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Journal of Bacteriology, June 2003, p . 3661-3667, Vol . 185,
No . 12
Trigger
Factor-Mediated Prolyl Isomerization Influences Maturation of the
Streptococcus pyogenes Cysteine Protease
William R . Lyon and Michael G . Caparon*
Department of Molecular Microbiology, Washington University School of
Medicine, St . Louis, Missouri 63110-1093
Received 9 January 2003/ Accepted 4 April 2003
Trigger factor, a ribosome-associated chaperone and peptidyl-prolyl
cis-trans isomerase (PPIase), is essential for the secretion
and maturation of the cysteine protease of the pathogenic gram-positive
bacterium Streptococcus pyogenes . In the absence of trigger
factor, the nascent protease polypeptide is not targeted to the
secretory pathway . Some partial-function mutations restore targeting .
However, the secreted protease does not efficiently mature into an
enzymatically active form, suggesting that trigger factor has an
additional role in protease biogenesis . Here, we show that, while not
required for targeting, the PPIase activity of trigger factor is
essential for maturation of the protease following its secretion from
the bacterial cell . Site-specific mutations introduced into ropA,
the gene which encodes trigger factor in S . pyogenes, produced
mutant proteins deficient in PPIase activity . When these mutant
alleles were used to replace the wild-type gene on the streptococcal
chromosome, analysis of protease biogenesis revealed that, although
the protease was secreted normally, it did not efficiently mature to
an active form . Furthermore, mutation of a single proline residue in
the protease prodomain suppressed the requirement for PPIase
activity, suggesting that this residue is the target of trigger
factor . These data support a model in which trigger factor-mediated
prolyl isomerization influences the conformation of the prodomain,
which in turn directs the protease into one of several alternative
folding pathways .
The folding of a protein into its native structure requires the
coordinated interaction of a network of accessory proteins known as
molecular chaperones . There has been considerable progress in
understanding how chaperones function to fold proteins in the
cytoplasm (for a review see reference 1); however, the
mechanisms by which they contribute to the folding of secreted
proteins are poorly understood . An example of a cytoplasmic chaperone
is trigger factor, an enigmatic protein that was originally
identified in a cell-free secretion system as a factor that was
required to present the substrate precursor protein proOmpA to the
secretory apparatus in a translocation-competent form (5) .
However, subsequent studies suggested that trigger factor was neither
essential for secretion of any known protein in Escherichia coli
or Bacillus subtilis nor essential for cell viability (4,
9, 14, 38) . Trigger
factor has many remarkable properties: it associates with the
ribosome, binds to nascent polypeptides in vivo, and possesses
peptidyl-prolyl cis-trans isomerase (PPIase) activity (21,
23) . Recent studies have indicated that, while
mutants lacking the gene for trigger factor or for the chaperone DnaK
are viable under normal growth conditions, simultaneous mutation of
both genes is lethal (8, 38) . Thus,
there is considerable evidence that trigger factor plays an
important role in protein synthesis; however, its function is far
from understood .
A new model for understanding trigger factor function has come
from the observation that trigger factor is required for the
secretion and maturation of the cysteine protease of the gram-positive
bacterium Streptococcus pyogenes (group A streptococcus) (26) .
As the causative agent of diseases, which include pharyngitis
(strep throat) and necrotizing fasciitis, S . pyogenes is an
important human pathogen, and the secreted cysteine protease (also
known as SpeB) may contribute to the organism's ability to cause
disease (3, 24, 25) .
Interestingly, trigger factor was shown to be required for two
distinct steps in the biogenesis of the active protease . First, while
a trigger factor mutant produced the protease polypeptide, the
protease was not secreted from the bacterial cell, suggesting that
trigger factor is required for targeting the protease to the
secretory pathway . Second, an in-frame deletion mutation that excised
just the central region of trigger factor resulted in normal levels
of secretion of the protease zymogen . However, the secreted protease
from this mutant exhibited a multipartite defect in maturation,
including a kinetic defect in the autologous processing of the
zymogen to the mature form, and the mature protease had a catalytic
defect (26) . These data indicate that, while this
mutant form of trigger factor is competent for targeting the
protease, the central domain has activity which influences the
maturation of the protease following its translocation across the
cellular membrane . Furthermore, this activity is required in response
to some specific feature of the protease since streptococcal
trigger factor mutants do not exhibit a general defect in protein
secretion and function (26) .
