Previous Article | Next Article ![]()
Eukaryotic Cell, April 2007, p. 693-709, Vol. 6, No. 4
1535-9778/07/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/EC.00341-06
Copyright © 2007, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.

and
Paula Sundstrom1,2*
Microbiology and Molecular Pathogenesis Program, Dartmouth Medical School, Hanover, New Hampshire,1 The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio,2 Clinical Research Division, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, Seattle, Washington 981093
Received 25 October 2006/ Accepted 15 December 2006
|
|
|---|
|
|
|---|
The true hyphal morphology of C. albicans (43) is notable for its enhanced adherence in comparison to yeast forms (40), and this is reflected in the presence of hypha-specific proteins that promote the invasion of and adherence to host surfaces. One such protein, Hwp1 (hyphal wall protein 1), is a glycosylphosphatidylinositol-linked cell wall protein that is abundantly expressed when C. albicans is in hyphal growth mode and is absent or barely detectable in the yeast morphology (41). Hwp1 is incorporated into the cell wall at the tips of apically growing hyphae, limiting its presence to hyphal surfaces (39). Hwp1 has been shown to play a key role in the attachment of C. albicans to human buccal epithelial cells by forming covalent bonds through its function as a substrate for epithelial transglutaminases (40). HWP1 gene expression is regulated at the level of mRNA. Northern blot analysis reveals abundant steady-state levels of HWP1 mRNA during hyphal growth but not yeast growth (41). Under hypha-inducing conditions, HWP1 mRNA becomes detectable within 15 min and increases over a period of several hours (3).
The regulation of HWP1 expression is believed to be intimately associated with a number of protein factors that themselves play key roles in the yeast-to-hypha transition. This has been shown in a variety of studies using mutants that exhibit both aberrant yeast-hypha transitions and altered HWP1 expression patterns. Those studies implicated the cyclic AMP signaling pathway and Efg1, a downstream transcription factor of this pathway, in both processes (4, 42). A number of additional contributors to HWP1 expression have also been uncovered, including the activators Cph2 and Tec1 (23, 37), the repressors Tup1 and Nrg1 (6, 27), and the biofilm factor Bcr1 (30). However, little has been done to explore the regulation of hypha-specific genes like HWP1 at the level of the promoter. It remains unclear whether the effect of these and other regulatory factors on HWP1 expression is the result of a direct interaction with promoter sequences or is instead an indirect effect of a morphogenesis regulatory pathway.
In previous work, we found that the 1,410 bp immediately upstream of the transcription start site of HWP1 conferred successful developmental regulation to a green fluorescent protein (GFP) reporter (39). However, additional analyses have revealed that the HWP1 promoter extends further upstream and is more complex than previously thought, necessitating the inclusion of additional DNA in the reporter plasmid. Here, we report an extensive dissection of the HWP1 promoter that unveiled a particular region, HCR, that is critical for activation and is able to confer developmental regulation on a heterologous promoter. Different sets of HCR/DNA binding protein interactions from crude extracts of yeast and hyphal cells were observed, four such proteins were isolated and identified, and their binding to a subregion of HCR was confirmed by the use of recombinant proteins. To our knowledge, these studies are the first to identify proteins from C. albicans that bind to a promoter region shown to confer developmental regulation to a hypha-specific gene. The results form the basis for a new model of hypha-specific gene regulation in C. albicans.
|
|
|---|
|
View this table: [in a new window] |
TABLE 1. Strains and plasmids
|
competent cells used for cloning were grown, where appropriate, in the presence of LB plus 100 µg/ml ampicillin, 25 µg/ml kanamycin, or 50 µg/ml zeomycin for plasmid selection and maintenance. Plasmid construction. (i) GFP reporter plasmids. Plasmid pHWP1GFP3, which contains 1,410 bp of upstream sequence from the HWP1 transcription start site, was previously described (39). Additional HWP1 DNA upstream of position 1410 was obtained using Lambda 1, a clone from a C. albicans genomic library containing HWP1 (31). Plasmid pBSRI 1.9-16 was created by cloning an 11.9-kb Lambda 1 EcoRI fragment that overlapped the HWP1 promoter region found in pHWP1GFP3 into pBluescript SK(). DNA regions from position 2025 or from position 1902 to the BamHI site at position 444 were amplified by PCR using primers that engineered XhoI sites at the 5' ends (see Table 2 for primer sequences). PCR products and pHWP1GFP3 were digested with XhoI and BamHI and ligated together to create plasmids p1902.GFP3 and pHWP1.2025GFP3.
|
View this table: [in a new window] |
TABLE 2. Oligonucleotidesa
|
Internal deletion S was created by PCR-ligation-PCR (1, 2). The HWP1 promoter regions at positions 1902 to 1410 and 1042 to +60 were PCR amplified with a genomic DNA template using primer pairs TX1902/B1411 and T1042/H39, respectively, whereas the resultant PCR products served as a template for the second reaction with primers TX1902 and H39. The final PCR product was digested with XhoI and HindIII and cloned into pHWP1GFP3 to create pSGFP3.
Internal HWP1 promoter deletions E, M, and K2 were cloned by amplifying the 1902 to 1657, 1410 to 1042, or 1288 to 1042 region, respectively, and engineering XhoI ends by PCR with a genomic DNA template. The resulting products were ligated into p856GFP3, which contains external deletion 555, to create plasmids pEGFP3, pK2GFP3, and pMGFP3.
To test that the activating ability of the 368-bp HCR segment was not the result of spatial effects, 376 bp of DNA from the enolase coding region was cloned into plasmid pSGFP3 to replace HCR. A unique EcoRV restriction site was placed at position 1042 in plasmid pSGFP3 using the QuikChange site-directed mutagenesis kit (Stratagene, La Jolla, CA). Primer set E15 was used to amplify the replacement DNA, adding EcoRV restriction sites to either end (Table 2). The pSGFP3 site-directed mutagenesis product and the E15 PCR product were digested with EcoRV, purified, and ligated to create plasmid pSENO1.
