Global gene expression during stringent response in Corynebacterium glutamicum in presence and absence of the rel gene encoding (p)ppGpp synthase

Background The stringent response is the initial reaction of microorganisms to nutritional stress. During stringent response the small nucleotides (p)ppGpp act as global regulators and reprogram bacterial transcription. In this work, the genetic network controlled by the stringent response was characterized in the amino acid-producing Corynebacterium glutamicum. Results The transcriptome of a C. glutamicum rel gene deletion mutant, unable to synthesize (p)ppGpp and to induce the stringent response, was compared with that of its rel-proficient parent strain by microarray analysis. A total of 357 genes were found to be transcribed differentially in the rel-deficient mutant strain. In a second experiment, the stringent response was induced by addition of DL-serine hydroxamate (SHX) in early exponential growth phase. The time point of the maximal effect on transcription was determined by real-time RT-PCR using the histidine and serine biosynthetic genes. Transcription of all of these genes reached a maximum at 10 minutes after SHX addition. Microarray experiments were performed comparing the transcriptomes of SHX-induced cultures of the rel-proficient strain and the rel mutant. The differentially expressed genes were grouped into three classes. Class A comprises genes which are differentially regulated only in the presence of an intact rel gene. This class includes the non-essential sigma factor gene sigB which was upregulated and a large number of genes involved in nitrogen metabolism which were downregulated. Class B comprises genes which were differentially regulated in response to SHX in both strains, independent of the rel gene. A large number of genes encoding ribosomal proteins fall into this class, all being downregulated. Class C comprises genes which were differentially regulated in response to SHX only in the rel mutant. This class includes genes encoding putative stress proteins and global transcriptional regulators that might be responsible for the complex transcriptional patterns detected in the rel mutant when compared directly with its rel-proficient parent strain. Conclusion In C. glutamicum the stringent response enfolds a fast answer to an induced amino acid starvation on the transcriptome level. It also showed some significant differences to the transcriptional reactions occuring in Escherichia coli and Bacillus subtilis. Notable are the rel-dependent regulation of the nitrogen metabolism genes and the rel-independent regulation of the genes encoding ribosomal proteins.


Background
Bacteria cultured in a nutritionally poor environment use the stringent response [1] to survive starvation. The main effector molecule produced during the stringent response is the alarmone (p)ppGpp (guanosine-5'-diphosphate-3'diphosphate and guanosine-5'-triphosphate-3'-diphosphate, respectively), which is synthesized in Escherichia coli by the relA and the spoT gene products. During amino acid starvation the ratio between charged and uncharged tRNAs decreases at the aminoacyl acceptor site (A-site) of the ribosome, which leads to a stop of protein synthesis. Uncharged tRNAs trigger a signal to the ribosome-bound RelA protein, which catalyzes the phosphorylation of GTP with ATP as donor [1,2]. The alarmone (p)ppGpp then binds to the β-subunit of the RNA polymerase [3], which leads to an activation or repression of a variety of genes, resulting in a global reprogramming of the cell to adapt to the new situation. The most prominent result is a growth arrest, accompanied by the downregulation of genes that are strongly expressed in fast growing cells e.g. those encoding ribosomal proteins, cell division and DNA replication proteins as well as a reduction of the amount of stable RNA [4,5].
In our previous studies it was shown that in contrast to E. coli, C. glutamicum possesses a single bifunctional guanosine pentaphosphate synthetase, termed Rel [6]. A rel gene deletion mutant strain C. glutamicum RES167∆rel was created and shown to be unable to synthesize (p)ppGpp after inducing an artificial amino acid starvation by DL-serine hydroxamate (SHX) [6]. SHX is a serine analogue, which competitively binds to the seryl-tRNA synthetase and thus prevents the seryl-tRNA from being charged [7]. This results in the induction of the stringent response by (p)ppGpp, newly synthesized through the action of the Rel protein in the wild-type strain. Furthermore, the rel mutant failed to downregulate ribosomal RNA transcription under stringent conditions and showed a growth requirement for the amino acids histidine and serine [5]. This observation proposes that transcription of at least parts of both biosynthesis pathways are under a positive stringent control. We had further investigated additional ribosomal genes involved into the stringent response, namely rplK, which is required for activating the Rel protein and is thus part of the mechanism to induce the stringent response of C. glutamicum [8].
