Affiliation:
1. Department of Microbiology and Molecular Genetics, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02115
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Evolution by natural selection occurs in cultures of
Escherichia coli
maintained under carbon starvation stress. Mutants of increased fitness express a growth advantage in stationary phase (GASP) phenotype, enabling them to grow and displace the parent as the majority population. The first GASP mutation was identified as a loss-of-function allele of
rpoS
, encoding the stationary-phase global regulator, ς
S
(M. M. Zambrano, D. A. Siegele, M. A. Almirón, A. Tormo, and R. Kolter, Science 259:1757–1760, 1993). We now report that a second global regulator, Lrp, can also play a role in stationary-phase competition. We found that a mutant that took over an aged culture of an
rpoS
strain had acquired a GASP mutation in
lrp
. This GASP allele,
lrp-1141
, encodes a mutant protein lacking the critical glycine in the turn of the helix-turn-helix DNA-binding domain. The
lrp-1141
allele behaves as a null mutation when in single copy and is dominant negative when overexpressed. Hence, the mutant protein appears to retain stability and the ability to dimerize but lacks DNA-binding activity. We also demonstrated that a
lrp
null allele generated by a transposon insertion has a fitness gain identical to that of the
lrp-1141
allele, verifying that cells lacking Lrp activity have a competitive advantage during prolonged starvation. Finally, we tested by genetic analysis the hypothesis that the
lrp-1141
GASP mutation confers a fitness gain by enhancing amino acid catabolism during carbon starvation. We found that while amino acid catabolism may play a role, it is not necessary for the
lrp
GASP phenotype, and hence the
lrp
GASP phenotype is due to more global physiological changes.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology