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Journal of Bacteriology, February 2004, p . 1021-1028, Vol .
186, No . 4
OppA,
the Substrate-Binding Subunit of the Oligopeptide Permease, Is the Major
Ecto-ATPase of Mycoplasma hominis
Miriam Hopfe* and Birgit Henrich
Institute of Medical Microbiology and Center for Biological and Medical
Research, Heinrich Heine University, 40225 Duesseldorf, Germany
Received 22 August 2003/ Accepted 4 November 2003
Most ATPases, involved in energy-driven processes, act in the
cytoplasm . However, external membrane-bound ATPases have also been
described in parasites and eukaryotic cells . In Mycoplasma hominis,
a bacterium lacking a cell wall, the surface-exposed
substrate-binding protein OppA of an oligopeptide permease (Opp)
contains an ATP binding P-loop structure in the C-terminal region .
With ATP affinity chromatography and tryptic digestion in the
presence or absence of ATP, the functionality of the Mg2+-dependent
ATP binding site is demonstrated . In addition to ATP, ADP also
could bind to OppA . The presence of an ATPase activity on the surface
of M . hominis is indicated by the inactivation of ATP
hydrolyzing activity of intact mycoplasma cells by the impermeable
ATPase inhibitor 4',4'-diisothiocyanostilbene-2',2'-disulfonic acid
and influenced by the ATP analog 5'-fluorosulfonyl-benzoyladenosine .
Comparing equimolar amounts of OppA in intact mycoplasma cells and in
the purified form indicated that more than 80% of the
surface-localized ATPase activity is derived from OppA, implying that
OppA is the main ATPase on the surface of mycoplasma cells . Together,
these data present the first evidence that the cytoadhesive substrate
binding protein OppA of the oligopeptide permease also functions as
an ecto-ATPase in Mycoplasma hominis .
The most important high-energy phosphate compounds in living cells
are adenosine and guanosine triphosphate (ATP and GTP), which serve
as carriers of energy that keeps the organism alive . The mobilization
of energy is accomplished by a diverse variety of ATPases (31) .
In 1982, Walker and coworkers (44) described a
sequence similarity in the alpha- and beta-subunits of ATP
synthetase . This consensus sequence is also found in myosin, kinases,
and other ATP-requiring enzymes . The best conserved of these motifs
is a glycine-rich region, [AG]-X(4)-G-K-[ST], which typically forms a
flexible loop between a beta-strand and an alpha-helix and interacts
extensively with the ß- and
-phosphates
of the nucleotide, whereas only limited interactions engaged with the
ATP adenine ring . This sequence motif, which is generally referred to
as Walker A sequence or P-loop, is present in numerous ATP- or
GTP-binding proteins, including the nucleotide-binding subunits of
the well known ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporter .
Besides the highly conserved Walker A motif there is also a less
conserved Walker B motif that is involved in attacking the
-phosphate
bond during ATP hydrolysis . Consequently, substitution in the Walker
sequences generally impairs ATP hydrolysis to a greater or lesser
extent (38) . Besides the two hydrophilic
peripheral nucleotide-binding subunits, ABC transporters generally
consist of two hydrophobic membrane-spanning subunits and a
substrate-binding protein which has been described only in bacteria (1,
12) . In gram negative bacteria the substrate-binding protein
is located within the periplasmic space, whereas in gram positive
bacteria it is surface exposed and tethered to the membrane via
a lipid anchor (32) .
We have previously characterized an oligopeptide permease of the
cell wall-less bacterium Mycoplasma hominis (11) . This
oligopeptide permease consists of two integral membrane proteins,
OppB and OppC, two nucleotide-binding proteins, OppD and OppF, and a
substrate-binding protein, OppA . The OppA subunit was shown to
be involved in cytoadherence, having a lipoprotein attachment site
and no further trans-membrane regions (11) . The finding
that OppA was proteolytically digested by trypsin treatment of
intact mycoplasma cells supports the idea that OppA is located on the
cell surface of Mycoplasma hominis (10) . Surprisingly,
computer analysis revealed an ATP-binding P-loop structure not
only in the protein sequences of OppD and OppF but also in the
C-terminal region of the OppA protein which has never been described
previously for a substrate-binding protein . The results presented in
this study provide evidence that OppA of M . hominis acts as an
ATP hydrolase on the surface of the cell .
