Abstract

BackgroundThe sporulation of aerial hyphae of Streptomyces coelicolor is a complex developmental process. Only a limited number of the genes involved in this intriguing morphological differentiation programme are known, including some key regulatory genes. The aim of this study was to expand our knowledge of the gene repertoire involved in S. coelicolor sporulation.ResultsWe report a DNA microarray-based investigation of developmentally controlled gene expression in S. coelicolor. By comparing global transcription patterns of the wild-type parent and two mutants lacking key regulators of aerial hyphal sporulation, we found a total of 114 genes that had significantly different expression in at least one of the two mutants compared to the wild-type during sporulation. A whiA mutant showed the largest effects on gene expression, while only a few genes were specifically affected by whiH mutation. Seven new sporulation loci were investigated in more detail with respect to expression patterns and mutant phenotypes. These included SCO7449-7451 that affect spore pigment biogenesis; SCO1773-1774 that encode an L-alanine dehydrogenase and a regulator-like protein and are required for maturation of spores; SCO3857 that encodes a protein highly similar to a nosiheptide resistance regulator and affects spore maturation; and four additional loci (SCO4421, SCO4157, SCO0934, SCO1195) that show developmental regulation but no overt mutant phenotype. Furthermore, we describe a new promoter-probe vector that takes advantage of the red fluorescent protein mCherry as a reporter of cell type-specific promoter activity.ConclusionAerial hyphal sporulation in S. coelicolor is a technically challenging process for global transcriptomic investigations since it occurs only as a small fraction of the colony biomass and is not highly synchronized. Here we show that by comparing a wild-type to mutants lacking regulators that are specifically affecting processes in aerial hypha, it is possible to identify previously unknown genes with important roles in sporulation. The transcriptomic data reported here should also serve as a basis for identification of further developmentally important genes in future functional studies.

Highlights

  • The sporulation of aerial hyphae of Streptomyces coelicolor is a complex developmental process

  • In order to identify genes that are changed in sporulating aerial hyphae, we have compared the pattern of gene expression in the wild-type strain M145 to those in two developmental mutants lacking the regulatory genes whiA or whiH

  • Mycelium was harvested after 18, 36 and 48 h of growth, in the case of the wildtype strain representing colonies consisting of vegetative mycelium only, colonies covered by a developing aerial mycelium, and colonies turning grey due to abundant production of spores, respectively

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Summary

Introduction

The sporulation of aerial hyphae of Streptomyces coelicolor is a complex developmental process. The subsequent development of the aerial hyphae into spores can be blocked at different stages by mutating critical genes Many mutations of this type give rise to a white aerial mycelium due to a failure to produce the grey spore pigment. Isolation of such whi mutants was the basis for identifying central regulatory genes that direct sporulation in aerial hyphae (for recent reviews, see [1,4]). A major challenge in Streptomyces developmental biology is to decipher how these regulators are acting to control the physiological and cell cycle-related processes involved in producing the mature spores, including modulation of cell division, cell wall assembly, chromosome replication, and nucleoid partitioning and condensation. The biosynthetic genes for the pigment are found in the whiE gene cluster, and the expression of this cluster depends on the regulatory whi genes, the direct regulator is still unknown [8,9]

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