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Polar Positioning of a Conjugation Protein from the Integrative and Conjugative Element ICEBs1 of Bacillus subtilis
Authors:Melanie B Berkmen  Catherine A Lee  Emma-Kate Loveday  Alan D Grossman
Affiliation:Department of Biology; Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139,1. Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry; Suffolk University; Boston, Massachusetts 021142.
Abstract:ICEBs1 is an integrative and conjugative element found in the chromosome of Bacillus subtilis. ICEBs1 encodes functions needed for its excision and transfer to recipient cells. We found that the ICEBs1 gene conE (formerly yddE) is required for conjugation and that conjugative transfer of ICEBs1 requires a conserved ATPase motif of ConE. ConE belongs to the HerA/FtsK superfamily of ATPases, which includes the well-characterized proteins FtsK, SpoIIIE, VirB4, and VirD4. We found that a ConE-GFP (green fluorescent protein) fusion associated with the membrane predominantly at the cell poles in ICEBs1 donor cells. At least one ICEBs1 product likely interacts with ConE to target it to the membrane and cell poles, as ConE-GFP was dispersed throughout the cytoplasm in a strain lacking ICEBs1. We also visualized the subcellular location of ICEBs1. When integrated in the chromosome, ICEBs1 was located near midcell along the length of the cell, a position characteristic of that chromosomal region. Following excision, ICEBs1 was more frequently found near a cell pole. Excision of ICEBs1 also caused altered positioning of at least one component of the replisome. Taken together, our findings indicate that ConE is a critical component of the ICEBs1 conjugation machinery, that conjugative transfer of ICEBs1 from B. subtilis likely initiates at a donor cell pole, and that ICEBs1 affects the subcellular position of the replisome.Integrative and conjugative elements (also known as conjugative transposons) and conjugative plasmids are key elements in horizontal gene transfer and are capable of mediating their own transfer from donor to recipient cells. ICEBs1 is an integrative and conjugative element found in some Bacillus subtilis strains. Where found, ICEBs1 is integrated into the leucine tRNA gene trnS-leu2 (Fig. (Fig.1)1) (7, 14, 21).Open in a separate windowFIG. 1.Genetic map of ICEBs1. conE (formerly yddE), regulatory genes (gray arrows), and genes required for integration, excision, and nicking (hatched arrows) are indicated. The number of transmembrane (TM) segments for each protein predicted by cPSORTdb (46) is indicated below each gene. Other topology programs yield similar but not identical predictions.ICEBs1 gene expression, excision, and potential mating are induced by activation of RecA during the SOS response following DNA damage (7). In addition, ICEBs1 is induced by increased production or activation of the ICEBs1-encoded regulatory protein RapI. Production and activity of RapI are indicative of the presence of potential mating partners that do not contain a copy of ICEBs1 (7). Under inducing conditions, the ICEBs1 repressor ImmR (6) is inactivated by proteolytic cleavage mediated by the antirepressor and protease ImmA (12). Most ICEBs1 genes then become highly expressed (7). One of these genes (xis) encodes an excisionase, which in combination with the element''s integrase causes efficient excision and formation of a double-stranded circle (7, 38). The circular form is nicked at the origin of transfer, oriT, by a DNA relaxase, the product of nicK (39). Under appropriate conditions, ICEBs1 can then be transferred by mating into B. subtilis and other species, including the pathogens Listeria monocytogenes and Bacillus anthracis (7). Once transferred to a recipient, ICEBs1 can be stably integrated into the genome at its attachment site in trnS-leu2 by the ICEBs1-encoded integrase (38).In contrast to what is known about ICEBs1 genes and proteins involved in excision, integration, and gene regulation, less is known about the components that make up gram-positive organisms'' mating machinery, defined as the conjugation proteins involved in DNA transfer (18, 24). The well-characterized mating machinery of gram-negative organisms can serve as a preliminary model (15, 16, 37, 48). Gram-negative organisms'' mating machinery is a type IV secretion system composed of at least eight conserved proteins that span the cell envelope. For example, the conjugation apparatus of the Agrobacterium tumefaciens Ti plasmid (pTi) is composed of 11 proteins (VirB1 through VirB11), including the ATPase VirB4 (16). VirB4 family members interact with several components of their cognate secretion systems and may energize machine assembly and/or substrate transfer (16, 48). The secretion substrate is targeted to the conjugation machinery by a coupling protein. Coupling proteins, such as VirD4 of pTi, interact with a protein attached to the end of the DNA substrate and couple the substrate to other components of the conjugation machinery. Coupling proteins might also energize the translocation of DNA through the machinery. Both VirB4 and VirD4 belong to the large HerA/FtsK superfamily of ATPases (29). Two other characterized members of this superfamily are the chromosome-partitioning proteins FtsK and SpoIIIE (29), which are ATP-dependent DNA pumps (reviewed in reference 2).Some of the proteins encoded by the conjugative elements of gram-positive organisms are homologous to components of the conjugation machinery from gram-negative organisms (1, 9, 14, 29), indicating that some aspects of conjugative DNA transfer may be similar in gram-positive and gram-negative organisms. For example, ConE (formerly YddE) of ICEBs1 has sequence similarities to VirB4 (29). YdcQ may be the ICEBs1-encoded coupling protein, as it is phylogenetically related to other coupling proteins (29, 44). Despite some similarities, the cell envelopes and many of the genes encoding the conjugation machinery are different between gram-positive and gram-negative organisms, indicating that there are likely to be significant structural and mechanistic differences as well.To begin to define the conjugation machinery of ICEBs1 and to understand spatial aspects of conjugation, we examined the function and subcellular location of ConE of ICEBs1. Our results indicate that ConE is likely a crucial ATPase component of the ICEBs1 conjugation machinery. We found that ConE and excised ICEBs1 DNA were located at or near the cell poles. We propose that the conjugation machinery is likely located at the cell poles and that mating might occur from a donor cell pole.
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