To test whether HCR could activate a different promoter, a basal promoter was created using pENO1GFP3 (39). A unique EcoRV site 20 bp upstream from the enolase promoter TATA box was added by site-directed mutagenesis as described above. The resulting plasmid was digested with EcoRV and XhoI to remove the activating regions of the enolase promoter and purified by gel extraction (QIAGEN, Valencia, CA). Primer set HCR was used for PCR with the genomic DNA template to generate the HCR fragment from the HWP1 promoter with engineered XhoI and EcoRV sites. The resulting PCR product and pENO1GFP3 were digested with XhoI and EcoRV and ligated to create plasmid pEX-1.
(iii) Plasmids containing putative HCRa binding protein transcripts.
A 249-bp PCR fragment encompassing positions 1410 to 1162 and named HCRa was amplified using primer set TR06 with genomic DNA as a template. The HCRa PCR product was cloned into pCR4-TOPO to create pSKD19. The C. albicans NHP6 gene with an N-terminal His6 tag was amplified by PCR using primers NHP-h6 Xho and NHP Spe with genomic DNA as a template. The PCR product was digested with SpeI and XhoI and ligated into pPICZ
C (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA) with digested XbaI and XhoI sites to create pSKD306. To generate pSKD703, which was engineered to have a His6 tag at its N terminus, His6-Nhp6 was PCR amplified from pSKD306 using primers NHP6-h6 and NHP Spe and cloned into pBAD202/D-TOPO (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA).
C. albicans GCF1, HTB1, and HTA1 were amplified with primer sets GCF1, HTB1, and HTA1, respectively. The resultant PCR products were cloned into the pBAD202/D-TOPO vector to generate plasmids pSKD710, pSKD721, and pSKD723 that placed sequences encoding thioredoxin and a His6 tag on their N and C termini, respectively.
All plasmid constructs were sequenced to verify accuracy.
Strain construction. (i) Integration of pHWPGFP3 at the HWP1 locus. To create a C. albicans strain with GFP at the native HWP1 locus, pHWP1GFP3 was linearized at its unique BamHI site and transformed by the spheroplast method (20) into CAI4, creating strain HB-12. Genomic DNA was digested with BglII and probed with a fragment spanning HWP1 promoter positions 1063 to +7 to verify low-copy integration by Southern blotting (not shown).
(ii) Integration of HWP1 promoter deletion plasmids at the ENO1 locus. ClaI-digested plasmid DNA from each promoter deletion construct was transformed into C. albicans CAI4 as described above. For each construct, multiple independent transformants were analyzed by Southern blotting as previously described (39).
(iii) Preparation of crude extracts. Crude extracts from stationary-phase yeast were prepared from cultures grown for 48 h in YNB medium supplemented with 2% glucose and 120 g/liter of appropriate nutrients. Crude extracts from hyphae and yeast were prepared as described above except that cells were incubated for 1 h. To ensure that cells were uniformly destined to become true hyphae (>95%) or budding yeast, an aliquot from each culture was incubated for 3 h, and cell morphologies were verified microscopically. Cultures were collected by centrifugation at 4,000 rpm for 20 min and resuspended in breakage buffer [180 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.5), 350 mM (NH4)2SO4, 10 mM MgCl2, 1 mM EDTA, 10% (vol/vol) glycerol, 7 mM ß-mercaptoethanol, 1x protease inhibitor cocktail, 1 mM phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride]. The cells were disrupted by three passages through a French press (20,000 lb/in2 [1 lb/in2 = 6.9 kPa]) and then bead beaten at 4,200 rpm and 20 s for seven cycles. The crude extract was then centrifuged at 10,000 x g for 2 min to remove unbroken cells and ultracentrifuged at 150,000 x g for 2 h at 4°C. The recovered extracts were dialyzed against buffer A (20 mM Tris-HCl [pH 8.0], 50 mM NaCl, 10 mM MgCl2, 1 mM dithiothreitol, 0.5 mM EDTA, 5% glycerol).
Analysis of crude cell extracts. (i) Anion-exchange column chromatography. To investigate the potential differences in DNA binding activities in the three growth conditions, crude hyphal, yeast, and stationary-phase yeast extracts were loaded onto a 1-ml HiTrap Q-Sepharose Fast Flow column (strong anion) (GE Healthcare, Piscataway, NJ) according to the manufacturer's instructions. A stepwise elution of proteins was carried out using increasing concentrations of NaCl (0.2, 0.3, 0.4, 0.5, and 1.0 M) in buffer A.
(ii) Ammonium sulfate precipitation and heparin-Sepharose column chromatography. To obtain preparative amounts of DNA binding proteins for amino acid sequencing, crude extracts from stationary-phase yeasts were divided into four fractions by progressive precipitation in 25%, 50%, and 75% ammonium sulfate; the supernatant fraction from the 75% ammonium sulfate precipitation served as the fourth fraction. The pellets resulting from the 50% and 75% ammonium sulfate precipitations as well as the final supernatant fraction were dialyzed twice against buffer A. Each fraction was loaded onto a 5-ml prepacked HiTrap heparin-Sepharose column (GE Healthcare, Piscataway, NJ) prior to stepwise elution with NaCl and analysis by gel mobility shift assays on each fraction.
Further fractionation using 60% ammonium sulfate was required to identify Hbp1. The pellet and the supernatant were dialyzed against buffer A, loaded onto a 5-ml prepacked heparin-Sepharose column, equilibrated with buffer A, and eluted using a model 2110 fraction collector (Bio-Rad, Hercules, CA) with a linear NaCl gradient ranging in concentration from 0.02 to 1 M at a flow rate of 1 ml/1 min. A total of 49 fractions were collected.
Trichloroacetic acid (TCA) was used to precipitate the column fractions by adding equal volumes of 20% TCA and incubating at 4°C for 30 min. Precipitates were collected by centrifugation at 13,000 rpm for 15 min, washed with cold acetone, and dissolved in sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE) loading buffer.
(iii) Protein sequencing. Protein fractions showing binding to HCRa were analyzed by conventional SDS-PAGE using 16% polyacrylamide (22). The N-terminal and internal amino acid sequences of each protein were determined by the Dartmouth College Molecular Biology Core Facility using either the Edman method or matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization mass spectrometry (MALDI-MS) (10).
