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Infection and Immunity, January 2003, p. 384-392, Vol. 71, No. 1
0019-9567/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/IAI.71.1.384-392.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Interaction of Ler at the LEE5 (tir) Operon of Enteropathogenic Escherichia coli
Kenneth R. Haack, Christopher L. Robinson, Kristie J. Miller,
Jonathan W. Fowlkes, and Jay L. Mellies*
Biology Department, Reed College, Portland, Oregon 97202
Received 1 March 2002/
Returned for modification 7 May 2002/
Accepted 18 September 2002

ABSTRACT
The genome of enteropathogenic
Escherichia coli (EPEC) encodes
a global regulator, Ler (locus of enterocyte effacement [LEE]-encoded
regulator), which activates expression of several polycistronic
operons within the 35.6-kb LEE pathogenicity island, including
the
LEE2-
LEE3 divergent operon pair containing overlapping -10
regions and the
LEE5 (
tir) operon. Ler is a predicted 15-kDa
protein that exhibits amino acid similarity with the nucleoid
protein H-NS. In order to study Ler-mediated activation of virulence
operons in EPEC, we used a molecular approach to characterize
the interactions of purified Ler protein with the upstream regulatory
sequences of the
LEE5 operon. We determined the
cis-acting DNA
sequences necessary for Ler binding at
LEE5 by mobility shift
and DNase I protection assays, demonstrating that Ler acts directly
at
LEE5 by binding sequences between positions -190 and -73
in relation to the transcriptional start site. Based on the
molecular weight of Ler, the similarity to H-NS, and the extended
region of protection observed in a DNase I footprint at
LEE5,
we hypothesized that multiple Ler proteins bind upstream of
the
LEE5 promoter to increase transcriptional activity from
a distance. Using an
hns deletion strain, we demonstrated that
like the
LEE2-
LEE3 operon pair, H-NS represses
LEE5 transcription.
We describe a model in which Ler activates transcription at
both divergent overlapping paired and single promoters by displacing
H-NS, which results in the disruption of a repressing nucleoprotein
complex.

INTRODUCTION
Enteropathogenic
E. coli (EPEC) is a leading cause of infant
diarrhea in developing countries (
35), and there is some indication
that diarrhea caused by EPEC in the United States is underreported
(
5). EPEC is the prototype organism of a group of pathogenic
bacteria that cause attaching and effacing (AE) intestinal lesions
(
25,
33,
35). A variety of gram-negative pathogens are capable
of forming AE lesions, including enterohemorrhagic
E. coli serotype
O157:H7, which causes hemorrhagic colitis and hemolytic-uremic
syndrome (
52),
Hafnia alvei, which causes diarrhea in children
(
2), the mouse pathogen
Citrobacter rodentium, (
43), and rabbit
enteropathogenic
E. coli, which causes diarrhea in rabbits (
40).
All genes necessary for the AE phenotype in EPEC are encoded in a 35.6-kb pathogenicity island that contains 41 predicted open reading frames termed the locus of enterocyte effacement (LEE) (15, 19, 28, 35). The genetic organization of the EPEC LEE was determined previously by defining transcriptional units and mapping transcriptional start points (30). Components of the type III secretion system are transcribed from three polycistronic operons designated LEE1, LEE2, and LEE3, and the secreted Esp molecules are part of a fourth polycistronic operon designated LEE4. Genes involved in intimate attachment to the host cell, tir, cesT, and eae, were found to be transcribed from a fifth polycistronic operon termed LEE5 (tir) (30, 42).
Ler (LEE-encoded regulator) increases expression of at least four polycistronic operons found within the LEE (14, 30). In a cascade fashion, the EAF plasmid-encoded regulator Per modulates the expression of the Ler protein, which goes on to increase expression of most, if not all, of the genes necessary for the AE phenotype (30). Ler increases the transcription of divergent operons of the LEE possessing overlapping promoter regions (e.g., the LEE2-LEE3 promoter pair), as well as single nondivergent operons. Interestingly, Ler activates transcription from both LEE2 and LEE3 by binding over an extended region (positions -221 to -100) on only one side of the overlapping promoters, upstream of LEE2 (47). In addition, Ler activates the expression of espC, which encodes an enterotoxin (14) and is contained within a second pathogenicity island in EPEC (31), and thus Ler is considered to be a global regulator of virulence genes.