Mycoplasma culture, osmotic lysis, and separation of membrane and
cytoplasmic proteins. Mycoplasma hominis strain FBG was
cultivated in PPLO (pleuropneumonia-like organism) broth base medium
containing arginine as described previously (5) .
Stocks of M . hominis FBG were prepared from
mid-logarithmic-phase broth culture and stored at -70°C . To prepare
lysates of M . hominis, the mycoplasma cells were harvested by
centrifugation (15,000 x g, 30 min,
4°C), washed and resuspended in buffer A (120 mM NaCl, 5 mM KCl, 20
mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.5) . The cells were disrupted by three freeze-thaw
cycles and the addition of 50 volumes of distilled water followed by
30 min of incubation at 37°C and centrifugation (23,500
x g, 45 min, 4°C) .
Bacterial strains and plasmids. Plasmids pXB and pBX (Roche
Applied Science, Mannheim, Germany) were used as expression vectors
for the heterologous expression of OppA and OppD . The plasmids were
propagated in Escherichia coli SG13009 (Qiagen, Hilden,
Germany) .
DNA manipulations. All routine DNA manipulation techniques,
including plasmid preparation, restriction endonuclease analysis,
ligation and transformation of E . coli, were performed as
described by Sambrook et al . (36) or according to
the manufacturer's instructions (Qiagen, Hilden, Germany) .
PCR, cloning, and sequencing of the DNA fragments. To
generate the oppA and oppD expression plasmids, oligonucleotides
were used as primers in PCR to change the mycoplasma tryptophan
encoding TGA to the universal codon TGG . To facilitate cloning of the
PCR products, restriction sites were inserted in the primer sequence
without changing the amino acid sequence . PCR was performed as
described by Kitzerow et al . (18) with the
oligonucleotide primers published by Hopfe (13) .
Mutations in the P-loop motif of OppA were inserted by use of the
following primers: PL1 (5'-AAAGGATCCTAAAACCGGAAAATATG-3') and PL2
(5'-CAGGAGGCATCAATAGAACCAACC-3') to generate fragment 1; PL3
(5'-TGATGCTCCTGAACTGTCTTTT-3') and PL4
(5'-TTTGCGGCCGCCTGCAGTTTTTTAGTATCTTTGA-3') to generate fragment 2 .
The two fragments were fused by SOE (splicing by overlap
extension)-PCR (14) and cloned into a vector which
carries the protein coding sequence of the OppA protein and thus
replaced the Lys875 with Arg (OppAK875R mutant) .
In the same way, the OppA P-loop
mutant was created by changing the P-loop motif from GKDSSGKS to
THASSSAH with the primers PL1 and PL5
(5'-TTTACACATGCCAGTTCAAGTGCACATATAGAACCAACC-3') for fragment 3 and
PL6 (5'-TATATGTGCACTTGAACTGGCATGTGTAAAATCG-3') and PL4 for fragment
4, which were fused and cloned as described above .
Expression and purification of recombinant proteins. The
recombinant proteins OppA, OppAK875R mutant, OppA P-loop
mutant, and OppD were each expressed with an N- or C-terminally
fused protein C tag . One liter of LB-broth medium (Gibco BRL, Life
Technologies Inc., Gaithersburg, Md.) containing ampicillin (100
µg/ml) and kanamycin (25 µg/ml) was inoculated with 50 ml of
overnight culture of the respective E . coli SG13009 clone for
3 h at 37°C with vigorous shaking until an A600 of
0.6 to 0.9 was reached . Protein expression was induced by
isopropylthio-ß-D-galactoside (1 mM) . After 3 to 4
h of cultivation at 37°C the cells were harvested by centrifugation
(15,000 x g, 20 min, 4°C) and
frozen at -70°C . After thawing on ice the cells were resuspended in
40 ml of buffer A . The cells were disrupted by three repeat
freeze-thaw cycles in liquid nitrogen followed by three bursts of
sonication on ice (5-min bursts at 95 W with a 1-min cooling period
between each burst) . The lysate was centrifuged (15,000
x g, 20 min, 4°C) and the
OppD-containing supernatant was transferred to an anti-protein C
affinity matrix (Roche Applied Science, Mannheim, Germany) according
to the manufacturer's instructions . The recombinant OppA variants
were purified with a Sepharose-coupled anti-OppA antibody (monoclonal
antibody DC10) as described by Henrich et al . (10) .
