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Journal of Bacteriology, September 2004, p . 5567-5575, Vol .
186, No . 17
Transglutaminase-Mediated Cross-Linking of GerQ in the Coats of Bacillus
subtilis Spores
Katerina Ragkousi and Peter Setlow*
Department of Molecular, Microbial and Structural Biology, University of
Connecticut Health Center, Farmington, Connecticut
Received 12 April 2004/ Accepted 27 May 2004
The spores of Bacillus subtilis show remarkable resistance to
many environmental stresses, due in part to the presence of an outer
proteinaceous structure known as the spore coat . GerQ is a spore coat
protein essential for the presence of CwlJ, an enzyme involved in the
hydrolysis of the cortex during spore germination, in the spore coat .
Here we show that GerQ is cross-linked into higher-molecular-mass
forms due in large part to a transglutaminase . GerQ is the only
substrate for this transglutaminase identified to date . In addition,
we show that cross-linking of GerQ into high-molecular-mass forms
occurs only very late in sporulation, after mother cell lysis . These
findings, as well as studies of GerQ cross-linking in mutant strains
where spore coat assembly is perturbed, lead us to suggest that coat
proteins must assemble first and that their cross-linking follows as
a final step in the spore coat formation pathway .
Bacillus subtilis is a gram-positive soil bacterium that has a
number of ways to survive harsh environmental conditions . One
survival mechanism that B . subtilis cells follow at the onset
of nutrient limitation is to sporulate and give rise to spores that
are both dormant and remarkably resistant to many stress factors (34) .
Detailed studies of sporulation have given us much insight into the
spatial and temporal regulation of gene expression that occurs during
this process (7, 31) . Early in
sporulation, the division septum is placed asymmetrically in the
dividing cell instead of in the middle, as seen during vegetative
cell growth . The small compartment generated after the asymmetric
division develops into the spore, and the large compartment serves as
the mother cell . Different sets of genes are switched on, and
different proteins are produced at different times during spore
development, as determined largely by the timing and compartmentation
of the synthesis and activation of four RNA polymerase sigma factors
(two active in the mother cell and two active in the developing
spore) .
One of the late events in sporulation is the formation of a
complex, multilayer protein structure that surrounds the spore, known
as the "coat." In B . subtilis, there are two major coat
layers, as shown by electron microscopy: the lamellar inner coat and
the thicker outer coat (5, 6,
11) . Coat protein assembly is a good system to learn how
multiprotein complexes are formed, since the spore coat is composed
of many different proteins . The first point of regulation of coat
formation is at the level of gene expression . More than 30 coat
proteins (18) are synthesized in the mother cell
starting at the beginning of sporulation, and yet a functional coat
begins to appear only several hours after the onset of sporulation,
which implicates a second point of regulation during coat formation,
that of protein assembly (5, 29) .
Very few of the coat proteins have any known function other than
participating in coat assembly (5, 6,
11) . The coat as a fully assembled structure,
however, is essential for spore resistance to chemicals and lytic
enzymes, as well as for spore germination .
Recent work has identified two coat proteins, CwlJ and GerQ, with
specific roles in spore germination . When nutrients are available,
the spores break dormancy through the process of germination and
outgrowth (22, 28) . CwlJ is needed (3,
12, 24, 33)
to aid in the hydrolysis of the cortex peptidoglycan that surrounds
the dormant spore and is found beneath the coat, and GerQ (initially
called YwdL) is essential for the presence of CwlJ in the coats (33) .
Early biochemical analyses of the spore coat identified a fraction
that makes up as much as 30% of the total coat protein that is
resistant to solubilization by detergents, denaturants, and reducing
agents combined (29) . In this work, we show that
GerQ is part of this insoluble coat protein fraction . We attempt to
answer the following questions in this report . (i) What kind of
posttranslational processing makes GerQ insoluble? (ii) How and when
does GerQ become insoluble? (iii) What is the functional significance
of generating insoluble GerQ for overall coat protein assembly?
Previous studies suggested that coat proteins may become cross-linked
through the formation of di-tyrosine bridges (5,
6, 11) . It was suggested that an
as-yet-unidentified peroxidase generates the di-tyrosine cross-links
and a superoxide dismutase was postulated to be essential for
formation of these cross-links, presumably by providing the hydrogen
peroxide necessary for the peroxidase (10) . Recent
studies also showed that the tyrosine-rich coat proteins CotB, CotC,
and CotG are present as multimers in the spore coats, although the
mechanism of this multimerization is not known (13,
42) . Other coat proteins including CotE and CotT
were also reported to form multimers by unknown mechanisms (2) .
