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The cin and rai Quorum-Sensing Regulatory Systems in Rhizobium leguminosarum Are Coordinated by ExpR and CinS,a Small Regulatory Protein Coexpressed with CinI
Authors:Anne Edwards  Marijke Frederix  Florence Wisniewski-Dyé  Jacob Jones  Angeles Zorreguieta  J Allan Downie
Institution:John Innes Centre, Colney, Norwich NR4 7UH, United Kingdom,1. Université Lyon 1, CNRS UMR 5557 Ecologie Microbienne, 69622 Villeurbanne, France,2. Fundación Instituto Leloir, IIBBA-CONICET, FCEyN, University of Buenos Aires, Patricias Argentinas 435, Buenos Aires, Argentina3.
Abstract:To understand how the Rhizobium leguminosarum raiI-raiR quorum-sensing system is regulated, we identified mutants with decreased levels of RaiI-made N-acyl homoserine lactones (AHLs). A LuxR-type regulator, ExpR, is required for raiR expression, and RaiR is required to induce raiI. Since raiR (and raiI) expression is also reduced in cinI and cinR quorum-sensing mutants, we thought CinI-made AHLs may activate ExpR to induce raiR. However, added CinI-made AHLs did not induce raiR expression in a cinI mutant. The reduced raiR expression in cinI and cinR mutants was due to lack of expression of cinS immediately downstream of cinI. cinS encodes a 67-residue protein, translationally coupled to CinI, and cinS acts downstream of expR for raiR induction. Cloned cinS in R. leguminosarum caused an unusual collapse of colony structure, and this was delayed by mutation of expR. The phenotype looked like a loss of exopolysaccharide (EPS) integrity; mutations in cinI, cinR, cinS, and expR all reduced expression of plyB, encoding an EPS glycanase, and mutation of plyB abolished the effect of cloned cinS on colony morphology. We conclude that CinS and ExpR act to increase PlyB levels, thereby influencing the bacterial surface. CinS is conserved in other rhizobia, including Rhizobium etli; the previously observed effect of cinI and cinR mutations decreasing swarming in that strain is primarily due to a lack of CinS rather than a lack of CinI-made AHL. We conclude that CinS mediates quorum-sensing regulation because it is coregulated with an AHL synthase and demonstrate that its regulatory effects can occur in the absence of AHLs.Production of N-acyl homoserine lactones (AHLs) is common to many plant-associated bacteria (7), in which it is usually associated with population density-dependent regulation of genes affecting adaptive responses (49). Within the family Rhizobiaceae, population density-regulated gene expression (quorum sensing) mediated via AHLs has been identified in several agrobacteria and rhizobia (13, 51). In Agrobacterium spp., quorum-sensing regulation was initially identified as a mechanism of regulating plasmid transfer. As the bacterial population density increases, plasmid transfer genes are induced by TraR in response to AHLs made by TraI (55). In several rhizobia, traI-like AHL synthase genes are also in an operon along with plasmid transfer genes (13).There are other quorum-sensing loci in different strains of rhizobia. In Sinorhizobium meliloti strain Rm1021, AHLs produced by SinI activate SinR and ExpR, LuxR-type regulators, to induce several genes, including those determining the production of an exopolysaccharide, exopolysaccharide II (EPS-II) (17, 23, 24, 35), that plays an important role in the symbiosis. In S. meliloti, two LuxR-type regulators, VisN and VisR, are involved in chemotaxis and motility (24, 44). Rhizobium etli has multiple AHL synthase genes (9, 39), but the functions of many of the regulated genes remain to be established. The cinR and cinI genes are required for normal symbiotic nitrogen fixation and swarming in R. etli (5, 9, 11) and for normal levels of expression of raiI, which encodes another AHL synthase. The expression of raiI in R. etli is regulated by RaiR (39).Analysis of AHLs produced by strain A34 of Rhizobium leguminosarum bv. viciae led to the characterization of four LuxI-type AHL synthases (RhiI, CinI, RaiI, and TraI) and five LuxR-type regulators (RhiR, CinR, RaiR, TraR, and BisR) (8, 31, 50, 53). In this strain, the cinI and cinR genes are chromosomally located; CinI produces N-(3-hydroxy-7-cis-tetradecenoyl)-l-homoserine lactone (3-OH-C14:1-HSL) (20, 31), CinR induces cinI expression in response to this AHL (31), and this appears to be associated with adaptation to starvation and salt stress (47). Mutation of cinI or cinR affects the expression of the other three AHL synthase genes in R. leguminosarum bv. viciae strain A34. Thus, in a cinI mutant, the expression of raiI is reduced, resulting in very low levels of 3-OH-C8-HSL, the major AHL made by RaiI (53). Similarly, the expression levels of the traI and rhiI genes on the symbiotic plasmid pRL1JI are reduced in cinI and cinR mutants (31). RhiI-made AHLs activate RhiR to induce the expression of the rhiABC operon in R. leguminosarum bv. viciae (38), enhancing the interaction with the legume host (8).The cinI and cinR quorum-sensing genes control induction of the traI and traR quorum-sensing regulons via CinI-made 3-OH-C14:1-HSL, which activates BisR (another LuxR-type regulator) to induce traR and hence traI (12). However, the mechanism by which cinI and/or cinR control raiI and raiR expression has not been established. In this work we demonstrate that raiI and raiR expression requires both expR and a small gene (cinS) cotranscribed with cinI. CinS also regulates the expression of plyB encoding an extracellular glycanase and is required for swarming of R. etli.
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