(iv) Purification of recombinant proteins from E. coli. Plasmids pSKD703, pSKD710, pSKD721, and pSKD723 were transformed into E. coli strain LMG194, in which the araC gene is under the control of the pBAD promoter. Transformed LMG194 was grown at 37°C to an optical density at 600 nm of 0.5 and then incubated for an additional 3 h with 0.2% L-arabinose to overexpress the protein of interest. Cells were disrupted by two passages through a French press (1,000 lb/in2 [1 lb/in2 = 6.9 kPa]) in binding buffer (50 mM Tris-HCl [pH 8.0], 250 mM NaCl, 5 mM imidazole, 10% glycerol, 0.05% Tween 20, 1 mM phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride) and centrifuged at 13,000 rpm for 30 min. The resultant soluble fraction was applied to a Pro-Bond resin column (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA) and washed with buffer containing 50 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.0), 125 mM NaCl, 10% glycerol, and 60 mM imidazole. Fusion proteins were eluted with buffer containing increasing concentrations of imidazole, dialyzed using SnakeSkin pleated dialysis tubing (7,000-molecular-weight cutoff) (Pierce, Rockford, IL) in EKMax reaction buffer (50 mM Tris-HCl [pH 8.0], 1 mM CaCl2, 0.1% [vol/vol] Tween 20) overnight, treated with 0.1 U of enterokinase (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA) for 16 h at 37°C to remove thioredoxin, and recovered using Pro-Bond resin.
(v) Gel mobility shift assays.
Gel mobility shift assays were performed as previously described (17), with modifications. Plasmid pSKD19 was digested with EcoRI, and 1 µg of the resultant HCRa fragment was end labeled with [
-33P]ATP by T4 polynucleotide kinase (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA). Unlabeled HCRa and an unrelated DNA fragment from the ENO1 gene were used for competition assays. A 382-bp segment from ENO1 was obtained by PCR using primer set ENO2 and pENO1 as a template (39). For the assay, 0.1 ng of labeled probe was incubated with the indicated amounts of protein from fractions with 200 or 500 ng of sheared salmon sperm DNA (normal conditions) (Ambion, Austin, TX) or from crude extracts with 3 µg of sheared salmon sperm DNA (high-stringency conditions) (46). The reaction mixtures were loaded onto a nondenaturing 5% polyacrylamide gel in Tris-borate-EDTA buffer (89 mM Tris base, 89 mM boric acid, 2 mM EDTA [pH 8.0]) and analyzed by using a Storm 860 PhosphorImager (GE Healthcare, Piscataway, NJ).
Monitoring GFP levels in reporter constructs. Assessment of GFP levels was performed by using 5 ml of M199 medium prewarmed to 37°C. Over 95% of the cells in each inoculated culture were observed to produce germ tubes. After germ tube induction, cells were washed twice with ice-cold phosphate-buffered saline, resuspended in 100 µl phosphate-buffered saline, and transferred into a 96-well Cytoplate (Applied Biosystems, Foster City, CA). Levels of GFP were measured by using a Victor2 1420 multilabel counter (Perkin-Elmer, Wellesley, MA) and normalized by dividing the fluorescence emitted per 1-s exposure by the absorbance seen at an optical density at 600 nm to produce relative fluorescence units. The fluorescence of each construct was expressed as the percentage of 1902 fluorescence, which was set at 100%. Epifluorescence using a fluorescein isothiocyanate cube with 470 to 490 nm of excitation and 515 to 550 nm of emission was performed to verify uniform GFP expression throughout the population. Cells were photographed at x400 magnification with an Olympus (Center Valley, PA) BX60 microscope and MagnaFire S99806 camera and analyzed with MagnaFire v 2.1 (Optronics, Goleta, CA) and Image-Pro Plus v4.1 (Media Cybernetics, Silver Spring, MD) software. For each construct, three independent transformants that had integrated correctly at the ENO1 locus as assessed by Southern blotting were tested. The variation within transformants was within 20% of the average for their respective constructs. A representative strain was selected for each construct, and fluorescence values were read in triplicate.
|
|
|---|
![]() View larger version (26K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 1. Analysis of the HWP1 promoter using GFP as a reporter. (A) Time course of GFP expression driven by various promoters including HWP1 (strain HB-12) (black), 1410 HWP1 (strain HGFP3) (gray), and promoterless (0GFP3) (lined). Fluorescence was quantified according to the procedures outlined in Materials and Methods. (B) Kinetics of activation of the 1410 region (dotted line) compared to the complete HWP1 promoter (HB-12) (solid line). The values represent the ratios of the fluorescence at each time point relative to the 7-h time point. (C and D) Dissection of the HWP1 promoter in strains containing external truncations from the 5' end (C) and internal deletions (D). Strains were grown in M199 medium at 37°C for 2.5 h. Values represent the percent fluorescence of strain 1902, which is indicated by an arrow in C. In D, deleted DNA is indicated by a dashed line. The arrow indicates the transcription start site, and the diamond just upstream of the arrow signifies a TATA element. The locations of HCR and HCRa are shown as black bars. Putative NRE and E-box sites are indicated by open circles and black squares, respectively. (E) Developmental regulation of a heterologous promoter by HCR. HCR alone activated the truncated ENO1 promoter, leading to GFP expression in germ tubes but not in yeast using strain HCRENO. The diamond represents the TATA box in the ENO1 promoter.
|
A comparison of GFP expression levels in strains with serial truncations at the 5' end of the HWP1 promoter was performed to identify the regions that were most important for activation (Fig. 1C). GFP levels were recorded as the percentage of fluorescence observed in the 1902 construct over the same time period, which was set at 100%. Sequence elements necessary for the transcriptional activation of the HWP1 promoter spanned a large region, with the most important activating regions being located between positions 1100 and 1840.