The products of the cotVWXYZ cluster were the first proteins
implicated in the formation of an insoluble coat lattice (40) .
It was also suggested that the CotY and CotZ coat proteins are
cross-linked by disulfide bonds, while CotX may be a substrate for
transglutaminase activity (40) . Another coat protein
suggested to be a substrate for transglutaminase is CotM, which
appears to be related to the
-crystallin
family of low-molecular-mass heat shock proteins, members of which
can be cross-linked via a transglutaminase (9) . A
spore-associated transglutaminase has been extracted, and the gene (tgl)
that encodes this enzyme was cloned by reverse genetics (14,
16) . Transglutaminases catalyze various
posttranslational reactions, mainly inter- or intraprotein
cross-linking, and are abundant in all forms of life (19) .
The products of their activity are supramolecular structures with
extra rigidity and resistance to degradation . Transglutaminases
can cause protein cross-linking by forming an
-( -glutamyl)
lysine isopeptide bridge between a lysine donor residue in one
protein and the acceptor glutamine residue from the same or another
protein (19) . In this work, we show that it is the
transglutaminase encoded by tgl that is involved in GerQ
incorporation into the insoluble coat protein fraction, most probably
by mediating GerQ cross-linking in the spore coats . This is the first
time that a spore coat protein has been shown to become cross-linked
due to the spore's transglutaminase .
Strains and plasmids used in this study. The B . subtilis
strains used in this study are listed in Table 1 .
All B . subtilis strains are isogenic with strain PS832, a
prototrophic derivative of strain 168, except where indicated . B .
subtilis strains were prepared by transformation with either
chromosomal DNA or plasmid DNA as described previously (1) .
The genotypes of the strains arising from transformation with
plasmid DNA were confirmed by PCR . Escherichia coli strains
TG1 and DH5
were used for the production of plasmids (20) . E .
coli strain BL21
(DE3)
(Novagen) (37) was used for protein expression .
| TABLE 1 . Strains and plasmids used in this study
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Plasmid pKE80, used to generate a tgl deletion mutant, was constructed
in two steps . The 3' region of tgl (from 45 bp upstream to 212
bp downstream of the translation stop codon) was amplified by
PCR (all primer sequences are available upon request) from chromosomal
DNA of strain PS832, cloned into plasmid pCR2.1 (Invitrogen,
Carlsbad, Calif.), and the insert was sequenced and then recovered as
an XbaI-EagI fragment (sites present in the PCR primers) . The
fragment was inserted between the XbaI and EagI sites downstream of
the ermC resistance cassette in plasmid pFE140 (27),
giving plasmid pKE79 . The 5' region of tgl (from 198 bp
upstream to 33 bp downstream of the translation start codon) was
amplified by PCR from chromosomal DNA of strain PS832 and cloned into
plasmid pCR2.1 . The insert was sequenced, recovered as a KpnI-XhoI
fragment (KpnI site present in the 5' PCR primer and XhoI site
present in plasmid pCR2.1), and inserted between the same sites in
plasmid pKE79 upstream of the ermC resistance cassette, giving
plasmid pKE80 . Plasmid pKE80 was used to transform B . subtilis
strain PS832 to macrolide-lincosamide-streptogramin B resistance by a
double-crossover event such that the internal part of the tgl
open reading frame (ORF) is deleted and replaced by the ermC
resistance cassette .
Plasmid pKE95, which was used to overexpress the gerQ ORF, was
derived from plasmid pET11a (Novagen) . The gerQ ORF was PCR
amplified with primers gerQ-N-pET (5'-CATATGAAACCGAAAAAAAATCAATAT)
and gerQ-C-pET (5'-GGATCCTTATCTTGGCGAATAGGACG) from plasmid
pKE39 (33), which contains the complete transcription
unit of gerQ (194 bp upstream of the translational start
codon, the gerQ ORF, and 156 bp downstream of the
translational stop codon) . The gerQ-N-pET primer introduced an NdeI
site (underlined) at the translation start codon (boldface) of
gerQ, and the gerQ-C-pET primer introduced a BamHI site
(underlined) right after the translation stop codon (boldface) of
gerQ . The PCR product was cloned into plasmid pCR2.1, and the
insert was sequenced and then recovered as an NdeI-BamHI fragment .
