Clostridium difficile is an emergent pathogen, and the most common cause of nosocomial diarrhea. In an effort to understand the role of small noncoding RNAs (sRNAs) in C. difficile physiology and pathogenesis, we used an in silico approach to identify 511 sRNA candidates in both intergenic and coding regions. In parallel, RNA–seq and differential 5′-end RNA–seq were used for global identification of C. difficile sRNAs and their transcriptional start sites at three different growth conditions (exponential growth phase, stationary phase, and starvation). This global experimental approach identified 251 putative regulatory sRNAs including 94 potential trans riboregulators located in intergenic regions, 91 cis-antisense RNAs, and 66 riboswitches. Expression of 35 sRNAs was confirmed by gene-specific experimental approaches. Some sRNAs, including an antisense RNA that may be involved in control of C. difficile autolytic activity, showed growth phase-dependent expression profiles. Expression of each of 16 predicted c-di-GMP-responsive riboswitches was observed, and experimental evidence for their regulatory role in coordinated control of motility and biofilm formation was obtained. Finally, we detected abundant sRNAs encoded by multiple C. difficile CRISPR loci. These RNAs may be important for C. difficile survival in bacteriophage-rich gut communities. Altogether, this first experimental genome-wide identification of C. difficile sRNAs provides a firm basis for future RNome characterization and identification of molecular mechanisms of sRNA–based regulation of gene expression in this emergent enteropathogen.
Clostridium difficile, a Gram positive, anaerobic, spore-forming bacterium is an emergent pathogen and the most common cause of nosocomial diarrhea. Although transmission of C. difficile is mediated by contamination of the gut by spores, the regulatory cascade controlling spore formation remains poorly characterized. During Bacillus subtilis sporulation, a cascade of four sigma factors, σF and σG in the forespore and σE and σK in the mother cell governs compartment-specific gene expression. In this work, we combined genome wide transcriptional analyses and promoter mapping to define the C. difficile σF, σE, σG and σK regulons. We identified about 225 genes under the control of these sigma factors: 25 in the σF regulon, 97 σE-dependent genes, 50 σG-governed genes and 56 genes under σK control. A significant fraction of genes in each regulon is of unknown function but new candidates for spore coat proteins could be proposed as being synthesized under σE or σK control and detected in a previously published spore proteome. SpoIIID of C. difficile also plays a pivotal role in the mother cell line of expression repressing the transcription of many members of the σE regulon and activating sigK expression. Global analysis of developmental gene expression under the control of these sigma factors revealed deviations from the B. subtilis model regarding the communication between mother cell and forespore in C. difficile. We showed that the expression of the σE regulon in the mother cell was not strictly under the control of σF despite the fact that the forespore product SpoIIR was required for the processing of pro-σE. In addition, the σK regulon was not controlled by σG in C. difficile in agreement with the lack of pro-σK processing. This work is one key step to obtain new insights about the diversity and evolution of the sporulation process among Firmicutes.
Endosporulation is an ancient bacterial developmental program that culminates with the differentiation of a highly resistant endospore. In the model organism Bacillus subtilis, gene expression in the forespore and in the mother cell, the two cells that participate in endospore development, is governed by cell type-specific RNA polymerase sigma subunits. σF in the forespore, and σE in the mother cell control early stages of development and are replaced, at later stages, by σG and σK, respectively. Starting with σF, the activation of the sigma factors is sequential, requires the preceding factor, and involves cell-cell signaling pathways that operate at key morphological stages. Here, we have studied the function and regulation of the sporulation sigma factors in the intestinal pathogen Clostridium difficile, an obligate anaerobe in which the endospores are central to the infectious cycle. The morphological characterization of mutants for the sporulation sigma factors, in parallel with use of a fluorescence reporter for single cell analysis of gene expression, unraveled important deviations from the B. subtilis paradigm. While the main periods of activity of the sigma factors are conserved, we show that the activity of σE is partially independent of σF, that σG activity is not dependent on σE, and that the activity of σK does not require σG. We also show that σK is not strictly required for heat resistant spore formation. In all, our results indicate reduced temporal segregation between the activities of the early and late sigma factors, and reduced requirement for the σF-to-σE, σE-to-σG, and σG-to-σK cell-cell signaling pathways. Nevertheless, our results support the view that the top level of the endosporulation network is conserved in evolution, with the sigma factors acting as the key regulators of the pathway, established some 2.5 billion years ago upon its emergence at the base of the Firmicutes Phylum.