The distal activating region extended from positions 1840 to 1410 and contributed approximately 50% of the total promoter activity compared to position 1902. Incremental external deletions into the 5' end of the promoter showed a gradual decline in activation until a sharp drop from 79% to 47% activation of position1902 fluorescence occurred upon the removal of the 125 bp between positions 1535 and 1410. This decrease was reversed upon the removal of an additional 44 bp as shown by restoration to 81% of position 1902 fluorescence in the position 1366 construct, indicating a region conferring repression. Extending the truncations past position 1366 led to a precipitous decline in fluorescence to less than 4% of that of position 1902 for constructs with less than 1,153 bp of promoter sequence.
To further define the interior regions of the HWP1 promoter that contribute to activation, a series of internal deletion constructs was also tested. Deletion of DNA sequences between positions 1410 and 1042 in internal deletion strain S diminished promoter activity to 8.8% of that seen in position 1902 (Fig. 1D). Replacement of this region with an equivalent amount of DNA from the ENO1 coding region in strain SENO1 did not restore promoter activity (not shown), indicating that HWP1 promoter activity is dependent largely on the specific sequences present within the 1410 to 1042 region and is not due simply to spatial effects. In addition, GFP fluorescence was increased from 2% to 72.4% when the promoter region between positions 1410 and 1042 was placed adjacent to a truncated construct with basal levels of activity (position 555) (Fig. 1D, construct E), indicating that sequences important for HWP1 induction are contained within this region.
The activating ability of the region at positions 1410 to 1042 depended heavily on sequences within 200 bp downstream of position 1410. A construct containing the HWP1 promoter region from positions 1288 to 1042 resulted in an activation level of only 12.6% when placed adjacent to position 555 (Fig. 1D, construct K2). This result, coupled with a comparison of the GFP fluorescence exhibited by external truncations at positions 1410 and 1366, indicate that the region of the HWP1 promoter between positions 1410 and 1288 contains both activating and repressing activities.
In contrast to the promoter region between positions 1410 and 1042, the more distal region from positions 1902 to 1657 that appeared to confer activation ability in the truncation analysis was not sufficient to activate GFP fluorescence when placed adjacent to the truncated 555 construct with basal promoter activity (Fig. 1D, construct M). This result showed that the region from positions 1902 to 1657 serves to enhance the activating function of the region between positions 1410 and 1042.
Importantly, the region from positions 1410 to 1042 was also able to activate a heterologous promoter. Placement of this region 20 bp upstream of the TATA element of an ENO1 promoter in strain HCRENO led to a fluorescence level of 50% of position 1902 under germ tube-inducing conditions, a level equivalent to that generated by the 1410 external deletion (Fig. 1E). The truncated ENO1 promoter by itself failed to show GFP fluorescence (not shown), indicating that the sequences between positions 1410 and 1042 are capable of high levels of gene activation in a developmentally regulated fashion independent of other sequences in the HWP1 promoter. Because of its ability to confer hypha-specific regulation of HWP1, the region from positions 1410 to 1042 was designated the HCR.
The entire HWP1 promoter was analyzed for the presence of binding sites for Nrg1 and Efg1 (27, 42). A single Efg1 binding site (E box) from positions 1090 to 1085 and a single Nrg1 binding site (NRE) from positions 1228 to 1223 were found in HCR. E boxes were found upstream of HCR, which is suggestive of a possible role for Efg1 in the amplification of the HWP1 promoter (Fig. 1D). Additional E boxes and NREs were also found downstream of the activating regions.
The relative levels of activation between the constructs described above were found to depend on the induction of germ tubes and were not dependent on the media used to induce germ tubes. However, the absolute level of activation was increased by 2.1-fold by the addition of 10% bovine calf serum to M199. Under yeast growth conditions, all strains showed negligible levels of HWP1 promoter activity (not shown). Pseudohyphal forms did not activate the HWP1 promoter to the high levels associated with germ tubes but were variably capable of producing low levels of HWP1 promoter activity (38).
Identification of proteins from crude extracts binding to the HCRa promoter region. Given its apparent importance in the hypha-specific activation of HWP1, it was of interest to identify DNA binding proteins in crude C. albicans extracts that bound to the HCR. In addition, we wished to identify differences in the protein binding patterns in hyphal versus yeast growth forms at an early time point following hypha induction, when the mechanisms involved in promoter activation would be in progress. To this end, extracts were prepared from cells that had been placed in hypha-inducing conditions for 1 h, a period known to be early in the kinetics of activation, when HWP1 mRNA is abundant but not yet at its peak level (3). Crude extracts were also prepared from comparable cultures incubated at 25°C for 1 h, allowing these cells to retain a yeast morphology. Crude extracts from stationary-phase yeast cultures were also included to reveal DNA binding proteins present in the absence of active growth. Henceforth, we refer to these preparations as hyphal extracts (HE), yeast extracts (YE), and stationary-phase extracts (STE).
The crude extracts were analyzed by gel mobility shifts. Experiments using the 5' portion of the HWP1 promoter region extending from positions 1410 to 1162, termed HCRa, showed the same DNA-protein binding pattern on nondenaturing gels as the original HCR (positions 1410 to 1042) identified in the promoter deletion analysis (data not shown). Therefore, HCRa was used in the gel mobility shift experiments described below.
Two major protein-DNA complexes that migrated slower than free HCRa were detectable in crude extracts from hyphae, yeast, and stationary-phase yeast cells under high-stringency reaction conditions (46) (see Materials and Methods). The amount of protein binding HCRa was enhanced when higher amounts of crude extract were used, suggesting a strong interaction between the two proteins and HCRa. Protein-DNA complex 2 appeared on the gel initially as two separate bands (Fig. 2A) of similar molecular weights with additional bands apparent at higher extract concentrations, suggesting the presence of a single protein with a tendency to multimerize (Fig. 2A, lanes 4, 5, and 6). The intensity of protein-DNA complex 2 appeared to be less in STE at all protein concentrations compared to those in YE and HE, suggesting that the protein present in complex 2 has decreased binding activity when the cells of origin were not actively growing. In contrast, protein-DNA complex 1 was found in HE, YE, and STE as a single shifted band across all crude extract concentrations. These results suggested that at least two distinct proteins occupy HCRa of the HWP1 promoter with distinct binding profiles that are influenced by growth conditions.