In this study we continued our previous work to explore the regulatory network of the stringent response by comparing the C. glutamicum RES167 and C. glutamicum RES167∆rel transcriptomes by using whole-genome microarrays. In a first approach, the transcriptomes were compared between exponentially growing cultures in complex growth medium indicating a complex pattern of differences in gene expression. In a second approach, the stringent response was induced by the addition of SHX. Therefore, an optimal time-point for harvesting total RNA was determined by a time-resolved characterization of the mRNA profiles of histidine and serine biosynthesis genes. Then, the transcriptomes of the rel-proficient and the reldeficient strain were compared before and after addition of SHX in order to determine those genes whose transcription was directly affected by (p)ppGpp.

Global gene expression in the exponential growth phase is highly different in a C. glutamicum rel-proficient strain and a rel-deficient mutant unable to produce (p)ppGpp
To study the effects of the effector molecule (p)ppGpp on a genome-wide scale the transcriptomes of a rel-proficient and a rel-deficient strain were compared by hybridization analysis using whole-genome DNA microarrays of C. glutamicum [9]. Therefore, both strains were grown in liquid LB complex medium and cell samples were taken at an O.D. 600 of 0.2. RNA isolation from C. glutamicum, labeling of probes and DNA microarray hybridization, including statistical analysis, were performed as described recently [9]. The spot intensities were measured and compared between RES167∆rel (int rel ) and RES167 as control (int cont ). Each experiment was performed four times, using two biological and two technical replicates including a dye-swap. In accordance with the previously determined technical variation of the C. glutamicum DNA microarray employed, only genes with ratios of int rel / int cont greater than 2 0.6 or less then 2 -0.6 were considered as being differentially expressed. For these ratios the significance value was determined as 0.95, meaning a 95% chance that the gene is differentially regulated. In addition, a Students t-test was applied to filter the data set and only data with an error probability of p = 0.05 or better were used. Figure 1 shows the results of this experiment depicted in a scatter plot. A total of 357 genes was found to be differentially expressed in the ∆rel mutant, of which 217 were transcribed stronger and 140 weaker than in the rel-proficient strain. Among the most prominent induced genes are uspA3 (putative universal stress protein), and the sigE gene (sigma factor of the extra-cytoplasmic function (ECF) family). The genes sigD (encoding another ECFtype sigma factor) as well as rpf1 and rpf2 (encoding proteins involved in bacterial cell-cell communication, [10]) are among the genes with the most strongly reduced expression.
Since global gene expression patterns were very different in the rel-proficient and the rel-deficient strain, and sigma factors responsible for global gene regulation are also affected, it was difficult to dissect primary effects of the rel mutation from secondary effects caused by differentially expressed regulatory genes. In order to overcome these problems, a second experimental strategy was employed to describe rel-dependent and rel-independent effects on global gene expression in which the stringent response was induced by the chemical DL-serine hydroxamate (SHX). The strategy consisted of two steps. First, the transcriptional effects of SHX addition on gene expression of stringently controlled genes were followed in a time course to determine the time point at which a maximal first order effect is exerted on gene expression. Then, microarray hybridizations were performed comparing the transcriptomes of both strains before and after addition of SHX for the dissection of rel-dependent and rel-independent effects during stringent response.