Multiple roles for trigger factor in the biogenesis of the streptococcal
protease are consistent with the modular structure of trigger
factor . Of the three distinct domains defined for trigger factor, the
N- and C-terminal domains have been shown to interact with each other
and are required for binding to substrate polypeptides (41) .
In addition, the N-terminal 118 amino acids are required for binding
to ribosomes (17) . The central domain has homology
to the family of FK506-binding PPIase proteins (13,
16, 35) . This class of proteins
can catalyze the isomerization of the peptide bond preceding a prolyl
residue, and the central domain of trigger factor can function
independently in vitro as an active PPIase (16,
35) . Prolyl isomerization can be a rate-limiting
step in protein folding (22), and multiple studies of in
vitro folding reactions support a role for PPIases in folding (for
reviews, see references 12 and 31) .
However, since mutations of PPIases generally do not affect folding
in vivo (10), the function of PPIases in protein
synthesis is less clear . The refolding of denatured proteins in vitro
can be catalyzed by trigger factor (14,
18) . However, it appears that this refolding
reaction is facilitated primarily through the chaperone function of
trigger factor, involving binding to hydrophobic regions exposed in
the partially folded protein to prevent aggregation rather than
promotion of prolyl isomerization (18) . Thus, the
role of the PPIase activity of trigger factor is not understood .
The PPIase domain was included in the region removed by the large
central deletion in trigger factor that was analyzed for S .
pyogenes (26) . Since the resulting mutant secreted a
defective protease, these data support a model in which the PPIase
activity of trigger factor introduces essential information into the
nascent polypeptide prior to its secretion . Furthermore, this
model suggests that the molecular nature of this information involves
prolyl isomerization . However, it is possible that, besides altering
PPIase activity, the large deletion introduced into the S .
pyogenes trigger factor may have altered its conformation,
stability, and possible interdomain interactions . Thus, a specific
requirement for PPIase activity remains to be determined . The model
also predicts that there is at least one prolyl residue in the
protease polypeptide whose conformation is critical for maturation .
If correct, this would provide a novel model for understanding the
contribution of prolyl isomerization to protein folding in vivo .
In the present study, analysis of specific RopA mutants provided
evidence to support an essential role for the PPIase activity of
trigger factor in protease maturation . Data to implicate the
isomerization state of a single prolyl residue in directing the
protease polypeptide into a productive or nonproductive maturation
pathway are also presented . The location of this residue in the
protease prodomain suggests a model in which prolyl isomerization
influences the conformation of the prodomain, which in turn directs
the protease into one of several alternative folding pathways .
Bacterial strains. Molecular cloning experiments utilized E .
coli DH5
(Gibco-BRL), and E . coli strain BL21(DE3) (36)
was used for protein expression . Strain HSC130 contains ropA
from wild-type S . pyogenes strain HSC5 with an in-frame
deletion of the region encoding residues 83 to 297 (ropA 82-297)
(26) . The construction of additional HSC5 mutants
is described below . Routine culture of S . pyogenes strains
utilized Todd-Hewitt medium (BBL) supplemented with 0.2% yeast
extract (Difco) . When appropriate, antibiotics were added to media at
the following concentrations: kanamycin, 50 µg/ml for E . coli
and 500 µg/ml for S . pyogenes; erythromycin, 750 µg/ml for
E . coli and 1 µg/ml for S . pyogenes; ampicillin, 100 µg/ml
for E . coli . All mutations in S . pyogenes were stably
maintained to the extent that culture for all functional assays did
not require the addition of antibiotics .
Plasmid construction. Plasmids for expression of trigger
factor were based on the expression vector pET24D+ (Novagen) and were
constructed as follows . Oligonucleotide primers startNcoI
(AATGA CTCCA TGGCT ACATC ATTTG AAAAC TTTCG ATG) and endXhoI
(CCTTA ATACT CGAGC TTAAC GCTTG CTGTG CTTGT AATCA C)
were used to amplify ropA by PCR from the plasmid pBL40 (see
below) . The resulting DNA fragment was inserted between the NcoI
and XhoI sites of pET24D+ by using the NcoI and XhoI
sites embedded in the primer sequences (underlined) . The same
strategy was used to construct expression plasmids for each of the
ropA alleles engineered to encode a substitution of an alanine
residue at selected positions (see below) . The fidelity of the
resulting plasmids, pROP4 (wild type), pROP5 (ropAD180A),
pROP6 (ropAF200A), and pROP7 (ropAF235A),
was confirmed by determination of their DNA sequences . Plasmids were
constructed so as to place six-His affinity tags at the carboxy
termini of the expressed RopA proteins .