The purified MalK protein was a gift from E . Schneider (Humboldt
University of Berlin, Institute of Biology) .
SDS-PAGE and immunostaining of proteins. Proteins were
separated on 9.5% and 12% polyacrylamide gels (22),
transferred to nitrocellulose (Schleicher and Schüll, Dassel,
Germany) with a semidry blot apparatus (Phase, Mölln, Germany), and
immunostained by the protocol of Kitzerow et al . (19) .
Monoclonal antibodies DC10 and BG11 (anti-OppA), BA10 (anti-P50),
NB12 (anti-P80), CG4 (anti-P60), and AH10 (anti-P55) were used .
Limited proteolysis by trypsin. Proteolysis of the purified
proteins recombinant OppA, OppAK875R mutant, OppA P-loop,
recombinant OppD, recombinant MalK, and native P50 (0.1 g/ml each) or
intact mycoplasma cells (2.5 mg/ml) was performed as described by
Schneider et al . (37) by first incubating the
samples at 4°C for 10 min with or without 5 mM ATP and 5 mM MgCl2 .
Trypsin was then added at a final concentration of 0.18 mg/ml (for
purified proteins) or 0.05 mg/ml (for mycoplasma cells), and
proteolysis was allowed to proceed for 30 min at 4°C . The reaction
was terminated by adjusting the sample to the conditions of sodium
dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) loading
buffer (10% [wt/vol] SDS, 0.4 M Tris-HCl, pH 6.8, 0.1% [wt/vol]
bromophenol blue, 25% [vol/vol] glycerol, 5% [vol/vol]
2-mercaptoethanol) and immediately boiling for 5 min . After gel
electrophoresis, the digestion patterns were analyzed by Western
blotting and immunostaining . Experiments were also carried out with
GTP, CTP, or ADP instead of ATP (Sigma Aldrich, Taufkirchen,
Germany) . The necessity of metal ions for ATP binding was determined
by adding EDTA (10 mM) to the trypsin assay .
Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. The enzyme-linked
immunosorbent assay was performed as described by Henrich et al . (10)
with the modification that different concentrations of M . hominis
cell lysate and purified OppA were coated to MaxiSorp microtiter
plates (Nunc, Wiesbaden, Germany) . The amount of OppA was determined
by the addition of the DC10 monoclonal antibody .
ATP hydrolysis assay. The ATPase assay was conducted at 37°C
as described by Henkel et al . (9) with minor
modifications . Briefly, the assay was performed in microtiter plates
by incubating 500 ng of purified protein or intact mycoplasma cells
equivalent to 500 ng of native OppA in 20 µl of buffer A with 5 mM
ATP and 5 mM MgCl2 for 1 to 60 min . Hydrolysis of ATP was
terminated by adding 200 µl of malachite green reagent (5.72%
[wt/vol] ammonium molybdate in 6 N HCl, 2.32% [wt/vol] polyvinyl
alcohol, 0.0812% [wt/vol] malachite green, and distilled water at a
ratio of 1:1:2:2) . The relative absorbance of the samples in relation
to a blank was measured at 620 nm (Tecan Rainbow, SLT Labinstruments,
Crailsheim, Germany) . The three nucleotides ATP, GTP, and CTP
also show hydrolysis activity in the absence of an ATPase . This value
was subtracted from the measured ATPase activities to achieve the
real value . Inorganic phosphate (in concentrations varying from 1 to
20 nmol) was used as a standard .
ATP affinity chromatography. ATP affinity chromatography was
performed with 0.5 ml of swollen ATP-agarose (2.1 µmol of ATP/ml
packed gel coupled via a 22-Å spacer [Sigma Aldrich, Taufkirchen,
Germany]) . The crude bacterial lysate (5 to 10 mg of protein/10 ml)
was incubated for 2 to 3 h at 4°C with the ATP-agarose on a
rotary shaker; 20 µl (for the detection of OppA) and 2 µl (for
the detection of clongation factor Tu [EF-Tu]) of the bacterial
lysate were resuspended in 5x SDS-PAGE
sample buffer before adding to the ATP agarose . The agarose was
transferred to a column and washed three times with 5 ml of wash
buffer (20 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.5, 2 mM EGTA, 2 mM MgCl2,
0.01% [wt/vol] n-dodecyl-ß-maltoside) . ATP-bound proteins were
eluted with wash buffer containing ATP (2 or 20 mM); 25-µl aliquots
of each 1-ml fraction were analyzed by SDS-PAGE .