The mRNA levels of serine and histidine biosynthesis genes in rel-proficient C. glutamicum cultures treated with serine hydroxamate are induced and reach a maximum ten minutes after induction of the stringent response
In previous experiments, it was demonstrated that the C. glutamicum RES167∆rel mutant grows poorly in liquid minimal medium without the supplementation of histi-dine and serine [5]. Apparently, the biosynthesis pathways of these amino acids are under control by a positive stringent response mediated by the Rel protein. In order to analyze transcriptional regulation of all genes involved in histidine and serine biosynthesis and to assess the timing of the effects of the stringent response on gene expression, sensitive real-time RT-PCR analyses on all serine and histidine biosynthesis genes were carried out in the rel-proficient C. glutamicum RES167 strain. Therefore cultures of C. glutamicum, growing exponentially in liquid LBG medium, were treated with 50 mM SHX. Samples were taken before addition of SHX (t 0 ) and in five minute intervals up to a total of 25 minutes (t 5 to t 25 ). Total RNA was isolated from these samples and mRNA levels of the nine known histidine biosynthesis genes hisED, hisDCB and hisHAFI and the three serine biosynthesis genes serA, serB and serC was determined. For each time point after treatment with SHX, the relative mRNA level compared to the t 0 value was calculated ( Figure 2).
The results clearly showed an increase of mRNA levels of some of the tested genes already five minutes (t 5

) after
The m/a scatter plot comparing the transcriptomes of the C. glutamicum rel-deficient and the rel-proficient strains Figure 1 The m/a scatter plot comparing the transcriptomes of the C. glutamicum rel-deficient and the rel-proficient strains. Genes with a reduced transcription are indicated by red dots and those with an upregulated transcription by green dots. Genes described in the text and showing the strongest changes in the expression ratio are marked by arrows.
SHX addition, with all being increased and with a maximum of induction after ten minutes (t 10 ). At this time, mRNA levels of the histidine genes are increased twofold to threefold and serine genes were transcribed stronger by factors of 3 to 7.8. In later stages relative mRNA levels slowly decreased until they reached the initial values at around 25 minutes (t 25 ). It is apparent that the histidine genes, which are localized on the chromosome in operonlike structures, are transcribed in similar patterns, supporting the idea that these genes are organized in the three operons hisEG, hisDCB and hisHA-impA-hisFI. The strongest induction was observed at the hisC and hisH genes ( Figure 2). Among the serine biosynthesis genes, serA coding for D-3-phosphoglycerate dehydrogenase, the first enzyme of the serine biosynthesis, was the gene whose mRNA level was induced most strongly.
These elevated mRNA levels after addition of SHX were not detected in the Rel-deficient strain C. glutamicum RES167∆rel (data not shown), supporting the interpretation that this is the cause for its requirement of histidine and serine as culture supplements to achieve normal growth [5].

Comparison of transcriptional profiles of C. glutamicum rel-proficient and rel-deficient mutant strains before and after induction of the stringent response allowed to identify rel-dependent genes
To determine the genes directly affected by (p)ppGpp in C. glutamicum, exponentially growing cultures of the relproficient strain C. glutamicum RES167 and the rel-deficient mutant strain RES167∆rel carrying a deletion in the (p)ppGpp synthase gene were treated with SHX. The com-Time course analysis of expression of the histidine and serine biosynthesis genes after treatment with DL-serine hydroxamate Figure 2 Time course analysis of expression of the histidine and serine biosynthesis genes after treatment with DL-serine hydroxamate. The samples were taken in five minute intervals up to a total of 25 minutes. The relative amount of mRNA was measured by real-time RT-PCR with a LightCycler instrument. The expression ratios were determined by calculating the ratio of t 0 (untreated) and t 5-25 (treated) samples from four experiments. Below the diagrams, the organization of the respective genes in the C. glutamicum chromosome is depicted.
parison of global gene expression patterns in the rel-proficient and the rel-deficient mutant strain at inducing and non-inducing conditions should allow to define the regulatory networks involved in the stringent response. In addition, comparison of the data sets enabled the identification of those genes that are controlled by the action of the Rel protein (Rel-dependent stringent control) and of those which are not dependent on the action of the Rel protein (Rel-independent control).