Purification of recombinant RopA. Plasmids were introduced
into E . coli expression strain BL21(DE3), and cultures for
expression were prepared by inoculation of 500 ml of Luria-Bertani
medium supplemented with ampicillin with growth from an overnight
cultures to an optical density at 600 nm (OD600) of 0.05 .
Cultures were incubated at 37°C with agitation (250 rpm) until an OD600
of 0.6 was reached, at which time isopropyl-ß-D-thiogalactopyranoside
(IPTG) was added to a final concentration of 0.2 mM . Following
an additional 3-h incubation, cultures were harvested by centrifugation
(10 min, 6,000 x g, 4°C) and
resuspended in 1 ml of a nondenaturing lysis buffer (50 mM NaH2PO4
[pH 8.0], 300 mM NaCl, 10 mM imidazole, 1 mg of lysozyme/ml) . After
incubation on ice for 30 min, bacteria were lysed by sonication
(three pulses, 10 s each; model 185; Branson) with a microprobe at
the highest-power setting . Debris was removed by centrifugation
(16,000 x g, 20 min, 4°C),
and the six-His-tagged proteins were purified from the supernatant
fluids by chromatography over a nickel affinity resin (Ni-nitrilotriacetic
acid) according the recommendations of the manufacturer (Qiagen) .
Purity of preparations was assessed by sodium dodecyl
sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and staining with
Coomassie brilliant blue and was consistently greater than 95% .
Protein concentrations were determined by a bicinchoninic acid assay
(Sigma) .
Prolyl-isomerase activity assays. The presence of PPIase
activity was determined by a protease coupling assay described by
Fischer et al . (11) . This assay measures the
conformation-specific cleavage of succinyl-Ala-Ala-Pro-Phe-4-nitroanilide
(Bachem) by
-chymotrypsin
(Sigma), which occurs only when the substrate is in the trans
conformation . The substrate exists in an equilibrium such that at pH
7.8 approximately 20% is in the cis conformation, and the rate
of conversion of this fraction of substrate to a cleavable form in
the presence or absence of PPIase is determined . A stock solution of
substrate (10 mg/ml) was prepared in dimethyl sulfoxide and was
diluted in reaction buffer (0.035 M HEPES, pH 7.8) containing
-chymotrypsin
(0.5 mg/ml) and 1.0 µM PPIase . The PPIases included RopA, mutant
RopAs, and a well-characterized PPIase, recombinant human FK-binding
protein (Sigma) . For kinetic analysis, the change in absorbance
at 390 nm over time was monitored at 10°C in a spectrophotometer
(Beckman DU-80) . To measure solely the cis isomerization reaction
without PPIase-independent cleavage of the trans form, measurements
were performed following the initial cleavage of the trans
population, as determined through control reactions lacking PPIase
activity . In the presence of PPIase, the kinetic equation is kobs
= ku + 2(kcat/Km),
where kobs is the first-order rate constant for
isomerization . The variable ku represents the
first-order rate constant for uncatalyzed isomerization, and kcat/Km
is the catalytic activity . Thus, the enzyme-catalyzed rate of
isomerization (kcat/Km)
can be calculated by the equation kcat/Km
= (kobs - ku)/2 .
Construction of mutant streptococcal strains. Streptococcal
strains that expressed RopA containing single amino acid
substitutions for alanine at selected residues were constructed by
alteration of the single chromosomal copy of ropA as follows .
Oligonucleotide primers RopA 5' XbaI (GCCAT AGTCA TCCGT
CTAGA AATGC) and RopA 3' PstI (CTCAT ATCAC TGCAG
CTTGA CAAAT C) were used to amplify by PCR the region containing
the ropA open reading frame from the HSC5 chromosome; this region
was then inserted between the XbaI and PstI sites of the
E . coli/streptococcal shuttle vector pJRS233 (29)
by using restriction sites embedded in the primer sequences
(underlined) . The resulting plasmid (pBL40) was used as the template
in an "inside-out" PCR with primers RopA 180D/A up (CACCA TCAAC
GGATC CAACA AAGTC AATC) and RopA 180D/A down (TTGTT
GGATC CGTTG ATGGT GTTGA GTTTG CTGGC) . Digestion of this
amplification product with BamHI (sites underlined), followed
by religation, resulted in the replacement of the aspartate codon
with an alanine codon in ropA . The altered allele (ropAD180A)
was used to replace the resident chromosomal allele as described
elsewhere (30), and replacement was confirmed by
PCR amplification and digestion of amplified products with BamHI
to probe for the unique BamHI site introduced at the mutated
codon . The resulting S . pyogenes mutant was designated RopA11 .