![]() View larger version (45K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 2. Identification of HCRa-protein complexes using crude protein extracts and fractionation by anion-exchange chromatography and gel mobility shift assays performed on either a 15- by 19-cm vertical gel electrophoresis system (Life Technologies, Gaithersburg, MD) at 200 V for 2 h (A and B) or a 7- by 10-cm Mini-PROTEAN 3 cell (Bio-Rad, Hercules, CA) at 120 V for 50 min (C to F). (A) Crude extracts (HE, YE, and STE) were mixed with -33P-labeled HCRa in the presence of 3 µg sheared salmon sperm DNA (high-stringency reaction conditions). Protein-DNA complexes 1 and 2, as well as free DNA, are indicated by arrows. Amounts of crude extract used were as follows: lane 1, 0 ng (DNA only); lane 2, 250 ng; lane 3, 500 ng; lane 4, 1,000 ng; lane 5, 3,000 ng; lane 6, 5,000 ng. (B) Competition assay in the presence of unlabeled HCRa and ENO1 DNA. The -33P-labeled fragment was incubated with 1,000 ng of crude extract from YE and HE and 3,000 ng from STE. Lane D, labeled probe only; lane 1, crude extract only; lanes 2 and 3, 200- and 50-fold molar excesses of unlabeled HCRa, respectively; lane 4, 200-fold molar excess of a region of ENO1 (see Materials and Methods). (C to F) Fractions prepared from YE and HE containing 25 ng (C and E) or 250 ng (D and F) of protein were mixed with -33P-end-labeled HCRa in the presence of 200 ng (C and E) or 500 ng (D and F) sheared salmon sperm DNA except for assays in lanes labeled CE, which were performed under high-stringency conditions as in A and B. The positions of the free DNA and four protein-DNA complexes (Hbp1 to Hbp4) are indicated by arrows. White arrowheads (C and E) and diamonds (F) represent Hbp1 and Hbp4, respectively. See Results for a complete explanation. Lane D, DNA only; CE, crude extract; FT, flowthrough; W, wash; lane 5, 0.2 M NaCl; lane 6, 0.3 M; lane 7, 0.4 M; lane 8, 0.5 M; lane 9, 1.0 M.
|
At least four proteins appear to bind HCRa. Crude extracts were further fractionated with anion-exchange column chromatography followed by gel mobility shift assays under normal conditions in an attempt to identify proteins that exhibited differing binding activities in relation to growth conditions. The protein originally identified in protein-HCRa complex 2 (Fig. 2A) was named Hbp1, (HWP1 control region binding protein 1). The number of bands associated with Hbp1 was variable and depended on the assay conditions. When normal conditions were used with the fractions from ion-exchange chromatography, Hbp1 appeared as a single band (Fig. 2C and E).
Although Hbp1 was present in crude extracts under all growth conditions, subtle differences were seen in its behavior between YE and HE. Using the conditions for the crude extracts (Fig. 2C to F, CE lanes), Hbp1 frequently consisted of three distinct shifted bands in YE (Fig. 2C, CE lane), which is suggestive of Hbp1 monomers, dimers, and tetramers or multimers in the yeast crude extract, respectively. However, only two bands were observed in HE, which is suggestive of monomers and dimers (Fig. 2E, CE lane). Under normal conditions, the mobility of the Hbp1-HCRa complex was retarded at a rate equivalent to that of the mobility of a possible tetrameric or multimeric structure of the protein in YE compared to the putative dimeric or less multimerized form in HE (compare positions indicated by white arrowheads in Fig. 2C, lanes W and 5, and E, lanes FT and W, relative to the position of the bands in lanes labeled CE). Hbp1 also showed different elution patterns in YE and HE in that DNA binding was detected in the wash and 0.2 M NaCl fractions from YE (Fig. 2C, lanes W and 5) and in the flowthrough and wash fractions from HE (Fig. 2E, lanes FT and W). Even more striking was the finding that Hbp1 appeared to show a particularly high binding affinity for HCRa in YE, an observation that was not made with the original crude extracts using high-stringency conditions. In the assays using 250 ng of eluted protein, the Hbp1-shifted protein-DNA complex was detectable even in the flowthrough fraction in YE (Fig. 2D, lane FT). In contrast, fractions containing Hbp1 from HE showed comparatively weak binding activities (Fig. 2F, lanes FT and W). Together, these results suggest that Hbp1 may be conformationally altered depending on environmental stimuli with increased binding activity under yeast growth conditions.
Protein-HCRa complex 1 from Fig. 2A was detectable in the flowthrough and wash fractions in both YE and HE; however, the binding activity of this protein, designated Hbp2, was reduced in YE compared to HE. Gel shifts with only 25 ng protein clearly showed a complex formed by Hbp2 in the flowthrough fraction of HE, which was barely detectable in YE (Fig. 2C and E, lanes FT and W). Using 250 ng of eluted protein, the entire amount of free DNA was shifted and formed a polydispersed smear using HE that consisted of aggregates of Hbp2 alone or complexed with other proteins. In YE, most of the DNA remained unbound, and the shifted band formed a tight, rapidly migrating complex consistent with reduced binding activity in YE in comparison to HE (Fig. 2D and F, FT lanes). Overall, this suggested that Hbp2 may be active specifically under conditions of hyphal growth or may recruit other proteins during hyphal morphogenesis.
A third protein, named Hbp3, was detected and produced a shifted band that was slightly smaller than that produced by Hbp2 (Fig. 2E, compare the size of the band just above the free DNA in the FT lane [Hbp2] and lane 5 [Hbp3]) and, unlike Hbp2, was specifically eluted in the 0.2 M NaCl fraction. Hbp3 is evident in Fig. 2C by the presence of an abundant shifted band in lane 5, which is diminished in lane 6, that is not formed in the flowthrough and wash fractions. Even though Hbp3 is present in reduced amounts in HE, the elution characteristics are consistent with those from YE. The higher intensity of the band in lane 5 compared to that in lane W in Fig. 2E is consistent with optimal elution at 0.2 M NaCl. The increased abundance in YE is also seen using higher amounts of protein. Using 250 ng of eluted protein, the entire amount of free DNA was shifted, forming a polydispersed smear using YE that consisted of aggregates of Hbp3 alone or complexed with other proteins. By contrast, in HE, most of the DNA remained unbound, and the shifted band formed a tight, rapidly migrating complex consistent with less binding activity (Fig. 2D and F, lanes 5).