Two C. glutamicum cultures were grown in liquid LBG medium up to an O.D. 600 of 0.2, at which SHX was added to a final concentration of 50 mM. For each strain, untreated samples (t 0 ) and treated samples were taken ten minutes after SHX addition (t 10 ) and the transcriptomes were compared as described above.
In Figure 3 the results of the microarray experiments are shown in ratio/intensity (m/a) plots for both the rel-proficient and the rel-deficient strain. In the C. glutamicum relproficient strain transcription of 60 genes was found to be downregulated and of 31 genes to be upregulated under inducing conditions. The most prominent upregulated transcription was detected in genes which are involved into stress response, among them katA (catalase) and dps (DNA protection during starvation protein). The genes with the strongest downregulation are the tagA1 gene (DNA-3-methyladenine glycosylase) involved in DNA repair or belonging to nitrogen metabolism including hmp (putative NO-detoxification flavohemoprotein), glnK (nitrogen regulatory protein PII), gltB (glutamate synthase large subunit) and amt (ammonia transporter).
In the m/a plot of the rel-deficient strain ( Figure 3B) it is shown that the genes with the strongest upregulation are again katA, gnd (6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase) and thiol stress-related genes. Among the latter, the sufD and nifS2 genes are involved in the repair of damaged iron-sulfur clusters in proteins whereas cysK encodes cysteine synthase. The strongest downregulation is observed for genes encoding ribosomal proteins (e.g. rpsE, rplO, rpmD).
The data obtained on the differentially regulated genes were grouped into three classes: class A genes are under Rel-dependent stringent control and were found to be differentially expressed only when the untreated and SHXtreated cultures of the rel-proficient RES167 strain were compared and therefore are regulated by (p)ppGpp. Class B genes are under positive or negative rel-independent control and show a change in expression in RES167 and its rel-deficient derivative RES167∆rel. In class C those genes were placed which showed a change in expression only when comparing the untreated and the SHX-treated rel-deficient mutant strain. By this classification scheme, the total number of 243 genes found to be differentially expressed in one or both experiments were ordered as follows: 42 genes in class A, 49 in class B and 152 genes in class C ( Figure 3C). For reasons of clarity only the classes A and B are presented here in the form of tables (Table 1, 2) and, within the tables only genes which are annotated at least in the form of a COG classification (Clusters of Orthologous Groups of proteins, [11]) are listed. A full list is available as supplementary Table S1 [see Additional file 1].

Class A genes are under (p)ppGpp mediated stringent control as they were found to be regulated SHX-treatment only in the rel-proficient RES167 strain but not in its reldeficient derivative RES167∆rel
The hallmark of the stringent response is the downregulation of transcription of the genes encoding ribosomal RNA in a (p)ppGpp-dependent manner. In the microarray experiments, a number of genes displayed a similar change in expression dependent on the presence of the alarmone (p)ppGpp synthesized by the Rel protein. These genes can be grouped to functional complexes according to their annotation and the COG classification scheme ( Table 1). As the dominant complex, nitrogen metabolism is apparently affected in C. glutamicum in a negative, Rel-dependent fashion. In particular the transcription of genes belonging to the AmtR repressor regulon [12] were found to be downregulated (codA, gdh, glnA, glnK, gltB, amt-ocd-soxA, ureA, urtB-urtC) ( Table 1). In addition, two other genes encoding oxidoreductases (betB, cg3370 ; COG class C) are found to be repressed in the presence of (p)ppGpp. Others are three genes encoding ribosomal proteins (rpmG, rpsF, rpsS) and one gene cluster involved in nucleotide biosynthesis and DNA repair (pyrG-cg1607, Figure 4).
The group of genes the transcription of which is positively affected in a Rel-dependent manner also comprises those encoding proteins involved in redox processes (qcrB-qcrC-qcrA1-ctaE, Figure 4). Other genes are involved in carbon metabolism (ptsF, pyk, ldh) or regulatory processes on protein (ptpA, clpP1, clpC) or mRNA level (lexA, sigB). Especially sigB is interesting since it encodes the alternative sigma factor (σ B ) in C. glutamicum which is involved in global gene regulation at the transition from exponential growth to the stationary phase and in the general stress response [13,14].

