig.
1). Also,
the
int gene on pCAMP17 is positioned in an opposite orientation
to that of the
lacZ reporter gene (Fig.
2). Consequently, all
detected activity of the reporter gene should be attributed
to the putative
slo promoter. The results demonstrate low but
reproducible expression of the
lacZ gene in all deletion mutants,
with the exception of control strain NZ131, with no plasmid
(data not presented), and strain OK103, in which the -35 sequence
of the putative
slo promoter is deleted (zero ß-Gal
activity) (Fig.
2). The low activity values obtained may be
the result of sensitivity of the
slo promoter to local DNA conformations
(pCAMP17 inserts into the chromosome at the opposite site of
the chromosome relative to the native site of the
slo gene,
more specifically between the open reading frames Spy1289 and
Spy1290 (
4), lack of a specific environmental signal, sharing
of a hypothetical positive regulator with the native
slo regulatory
region, weakness of the
slo promoter, or the combined effects
of several factors. We conclude that expression of the reporter
gene in strains with ß-Gal activity is not the result
of some spurious transcript coming from vector DNA and that
the
slo gene possesses its own genuine promoter as predicted
before (
7).
A similar experiment to that carried out with plasmid constructs
as described above was performed with a set of mutants in which
the reporter
lacZ gene was inserted into the chromosome at its
natural site. For that purpose, a mutant of pCAMP17 (pCAMP17-1)
which had lost the ability to integrate at its specific chromosomal
site (
5) was used. As in the previously described construction
procedure (Fig.
2), a piece of the
slo upstream region (approximately
0.6 kb) was amplified by PCR, treated with
PstI and
BamHI enzymes,
and ligated into the pCAMP17-1 mutant vector. The construct
obtained (pOK141) (Fig.
3) was inserted into strain NZ131 by
transformation. Confirmation that insertion in the chosen Erm
r transformant occurred at the
slo locus was accomplished by PCR
with appropriate primers. In this way, the
lacZ reporter and
slo upstream region in the new strain OK145 were brought into
continuity with the immediate upstream genes and the rest of
the chromosome (Fig.
3). Previous results indicate that the
nga gene is inactive in strain NZ131 (our unpublished results
and reference
1). The nature of the
nga mutation in strain NZ131
is unknown. However, similar absolute values of ß-Gal
activity obtained for deletion strains devoid of any incoming
transcripts from the upstream DNA (Fig.
2) and strain OK145
(Fig.
4), as opposed to the ß-Gal activity values
obtained for strain OK162 with a wild-type allele of the
nga gene, point to the polar nature of the
nga mutation in strain
NZ131 and its derivative OK145. These data suggest that all,
or almost all, transcripts coming into the
lacZ gene originate
from the
slo promoter.
It has been shown that the
phoR gene of
Clostridium perfringens may regulate expression of the
phoA gene as an inducer (
12),
although the hypothesis regarding the mechanism of action of
the PhoR protein in regulation of the
phoA gene was later questioned
(
3). The
phoA gene encodes perfringolysin O, which together
with SLO belongs to a single family of CDC pore-forming cytolysins
(
13). Our analysis of the
S. pyogenes genome demonstrated a
high degree of DNA sequence homology between the
sloR gene (Spy146)
of
S. pyogenes, which maps to a location approximately 19 kb
from the
slo gene (
4), and the
phoR gene from
C. perfringens. To test whether the
sloR gene influences expression of the
slo gene, the activities of ß-Gal were compared for strains
OK145 (
nga sloR+) and OK154 (
nga sloR). Strain OK154 was made
by insertional inactivation as follows. The central part (around
800 bp) of the approximately 1-kb-long
sloR gene was amplified
with appropriate primers by using DNA from strain NZ131 as a
substrate, cloned into pGEM-T Easy vector (Promega Corp.), and
recloned into the insertional vector p7tet (
9). The resulting
construct (pOK81) (Fig.