An additional protein, Hbp4, was detectable in the 400 mM NaCl fraction using 25 ng of eluted protein from HE (Fig. 2E, lane 7) but not from YE (Fig. 2C, lane 7). When 250 ng of eluted protein was used, Hbp4 was detectable in both the 400 and 500 mM NaCl fractions in HE (Fig. 2F, lanes 7 and 8) but only in the 400 mM NaCl fraction in YE (Fig. 2D, lane 7). In addition, multimeric forms of Hbp4 were observed in the 400 mM NaCl fraction in HE (Fig. 2F, lane 7). It is important that the binding activities of Hbp3 and Hbp4 were not confined exclusively to a single growth form. Although Hbp3 was notably more active in YE compared to HE, it was not completely absent from the latter. Likewise, Hbp4 was expressed predominantly in HE but was present at low levels in YE as well. We also observed the presence of protein-DNA complexes that failed to migrate during electrophoresis located immediately below the wells in both YE (Fig. 2C, lane 8, and D, lanes 7 and 8) and HE (Fig. 2F, lanes 8 and 9). Taken together, these results show that HCRa binds several C. albicans proteins and that their binding activities appear to be strongly influenced by growth conditions.
Purification and identification of HCRa binding proteins. To obtain preparative amounts of Hbp1 and Hbp2, crude extracts from stationary-phase cultures were prepared and fractionated by ammonium sulfate precipitation. The proteins of interest were observed to retain their binding activities in fractions from stepwise ammonium sulfate precipitation (Fig. 3A). Hbp1 was detectable mainly in the 25% and 50% ammonium sulfate fractions, whereas Hbp2 was found in all of the ammonium sulfate precipitated fractions as well as in the supernatant fraction. In subsequent heparin-Sepharose column chromatography from these precipitations, the protein components responsible for the different complexes with HCRa were eluted with 0.5 M and 1 M NaCl from the 50% and 75% ammonium sulfate and supernatant fractions (Fig. 3B, C, and D). The fractions in which protein-DNA complexes could be seen in gel mobility shift assays were compared with those fractions that did not show the presence of DNA binding proteins. A relatively small protein of about 11 kDa was absent from fractions that did not bind HCRa DNA but was present in other fractions (Fig. 3E, compare lanes 1, 2, 4, 5, 7, and 8 with lanes 3 and 6). A band correlating with Hbp1 binding activity was not apparent.
![]() View larger version (79K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 3. Fractionation of DNA binding proteins in STE by ammonium sulfate precipitation (A) followed by heparin-Sepharose column chromatography of each ammonium sulfate fraction (B to D). Gel mobility shift assays were performed in the presence of 500 ng sheared salmon sperm DNA (A) or with 200 ng sheared salmon sperm DNA using the heparin-Sepharose fractions from stepwise elutions with NaCl from the 50% (B), 75% (C), and supernatant (D) ammonium sulfate fractions. Lane D, DNA only; lane CE (1,000 ng), crude extract under high-stringency conditions (see Materials and Methods); FT, flowthrough fraction; W, wash fraction; lanes 2, 3, and 4, 100 ng protein from 50% and 75% ammonium sulfate saturated fractions and the supernatant fraction, respectively; lanes 11, 12, and 13, 25 ng, 100 ng, and 500 ng protein, respectively, from the indicated fractions. Fractions that were compared by SDS-PAGE in E are marked with asterisks and diamonds to indicate the presence of Hbp1 and Hbp2, respectively, and with ovals to indicate fractions that did not show binding activities for either protein. The boxed numbers correspond to the lane numbers in E that were used for separating the indicated fractions by SDS-PAGE. (E) Silver-stained 16% SDS-polyacrylamide gel of representative Hbp1- and Hbp2-containing fractions as determined by assays shown in C and D. Each lane contains 1 µg of the appropriate fraction. The location of Hbp2 is indicated. The band indicated by the black dot was later found to contain histones (Fig. 4). MW, molecular weight (in thousands).
|
![]() View larger version (71K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 4. Isolation of Hbp1. STE was precipitated with 60% ammonium sulfate and further fractionated with heparin-Sepharose chromatography using a 20 to 1,000 mM NaCl gradient. -33P-labeled HCRa (0.1 ng) was mixed with 50 ng of each fraction in the presence of 200 ng sheared salmon sperm DNA (A) or 250 ng of each fraction in the presence of 500 ng of sheared salmon sperm DNA (B). Lane D contains radiolabeled probe only. (C) Coomassie blue-stained 16% SDS-polyacrylamide gel to visualize Hbp1 (see arrow and dot next to band) and Hbp5/6. Each lane contained a 5-µg sample from the indicated fraction following TCA precipitation.
|
|
View this table: [in a new window] |
TABLE 3. Protein sequence determined by MALDI-MS or N terminal amino acid sequencing
|
Sequence analysis of Hbp5 and Hbp6 revealed internal peptides with identities to two predicted C. albicans histone proteins, Hta1 and Htb1. The internal peptides showed 17% coverage of Hta1 and 32% coverage of Htb1 (Table 3). Hta1 and Htb1 have predicted masses of 13,861 Da and 13,988 Da, which matched their observed masses on SDS-PAGE gels. A BLAST analysis also revealed a strong similarity to S. cerevisiae histones Hta1 and Htb1, subunits of the nucleosome (29).
Two HMG proteins and histones Htb1 and Hta1 bind to HCRa at the HWP1 promoter. The genes NHP6, GCF1, HTB1, and HTA1 were each cloned into plasmid pBAD202/D-TOPO and transformed into E. coli strain LMG194 to facilitate the overexpression of fusions between the C. albicans proteins and thioredoxin and His6 tags following induction with 0.2% L-arabinose (see Materials and Methods). Major bands with mobilities of 25 kDa (Nhp6), 45 kDa (Gcf1p), and 28 kDa (Hta1 and Htb1), which were the expected sizes of each fusion protein of interest when factoring in the 11.7-kDa thioredoxin and 2-kDa His6 tags, were found in crude extracts from E. coli LMG194 induced with arabinose and carrying the appropriate plasmids (Fig. 5). These results indicated that the overproduced proteins were the expected fusion proteins of interest.