Class B genes are regulated Rel-independently and show a change in their expression in the rel-proficient strain and the rel-deficient mutant
The most important members of this class that are regulated in a negative Rel-independent manner are genes coding for ribosomal proteins (COG class J: translation), of which 26 were found to be downregulated under DNA microarray hybridizations of the C. glutamicum RES167 and the C. glutamicum RES167∆rel mutant strain Scatter plots (m/a plots) of the experiments. Shown are all genes whose transcription has been significantly up-(green) or downregulated (red) after induction of the stringent response by DL-serine hydroxamate. Genes which showed the most prominent changes in expression are labelled. (C) Venn diagram of the differentially expressed genes in the C. glutamicum RES 167 and ∆rel mutant after treatment with SHX is shown. The numbers of genes which were placed in each of the three classes A, B and C is given. Green numbers represent upregulated genes, red ones represent downregulated genes. a Locus tag according to [50] b COG class according to [11] inducing conditions (Table 2, Figure 5). Additionally, transcription of one other gene from the translational apparatus (infA) and of three genes involved in transcription or DNA replication (COG classes K and L) was repressed in both strains. As a further functional complex, the transcription of the putative nitrate reductase and transport genes (narK-narG-narH-narJ-narI) was found repressed.
In a Rel-independent way, transcription of genes involved in oxidative stress response (katA encoding catalase, dps encoding a DNA protection protein) was upregulated not only in the rel-proficient, but also in the rel-deficient mutant strain of C. glutamicum (Table 2). Additionally, the transcription of genes from the suf/nif gene cluster (sufB-sufD-nifS2) involved in the repair of Fe-S clusters damaged by oxidation [15] was induced under these conditions ( Figure 5).

Class C genes belong to a variety of functional complexes and show differential regulation only in the rel-deficient mutant
A large number of genes were found to be regulated after treatment with SHX only in the rel-deficient mutant but not in the rel-proficient strain (class C). Within this class additional genes belonging to the translational (COG class J) and transcriptional apparatus (COG class K) were grouped, in total, 18 genes encoding ribosomal proteins, infB encoding translation initiation factor 2 and prfB (peptide chain release factor 2), as well as rpoB (β subunit of RNA polymerase) as well as cg2177-nusA encoding proteins involved in transcription termination. As illustrated in an example ( Figure 5) the transcription ratios of several ribosomal genes in the rel-proficient strain experiment are just below the significance value. Taken into account that most of these genes are organized in operons, it can be assumed they rather belong to class B than to class C.
The expression of genes involved in oxidative stress response has been found to be upregulated only in the reldeficient mutant (sod encoding superoxide dismutase, cg2674 encoding a putative alkyl hydroperoxidase and tpx encoding a thiol peroxidase). Especially thiol oxidation stress is apparent since also the expression of the fpr2-cysI-cysH-cysD gene cluster for assimilatory sulfate reduction [16] as well as cysK encoding cysteine synthase are enhanced.
It is apparent that a number of transcriptional regulatory genes fall into class C. Among these are cg1792 encoding a WhiA homologue, whiB2 and whiB4, cg0725 encoding a MarR-family regulator, clgR encoding a stress-induced proteolysis regulator [17], phoU encoding the putative phosphate uptake regulator, and cg3303 encoding a regulator of the PadR family. All these genes were found to be repressed under stringent conditions in the rel mutant. Another group of genes encoding transcriptional regulators is found to be expressed stronger under these conditions, namely cg1631 encoding a MerR family regulator, dtxR and fur, encoding regulators implicated in metal uptake and homeostasis, cg2500 encoding an ArsR-type regulator, cg2614 encoding a TetR-type regulator, and cg3315 encoding a regulator of the MarR family [18,19]. This is indicative that cellular metabolism is not well balanced in the mutant but on the other hand this deregulation might cause secondary effects on global gene expression patterns not directly associated with the stringent response.