Additional alterations were made by the same method . Primers pairs
RopA 200F/A start (ATTGT CCGGA TCCAA GTTCA AGAGA GAAG)
and RopA 200F/A end (AACTT GGATC CGGAC AATTT ATCCC AGGTG CTGAA)
and RopA 235F/A start (TTAGC GGCGG ATCCT GCAAG ATCTT CTGC)
and RopA 235F/A end (CTTGC AGGAT CCGCC GCTAA AGCTA
TGACA AC) were used for substitution of alanine for phenylalanine at
positions 200 (ropA200F/A) and 235 (ropA235F/A),
respectively . The resulting plasmids were designated pROP2 and pROP3,
and the corresponding mutant strains were designated RopA12 and
RopA13 .
Streptococcal strains with the proline at residue 78 replaced by
glycine were constructed by alteration of the single chromosomal copy
of speB as follows: Oligonucleotide primers -1000speBBamHI
(GAATG CCTAA TGGAT CCAAC GGTTT CACAA) and SpeBstopBamHI
(GGATA GCTTA ACTGC TGGAT CCGCA TAGGG) were used to
amplify by PCR the region containing the speB open reading
frame from the HSC5 chromosome; this region was then inserted at the
BamHI site of the E . coli/streptococcus shuttle vector
pJRS233 (29) by using restriction sites embedded
in the primer sequences (underlined) . The resulting plasmid
(pSpeB112) was then used as the template in an inside-out PCR with
primers SpeBP78G start (CCTAG AATTT CTCCA GATCT TTTAT
CTCC) and SpeBP78Gend (GGAGA TAAAA GATCT GGAGA AATTC
TAGGA TAC) . Digestion of this amplification product with BglII
(sites underlined) followed by religation resulted in the replacement
of the codon that codes for proline with a glycine codon in speB .
The altered allele (speBP78G) was used to replace
the resident chromosomal allele as described elsewhere (30),
and replacement was confirmed by PCR amplification and digestion
of amplified products with BglII to probe for the unique BglII
site introduced at the mutated codon . The resulting S . pyogenes
mutant was designated SpeB14 .
Measurement of protease activity. Expression of the protease
was analyzed in culture supernatants as follows . Cultures in C medium
were initiated using cells from overnight growth in C medium (26) .
The cells were washed in phosphate-buffered saline (pH 7.4) to remove
any residual protease . The initial OD600s of cultures were
adjusted to 0.01, samples were removed at various time points during
incubation at 37°C, and cells were removed by filtration
(0.45-µm-pore-size sterile Acrodisc; Gelman Sciences) . The resulting
supernatant fluids were diluted in fresh C medium to normalize for
any differences in growth between samples based on the OD600
of the culture at time of harvest . The presence of the proprotein and
processed forms of SpeB was determined in a Western blot analysis as
described previously (26) . The proteolytic
activities of supernatants were quantitated by the method of Hauser
and Schlievert (15), which measures the increase
in relative fluorescence generated by the proteolytic cleavage of
fluorescein isothiocyanate-casein (Sigma) . The activity of
uninoculated culture medium was used to derive background values,
which were typically undetectable under the conditions of this assay .
To ensure that all proteolytic activity was specifically the result
of SpeB, the cysteine protease-specific inhibitor E-64 (final
concentration, 10 mM; Sigma) was routinely added to selected samples .
This treatment typically reduced activity by >95% .