Sequence analysis. Analysis of the DNA and protein sequences
and the design of oligonucleotides were facilitated by the Lasergene
software (DNA Star Inc., Madison, Wis.) . For protein analysis the
database of the Expert Protein Analysis System (ExPASy; www.expasy.org) was used . The
two-dimensional densitometry was performed with the Aida Image
Analyser version 3.24 (Raytest GmbH, Straubenherdt, Germany) .
Statistical analysis. All experiments were performed in
triplicate, with similar results obtained with at least five separate
cell suspensions or six recombinant protein preparations . Km
and Vmax were calculated with a computerized
nonlinear regression analysis (Graph Pad Prism, version 3.02, Graph
Pad Software Inc., San Diego, Calif.) .
OppA binds to an ATP affinity column. A P-loop structure motif
has been found in a variety of proteins, e.g., the guanylate kinase,
thymidine kinase, ATP-binding proteins of the ABC transporters,
DNA/RNA helicases, and the GTP-binding elongation factor EF-Tu . While
these proteins bind nucleotides, others also carrying a P-loop
sequence do not bind ATP or GTP, e.g., chymotrypsin or the human
ferritin light chain . As computer analysis of the Mycoplasma
hominis OppA protein sequence predicted an ATP-binding site
(P-loop) in the C-terminal region (amino acids 869 to 876:
G-K-D-S-S-G-K-S) (11, 13), we investigated
its ATP-binding character . The less conserved Walker B motif
R/K-X-X-X-G-X-X-X-L, followed by several hydrophobic amino acids (44),
was present between amino acids 737 and 752 (RFDGVTGENLLAWSAD) . This
indicated that in OppA of M . hominis the structural elements
Walker A and B are in the order BA . A similar order has been
described for nematode and rabbit myosin (44) .
An ATP affinity column was loaded with lysate of the M . hominis
isolate FBG . After several washes the bound proteins were eluted
with 2 and 20 mM ATP . The proteins were resolved by SDS-PAGE,
blotted, and analyzed by immunostaining (Fig . 1) . As shown in
OppA staining (monoclonal antibody DC10), 2% of the added OppA
was retained on the ATP affinity column (determined by two-dimensional
densitometry) . The elongation factor EF-Tu, which is known to
carry an ATP/GTP binding site, was used as a positive control, and
the P50 adhesin of M . hominis (10), which does not
express an ATP-binding site, was used as a negative control . As was
expected, the EF-Tu protein also bound to a GTP affinity column,
whereas OppA did not (data not shown) .
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FIG . 1 . Western blot analysis of ATP-binding proteins . Mycoplasma
hominis FBG lysate was applied to an ATP affinity column . The
ATP-bound proteins were eluted with 2 mM ATP (lanes 1 to 3) and with 20
mM ATP (lanes 4 to 6), subjected to SDS-PAGE, and immunostained with
monoclonal antibodies for the detection of OppA (monoclonal antibody
DC10), P50 (monoclonal antibody BG2), and EF-Tu (monoclonal antibody
KD2).
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The binding of OppA is not a result of its positive charge (4.6) at
pH 7.5 because the lipoprotein P60 (18) with a pK of 15.5
at pH 7.5 did not show binding to the ATP affinity column (data
not shown) . This finding confirms that the adsorption of OppA to the
matrix is not due to ion exchange .
It is possible that OppA forms a complex with the other Opp
components even in the lysate . To rule out that the retention of OppA
on the ATP matrix is mediated through the nucleotide binding proteins
OppD and OppF of the Opp complex, binding of purified OppA to the ATP
matrix was also proven . These data strongly suggest that OppA belongs
to the group of ATP-binding proteins .
Effect of ATP on the tryptic digestion pattern of OppA.
Binding of ATP often induces a conformational change in the protein,
demonstrated for MalK, the ATP-binding protein of the maltose
transporter of Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium (37) .