The predicted 15-kDa Ler protein exhibits significant amino acid similarity to the H-NS family of DNA-binding proteins, including 24% identity and 44% similarity to H-NS of Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium (47). The C-terminal domain of H-NS contains a conserved DNA-binding domain (4), whereas the N terminus contains a coiled-coil domain involved in protein oligomerization (27). Greater amino acid sequence similarity to H-NS was observed in the C terminus than in the N terminus. Base substitution in the putative oligomerization domain in the N terminus of Ler eliminated the ability of the protein to bind to DNA and the ability to activate expression of a LEE2-lacZ fusion, strongly suggesting that Ler must form oligomers in order to activate transcription (47).
H-NS is a 15-kDa, histone-like, nucleoid-associated protein that was originally described as a protein that compacts and alters the topology of DNA (20, 37). This protein is also a pleiotropic transcription factor, affecting the expression of approximately 5% of the genes in E. coli (3, 21). One commonality of the seemingly unrelated genes regulated by H-NS is that many respond to environmental stress conditions, such as osmotic shock and cold shock (13, 16, 26, 29, 50). H-NS was shown to influence the thermo-osmotic regulation of virulence genes in Shigella (38). H-NS is now known to regulate virulence gene expression in several gram-negative pathogens (16, 18, 41, 54).
H-NS forms homodimers or tetramers (48) and is known to form higher-order oligomeric structures in solution (46). It is now apparent that the H-NS protein binds to DNA possessing a particular conformation rather than to a specific consensus binding sequence (10, 12, 50). There is a large body of data that demonstrates that there is transcriptional repression by H-NS binding to promoter regions (1, 17, 26, 39, 53). Recent discoveries indicate that H-NS can hold RNA polymerase in an open complex while it forms a nucleoprotein structure that represses transcription at the rrnB P1 promoter (11, 44). Ler has been shown to relieve the transcriptional repression caused by H-NS at the LEE2 and LEE3 operons (6) and the transcriptional repression of the LEE5 operon caused by an unknown negative regulator (42).
In order to learn more about the molecular pathogenesis of EPEC, we used a biochemical approach to study the mechanism of Ler binding at the LEE5 operon. Ler is a key virulence gene regulator in EPEC, and a better understanding of the details of its DNA binding activity and the DNA sequences required for binding should provide insight into to how Ler activates transcription. The ability of the Ler protein to increase transcriptional activity from a distance at both divergent overlapping and nondivergent promoter sequences and the similarity to the H-NS family of proteins that, in most cases, repress transcription prompted us to study the mechanism of Ler binding at the molecular level.

MATERIALS AND METHODS
Bacterial strains, plasmids, and phage.
The plasmids, strains, and phage used in this study are listed
in Table
1. Strains were grown at 37°C with aeration in
Luria-Bertani medium supplemented with ampicillin (100 µg/ml)
or kanamycin (50 µg/ml). Single-copy chromosomal
lacZ fusions were constructed by homologous recombination between

RS45 and plasmids containing
LEE5 regulatory fragments cloned
upstream of the promoterless
lacZYA operon contained in pRS551
and were subsequently transduced into MC4100, selecting for
kanamycin resistance as previously described (
30,
45).
Generation of LEE5 regulatory fragments.
Specific
LEE5 regulatory fragments were generated by PCR by
using
Pwo DNA polymerase, which contains proofreading activity
(Boehringer Mannheim). The oligonucleotides used in the study
are listed in Table
2 and were purchased from Invitrogen. PCRs
were performed by using standard protocols. Restriction endonucleases
and DNA ligase were obtained from New England Biolabs and used
according to the manufacturer's instructions. The PCR-generated
LEE5 regulatory fragments were gel isolated with a Qiaquick
gel extraction kit obtained from Qiagen. DNA fragments were
then cloned into pRS551 by using a Bio-Rad Micropulser electroporation
apparatus to transform
E. coli strains DH5

and MC4100. Clones
containing plasmids with
LEE5 regulatory sequences fused to
lacZ were verified by restriction mapping, PCR, DNA sequence
analysis, and ß-galactosidase assays.