Discussion
In earlier studies, we demonstrated that (p)ppGpp is the signalling molecule of the stringent response in C. glutamicum [6]. It is synthesized after inhibiting the seryl-tRNA synthetase by addition of DL-serine hydroxamate (SHX) to the growth medium. We also showed that the Rel protein is responsible for (p)ppGpp formation and that its presence is required for the normal function of the serine and histidine biosynthesis pathways [5].
In this study, we investigated the timing of the stringent response at the histidine and serine biosynthesis genes by real-time RT-PCR and the global effect of the stringent response on gene expression by using comparative DNA microarray hybridizations. In the following, the observations made will be discussed and the findings in C. glutamicum will be compared to the existing knowledge obtained in the model organisms E. coli and B. subtilis. However, these comparisons have inherent problems. The stringent response of E. coli has up to now not been assessed on a global scale in a mutant unable to synthesize (p)ppGpp and therefore no data exist on a probable relA/ spoT-independent stringent response in this organism. In B. subtilis such a study has been carried out [20] although there the stringent response was induced by DL-norvaline in a mutant auxotrophic for the amino acids lysine and tryptophan.
As an initial microarray experiment comparing the transcriptomes of a C. glutamicum rel mutant strain with its relproficient parent yielded an extremely complex pattern of gene expression, the effects of the rel gene on stringent control of transcription were assessed by a second approach including the addition of SHX. In order to determine the optimal harvesting point, the genes encoding the enzymes of the histidine and serine biosynthetic pathways were used for establishing a time course of the stringent response on transcription by sensitive real-time RT-PCR. The induction of transcription of these genes by the stringent response was detected already five minutes after addition of SHX to the medium. The maximum induction Graphical representation of selected genes and putative operons comprising genes of classe A in their genomic organization Figure 4 Graphical representation of selected genes and putative operons comprising genes of classe A in their genomic organization. Below each gene, the induction or repression ratios are given for both strains, C. glutamicum RES167 and its derived ∆rel mutant. Bold numbers indicate a significant induction or repression of the corresponding gene according to the filtering criteria (5% error probability) applied on the microarray data. Genes are not drawn to scale. Known transcription start points are marked by small arrows. Predicted rho-independent terminators are indicted by hairpins.  [50] b COG class according to [11] of expression was measured 10 minutes after SHX addition. The strongest increase in expression was found in the case of the hisC, hisH and serA genes. Later, expression declined and the transcription ratios were back to normal levels after 25 minutes, indicating that the stringent response is completed at that point and the cells can resume normal growth again. In S. typhimurium, it was shown that an increase of the (p)ppGpp level was detectable immediately after SHX addition and reached its maximum after 7 minutes [21]. These results are in accordance with our experiments and show a rapid response of the cell to an artificially induced amino acid starvation. The histidine genes were among the first ones to be found under positive stringent control [1,22,23] and the effect of (p)ppGpp on the his operon in E. coli and S. typhimurium has been studied intensively [21,23] and was later confirmed by microarray experiments [24]. Our results are in accordance with the E. coli data concerning the induction of the histidine biosynthesis genes, but no induction of histidine or serine gene expression was observed in B. subtilis [20]. However, the exact mechanism of induction of his operon expression in E. coli is still unknown. The strong induction of the serine biosynthesis genes in C. glutamicum is unexpected since mainly histidine and arginine biosynthesis genes are reported to be regulated by the stringent response in E. coli and B. subtilis [1,20,25].