The structural alteration in the MalK protein by ATP induced a change
in the sensitivity to protease and caused an altered degradation
pattern of the ATP-protein complex .
We performed a similar analysis on OppA and OppD of the oligopeptide
permease of M . hominis, the P50 adhesin (as a negative control),
and MalK (as a positive control) . Recombinant OppA, recombinant
OppD, and native P50 isolated from M . hominis as well as purified
S . enterica serovar Typhimurium MalK were exposed to trypsin
in the presence or absence of ATP for 30 min at 4°C . The
tryptic peptides were separated by SDS-PAGE and subsequently analyzed
by Western blotting and protein staining (Fig . 2) .
By comparing the Coomassie-stained digestion patterns with the
immunostained ones, we ascertained that the antibodies against OppA,
P50, and OppD reacted with the major cleavage products (data not
shown) . As shown in Fig . 2A, OppA was completely digested
into three major fragments of 80, 50, and 39 kDa in the absence
of ATP . In the presence of ATP, the sensitivity of OppA to proteolysis
was markedly reduced, and the degradation pattern was modified .
Most of the OppA molecules were resistant to proteolytic degradation
when pretreated with ATP, and an additional 65-kDa peptide was
produced . As expected, the ATPases OppD and MalK (used as positive
controls) showed different tryptic digestion patterns with and
without ATP exposure, whereas the proteolytic cleavage pattern of the
P50 adhesin (used as a negative control) remained unchanged,
indicating the lack of ATP binding (Fig . 2B) . These
experiments confirm that OppA is an ATP-binding protein .
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FIG . 2 . Effect of ATP on the tryptic digestion pattern . After limited
tryptic digestion of 0.5 µg of recombinant OppA, OppAK875R
mutant, and OppA P-loop
(A) and recombinant OppD, native MalK, and native P50 (B) in the
presence or absence of the depicted nucleotides, the fragments were
analyzed by Western blotting with the monoclonal antibodies DC10 (OppA)
and BG2 (P50), a polyclonal antiserum directed against OppD, or by
Coomassie staining (C) (MalK) . The left two lanes of each panel show the
purified proteins used in the trypsin assay in silver staining (S) and
Western blotting (W).
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We used the trypsin assay to analyze the binding characteristics of
OppA for ADP, GTP, and CTP . As depicted in Fig . 2A, ADP,
like ATP, protected OppA from proteolytic cleavage . Neither GTP
(Fig . 2A) nor CTP (data not shown) was able to protect OppA
against rapid proteolytic digestion, which is reflected by similar
tryptic peptide patterns obtained with and without nucleotide
addition . As most ATP-protein interactions require divalent cations,
EDTA was used to chelate the Mg2+ ions from the ATP-binding
assay . This led to a loss of the protective effect of ATP to
proteolysis (Fig . 2A, +EDTA) .
Effect of ATP on the tryptic digestion pattern of the OppAK875R
and OppA P-loop
mutants. In order to confirm that the Walker A motif of OppA is
essential for nucleotide binding, we analyzed the effect of ATP on
the tryptic digestion pattern of two OppA mutants . In OppAK875R,
the lysine residue (Lys875) of the Walker A motif of the
nucleotide binding fold, an invariant amino acid important for ATP
hydrolysis, was replaced by arginine . This lysine is described in
other ATP-binding proteins to be involved in binding of the ß-
and
-phosphates
of nucleotides (7) . Limited trypsin proteolysis of
OppAK875R in the presence or absence of ATP revealed a similar
protection by ATP as seen with the recombinant OppA protein
(Fig . 2A), suggesting binding of ATP . In the OppA P-loop
mutant, in which the whole P-loop motif GKDSSGKS was changed to
THASSSAH, no protective effect of ATP was observed, indicating that
ATP binding did not occur . Thus, these data show that the Walker
A motif is essential for the binding of ATP .
ATP binding of surface-exposed OppA. OppA was characterized
as a surface-exposed lipoprotein with cytoadhesive qualities (10,
112) . To confirm that the ATP-binding site of OppA is accessible from
outside the M . hominis cell, intact mycoplasma cells were
incubated with and without ATP, followed by trypsin treatment . The
membrane-anchored OppA protein was protected by ATP from proteolysis,
whereas this protein was rapidly digested in the absence of ATP (Fig.