This fragment was inserted between the NdeI and BamHI sites of
plasmid pET11a, giving plasmid pKE95 .
Plasmid pKE97, which was used to overexpress the gerQ ORF as
a His10-tag fusion, was derived from plasmid pET16b (Novagen,
Madison, Wis.) . The gerQ ORF was recovered as an NdeI-BamHI
fragment from plasmid pKE95 and inserted between the same sites
in plasmid pET16b, giving plasmid pKE97 .
Growth of strains and spore preparation. E . coli and
B . subtilis strains were grown at 37°C in rich medium
(Luria-Bertani [LB] or 2x YT) (20),
supplemented when necessary with the following antibiotics:
ampicillin, 100 mg/liter; chloramphenicol, 5 mg/liter for B .
subtilis and 20mg/liter for E . coli strains carrying
plasmid pLysS; erythromycin, 1 mg/liter; and lincomycin, 25 mg/liter;
kanamycin, 10 mg/liter; spectinomycin, 100mg/liter; or tetracycline,
7 mg/liter .
Spores were prepared by nutrient exhaustion on 2x
SG medium agar plates at 37°C for 6 days and were harvested and
purified by sonication and repeated washing with cold distilled water
as described previously (23, 25) .
All spore preparations were free (>99%) of vegetative and sporulating
cells and germinated spores as evaluated by phase-contrast
microscopy . For study of GerQ cross-linking during sporulation, cells
were induced to sporulate by the resuspension method (see reference
36 and below) .
Spore germination. B . subtilis spores were germinated
by either nutrients or a 1:1 chelate of Ca2+ and
pyridine-2,6-dicarboxylic acid (dipicolinic acid [DPA]) . For spore
germination by nutrients, spores in water (optical density at 600 nm
[OD600] of 50) were heat activated (70°C, 30 min) and
cooled on ice . The heat-activated spores were diluted to an OD600
of 1 in 2x YT medium plus 10 mM
L-alanine and incubated at 37°C, and changes
in OD600 were monitored as described previously (21,
26) . In other experiments, heat-activated spores
were diluted to an OD600 of 1 in water, LB agar plates
were spotted with 10-µl aliquots of serial dilutions of spores in
water, and the colonies formed were counted after overnight
incubation at 30°C (27) . For germination with a
1:1 chelate of Ca2+-DPA, spores at an OD600 of 1 were
incubated in 60 mM Ca2+-DPA (60 mM CaCl2, 60 mM
DPA [pH 8.0]) at 25°C for 1 h (24,
33), and spore germination was monitored by phase-contrast
microscopy . The germinated spores appear phase dark, in contrast to
the dormant spores, which appear phase bright .
Spore decoating and spore protein extraction. Spores at an
OD600 of 50 were decoated by either of two methods: (i)
treatment for 30 min at 70°C with 1 ml of 0.1 M NaCl-0.1 M NaOH-1%
sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)-0.1 M dithiothreitol (DTT) (38)
or (ii) treatment for 90 min at 37°C with 1 ml of 50 mM Tris-HCl (pH
8)-8 M urea-10 mM EDTA-1% SDS-50 mM DTT (29) . We
found the first method to be more efficient in extracting
high-molecular-mass species of GerQ compared to the second extraction
method . The coat extracts were dialyzed overnight against 0.33 M
sodium acetate (pH 5.0) at 12°C and then dialyzed three times against
water at 12°C for 4 h each time . The dialyzed extracts were
lyophilized, and the dry material was resuspended in 100 µl of 1x
SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE) sample buffer (62.5 mM
Tris-HCl, pH 6.8, 10% glycerol, 2% SDS, 0.003% bromophenol blue, 1%
ß-mercaptoethanol) and boiled for 5 min before SDS-PAGE and Western
blot analysis (reference 8 and see below) . The
decoated spores were centrifuged (13,000
x g, 1 min, 25°C) and washed 10 times with water at
25°C, and the spore pellet was lyophilized .