Enzymatic assays.
Lysogens of
E. coli strain MC4100 containing single-copy chromosomal
lacZ fusions were transformed with pSE1100 (minimal
ler clone
[
30]), pTHK113 (minimal
hns clone [
23]), or pBR322 (control)
and grown at 37°C in Luria-Bertani medium supplemented with
the appropriate antibiotics with aeration to an absorbance at
600 nm of approximately 0.3 to 0.5 and then subjected to ß-galactosidase
assays performed by the method described by Miller (
32). Assays
were performed in triplicate, and values (in Miller units) were
expressed as the mean ± one standard deviation. Statistical
analysis was performed with raw data generated from ß-galactosidase
assays by using StatView (SAS Institute Inc.).
Ler protein purification.
His-tagged Ler protein was isolated from DH5
(pVS45) as described previously (47). The purified Ler protein migrated as a single species when it was separated by sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and stained by Coomassie brilliant blue. The concentration of purified Ler protein, 50 µg/ml, was estimated by comparison with a known concentration of a standard protein having a similar molecular weight (lysozyme from Sigma).
DNA mobility assays.
The LEE5 regulatory fragments were subcloned into pBluescript by using E. coli strain DH5
. Plasmid DNA was isolated with a Qiagen plasmid midi kit (Qiagen). The purified plasmid DNA was cut with NotI restriction endonuclease, which left a 5' overhang that was subsequently filled in by using [
-32P]dCTP (Amersham), dGTP, and Klenow DNA polymerase (Promega). The plasmid DNA was then cut with EcoRI, releasing the LEE5 regulatory fragments. Radiolabeled and nonlabeled DNA fragments were separated in a 6% polyacrylamide-1x Tris-borate-EDTA (TBE) gel and were isolated by soaking the gel slice in elution buffer (0.5 M ammonium acetate, 0.1% SDS, 1 mM EDTA) overnight and precipitating the DNA with ethanol. Ler binding reactions were performed by incubating 10 µg of poly(dI-dC) (U.S. Biochemicals) per ml (to prevent nonspecific binding), 8 µg of purified Ler protein per ml, and 20,000 cpm of probe DNA in binding buffer (10 mM Tris-HCl [pH 7.4], 1 mM EDTA, 50 µg of bovine serum albumin per ml, 5 mM NaCl, 50 mM KCl) for 30 min at room temperature. A 50-fold excess of an identical unlabeled fragment was used as a specific competitor for each fragment as a control. The binding reaction mixtures were electrophoresed in a 6% polyacrylamide-1x TBE gel at 4°C, dried at 80°C for 1 h, and exposed to Kodak X-OMAT film.
PCR-generated deletions.
Overlapping PCR was performed by using oligonucleotide primers which contained deletions of the LEE5 sequence corresponding to positions -51 to -47. Primers JFTIR1 and JFTIR3 contain corresponding five-base deletions and were used with primers TIR1 and TIR3, respectively, to independently amplify LEE5 sequences. Individual PCR products were amplified, gel isolated, mixed, and used as template DNA for a secondary overlapping PCR (22), which resulted in a product that contained the 5-bp deletion. The PCR product was cloned into pRS551 and sequenced to verify the deletion.
DNase I footprint analysis.