3) . The integrity of the mycoplasma cells was
demonstrated by monitoring the proteolysis of cytoplasmic protein
P55 . Exposure of intact cells to trypsin did not result in digestion
of P55, whereas lysis of the mycoplasma cells prior to trypsin
exposure led to proteolytic digestion of the cytoplasmic protein P55
(Fig . 3) . These data clearly prove that the
ATP-binding site of OppA is located outside the mycoplasma cell .
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FIG . 3 . Localization of the ATP-binding site . Intact mycoplasma cells
(50 µg/20 µl) were incubated with 2 mM trypsin in the presence (+) or
absence (-) of 5 mM ATP . The protein patterns were analyzed by Western
blotting with the OppA-specific monoclonal antibody DC10 and the
P55-specific monoclonal antibody AH10 . Since cytoplasmic P55 is
susceptible to tryptic digestion, cells were lysed (P55lc)
before addition of trypsin.
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ATP hydrolysis of OppA and intact mycoplasma cells. To analyze
whether OppA is able not only to bind but also to hydrolyze ATP, we
estimated the ATP-hydrolyzing activity of recombinant OppA protein .
The purity of the recombinant OppA preparation was demonstrated by
silver staining (Fig . 2A) .
The kinetics of ATP hydrolysis by recombinant OppA measured as the
release of free phosphate were linear for at least 40 min (Fig.
4A) . In the following experiments, the ATPase assay
was therefore terminated after 20 min . ATPase activity was determined
in relation to the concentration of OppA . ATP hydrolysis was linear
between 0.125 and 1 µg of OppA (Fig . 4B, open square) .
Therefore, we used 0.5 µg of OppA in all further ATPase assays .
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FIG . 4 . Comparison of ATPase activity of intact mycoplasmas, recombinant
OppA, OppAK875R mutant, and OppA P-loop .
ATPase activity of intact cells ( ),
recombinant OppA ( ),
OppAK875R ( ),
OppA P-loop
( ),
and the supernatant (•) was measured in the ammonium molybdate assay as
described in Materials and Methods . The amount of OppA present at the
surface of intact mycoplasma cells was estimated by an OppA-specific
enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay . The ATPase activity was measured as a
function of time (A), concentration of OppA (B), concentration of Mg2+
ions (C), and concentration of ATP (D) . The effect of increasing
concentration of 5'-fluorosulfonyl-benzoyladenosine (FSBA, E) and DIDS
(F) on the ecto-ATPase activity of OppA was determined . The values shown
are the means (± standard deviations) of the results of three
independent experiments.
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As demonstrated in the ATP trypsin assay, the binding of ATP to OppA
depends on Mg2+ ions . To prove that ATP hydrolysis was
also dependent on divalent cations, recombinant OppA was used in the
absence of MgCl2 and resulted in a low level of ATP hydrolysis,
and addition of MgCl2 to the medium led to an increase in
ATPase activity in a dose-dependent manner (Fig . 4C) .
The data for ATP hydrolysis of OppA were fed into the
Michaelis-Menten equation to yield values for Vmax
of 1,254 ± 40 nmol/min/mg of OppA protein and Km
of 0.18 ± 0.04 mM (Fig . 4D) . As expected, mutation
of the P-loop structure decreased ATPase activity . In comparison to
the wild type, the ATP-hydrolyzing activity of the mutants OppAK875R
and OppA P-loop
decreased to 15% and 6%, respectively (see Fig . 4B) .
We also analyzed the specificity of recombinant OppA towards
hydrolysis of other nucleoside triphosphates . With GTP and CTP, the
release of free phosphate represents only 8% (GTP) and 6% (CTP) of
the ATP hydrolysis (data not shown) . This result was consistent with
the finding described above that GTP and CTP have a lower affinity to
OppA than ATP does .
To confirm that the ATP cleavage is accompanied by ATP binding in
OppA, a synthetic adenosine analog which is capable of covalent
binding to proteins was added to the ATP hydrolysis assay . Pretreatment
of OppA with 5'-fluorosulfonyl-benzoyladenosine strongly inhibited
ATP hydrolysis in a dose-dependent manner (Fig . 4E) . The
ATPase inhibitor 4',4'-diisothiocyanostilbene 2',2'-disulfonic acid
(DIDS) reduced ATPase activity to 25% of that of the control
(Fig . 4F) .