Construction of trigger factor mutations. The strategy for
determining whether the PPIase activity of trigger factor is required
for the maturation of the streptococcal protease involved the
construction of streptococcal strains which expressed a mutant
trigger factor that was altered at a single amino acid residue that
specifically disrupted the PPIase activity of the protein . As the
first step in this analysis, the S . pyogenes trigger factor
(RopA) was expressed in E . coli with a six-His affinity tag
and purified to homogeneity by standard methods (see Materials and
Methods) . Analysis of the resulting protein confirmed that it
possessed an active PPIase activity for the synthetic substrate
succinyl-Ala-Ala-Pro-Phe-4-nitroanilide, as determined by the
protease coupling assay of Fischer et al . (11) (kcat/Km
= 54.1 ± 5.3 mM-1 s-1), that was comparable to
that of human FKBP (kcat/Km = 66.3 ±
4.1 mM-1 s-1), a well-studied member of the
FK506 family of PPIases .
Targeting of residues in RopA for mutagenesis was assisted by the
fact that the PPIase domain of trigger factor displays a high level
of homology to other members of the FK506-inhibited PPIase family (16)
(Fig . 1B) and that mutation of several residues in
trigger factor that are conserved among FK506-binding proteins
resulted in altered catalytic activity with no effect on its ability
to refold certain proteins in vitro (39) . In addition,
the three-dimensional structures for several FK506 type PPIases
in complex with FK506 have been determined . Since FK506 inhibits
PPIase activity by inhibiting the binding of the substrate polypeptide,
it is likely that residues important for binding FK506 will
also make contact with the substrate polypeptide and that the loss of
these contacts will lead to a loss of PPIase activity . An examination
of the structure of FKBP12 (7, 40)
identified several residues that make specific contacts with FK506
(Fig . 1A) that are similar in trigger factor (Fig.
1B) . Three residues in the S . pyogenes
trigger factor (D180, F200, and F235; Fig . 1B) were
changed to alanine residues in order to minimize alteration of the
overall conformation of the mutant protein . Purification and analysis
of the proteins revealed that each mutation led to a profound
decrease in PPIase activity to between 18 and 7% of the activity the
wild-type protein (compare RopAD180A, RopAF200A,
and RopAF235A to the wild type in Fig . 2) .
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FIG . 1 . Mutagenesis of RopA . (A) Structure of FKBP12 in complex with
FK506 . The highlighted residues D180, F200, and F235 make contact with
FK506 and are conserved in the PPIase domain of trigger factor . The
labels represent the residue of FKBP12 and the numbers of the conserved
residues in RopA . The model shown was based on published structures (7,
40) using the molecular renderer RasMol, version 2.6
(http://www.umass.edu/microbiol/rasmol/) .
(B) Domain structure of trigger factor . The locations of the PPIase
domain and residues (F170, G172, F179, D180, F196, I197, F200, Y223, and
F235) highly conserved between trigger factor and other FK506-binding
proteins are indicated . The residues named correspond to those indicated
in panel A and were targeted for mutagenesis . Note that D180 and F235
are identical between trigger factor and FKBP12 and that F200 of trigger
factor corresponds to W200 of FKBP12.
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FIG . 2 . Protease maturation is defective in the absence of PPIase
activity . The PPIase activity of the indicated site-specific mutant RopA
proteins was compared to that of the wild type following purification of
the six-His-tagged fusion proteins from E . coli . The mutant
alleles lacking the regions encoding the six-His tags were used to
replace the wild-type allele in single copy in the streptococcal
chromosome, and the ability of the resulting strains to express
proteolytic activity was compared to that of the wild type and a trigger
factor mutant that contains ropA with a large in-frame deletion
that includes the coding sequence for the PPIase domain (ropA 82-297) .
Data represent the means and standard errors of the means for at least
two independent experiments, each of which was conducted in triplicate .
NT, not tested.
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Characterization of trigger factor mutants. Each of the three
mutations was recreated in a version of the trigger factor gene that
lacked the coding sequence for the six-His affinity tag, and the
mutant alleles were then used to replace the wild-type ropA
allele in the chromosome of S . pyogenes HSC5 . The
streptococcal cysteine protease is expressed when the bacterial cells
enter the stationary phase of growth, and it is secreted as an
inactive 40-kDa precursor protein . In S . pyogenes HSC5, the
secreted protease remains as the precursor for about 1 to 2 h after
the culture reaches stationary phase and then is rapidly processed to
the mature active 28-kDa protease (26) .
Examination of the resulting mutant strains revealed that each
expressed wild-type levels of the precursor protease protein and that
the protease was expressed in a temporal pattern equivalent to that
for the wild type, indicating that the mutations did not disrupt
transcriptional regulation of the protease gene or the trigger
factor-dependent targeting activity required for secretion of the
protease (data for RopAF200A are shown in Fig.