3) was inserted by transformation into
the OK145 recipient, and its insertion into the
sloR gene was
verified by PCR with appropriate primers (data not presented;
Fig.
3). The resulting data demonstrate a 2.4-fold-higher level
of activity of the reporter gene in strain OK154 (
sloR) compared
to that of the OK145 strain with the wild-type allele of the
sloR gene (Fig.
4), indicating the repressor role of the SloR
protein in regulation of the
slo gene. This result is in contrast
to the inducer role of
pfoR gene in
C. perfringens (
12). As
mentioned, a more detailed study of the role of the
pfoR gene
in the regulation of expression of the
phoA gene (
3) and the
solution of the problem posed thereby await the isolation and
analysis of a
pfoR mutant in
C. perfringens.
A pair of mutants with the same characteristics as those described above was made by using strain K56, which, in contrast to NZ131, possesses the wild-type allele of the nga gene (OK162 [nga+ sloR+] and OK163 [nga+ sloR]) (Fig. 3). As shown in Fig. 4, the ß-Gal activities detected for these strains attained much higher values than those for strains OK145 and OK154. Also, no substantial difference was observed between strains carrying sloR+ or sloR alleles (Fig. 4). The levels of expression for the strains in the NZ131 background (OK145 versus OK154) differed significantly (P < 0.001), while those for the strains in the K56 background (OK162 versus OK163) did not (P > 1). These data confirm that the nga and slo genes are organized in an operon structure expressed from the strong common promoter upstream from the nga gene (8). They also indicate that the product of the sloR gene, which has been shown to be a DNA binding protein (12), does not affect transcription from the nga promoter but does affect expression of the slo promoter, which confirms ipso facto the previous results (Fig. 2) and points to the existence of an autonomous slo promoter. We explain the lack of significant differences in ß-Gal activity between strains OK162 and OK163 and strains OK145 and OK154 by the relative strengths of the nga and slo promoters; that is, the overwhelming majority of mRNA coming into the lacZ gene in these strains possibly originates from the nga promoter, obscuring the effect of the sloR gene product at the weak slo promoter. That the sloR gene does not affect transcription from the nga promoter was confirmed in an independent experiment, in which no difference was found in NADase activity between strains K56 and OK156 (K56 sloR) (results not presented). The results presented here are in agreement with earlier findings (6, 7) and in contrast with the report of Caparon and colleagues, whose data indicated that a polar mutation in the nga gene reduces expression of the slo gene to undetectable levels (8). A detailed analysis of RNA transcripts in this region, including determination of the status of the hypothetical gene Spy166 (4), should provide an explanation for these disparate views.
The genetic data we present support the hypothesis of the existence of an internal slo promoter within the operon-like organized nga and slo genes which is regulated in a negative manner by the product of the sloR gene. The weak activity of this promoter does not necessarily reflect its potential under different physiological circumstances; it only reflects its activity during growth in Todd Hewitt broth with 0.2% yeast extract (THY) medium. The biological implication of the existence of an autonomous slo promoter is that it would increase genetic flexibility by providing the cell with a potential to divorce the SLO and NGA synthesis processes when necessary. That is, it is not difficult to imagine the SLO toxin as having another function in the infection process and pathogenesis besides its role in the NGA translocation system. Further studies of the regulatory mechanisms are needed to elucidate the functional relationship between these two genes.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We are grateful to C. Primaux for excellent technical assistance.
This work was supported by Public Health Service grants AI19304 and AI38406 from the National Institutes of Health to J.J.F.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of Microbiology and Immunology, University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center, 940 S. L. Young Blvd., Oklahoma City, OK 73104. Phone: (405) 271-1202. Fax: (405) 271-3117. E-mail:
Dragutin-Savic{at}ouhsc.edu.

Editor: E. I. Toumanen

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Infection and Immunity, May 2002, p. 2730-2733, Vol. 70, No. 5
0019-9567/02/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/IAI.70.5.2730-2733.2002
Copyright © 2002, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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