Carbon catabolite repression (CCR) of several Bacillus subtilis catabolic genes is mediated by ATPdependent phosphorylation of histidine-containing protein (HPr), a phosphocarrier protein of the phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP): sugar phosphotransferase system. In this study, we report the discovery of a new B. subtilis gene encoding a HPr-like protein, Crh (for catabolite repression HPr), composed of 85 amino acids. Crh exhibits 45% sequence identity with HPr, but the active site His-15 of HPr is replaced with a glutamine in Crh. Crh is therefore not phosphorylated by PEP and enzyme I, but is phosphorylated by ATP and the HPr kinase in the presence of fructose-1,6-bisphosphate. We determined Ser-46 as the site of phosphorylation in Crh by carrying out mass spectrometry with peptides obtained by tryptic digestion or CNBr cleavage. In a B. subtilis ptsH1 mutant strain, synthesis of -xylosidase, inositol dehydrogenase, and levanase was only partially relieved from CCR. Additional disruption of the crh gene caused almost complete relief from CCR. In a ptsH1 crh1 mutant, producing HPr and Crh in which Ser-46 is replaced with a nonphosphorylatable alanyl residue, expression of -xylosidase was also completely relieved from glucose repression. These results suggest that CCR of certain catabolic operons requires, in addition to CcpA, ATP-dependent phosphorylation of Crh, and HPr at Ser-46.The bacterial phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP): sugar phosphotransferase system (PTS) catalyzes the transport and concomitant phosphorylation of carbohydrates via a protein phosphorylation chain including PEP-dependent phosphorylation of His-15 in histidine-containing protein (HPr) by enzyme I (EI). P-His-HPr phosphorylates the sugar-specific EIIAs. In Gram-positive bacteria, the PTS regulates also induction and carbon catabolite repression (CCR) of numerous catabolic genes (1). The central regulatory protein involved in these various functions is HPr. In Gram-positive bacteria, this small phosphoryl transfer protein can be phosphorylated at a regulatory serine (Ser-46) by ATP and the HPr kinase (2, 3), in addition to phosphorylation at the catalytic His-15 by PEP and EI (4, 5). PEP-dependent and ATP-dependent phosphorylation of HPr interfere with each other-i.e., P-His-HPr is a poor substrate for the HPr kinase and P-Ser-HPr is a poor substrate for EI (6, 7). ATP-dependent phosphorylation of HPr is stimulated by glycolytic intermediates such as fructose-1,6-bisphosphate (FBP) in Enterococcus faecalis (6) and in Streptococcus pyogenes (7). It has been reported that FBP is also implicated in CCR of the Bacillus subtilis gnt and iol operons (8, 9), and a potential role of phosphorylation of HPr at Ser-46 in CCR has therefore been investigated (10). The gnt operon contains the genes gntRKPZ encoding the repressor GntR, gluconate kinase, gluconate permease, and a gluconate-6-Pdehydrogenase (11), whereas the iol operon is composed of 10 genes encoding enzymes presumably implicated in inositol metabolism, including iolG encoding inositol dehydro...