In order to identify stringently controlled genes as precise as possible, a filtering of the genes appearing differentially regulated in the microarray experiments was performed and three classes were established. The genes of Class A are differentially expressed only in the presence of a functional rel gene, and therefore, in the presence of (p)ppGpp. Dominant in this class are genes involved in nitrogen metabolism. Namely these are amt (encoding ammonia permease; [26]), codA (creatinine deaminase; [27]), ureA (urease γ -subunit; [28,29]), gltB (glutamine 2oxoglutarate aminotransferase large subunit; [30]), glnA (glutamine synthetase; [31]), glnK (nitrogen regulatory protein PII; [32]), urtBC ( [33]) and gdh (glutamate dehydrogenase; [34]). In E. coli, an increased transcription of the glnK gene was observed under stringent conditions [24], probably reflecting the fact that E. coli has nitrogen sensing and signal transduction mechanisms quite different to those of C. glutamicum [35]. In this context it is interesting to note that the genes of nitrogen metabolism detected here were shown to be controlled by the transcriptional regulator AmtR in C. glutamicum [12,36]. It was demonstrated that the transcription of the genes of the AmtR regulon is upregulated under nitrogen limitation [37]. There are two different possible explanations for the observation that the genes of the AmtR regulon are under Rel-dependent stringent control. The first possibility is that AmtR is directly affected by (p)ppGpp in a sense that it strengthens its repressor function. Second, it might be speculated that especially the promoters of genes of the AmtR regulon are sensitive to (p)ppGpp.
Also the expression of the alternative sigma factor σ B , the supposed functional analogue of the E. coli σ S [14], is induced after invoking the stringent response by an artificial amino acid starvation. In E. coli, σ S controls the general stress response and the entry into the stationary phase of growth [38,39] and thus plays an important role in adaptation to nutritional and environmental stresses. In E. coli, σ S expression is increased during the stringent response [24,39] but contrary to this the B. subtilis functional analogue σ B seems to be involved only in general stress response and is not induced by the stringent response [20,[40][41][42]. This leads to the assumption that a mechanism similar to E. coli is present in C. glutamicum, inducing the stress response as well as the entry into the stationary phase due to nutrient limitation. Here, an inherent problem of such analyses becomes obvious, namely how to distingush between a direct, Rel-dependent induction or repression of gene transcription and σ factor-mediated transcriptional changes. We tried to minimize this problem by analysing a relatively early timepoint after induction as it was done for E. coli [24].
Another important cellular function is provided by the genes coding for subunits of the Clp protease (clpP1, clpC) that are under Rel-dependent, positive stringent control. This shows a strong parallel to results obtained in Streptococcus pyogenes, where the transcription of these genes was found to be upregulated in a Rel-independent manner upon an artificially induced amino acid starvation [43]. As published recently, the clpP1P2 and clpC genes of C. glutamicum are induced upon heat stress [17]. Proteases together with chaperones are the cells quality management system and involved in the regulation of transcriptional regulator genes [44]. It has been shown for E. coli that some proteins are rapidly degraded in an ATPdependent manner during the stationary phase [45]. Also by means of the ClpP protease, E. coli adapts to the stationary phase on the proteomic level [46]. Thus it might be speculated that by inducing these genes during the stringent response a global change in gene expression is mediated by the changed availability of several regulatory proteins due to proteolysis.
It has to be noted that in the microarray analysis, the histidine and serine biosynthesis genes, which were found to be transcribed stronger in response to the induction of the stringent response in the rel-proficient strain, did not show up with ratios indicating 95% chance of differential regulation. This is explained by the much higher sensitivity of the RT-PCR approach which in turn means that a number of other genes whose transcription is influenced might have escaped this analysis and the stringent data filtering.
The most important complex of class B being upregulated Rel-independently is made of genes involved into the oxidative stress response. Namely these are the genes coding for catalase (katA) and the DNA protection during starvation protein (dps). These findings are in accordance with recent findings in E. coli. Dukan and Nyström [47] found that at the onset of the stationary phase several genes involved in a response to oxidative stress are induced. In this context the regulation of the dps gene is also of importance. It was shown recently that Dps proteins protect stationary phase cells against a variety of stresses, including oxidative stress [48] and it was also found to be upregulated during the stringent response in E. coli [24].
The most prominent members of genes with reduced expression are those for ribosomal proteins which form the dominant complex in this group. In E. coli and B. subtilis, the genes for ribosomal proteins showed a reduced expression after inducing the stringent response [20,24].