The effect of ATP on the tryptic digestion pattern of lipid-anchored
OppA in the mycoplasma membrane demonstrated that the nucleotide-binding
site is located on the surface of the cell . To characterize the
contribution of OppA to the ecto-ATPase activity of Mycoplasma
hominis, the amount of surface-localized OppA was determined by
an OppA-specific enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay analyzing
recombinant OppA of known concentration and cells of Mycoplasma
hominis in serial dilutions . The ATPase activity of the different
samples was determined in parallel . This experiment revealed that
regarding the same amount of OppA in both lines (protein versus
cells), the purified recombinant OppA represents about 80% to 85% of
the ATPase activity of intact mycoplasma cells (Fig . 4B) .
The ecto-ATPase activity of intact mycoplasma cells showed the
same enzyme kinetic and dependence on the concentrations of enzyme,
Mg2+ ions and ATP as the purified OppA protein (Fig .
4A, B, and C, curve with open squares) . For mycoplasma cells
the Vmax for ATP hydrolysis was 1,460 ± 76 nmol/min/mg,
correlating with an OppA concentration on the surface of M .
hominis of 0.19 ± 0.03 mM (Fig . 4D) .
As observed for the ATPase activity of purified OppA, the ATP
hydrolysis activity of intact cells decreased (here about 86%) in the
presence of the inhibitor 5'-fluorosulfonyl-benzoyladenosine (Fig.
4E) . Further evidence for the surface ecto-ATPase activity
of M . hominis cells was provided by inhibition of the hydrolysis
with the cell-impermeable reagent DIDS . DIDS inhibited the ATPase
activity of mycoplasma cells by 75% (Fig . 4F) .
To avoid measurement of ATPase activity from cytoplasmic enzymes,
cells of the Mycoplasma hominis strain FBG were collected at
the beginning of logarithmic growth and transferred to a phosphate-free
ATPase buffer, and the release of inorganic phosphate was measured
immediately . During the experiment the mycoplasma cells did not
show measurable growth or lysis, as confirmed by determination of the
colony-changing units . We also excluded the possibility that the
observed ATP hydrolysis was a result of soluble enzymes secreted from
the cells by analyzing the supernatant of the mycoplasma cells for
ATPase activity, which did not show hydrolyzing activity (Fig.
4B) .
These data clearly demonstrate that in M . hominis the
substrate-binding protein of the oligopeptide permease has a
surface-localized ATP-binding site which functions as the main
ecto-ATPase of the organism .
Proteins with surface-localized binding sites for nucleotides have
been reported for cells such as vascular endothelium (40),
smooth muscle cells (23), parasites such as
Leishmania tropica (26), the amoeba
Dictyostelium discoideum (16), and group C
streptococci (28) . The data presented here describe the first
Mg2+-dependent ATP-binding and -hydrolyzing activity on the
external surface of a cell wall-less bacterium . The substrate-binding
protein OppA of the oligopeptide permease was shown to be the
main ecto-ATPase of M . hominis . Trypsin treatment of protein
or cell preparations in the presence or absence of ATP indicated a
conformational change of OppA in response to the binding of
nucleotides, as seen for other nucleotide-binding proteins (37) .
The tryptic digestion pattern of OppA changed dramatically in the
presence of ATP and ADP, whereas nucleotides such as GTP and CTP
failed to protect OppA against proteolysis . Because of identical
tryptic digestion patterns by binding ATP or ADP, it seems likely
that the adenosine in both molecules was involved in binding to OppA .
This is in accordance with results reported for the hemolysin
exporter HlyB of E . coli that also binds ATP and ADP in almost
equimolar amounts, inducing a substantial conformational change in
HlyB (21) . Furthermore, a 95-kDa fragment of the
SecA ATPase of E . coli was shown to be highly resistant to
protease treatment in the presence of ATP, ATP S,
and ADP but not GTP, also suggesting an adenosine phosphate-mediated
change in the protein structure (39) .
The experiments shown in this paper revealed that GTP and CTP did
not bind to the OppA protein and this protein also exhibited very low
GTPase (8%) and CTPase (6%) activity compared with the ATPase
activity . There are several types of surface-located enzymes
differing in their ability to hydrolyze nucleotides (45) .