3) . However, when the ability of the precursor to become
processed to the 28-kDa mature form of the protease was analyzed,
it was found that the protease produced by each of the PPIase-defective
trigger factor mutants demonstrated the same kinetic defect in
autoprocessing that was observed for the previously characterized
mutant protein with the large internal ropA deletion (RopA 82-297)
(26) . A characteristic of this defect is that
conversion to the 28-kDa mature form takes approximately 8 h longer
than it does for the protease produced by the wild-type strain (Fig .
3, compare RopAF200A to the wild type at 10
and 24 h) . A second characteristic is that the processed protease
demonstrates only a fraction of the proteolytic activity of the
wild-type protease (26) . Comparison of proteolytic
activities at a point where both wild-type and mutant proteases are
fully converted to the mature form (24-h incubation; see Materials
and Methods) reveals that each of the three PPIase-deficient mutants
exhibited reduced proteolytic activity (Fig . 2;
compare RopAD180A, RopAF200A, and RopAF235A
to the wild type) . The decreased level of expression closely
correlated with the levels to which PPIase activity was decreased for
the three mutants and approached that observed for the original
deletion mutant (RopA 82-297;
Fig . 2) .
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FIG . 3 . Maturation kinetics of SpeB is restored in a ropAF200A
mutant through a speBP78G allelic replacement .
SpeB was detected in a Western blot analysis using a SpeB-specific
antiserum . The secreted SpeB zymogen (proSpeB) is 40 kDa, while the
processed form is 28 kDa . Time points represent the incubation times of
the culture prior to sample harvesting . Similar results were observed
for the ropAD180A and ropAF235A
alleles (data not shown) . WT, wild type.
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Identification of a target proline residue. A requirement for
PPIase activity in the production of an active protease implies that
the protease polypeptide possesses at least one proline residue whose
state of isomerization directs subsequent maturation into either a
productive or a nonproductive pathway . Examination of the protease
shows that it has 13 prolyl residues, including 1 in the signal
sequence, 1 in the prodomain, and 11 in the mature polypeptide . Of
these, the residue in the prodomain (P78, with position 1 defined as
the first residue of the zymogen) was of particular interest for
several reasons . First, because of its association with the
translating ribosome, trigger factor may first interact with the
amino terminus of the nascent polypeptide as it exits the ribosome
prior to any subsequent folding (23) . When
analyzed in vitro, trigger factor preferentially associates with
short peptides enriched in basic and aromatic residues with a
positive net charge (28) . Use of the algorithm of
Patzelt et al . (28) indicates that a section of
the proregion including P78 (S77 to F89) has a high probability of
being bound by trigger factor . Thus, the prodomain proline is in a
position to interact with trigger factor . Second, the prodomains of
many cysteine proteases have been shown to function as intramolecular
chaperones and are absolutely required for proper folding of their
proteases (37) . Third, the cysteine protease
proregion makes intimate contacts with residues of the protease
active site (6, 20) . Thus, it is
conceivable that the structure of the proregion itself could
influence the final conformation of the active site . To test whether
P78 could be a target of trigger factor, a mutant protease in which
P78 was changed to a glycine residue in order to maximize the
flexibility of the polypeptide at this position was first
constructed . When the speBP78G allele was
used to replace the wild-type allele in S . pyogenes, the
resulting mutant secreted the protease polypeptide at levels
equivalent to those for the wild type and produced proteolytic
activity at a level about 20% reduced from that of the wild-type
strain (Fig . 4; for RopAWT, compare SpeBWT
to SpeBP78G) . This indicates that, while P78 is required for
full expression of proteolytic activity, it is not essential
for maturation of the zymogen to an enzyme with activity for this
substrate (casein) . In the presence of a PPIase-deficient ropA
allele, expression of the wild-type protease gene results in only
about 10% of the proteolytic activity obtained with the wild-type
ropA background (Fig . 4; for SpeBWT, compare
RopAWT to RopA 82-297) .
However, when the P78G protease allele was expressed in a trigger
factor PPIase-deficient background, proteolytic activity increased
over that obtained with the wild-type protease allele in this
background (Fig . 4; for RopA 82-297,
compare SpeBWT to SpeBP78G) to levels
equivalent to that for the P78G protease in a wild-type trigger
factor background (Fig . 4; for SpeBP78G,
compare RopAWT to RopA 82-297) .
