Affiliation:
1. Department of Microbiology and Immunology, University of South Alabama College of Medicine, Mobile, Alabama 36688,1 and
2. Department of Medical Microbiology and Immunology, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada T6G 2S22
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Acid resistance (AR) in
Escherichia coli
is defined as the ability to withstand an acid challenge of pH 2.5 or less and is a trait generally restricted to stationary-phase cells. Earlier reports described three AR systems in
E. coli
. In the present study, the genetics and control of these three systems have been more clearly defined. Expression of the first AR system (designated the oxidative or glucose-repressed AR system) was previously shown to require the alternative sigma factor RpoS. Consistent with glucose repression, this system also proved to be dependent in many situations on the cyclic AMP receptor protein. The second AR system required the addition of arginine during pH 2.5 acid challenge, the structural gene for arginine decarboxylase (
adiA
), and the regulator
cysB
, confirming earlier reports. The third AR system required glutamate for protection at pH 2.5, one of two genes encoding glutamate decarboxylase (
gadA
or
gadB
), and the gene encoding the putative glutamate:γ-aminobutyric acid antiporter (
gadC
). Only one of the two glutamate decarboxylases was needed for protection at pH 2.5. However, survival at pH 2 required both glutamate decarboxylase isozymes. Stationary phase and acid pH regulation of the
gad
genes proved separable. Stationary-phase induction of
gadA
and
gadB
required the alternative sigma factor ς
S
encoded by
rpoS
. However, acid induction of these enzymes, which was demonstrated to occur in exponential- and stationary-phase cells, proved to be ς
S
independent. Neither
gad
gene required the presence of volatile fatty acids for induction. The data also indicate that AR via the amino acid decarboxylase systems requires more than an inducible decarboxylase and antiporter. Another surprising finding was that the ς
S
-dependent oxidative system, originally thought to be acid induced, actually proved to be induced following entry into stationary phase regardless of the pH. However, an inhibitor produced at pH 8 somehow interferes with the activity of this system, giving the illusion of acid induction. The results also revealed that the AR system affording the most effective protection at pH 2 in complex medium (either Luria-Bertani broth or brain heart infusion broth plus 0.4% glucose) is the glutamate-dependent GAD system. Thus,
E. coli
possesses three overlapping acid survival systems whose various levels of control and differing requirements for activity ensure that at least one system will be available to protect the stationary-phase cell under naturally occurring acidic environments.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
533 articles.
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