Lyophilized intact or decoated spores were pulverized with 100 mg
of glass beads in a dental amalgamator (Wig-L-Bug) for 20 pulses of
30 s each with 30-s intervals between pulses . Soluble proteins were
extracted from the disrupted spores with 100 µl of 50 mM HEPES (pH
7.5)-5 mM EDTA-1 mM phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride (PMSF) by
incubation for 30 min on ice and a 5-min centrifugation (13,000
x g, 12°C) as described previously
(3, 33) . The soluble fraction was
mixed with 100 µl of 2x SDS-PAGE
sample buffer, and the insoluble fraction was resuspended in 100 µl
of 1x SDS-PAGE sample buffer, and both
fractions were boiled for 5 min before SDS-PAGE and Western blot
analysis (reference 8 and see below) . Note that
together the soluble and insoluble fractions contain the total
proteins from intact or decoated spores that have been mechanically
disrupted . The soluble coat proteins are likely to be extracted with
the coats as described above, and the insoluble coat proteins will be
in the insoluble fraction of the mechanically disrupted spores
along with other insoluble spore proteins .
Protein extraction from sporulating cells. B . subtilis
strains were induced to sporulate by the resuspension method (36) .
A 4-ml sample was collected every hour after the onset of
sporulation, and the cell pellet (13,000 x
g, 1 min, 25°C) was lyophilized . The lyophilized cells were
pulverized with 50 mg of glass beads in a dental amalgamator as
described above for protein extraction from intact or decoated
spores . Proteins were extracted by resuspending the disrupted spores
in 100 µl of 1x SDS-PAGE sample buffer
(8), boiling for 5 min, and centrifugation (13,000
x g, 30 s, 25°C) to remove
insoluble debris, and aliquots of equal volume were run on SDS-PAGE
and subjected to Western blot analysis (reference 8 and see
below) .
Production of anti-GerQ antibodies. The His10-GerQ
protein was overexpressed in BL21
(DE3)
E . coli cells as follows . Strain KE98, which carries plasmid
pKE97, was grown at 37°C in 2x YT
medium, and at an OD600 of
0.7,
cells were induced by the addition of isopropyl-ß-D-thiogalactoside
(IPTG) to 1 mM . After 4 h of further growth, the cells were
harvested (4,000 x g, 20 min, 4°C),
resuspended in lysis buffer (100 mM NaH2PO4-10
mM Tris-HCl-8 M urea [pH 8.0]), and incubated for 30 min at 25°C .
Cells were centrifuged at 25°C (10,000 x
g, 20 min), and the supernatant fluid was mixed with Ni2+-nitrilotriacetic
acid agarose (Qiagen) . The mixture was loaded onto a column, and
purification of His10-GerQ was performed under denaturing
conditions according to Qiagen specifications . The overexpressed His10-GerQ
is present in the insoluble fraction of the extracted protein from
E . coli cells and most probably is in the inclusion bodies that
were observed under the phase-contrast microscope . The purified His10-GerQ
was dialyzed in 50 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.5) at 12°C overnight,
during which time the protein precipitated . After further dialysis
against fresh buffer for 7 h, the precipitated protein was used for
antibody production (Pocono Rabbit Farm and Laboratory, Canadensis,
Pa.) . Anti-His10-GerQ antibodies were detected in a bleed
2 months after antigen injection, the animals were exsanguinated, and
the antiserum was collected and stored at –80°C . In later work, we
managed to keep the purified His10-GerQ in solution by
dialyzing the protein against 5% (vol/vol) acetic acid (adjusted to
pH 5.5 by addition of NaOH) .
Preparation of E . coli cell extracts. Strain PS2602,
which carries plasmid pET11a, and strain KE96, which carries plasmid
pKE95, were grown in 2x YT medium, and
at an OD600 of
0.5,
the cell culture was induced by addition of IPTG to 1 mM . After 4 h
of further growth, 1-ml samples were centrifuged (13,000
x g, 1 min, 25°C), the cell pellet
was resuspended in 100 µl of 1x
SDS-PAGE sample buffer (8) and boiled for 5 min,
and aliquots (adjusted to contain the lysate from an equal number of
cells) were run on SDS-PAGE followed by Western blot analysis
(reference 8 and see below) .