Ler binding reactions were performed as described above, except that various amounts of Ler protein, 70,000 cpm of radiolabeled probe DNA (both coding and noncoding strands individually from positions -272 to -31 of the LEE5 regulatory region), and 100 µg of poly(dI-dC) (U.S. Biochemicals) per ml were used. The coding and noncoding strands were labeled individually by cutting the plasmid, pKH273, with either EcoRI or NotI first, followed by filling in of the EcoRI site with [
-32P]dATP or of the NotI site with [
-32P]dCTP and the Klenow fragment of DNA polymerase. The polymerase was then heat inactivated by heating the preparation at 70°C for 15 min. Subsequently, the fragments were released from the plasmid by a final restriction with the alternate enzyme NotI or EcoRI and isolated as described above. After Ler binding, 5 mU of DNase I (Sigma), MgCl2 (final concentration, 5 mM), and CaCl2 (final concentration, 1 mM) were added and incubated at room temperature for 2 min. The reaction was terminated by addition of stop solution (200 mM NaCl, 2 mM EDTA, 1% SDS), and this was followed by phenol-chloroform extraction and ethanol precipitation with 7.5 M ammonium acetate (pH 7.5) and 1 µl of glycogen (Invitrogen). The footprint reaction mixtures were denatured at 75°C for 2 min prior to loading and then were electrophoresed in a denaturing 6% polyacrylamide-1x TBE gel, dried at 80°C for 1 h, and exposed to Kodak X-OMAT film. Sequencing reaction mixtures (Sequenase DNA sequencing kit, version 2; U.S. Biochemicals) with the TF1 and BlueNot primers were loaded adjacent to the footprint reaction mixtures to determine the positions of protected sequences.

RESULTS
Deletion analysis of LEE5 regulatory sequences.
In order to define
LEE5 regulatory fragments that were appropriate
for Ler binding studies, sequences upstream of the
LEE5 promoter
were deleted (Fig.
1A). PCR amplification of
LEE5 sequences
from positions -405, -303, -198, and -75 to position +172 relative
to the transcriptional start site of the
tir gene, which is
the first gene of the
LEE5 operon, were fused to a promoterless
lacZ reporter gene in pRS551 (
45). Individual fusions were allowed
to recombine with

RS45 and inserted, as single copies, into
the chromosome of MC4100 (see Materials and Methods). The resulting
isogenic, single-copy fusion strains were transformed with pBR322
as a negative control or pSE1100, which encodes a minimal
ler fragment in pBR322 (
30). The ß-galactosidase activities
of these strains were assayed in the presence and absence of
the Ler protein expressed in
trans from plasmid pSE1100. Fusion
strains KMTIR2 (positions -405 to +172), KMTIR3 (positions -303
to +172), and KMTIR4 (positions -198 to 172) were all induced
approximately four- to fivefold in the presence of pSE1100 (Fig.
1B). Fusion strain CRTIR5 (positions -75 to +172) exhibited
high levels of ß-galactosidase activity independent
of
ler expression. These results indicated that Ler-mediated
activation of the
LEE5 operon required sequences between positions
-198 and -75. The observation that high levels of ß-galactosidase
activity were detected independent of Ler in the CRTIR5 strain
was consistent with the activity of a negative regulator that
represses
LEE5 expression and with the hypothesis that sequences
necessary for repression also reside within the same region
required for activation by Ler.
DNA mobility assays with purified Ler protein.
To identify sequences necessary for Ler binding, we performed
mobility shift experiments with purified Ler protein (
47) and
radiolabeled DNA fragments corresponding to the
LEE5 regulatory
sequences used in the deletion analysis (Fig.
1A). As expected,
DNA fragments corresponding to TIR3 and TIR4 exhibited pronounced
shifts in mobility when purified Ler protein was added to the
binding reaction mixture compared to the results obtained with
an identical reaction mixture without the Ler protein (Fig.
2). DNA fragment TIR5, which showed no Ler-dependent activation
(Fig.
1B), also exhibited no shift in mobility in the presence
of purified Ler protein (Fig.
2). This observation clearly demonstrated
that Ler did not bind to sequences from positions -75 to +172.
These results were consistent with the fusion data in that Ler-mediated
transcriptional activation was observed with the same regulatory
fragments that also exhibited shifts in mobility due to Ler
binding.
To examine the specificity of Ler binding, we added nonspecific
competitor DNA [unlabeled poly(dI-dC)] at a concentration of
10 µg/ml to each binding reaction mixture to minimize
nonspecific interactions. In addition, a 50-fold excess of unlabeled
specific competitor DNA (identical to the labeled probe DNA)
was added to the reaction mixtures (Fig.