The catabolite control protein CcpA is a pleiotropic regulator that mediates the global transcriptional response to rapidly catabolizable carbohydrates, like glucose in Gram-positive bacteria. By whole transcriptome analyses, we characterized glucose-dependent and CcpA-dependent gene regulation in Clostridium difficile. About 18% of all C. difficile genes are regulated by glucose, for which 50% depend on CcpA for regulation. The CcpA regulon comprises genes involved in sugar uptake, fermentation and amino acids metabolism, confirming the role of CcpA as a link between carbon and nitrogen pathways. Using combination of chromatin immunoprecipitation and genome sequence analysis, we detected 55 CcpA binding sites corresponding to ∼140 genes directly controlled by CcpA. We defined the C. difficile CcpA consensus binding site (creCD motif), that is, ‘RRGAAAANGTTTTCWW’. Binding of purified CcpA protein to 19 target creCD sites was demonstrated by electrophoretic mobility shift assay. CcpA also directly represses key factors in early steps of sporulation (Spo0A and SigF). Furthermore, the C. difficile toxin genes (tcdA and tcdB) and their regulators (tcdR and tcdC) are direct CcpA targets. Finally, CcpA controls a complex and extended regulatory network through the modulation of a large set of regulators.
The spore coat protein CotA of Bacillus subtilis displays similarities with multicopper oxidases, including manganese oxidases and laccases. B. subtilis is able to oxidize manganese, but neither CotA nor other sporulation proteins are involved. We demonstrate that CotA is a laccase. Syringaldazine, a specific substrate of laccases, reacted with wild-type spores but not with ⌬cotA spores. CotA may participate in the biosynthesis of the brown spore pigment, which appears to be a melanin-like product and to protect against UV light.The spore-forming bacterium Bacillus subtilis synthesizes and deposits a protein coat around the developing endospore during differentiation (8). The spore coat consists of at least 25 different polypeptides of 5 to 65 kDa, and some of them are highly cross-linked. These proteins are assembled into a lamella-like inner coat and an electron-dense outer coat, which protects the spore from a diverse range of stresses (8).The cotA gene codes for a 65-kDa protein belonging to the outer spore coat of B. subtilis. It corresponds to the former pig locus (7, 21) and was one of the first cot genes to be cloned (7). The cotA gene is expressed under the control of sigma K, with GerE acting as a transcriptional repressor instead of its more usual function of transcriptional activator (24). The absence of CotA has no apparent effect on spore resistance, but it results in the loss of the usual brownish pigmentation of the colonies. Moreover, wild-type spore-forming colonies are darker at higher manganese concentrations (13). This is similar to marine Bacillus sp. strain SG1, which has spores that express manganese oxidase (30).The CotA protein displays similarities with multicopper oxidases (for a review, see reference 28). In particular, it contains the four copper-binding sites, the type I blue copper center (T1) and the T2/T3 trinuclear cluster, which differ in their spectroscopic features (Fig.
Toxin synthesis in Clostridium difficile increases as cells enter into stationary phase. We first compared the expression profiles of strain 630E during exponential growth and at the onset of stationary phase and showed that genes involved in sporulation, cellular division, and motility, as well as carbon and amino acid metabolism, were differentially expressed under these conditions. We inactivated the sigH gene, which encodes an alternative sigma factor involved in the transition to post-exponential phase in Bacillus subtilis. Then, we compared the expression profiles of strain 630E and the sigH mutant after 10 h of growth. About 60% of the genes that were differentially expressed between exponential and stationary phases, including genes involved in motility, sporulation, and metabolism, were regulated by SigH, which thus appears to be a key regulator of the transition phase in C. difficile. SigH positively controls several genes required for sporulation. Accordingly, sigH inactivation results in an asporogeneous phenotype. The spo0A and CD2492 genes, encoding the master regulator of sporulation and one of its associated kinases, and the spoIIA operon were transcribed from a SigH-dependent promoter. The expression of tcdA and tcdB, encoding the toxins, and of tcdR, encoding the sigma factor required for toxin production, increased in a sigH mutant. Finally, SigH regulates the expression of genes encoding surface-associated proteins, such as the Cwp66 adhesin, the S-layer precursor, and the flagellum components. Among the 286 genes positively regulated by SigH, about 40 transcriptional units presenting a SigH consensus in their promoter regions are good candidates for direct SigH targets.
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