In contrast to B. subtilis [20,49] the ribosomal genes are Rel-independently controlled in C. glutamicum. This is an apparent discrepancy to the established model which interprets this decrease in expression by the reduced amount of ribosomal RNA available under stringent conditions and the subsequent transcriptional repression on ribosomal protein operons by ribosomal proteins. Since in C. glutamicum, repression of many genes encoding ribosomal proteins is found in both the rel-proficient and the rel-deficient strain after addition of SHX, it might be explained by empty tRNAs which cause a stall in protein biosynthesis by the ribosomes leading to the disassembly of ribosomes. This in turn would cause a negative autoregulation of ribosomal protein gene expression.
Class C, comprising genes that are differentially regulated only in the rel-deficient mutant include a number of genes encoding transcriptional regulators. This can be interpreted as an expression of the fact that the cellular metabolism in the ∆rel mutant is much more unbalanced. It seems to be clear that the existence of the latter two classes of genes implies not a certain mechanism for stringent Illustration of putative operons of class B Figure 5 Illustration of putative operons of class B. For each experiment with the C. glutamicum RES 167 and its derived ∆rel-mutant the induction or repression ratios are given. Bold numbers indicate a significant induction or repression of the corresponding gene according to the filtering criteria (5% error probability) applied on the microarray data. Genes are not drawn to scale. Known transcription start points are marked by small arrows. Predicted rho-independent terminators are indicted by hairpins.
control only active when the Rel protein is inactive or absent. In contrast, it seems to be the expression of an imbalanced metabolism trying to antagonize the effects of an artificial amino acid deficiency without its master regulator (p)ppGpp.
In the longer run this might lead to the complex pattern of differential gene expression observed when comparing the transcriptomes of the rel mutant directly with that of its rel-proficient parent strain.

Bacterial strains and growth conditions
In this work, C. glutamicum RES167, a restriction and modification-deficient derivative of the wild-type strain ATCC 13032 [51] and C. glutamicum RES167∆rel [6] were used. The strains were cultivated at 30°C in Luria-Bertani medium [52] supplemented with 2 gl -1 glucose (LBG). For transcriptome analysis the cultures were grown to an O.D. 600 of 0.2 and then harvested. In the induction experiments, the cultures were divided into two aliquots, one of which was treated with DL-serine hydroxamate (final concentration 50 mM) to induce the stringent response.

Total RNA isolation from C. glutamicum
Approximately 1 × 10 9 cells were harvested from C. glutamicum cultures and immediately frozen in a dry ice/ ethanol bath. The cells were thawed and centrifuged at 6.000 g for 60 seconds. The supernatant was decanted and the pellet was resuspended in 800 µl RLT-buffer (RNeasy Mini Kit, Qiagen) and disrupted by means of a Rybolyser Instrument (Hybaid, Heidelberg, Germany). The following clean-up of RNA along with DNase I digestion was performed as described [9].

cDNA synthesis, DNA microarray experiments and data analysis
The labeled cDNA was synthezised according to [9], as were the DNA microarray experiments and data analysis. The ImaGene 5.0 Software (BioDiscovery, Los Angeles, CA) was used for spot finding, signal-background segmentation and intensity quantification. Normalization and t-test statistics were carried out with the EMMA microarray data analysis software [53]. According to the validation experiments [9] all genes with detected gene expression ratios greater than 2 0.6 or smaller than 2 -0.6 were regarded as differentially expressed with a confidence level of at least 95%. The additional Students t-test statistics were performed with a probability cutoff of p = 0.05.

Real-time RT-PCR assays
One-step real-time RT-PCR reactions were performed by using the LightCycler instrument (Roche Diagnostics) and the QuantiTect SYBR Green RT-PCR Kit (Qiagen) accord-ing to the manufacturer's instructions. To verify the purity of the obtained PCR products, melting curve analyses were performed. Differences in gene expression were calculated by comparing the crossing points of the samples with the help of the LightCycler software (version 3; Roche Diagnostics).
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