Western blot analysis. For GerQ detection, E . coli
and B . subtilis extracts were run on SDS-PAGE (10%
polyacrylamide) and proteins were transferred to an Immobilon-P
membrane (Millipore) (8) . The membrane was treated
with a 1:50,000 dilution of anti-GerQ antiserum and then with a
1:10,000 dilution of goat anti-rabbit immunoglobulin G-alkaline
phosphatase conjugate (Southern Biotechnology Associates, Birmingham,
Ala.) in 1x Tris-buffered saline (TBS) with
2% blocking reagent (Roche, Indianapolis, Ind.) and 0.1% Tween 20
added as described previously (8) . For detection of
the CwlJ-His tag, B . subtilis extracts were run on SDS-PAGE
(12.5% polyacrylamide) and proteins were transferred to an
Immobilon-P membrane and treated with a 1:666 dilution of anti-His
tag monoclonal antibody (Novagen, Madison, Wis.) and then a 1:30,000
dilution of goat anti-mouse immunoglobulin G-alkaline phosphatase
conjugate (Sigma, St . Louis, Mo.) in TBS with 2% blocking reagent
(Roche) and 0.1% Tween 20 added as described previously (3,
8, 33) . The alkaline phosphatase
was detected with the chemiluminescent substrate disodium
3-(4-methoxyspiro {1,2-dioxetane-3,2'-(5'-chloro) tricyclo [3.3.1.13,7]
decan}-4-yl) phenyl phosphate (Roche), and chemiluminescence was
detected by exposure to X-ray film .
Other methods. B . subtilis spores at an OD600
of 1 were treated with 0.25% sodium hypochlorite (pH 11.5) in water
at 25°C, and spore viability was monitored on LB agar plates spotted
with aliquots of serial dilutions as described previously (33,
39) . For lysozyme resistance assays, spores were
treated with lysozyme (1 mg/ml) in buffer (20 mM Tris-HCl [pH
8.0]-300 mM NaCl) for 20 min at 37°C, and LB agar plates were spotted
with serial dilutions of aliquots (33) .
Detection of GerQ. We induced the overexpression of GerQ in
E . coli both as an untagged and as a His10-tagged
fusion protein . In both cases, the protein was found in the insoluble
fraction of the total cell lysate and inclusion bodies were observed
in E . coli cells overexpressing either of the two forms of
GerQ . This suggested that GerQ tends to form inclusion bodies when
overexpressed in E . coli cells . Therefore, we purified the
overexpressed, insoluble His10-GerQ under denaturing
conditions by Ni2+ affinity chromatography . While purified
His10-GerQ precipitated during subsequent dialysis, the
precipitated protein was immunogenic when injected into rabbits and
we were successful in production of anti-GerQ antiserum .
We investigated the specificity and sensitivity of anti-GerQ
antiserum by Western blot analysis on cell extracts from E . coli
strains that express the untagged GerQ and those carrying only the
empty vector (Fig . 1, lanes B and C) . We also ultimately
managed to maintain the purified His10-GerQ in solution during
dialysis and used the solubilized form to estimate the minimum
amount of GerQ detectable by the anti-GerQ antiserum ( 30
ng) (Fig . 1, lane A) (data not shown) . The
antiserum recognizes a single band of
18
kDa, present only in the extract of E . coli cells expressing
the untagged GerQ . The molecular mass of full-length GerQ is
calculated to be 20.2 kDa . The discrepancy between the calculated
molecular mass and the observed value could be due to the physical
properties of the denatured GerQ when run on SDS-PAGE or some protein
degradation or processing, but this was not studied further .
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FIG . 1 . Specificity and sensitivity of the anti-GerQ antiserum . The
samples in the various lanes are as follows: A, purified His10-GerQ
(30 ng); B, extract from 2 x 104
E . coli cells of strain KE96 carrying plasmid pKE95 (pET11a-gerQ)
induced to overexpress the untagged GerQ; C, extract from 2
x 104 cells of strain
PS2602 carrying the empty vector pET11a . The cell extracts were prepared
in parallel as described in Materials and Methods . Samples were run on
SDS-PAGE (10% polyacrylamide), proteins were transferred to an
Immobilon-P membrane, and GerQ was detected as described in Materials
and Methods . The numbered bars to the right of the figure indicate the
migration positions of mass markers in kilodaltons . The band at the
position of the asterisk is the His10-GerQ product, and the
band at the position of the dot is the untagged GerQ . Note that the
anti-GerQ antiserum fails to cross-react with any E . coli host
proteins.