Identical results were obtained when SpeBP78G was
introduced into hosts expressing each of the three ropA
alanine substitution alleles (data not shown) . Thus, the P78G
mutation makes the protease maturation step independent of the
requirement for PPIase activity . The ability of the P78G mutation to
suppress PPIase deficiency supports a model in which trigger
factor-promoted isomerization of P78 is required for directing the
maturation of the secreted protease into a productive pathway .
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FIG . 4 . Mutation of P78 of the cysteine protease suppresses the
requirement for PPIase activity . A site-specific mutation in the single
chromosomally encoded copy of the protease gene was constructed to
change the prodomain P78 to G in S . pyogenes hosts containing
either wild-type trigger factor (ropA) or trigger factor
defective in PPIase activity (ropA 82-297) .
Protease activity of the resulting strains was compared to that of the
wild type (WT) . Data represent the means and standard errors of the
means for at least two independent experiments, each of which was
conducted in triplicate.
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Trigger factor is found in virtually all species of bacteria and is
the only PPIase of Mycoplasma genitalium, the bacterium that
possess the smallest known genome of any freely self-replicating
organism (2) . Evidence suggests that trigger factor in M .
genitalium is essential for viability (19) . It
is present in pathogenic bacterial species such as the streptococci,
and in E . coli it provides an essential activity that overlaps
with that of DnaK (8, 38) . These
data imply that trigger factor is essential for the ability of
bacteria to survive in their natural environments . However, since
trigger factor mutants generally have no obvious defect for growth or
for expression of any protein under laboratory conditions, the
function of trigger factor is not understood .
In the present study, we have shown that the PPIase activity of
trigger factor is required for the maturation of the protease of
S . pyogenes following its secretion from the bacterium . Furthermore,
the observation that the mutation of a specific proline residue
results in a bypass of the requirement for trigger factor in protease
maturation implies that this residue is the target of trigger
factor's PPIase activity . When combined with the known properties of
trigger factor, the trigger factor cycle (23), and
our previous observation that trigger factor is also required for
targeting the protease to the streptococcal secretion pathway, these
data support the following model . During translation of the protease
message, trigger factor binds to the N-terminal proregion of the
nascent protease polypeptide as it emerges from the translating
ribosome . This interaction is essential for stabilizing the
preproprotease in a secretion-competent conformation, and the complex
is targeted to the Sec pathway translocon for secretion across the
cellular membrane . During this targeting phase, the PPIase domain of
trigger factor introduces information into the nascent protease
polypeptide through isomerization of the proregion proline residue at
position 78 . Trigger factor dissociates from the protease polypeptide
as it transits through the Sec translocon and is recycled into a
cytoplasmic pool for reassociation with a ribosome . The nascent
protease polypeptide is now in an extracellular space, and it folds
into its zymogen form via a folding pathway that is influenced by the
isomerization state of P78 .
A key feature of the model is that it predicts that the conformation
of the proregion is influenced by the isomerization state of
P78, which in turn provides steric information that influences the
subsequent folding pathway . This idea is consistent with what is
known concerning the roles of some proregions in the biogenesis of
their cognate proteases . For example, the proregions of many
proteases, including some cysteine proteases (37), are
essential for the proper folding and activation of the proteases .
When the serine protease subtilisin is folded in the absence of
its prodomain, it can obtain a stable but inactive molten
globule-like intermediate state that can be converted to an active
enzyme upon addition of the prodomain (32-34) .
Mutation of single amino acid residues in the subtilisin proregion
can produce an altered enzymatic conformation of the activated
protease compared to the wild type, even though the mutant and
wild-type enzymes retain identical amino acid sequences . These data
have been interpreted to suggest that the proregion provides a
folding template for configuration of the active-site residues . Thus,
the final state of the protein is not necessarily that dictated
by a global free-energy minimum directed by the primary amino acid
sequence but rather is one of an ensemble of low-energy minima whose
accessibility is influenced by the conformation of the proregion .
Since the subtilisin proregion does not become part of the final
structure, it has been referred to as an intramolecular chaperone .