![]() View larger version (90K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 5. Overexpression of recombinant putative HCRa binding proteins. Extracts of strains producing His6-Nhp6 (A), Gcf1p-His6 (B), Htb1-His6 (C), and Hta1-His6 (D) were analyzed on a Coomassie blue-stained SDS gel. Lane 1, preinduction; lane 2, postinduction; lane 3, soluble fraction; lane 4, insoluble fraction; lane 5, flowthrough; lane 6, wash; lane 7, 0.1 M imidazole elution; lane 8, 0.2 mM imidazole; lane 9, 0.5 M imidazole. MW, molecular weight (in thousands).
|
![]() View larger version (124K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 6. Comparison of recombinant proteins Hbp1, Hbp2, Hbp5, and Hbp6 with proteins from STE to bind to HCRa. (A) Eluate from the 1.0 M NaCl-75% ammonium sulfate precipitation fraction shown in Fig. 3C compared to purified N-His6-Nhp6. (B) Fraction 34 shown in Fig. 4A to C compared to purified Gcf1p-His6. (C) Fraction 49 shown in Fig. 4A to C compared to purified Hta1- and Htb1-His6. Protein-HCRa complexes and free DNA are indicated by arrows. Protein amounts used were as follows: lane 1, 0 ng; lane 2, 2 ng; lane 3, 10 ng; lane 4, 50 ng; lane 5, 250 ng.
|
![]() View larger version (47K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 7. Competition assay in the presence of 50- and 200-fold molar excesses of unlabeled DNA fragments from HCR and ENO1. Recombinant proteins (100 ng) His6-Nhp6 (A) and Gcf1p-His6 (B) were incubated with -33P-labeled subregions of HCRa designated HCRa1 and HCRa2 (positions 1410 to 1249 and positions 1322 to 1162, respectively) or with a 160-bp region of ENO1 (positions +1250 to +1405) in the presence of 1,000 ng salmon sperm DNA. Lane D, probe only; lane 1, protein only; lanes 2 and 4, 50- and 200-fold unlabeled DNA from HCR; lanes 3 and 5, 50- and 200-fold ENO1 DNA.
|
|
|
|---|
The activity of the HWP1 promoter for external deletion constructs between positions 1410 and 1042 correlated roughly with length and did not appear to be dependent on discrete activation motifs that typically form the basis of regulatory elements. Instead, a centrally located 368-bp critical region, HCR, was found, which conferred developmental regulation independently of other HWP1 promoter DNA and was characterized by having both activating and repressing activities located in close proximity to each other. Deletions into the 5' end of HCR resulted in the loss of activating properties, whereas internal deletions into the 3' region showed mixed results (not shown). The activating ability of HCR might have been enhanced if additional 5' sequences had been included based on the decreased activity of the 1410 external deletion construct relative to position 1535; however, the sequences between positions 1535 and 1410 were not critical for developmental regulation. HCR contained both activating and repressing activities and resisted attempts to isolate separable segments responsible for each type of activity. In keeping with the close relationship between the repressing and activating activities of HCR was the inability of any of the mapping constructs to activate the promoter during growth in yeast-inducing conditions. Thus, the mechanisms of repression and activation appeared to be intertwined within this sequence. Activation conferred by HCR did not reach wild-type levels but was amplified by a distal region of the promoter that was not able to confer developmental expression on its own. The regions downstream of position 1042, in contrast, showed minimal activating function and appeared to be dispensable based on the independent functioning of HCR in the developmental regulation of a chimeric promoter.
The identities of the proteins that bound HCR from crude extracts strongly implicate chromatin structure in the activation of the HWP1 gene. Nhp6 contains a single HMG box domain that is responsible for DNA binding (http://smart.embl-heidelberg.de) and belongs to the HMG1 subfamily of HMG proteins (9) that bind to DNA in either a sequence-specific or -nonspecific fashion (44). Nhp6 was found to specifically bind to the HCRa region in YE, HE, and STE under conditions of high stringency. Although both native Nhp6 and recombinant Nhp6 were selective for HCRa in competition assays using control DNA under conditions of high stringency, Nhp6 did not protect specific DNA sites in HCRa from DNase I cleavage as seen on urea-denaturing gels (data not shown). These findings are consistent with a high affinity of binding of Nhp6 to HCRa that is characteristic of this class of HMG proteins (44). Nhp6 was also present in extracts from 2-h hyphae, 2-h yeast, and stationary-phase cells, confirming its continued presence during hyphal growth beyond the 1-h time point used in the data reported herein (data not shown).
The identification of an HMG-like HCRa binding protein, Gcf1p, which has a domain showing weak similarity (30%) to a P. polycephalum protein nicknamed Glom because of its function in the compact condensation of mitochondrial DNA (36), provided further support for the influence of chromatin structure in HWP1 promoter regulation. Gcf1p showed higher binding activity in yeast cultures than in hyphal cultures and appeared to show conformational changes between yeast and hyphal growth conditions. The increased presence of Gcf1p in yeast might reflect its contribution to repressing HWP1 promoter activation in yeast (see below), although this function requires further investigation.
The identification of histones in HCRa binding is consistent with the relative ease of reconstitution of mononucleosomes in vitro with purified core histones and DNA fragments that range from about 150 bp to 250 bp in length (24). Also consistent with this, the 49th fraction prepared using heparin-Sepharose column chromatography and the 60% ammonium sulfate precipitation formed a complex with the 249-bp HCRa fragment on nondenaturing gels that turned out to contain two histones indicative of an H2A/H2B dimer (Table 3).