2), which resulted
in specific competition. Under these conditions, the binding
of Ler protein to radiolabeled TIR3 and TIR4 fragments was severely
reduced (Fig.
2). We therefore concluded that the Ler protein
bound specifically to sequences upstream of position -75 and
acted directly to increase transcription at
LEE5.
Deletion of sequences between the regulatory region and the promoter affected repression but not activation of the LEE5 operon.
Since Ler bound at a distance from the LEE5 promoter and also the LEE2 promoter (47), we hypothesized that Ler may influence transcription by altering DNA topology. By deleting 5 bp at positions -51 to -47, we altered the spacing of the LEE5 regulatory region (positions -198 to -75) in relation to the promoter by one half-helical turn of DNA without altering the sequences required for repression or Ler-mediated activation. Strains with single-copy lacZ fusions, encoding the wild-type TIR3 regulatory fragment or the TIR3M (five-base deletion) regulatory fragment, were assayed for Ler-dependent ß-galactosidase activity as described above. Strains KMTIR3 and KHTIR3M transformed with pSE1100 exhibited Ler-mediated activation of the same magnitude,
300 Miller units (Fig. 3). Strain KHTIR3M transformed with pBR322, as a control, exhibited threefold-higher ß-galactosidase activity (155 Miller units) than strain KMTIR3 (53 Miller units) also transformed with pBR322 (P < 0.0001). These results indicated that repression of the LEE5 operon was compromised by the 5-bp deletion.
Mobility shift experiments were performed with the TIR3M fragment
and purified Ler protein. The deletion fragment TIR3M exhibited
shifts in mobility in the presence of Ler protein that were
identical to those exhibited by the wild-type TIR3 regulatory
fragment, indicating that the five-base deletion had no effect
on Ler binding (data not shown).
H-NS-dependent repression of LEE5.
As indicated previously, H-NS is involved in repression of the LEE2 and LEE3 operons (6). However, because the identity of the negative-acting factor for the LEE5 operon remained unclear, we wished to determine whether H-NS affected the expression of LEE5 as well. Therefore, we assayed ß-galactosidase activities derived from LEE5-lacZ single-copy fusions in HN4104 strains having a deletion of hns and the isogenic parent strain, MC4100. The TIR3 and TIR4 fusion strains which contained all known regulatory sequences and from which hns was deleted exhibited ß-galactosidase activities that were approximately fourfold greater than the ß-galactosidase activities of isogenic strains with wild-type hns (60 versus 250 Miller units) (Table 3). Providing H-NS expressed from the minimal hns gene on a plasmid restored transcriptional activity to low basal levels (67 to 96 Miller units) in the TIR3 and TIR4 fusion strains from which hns was deleted. Under the conditions tested, maximal LEE5 expression was observed in the absence of H-NS and in the presence of Ler; under these conditions the ß-galactosidase activities reached 1,400 to 2,000 Miller units. ß-Galactosidase activities were similarly high for all of the strains containing the TIR5 fragment fused to lacZ, from which all currently known positive and negative regulatory sequences were deleted (Table 3).
To ensure that H-NS activity was indeed absent from the HN4104
hns deletion strain used for our assays, phenotypes associated
with this strain were confirmed prior to and after transduction
of the
LEE5-lacZ fusions into the strains. As expected, HN4104
and its derivatives were able to ferment salicin, presumably
by expression of the cryptic
bgl operon, which is known to be
expressed in the absence of H-NS (
34). Thus, we concluded that
like the
LEE2-LEE3 operon pair, H-NS was involved in the negative
regulation of
LEE5.
DNase I footprint analysis of purified Ler bound to LEE5 regulatory sequences.
A 241-bp fragment (positions -272 to -31) containing the LEE5 regulatory region and flanking sequences was radiolabeled in separate reactions on both the coding and noncoding strands and subjected to DNase I digestion in the presence and absence of purified Ler protein. Ler protein protected approximately 117 bp of DNA (positions -190 to -73) from digestion by DNase I (Fig. 4). Because of the low predicted molecular mass of Ler protein (15 kDa), multiple Ler proteins would be required to protect such an extended region of DNA (>100 bp). Consistently, Ler appeared to exhibit cooperative binding. At low concentrations of Ler protein (0 to 0.15 µg of Ler protein per ml), little or no protection was observed, yet when the protein level reached 0.5 µg/ml Ler protein protected an extended region of DNA. One striking feature of these footprints was that Ler protein protected a region of DNA rich in AT (A+T content, >80%).