The unique aspect of the present study is that, unlike previous
mutational studies that have altered the proregion sequence (34),
different protease conformations were derived from interactions with
proregions of identical sequences . The only difference was the
presence or absence of PPIase activity in trigger factor, an
accessory protein required for targeting the protease to the
secretory pathway . The streptococcal cysteine protease is a member of
the papain-like cysteine protease family, and, while the proregions
of family members are diverse in regards to sequence and length, they
can be divided into two major subfamilies based on structural
similarities to cathepsin L or to cathepsin B . It is not uncommon for
members of both subfamilies to have a proline residue approximately
15 to 20 residues from the carboxy terminus of the proregion, as for
cathepsin B and cathepsin L (P49 and P83, respectively (6,
27) . The three-dimensional structures of the two
subfamily prototypes, procathepsin B and procathepsin L, revealed
that their proregions have several common structural features,
including proregions that loop through the entire substrate binding
groove in the opposite direction to that of the substrate and
proregion prolines that are positioned in the immediate vicinity of
the cysteine and histidine residues that comprise the catalytic
machinery (6) . The location of the proline residue
suggests that its configuration could influence active-site
conformation .
The recently determined three-dimensional structure of the streptococcal
protease zymogen revealed that, while the protease has the canonical
papain family structure, the proregion adopts a unique structure
which itself surrounds a substantial hydrophobic core (20) .
The latter feature implies that the proregion can fold independently
into a stable structure . Furthermore, instead of the extended
loop structure used by other cysteine protease zymogens to inhibit
proteolytic activity, the proregion of the streptococcal zymogen
inserts an alpha-helical region into the active-site cleft so that it
displaces the catalytic His (H195) from the active site to prevent
any interaction of this residue with the catalytic Cys (C47) .
Activation of the streptococcal protease apparently involves removal
of the proregion loop and a substantial reorganization of the active
site, including a rotation of H195 into the active site . The fact
that the proregion actively interacts with residues in the active
site, combined with its apparent stability, suggests that the
structure of the proregion could directly influence the final
conformation of the active site . Exactly how P78 could participate in
this process is less clear . Unlike what is found in many other
cysteine proteases, this Pro residue does not enter the active-site
cleft . In addition, in the recently determined structure P78 is in
the trans conformation . However, it remains to be determined
whether this is the native state of isomerization for this residue
for several reasons, among which are that the structure was derived
from a mutant protease with the catalytic Cys residue replaced and
that the protease was expressed and purified from E . coli, a
process that is notorious for producing a streptococcal protease with
low specific activity .
Problems associated with production of the streptococcal protease
in the gram-negative bacterium E . coli illustrate some interesting
contrasts with the problem of protein secretion in gram-positive
bacteria . While the processes look similar at first glance and
involve many of the same pathways and accessory proteins such as
trigger factor, there are some fundamental differences . For example,
proteins that are secreted by the general secretory pathway in
gram-negative bacteria translocate across the cellular membrane in an
unfolded conformation and are released into the periplasmic space .
They then fold into their final conformations in a controlled
environment rich in folding catalysts including specific chaperones,
thiol-disulfide oxioreductases, and multiple PPIases . In contrast,
gram-positive bacteria lack a clearly defined periplasmic space, few
extracellular folding catalysts have been identified, and it is
unknown whether the organization of their outer surfaces provides any
type of protected environment to facilitate folding . Thus, the
mechanisms by which gram-positive bacteria fold secreted proteins are
unclear .
Also unclear is why the PPIase activity of trigger factor is
required for maturation of the secreted streptococcal protease .
Replacement of P78, the apparent target of the PPIase activity, has
an effect on the ability of the protease precursor to form an active
protease; however, the mutant protease retains substantial activity .
The fact that a proline residue has been conserved at this position
implies that its role in protease biogenesis is more substantial than
was revealed by these studies . It is possible that the in vitro
conditions used for folding and analyses of proteolytic activity do
not reflect the conditions that S . pyogenes encounters during
infection . Also, it is possible that the casein substrate used to
assess proteolytic activity was more permissive than the native
substrate(s), which has not been identified . Further studies on the
folding of this protease and the role of accessory factors such as
trigger factor will be important for understanding the function of
this protease in infection and the process of protein folding in
gram-positive bacteria .
This work was supported by Public Health Service grant AI46433 from
the National Institutes of Health .
* Corresponding author . Mailing address: Department of
Molecular Microbiology, Washington University School of Medicine, Box 8230, St .
Louis, MO 63110-1093 . Phone: (314) 362-1485 . Fax: (314) 362-1232 . E-mail: caparon@borcim.wustl.edued.
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