The ecto-ATPases at the surface of parasites (26) and
the ATP-binding protein of the histidine permease of S . enterica
serovar Typhimurium (29) show reduced hydrolysis
activity for the nucleotides GTP, CTP, UTP, and ADP .
Analyses of the crystal structure of different ATP and GTP binding
proteins revealed that a distinct lysine residue in the P-loop
structure is involved in binding the ß-and
-phosphates
of nucleotides (7, 30) . We proved
that this lysine was important for ATP hydrolysis when analyzing an
OppAK875R mutant in which the lysine residue was replaced
by arginine . In accordance with the findings of Schneider and
coworkers who tested a respective lysine deficient mutant of the MalK
protein of S . enterica serovar Typhimurium (37),
the OppAK875R mutant displayed a decreased ATPase activity
of 85% compared to the wild-type but was still capable of binding
ATP . Thus, binding of ATP appears to be sufficient to cause
protection against trypsin digestion whereas mutation of the whole
Walker A motif is required to decrease ATP binding and hydrolysis .
Several hypotheses for the function of ecto-ATPases in various
cell types have been proposed, such as (i) protection from a
cytolytic effect of extracellular ATP (6, 34),
(ii) regulation of ecto-kinase substrate concentration (33),
(iii) involvement in signal transduction (2,
25, 27), and (iv) involvement in
cellular adhesion (17, 20,
42) . So far the physiological role of OppA in
Mycoplasma hominis remains speculative . Indeed, this protein is
concomitantly expressed with the four core subunits of the permease,
and furthermore, no OppA-deficient mutants were found after analyzing
approximately 200 M . hominis isolates, which suggests that
OppA probably plays an essential role in M . hominis vitality .
A decade ago, when its function as a substrate-binding protein was
unknown, OppA was identified as a cytoadherence-mediating lipoprotein
of M . hominis (10) . With the discovery of the
substrate-binding function of the OppA protein, the
multifunctionality of this protein has become obvious (11) .
In other bacteria, transport systems have been shown to take part in
processes other than the transport of peptides, e.g., cytoadherence (4),
initiation of competence and sporulation (32,
36), or induction of conjugation (24) .
Extracellular ATP has been shown to be released from neutrophils,
degranulated platelets (8), and epithelial cells colonized by
bacteria (3) . ATP is known to be an important
extracellular signaling molecule which may be involved in
cell-mediated cytotoxicity (41) . Into and
coworkers found that lipoproteins of Mycoplasma fermentans and
Mycoplasma salivarius induced an increase in plasma membrane
permeability by which ATP is released . This extracellular ATP
regulates the cytotoxicity of the lipoproteins, probably by
interaction with ATP receptors such as P2X purinergic receptors (15) .
It has been demonstrated that extracellular ATP has profound effects
on cellular functions, causing plasma membrane depolarization, Ca2+
influx, and cell death (6, 41) .
The ecto-ATPases of parasites might be involved in an escape
mechanism allowing a splitting of the ATP released in its vicinity by
the colonized cells (43) . Recently, in vivo phosphorylation
of M . hominis revealed that OppA exists in phosphorylated and
nonphosphorylated forms, suggesting a regulatory mechanism (13) .
Future work will include the study of the influence of the phosphorylation
status of OppA on the ATPase activity and the influence of the
ATPase activity on cytoadhesion, peptide transport, cytolysis, and
the triggering of specific signal cascades in the host that have been
described to alter host cell division and growth (35) .
Our aim is to achieve an understanding of the multifunctional
network in Mycoplasma hominis in which OppA seems to play an
important role .
We thank Marzena Czarna for excellent technical assistance; Gaby
Reichmann, Colin MacKenzie, Klaus Pfeffer, and Heiner Schaal for
critically reading the manuscript; Sybille Scheuring for the DNA
sequencing work (Center for Biological and Medical Research, Heinrich
Heine University); and Erwin Schneider (Humboldt University of
Berlin, Institute of Biology) for the gift of purified MalK protein .
* Corresponding author . Mailing address: Institute of Medical
Microbiology, Heinrich-Heine University, Moorenstrasse 5, 40225 Duesseldorf,
Germany . Phone: 49-211-8112492 . Fax: 49-211-8115906 . E-mail: duerrm@uni-duesseldorf.de.
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