At high concentrations of Ler protein protection extended slightly
further downstream on the coding strand (position -60) and slightly
further upstream on the noncoding strand (position -221). This
most likely represented weak binding and was observed only at
high concentrations of Ler protein. Thus, similar to binding
upstream of the
LEE2 promoter (from positions -221 to -100 [
47]),
Ler bound between positions -190 and -73 in relation to the
LEE5 transcriptional start site. A Ler-dependent DNase I-hypersensitive
site was observed at position -111 on the coding strand. We
concluded from this finding that the binding of Ler protein
to the
LEE5 regulatory region induced a structural change in
the DNA that resulted in increased cleavage, specifically at
position -111, by DNase I.

DISCUSSION
We demonstrated that Ler acts directly to increase transcription
of the
LEE5 operon. As determined by DNase I footprint analyses,
purified Ler protein bound to an approximately 117-bp region
of DNA (positions -190 to -73) upstream of the
LEE5 transcriptional
start site. As determined by a mobility shift assay, Ler protein
specifically bound to sequences between positions -198 and -75,
which is consistent with the
lacZ fusion data (Fig.
1), with
which we independently identified and confirmed a regulatory
region (
42) required for both H-NS-dependent repression and
Ler-mediated derepression. One apparent conflict in our data
was that as determined by a mobility shift assay, the TIR5 regulatory
fragment (positions -75 to +172) did not bind Ler, whereas a
DNase I protection assay showed that there was protection to
the -60 position on the coding strand (Fig.
4A). This might
be explained by the observation that Ler did not protect sequences
downstream of the -79 position on the noncoding strand, and
thus the binary complex (TIR5 DNA and Ler protein) was most
likely too unstable to remain intact in the mobility shift assay.
Our data clearly demonstrated that H-NS is involved in the negative regulation of the LEE5 operon (Table 3). The observation that under the conditions tested, maximal activity was achieved only in the presence of Ler and in the absence of H-NS may suggest that an additional protein(s) acts negatively at LEE5. An alternate explanation for the high transcriptional activity observed in the presence of Ler and in the absence of H-NS is that greater Ler activation of LEE5 requires environmental conditions specific to conditions inside the human gut. Whether H-NS acts directly or indirectly through control of expression of an alternate negative regulator to repress LEE5 transcription remains to be determined.
There is an extensive body of work which suggests that the global regulator H-NS is a non-sequence-specific DNA-binding protein yet specifically recognizes structural features of DNA (10, 12, 50). When we aligned the upstream LEE5 and LEE2 (47) regulatory sequences to which Ler bound, we found no significant sequence similarity that allowed us to identify a Ler consensus binding sequence (data not shown). These sequences were, however, similar lengths, approximately 120 bp, and the A+T contents were high, approximately 80%. AT-rich DNA, particularly poly(A) tracts, are known to form curves (24). Based on these observations, the molecular mass of Ler (15 kDa), the amino acid sequence similarity to H-NS, the extended protection from DNase I digestion, and the likelihood that multiple Ler proteins bind upstream of LEE5 and LEE2 (47), we propose that like H-NS, Ler recognizes DNA structural motifs instead of specific nucleotide sequences.