Potential interactions between H2A/H2B and Nhp6, as suggested by their coelution in the same column fraction (Fig. 3E), and the increased activity of Nhp6 in HE (Fig. 2) prompt a partial model for HWP1 promoter activation based on the role of S. cerevisiae Nhp6 in chromatin reorganization and in transcriptional initiation and elongation (5, 13) (Fig. 8). Of particular interest is a transcription elongation factor called FACT (facilitates chromatin transcription), which restructures chromatin in the absence of ATP hydrolysis (34). In S. cerevisiae, the FACT complex consists of Spt16/Cdc68, Pob3, and Nhp6 and functions in histone degradation, the initiation of transcription (13, 25, 35, 45), and the promotion of TATA binding protein binding to a TATA box in chromatin both in vivo and in vitro (5). Proteins with 50 and 55% identities to S. cerevisiae Spt16 and Pob3 are present in the C. albicans SC5314 genome. In HeLa cells, FACT binds to nucleosomes following the monoubiquitination of lysine residue 120 of histone H2B and facilitates the removal of H2A/H2B and, ultimately, the separation of DNA from the nucleosome (32).
![]() View larger version (28K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 8. Proposed model for the developmental regulation of the HWP1 gene. (A) Under yeast growth conditions, tightly compacted DNA-histone octamers (white disks, H2A/H2B; gray disks, H3/H4) and relatively strong binding of Gcf1p (Hbp1) (circles) and Hbp3 (squares) to the HCR region inhibit occupation of DNA by activators. (B) Under germ tube-inducing conditions, a putative cFACT containing Nhp6 (oval) functions in facilitating the removal of ubiquitinized H2A and/or H2B (dotted disk) and relaxes DNA on nucleosomes, thereby permitting an enhancer (Hbp4) (triangles) to gain access to the promoter region to activate the HWP1 gene. The location of HCR (positions 1410 to 1042) is indicated on the top of each model.
|
Our characterization of HCRa binding proteins has provided insight into the complex nature of repressing and activating functions at the HWP1 promoter that became evident from our GFP reporter studies. One possible scenario for the regulatory functions of these DNA binding proteins is that Gcf1p (Hbp1) and Hbp3, which show higher binding activities in YE, act as repressors of HWP1 transcription, whereas Nhp6 (Hbp2) and Hbp4, which have increased activities in HE, act as activators. The lesser activities of Gcf1p and Hbp3 in HE and Nhp6 and Hbp4 in YE are suggestive of a model of competition between these proteins for binding to HCRa that is dependent on growth conditions to determine which HCRa binding factors are expressed in their activated forms at levels favoring successful binding to the promoter.
Further support for the idea that the HWP1 promoter is regulated in a growth condition-dependent manner by repressing and/or activating factors at HCRa is shown by the observation that Hbp3 and Nhp6 (Hbp2) were found to bind near the 5' end of HCRa between positions 1410 and 1289, whereas Gcf1p and Hbp4 formed protein-DNA complexes closer to the 3' end between positions 1365 and 1162 (data not shown). It is possible that under yeast growth conditions, multimeric forms of Gcf1p interact with HCRa along with Hbp3, thereby impeding Nhp6 and Hbp4 from binding and imposing repression. In support of this model, we found that under germ tube-inducing conditions, Gcf1p appeared to be less multimerized, possibly as a result of conformational changes or loss or gain of posttranslational modifications, and Hbp3 showed reduced binding activity, potentially because of reduced expression. This shift in expression patterns would allow Nhp6 or Nhp6-interacting proteins and Hbp4 to gain access to HCR and enhance HWP1 expression. Since the binding of Hbp3 and Nhp6 as well as that of Gcf1p and Hbp4 potentially overlap, competition for binding in HCRa that would be dependent on growth conditions would be expected to occur.
Several conclusions regarding the HWP1 promoter are in agreement with those of Brown and coworkers, who studied the developmentally regulated ALS3 gene. The spatial pattern of a critical region capable of conferring developmental regulation and a distal region that amplified the effect of this critical region was found for both promoters, although these elements were much closer to the coding region in the case of the ALS3 promoter. The relationship between the distal and proximal regions in terms of the former enhancing the latter was verified by kinetic studies for both promoters, and the critical regions were both longer than would be predicted based on standard transcription factor binding motifs. Attempts to further delimit the critical regions, 150 bp for ALS3 and 368 bp for HWP1, were not fruitful in either study. Subtle differences between the two promoters were also noted. The HWP1 promoter appeared to activate GFP expression to higher levels, and the period of activation was extended well past the 1-h peak shown for the ALS3 promoter.
For both the ALS3 and HWP1 promoters, the critical activating regions were notable for the paucity of morphogenetic transcription factor binding sites for known regulators such as Efg1, Tec1, Cph1, and Cph2. Consistent with its role in the activation of the ALS3 promoter, as shown using a bcr1
/bcr1
mutant (30), Bcr1 also functioned in the activation of the HWP1 promoter, although the HWP1 promoter retained 37% activating activity relative to HB-12 in the bcr1
/bcr1
mutant background (not shown).
Activating regions from both promoters showed evidence of sites for repressor activity located in close proximity. Besides the potential for repression mediated by chromatin-condensing activities described above, strong evidence for the function of Nrg1 was found. A single binding site for Nrg1 was found in the critical activation regions of both the ALS3 and HWP1 promoters. Increased activation of both promoters (not shown for HWP1) was found in yeast growth conditions using nrg1
/nrg1
and tup1
/tup1
null mutants. Although Nrg1 was not among the four proteins identified from crude extracts of C. albicans that bound to HCRa, it may be one of the unidentified factors that was observed in gel mobility shift experiments. Overall, both studies supported the assertion that hypha-specific promoters are complex and are likely to be regulated by multiple factors.
We thank Abraham L. Sonenshein and Ronald K. Taylor for providing helpful comments on the manuscript and Sarah Thompson, Michael D. Meeks, and Jennifer L. Snide for excellent technical assistance.
Published ahead of print on 12 January 2007. ![]()
Present address: Division of Infectious Diseases, Oregon Health and Science University, Portland, OR 97239. ![]()
|
|
|---|
This article has been cited by other articles:
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Copyright © 2009 by the American Society for Microbiology. For an alternate route to Journals.ASM.org, visit: http://intl-journals.asm.org | More Info»