Abstract

Identification of the environmental triggers involved in the expression of virulence genes is a fundamental objective in studies of bacterial pathogens. For uropathogens, urea, found in the urinary tract at concentrations of up to 500 mm, functions as an environmental signal. Urea freely diffuses into the bacterium Providencia stuartii and activates UreR, a member of the AraC family of transcriptional activators. Active UreR promotes transcription of virulence-associated urease genes and alerts the organisms of its immediate milieu. Thus, the UreR.urea complex has a dual role, acting as both a transcriptional activator as well as an environmental sensor. Here, we describe the molecular events associated with activation of gene expression by urea-bound UreR. The K(d) of the urea.UreR binding reaction was measured as 0.2 mm by fluorescence quenching assays, and the shape of the binding curve indicated a single specific urea-binding site on UreR. Histidine residues are critical for urea binding in urease, and therefore to identify the urea-binding site in UreR, five mutant UreR forms were generated with histidine to alanine substitutions. Two of the mutants (UreR(c)) exhibited a constitutive phenotype by both activating transcription and binding to DNA with an increased affinity in the absence of urea. The UreR(c) bound urea with an affinity similar to that of wild-type UreR. We concluded, therefore, that the mutations resulting in constitutive activity were not involved in the UreR.urea interaction. UreR was activated, then, either by binding urea or by histidine to alanine substitutions at one of two positions. Circular dichroism indicated little change in the structure of UreR when activated, and size-exclusion chromatography demonstrated that both rUreR and rUreR(c) were dimers in both the presence and absence of urea. Thus, the structural changes associated with activation are subtle.

Highlights

  • Ronmental signals alerting the organisms of the appropriate host niche include temperature, osmolarity, pH, and metal ions [2]

  • Urea freely diffuses into the bacterium Providencia stuartii and activates UreR, a member of the AraC family of transcriptional activators

  • Because the urea1⁄7UreR interaction is critical for urease gene activation, we asked whether there is a specific urea-binding site on UreR necessary for a low to high DNA affinity conformational change

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Summary

TABLE I Bacterial strains and plasmids

FϪ ompT hsdSB (rBϪmBϪ) gal dcm (DE3) FϪ endA1 hsdR17 (rKϪmKϪ) supE44 thi-1 ␭-recA1 gyrA96 relA1 ␾80⌬LacZ M15 DH5␣ with chromosomal ureRp-lacZYA DH5␣ with chromosomal ureDp-lacZYA. Expression vector (AmpR) Expression vector (AmpR) Cloning vector, pRK290 derivative 3–4 copies/cell, (TetR) ureR in pET15-b ureR in pMAL-c2E ureR H73A in pET-156 ureR H102A in pET-156 ureR H107A in pET-156 ureR H175A in pET-156 ureR H240A in pET-156 ureR coding for residues 1–194 in pET15-b pRK415 with UreRp-ureR pRK415 with lacZp-ureR pRK415 with lacZp-His-ureR pRK415 with lacZp-ureR H73A pRK415 with lacZp-ureR H102A pRK415 with lacZp-ureR H107A pRK415 with lacZp-ureR H175A pRK415 with lacZp-ureR H240A. Novagen New England BioLabs [30] This work This work This work This work This work This work This work This work [20] This work This work This work This work This work This work This work molecule and as the environmental signal, alerting P. stuartii that it has entered the appropriate site to initiate infection. The urea1⁄7UreR interaction is one of the first signals to the uropathogen that it has entered a urinary tract.

EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
RESULTS
Random coil
DISCUSSION
Minus urea

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