Our current model of Ler function is that multiple Ler proteins bind to the upstream regulatory regions of both LEE5 and LEE2, disrupting a nucleoprotein complex responsible for the repression of the LEE5, as well as both the LEE2 and LEE3 operons (Fig. 5). It has been proposed that in the presence of H-NS, LEE2-LEE3 transcription is repressed by the binding of H-NS to the silencing regulatory sequences, identified previously by genetic analysis (6). Thus, repression requires both upstream and downstream silencing regions (Fig. 5A). By using scanning force microscopy, it was recently demonstrated that H-NS represses the rrnB P1 promoter by forming a collar-like structure wrapping RNA polymerase in an open complex (11), and some evidence suggests that this type of repression may be a general phenomenon (9). Thus, our model includes RNA polymerase in the nucleoprotein complex, which is disrupted by the binding of Ler to the LEE2 upstream region, allowing transcription of LEE2. It is also possible, however, that RNA polymerase is not part of the repressing nucleoprotein complex and that H-NS simply occludes RNA polymerase binding. We propose that transcription of the LEE3 operon is also increased due to the absence of the repressing nucleoprotein complex.
As shown in Fig.
5B,
LEE5 is also negatively regulated by H-NS.
It is reasonable to propose that
LEE5 transcription is inhibited
by the formation of a nucleoprotein complex similar to that
proposed for the
LEE2-LEE3 operon pair. Ler binding to the upstream
region of
LEE5 disrupts the H-NS-dependent nucleoprotein complex,
allowing an increase in
LEE5 transcription. Thus, our model
begins to explain how Ler can bind on only one side of divergent
operon pairs to increase transcriptional activity at both promoters,
as well as single nondivergent operons which are repressed by
the same protein, H-NS.
At LEE5, the upstream regulatory region (between positions -198 and -75) is required for both H-NS-dependent repression and Ler-mediated activation. KHTIR3M, the strain containing the 5-bp deletion fragment fused to lacZ, which showed significant derepression with no alteration of Ler-mediated activation or Ler binding, provides a unique opportunity to study potential topology constraints required for the nucleoprotein complex. If the five-base deletion exhibits derepression due to the one half-helical turn of DNA difference between the regulatory region and the putative downstream regulatory region of LEE5, one could then predict the transcriptional activity of multiple deletion derivatives.
H-NS is a modulator of expression of environmentally regulated genes, particularly those that respond to temperature, osmolarity, and pH (for a review see reference 3), and has been demonstrated to control the expression of virulence-associated genes in several genera, including Shigella (8, 51) and Vibrio (36, 54). The proU operon of E. coli, which is activated in response to osmotic stress, is negatively regulated by H-NS binding to sites located both upstream and downstream of the promoter (26), similar to what has been proposed for the LEE2-LEE3 operon pair (6) and LEE5. Experiments performed with a proU'-lacZ transcriptional fusion showed that Ler can neither substitute for nor exert a dominant negative effective on H-NS, demonstrating that Ler is distinct from H-NS and suggesting that Ler does not interact directly with H-NS (14). These data, combined with our observation that Ler does not derepress the expression of the cryptic bgl operon in the presence of H-NS, demonstrate that Ler is a specific regulator of virulence genes rather than a general antagonist of H-NS. Thus, we concluded that the specific regulator Ler is part of a complex regulatory network controlling the expression of EPEC virulence genes in response to environmental signals inside the human gut.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We thank James B. Kaper for an initial gift of purified Ler
protein, Bianca Colonna for the gift of the
hns deletion strain
HN4104, and Tom Kawula for the gift of the minimal
hns clone
pTHK113. We thank Vanessa Sperandio and Arthur Glasfeld for
helpful comments on the manuscript and Peter J. Russell and
Maryanne McClellan for critical discussions. We also thank The
Vollum Institute at Oregon Health Sciences University for performing
the DNA sequence analysis.
This study was supported by grant R15 AI47802 awarded to J.L.M. by the National Institutes of Health and by generous start-up funds provided by Reed College, in addition to National Science Foundation and Howard Hughes Medical Institute awards to Reed College for undergraduate research.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Biology Department, Reed College, 3203 S.E. Woodstock Blvd., Portland, OR 97202. Phone: (503) 771-1112, ext. 7964. Fax: (503) 777-7773. E-mail:
jay.mellies{at}reed.edu.

Editor: V. J. DiRita
Present address: Molecular Microbiology and Immunology Department, Oregon Health and Science University, Portland, OR 97201. 

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Infection and Immunity, January 2003, p. 384-392, Vol. 71, No. 1
0019-9567/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/IAI.71.1.384-392.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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