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We then examined GerQ in extracts from B . subtilis spores (Fig .
2) . While there was no signal in Western blot analysis
with extracts from gerQ spores, in wild-type spore extracts we
observed a band of 18 kDa, similar to the size of the band detected
in E . coli cell extracts, as well as a number of
higher-molecular-mass bands and a possible breakdown product (Fig.
2) . Although we detected the high-molecular-mass
bands and the single 18-kDa band in all of our Western blots in this
and subsequent experiments, the band just below the 18-kDa band was
not detected in all experiments . This led us to assign it as a
degradation product of GerQ . All of these bands were found only in
the insoluble fraction from mechanically disrupted wild-type spores .
Since neither the 18-kDa band, the higher-molecular-mass bands, nor
any other bands were seen at significant levels in the gerQ
spore extracts, the antiserum appears to be specific for GerQ .
Moreover, GerQ appears to be present in wild-type spores largely as a
part of an insoluble high-molecular-mass complex .
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FIG . 2 . GerQ in extracts from spores of various strains . The insoluble
(lanes A, C, and E) and soluble (lanes B, D, and F) proteins in extracts
from identical amounts (5 OD600 units;
0.6
mg [dry weight]) of mechanically disrupted spores were run on SDS-PAGE
(10% polyacrylamide), proteins were transferred to an Immobilon-P
membrane, and GerQ was detected as described in Materials and Methods .
The spores were from strains KB81 (tgl; lanes A and B), KB29 (gerQ;
lanes C and D), and PS832 (wild type; lanes E and F) . The bars on the
right side of the figure indicate the migration positions of molecular
mass markers in kilodaltons . The asterisk denotes the migration position
of monomeric GerQ, and the band below it, at the position of the dot, is
a possible degradation product of GerQ.
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GerQ is cross-linked into a high-molecular-mass complex in the spore
coats. Since the anti-GerQ antiserum recognized a number of
high-molecular-mass products in the insoluble fraction of wild-type
spores (Fig . 2, lanes E and F), GerQ must be
present in one or more higher-molecular-mass forms observed in
samples from mechanically disrupted spores . GerQ is a spore coat
protein (33), and analysis by fluorescence
microscopy has shown that a GerQ-green fluorescent protein (GFP)
fusion is localized on the spore periphery, with this localization
dependent on the major coat morphogenetic proteins CotE and SpoIVA (33) .
Previous studies have suggested that approximately 30% of the spore
coat protein remains insoluble even after treatment of spores with
detergents and reducing agents (29) . This observation,
the detection of
-( -glutamyl)
lysine isopeptide bonds in the spore coats (15),
and the cloning of some of the proteins that make up the insoluble
coat protein lattice (40) have led to the idea
that some spore coat proteins are covalently cross-linked into
higher-molecular-mass complexes . Moreover, a number of tyrosine-rich
coat proteins have been found to form multimers, supporting the
suggestion that di-tyrosine bonds could be involved in cross-linking
of proteins in the spore coat (5, 6,
10, 11, 13,
42) . Indeed, the presence of such highly cross-linked
complexes could render the spore coat and the spore itself rigid and
resistant to mechanical disruption (5,
6, 11) . In light of this idea,
we analyzed GerQ in extracts from mechanically disrupted spores
lacking either SodA, a superoxide dismutase associated with
cross-linking of another protein into the coats (10), or Tgl,
a spore-associated transglutaminase (14,
16) . SodA could cross-link GerQ by generation of di-tyrosine
bonds, while Tgl could cross-link GerQ by generation of isopeptide
bonds . GerQ was detected in much smaller species in extracts from
tgl spores, in contrast to the similar levels of
higher-molecular-mass species observed in the extracts of wild-type
or sodA spores (Fig . 2) (data not shown) .
Moreover, the low-molecular-mass species of GerQ in tgl spores
were completely removed by a decoating treatment, in contrast to the
higher-molecular-mass species present in wild-type spores that were
still present in the extracts of decoated spores (Fig .
3) . Presumably when the transglutaminase is not expressed, GerQ
is still present in the spore coats, but because it is not part of a
rigid, cross-linked complex, it is easily removed during standard
coat removal procedures . Given the effect of Tgl on GerQ, it was
surprising to find GerQ present in the coats of tgl spores . To
confirm this observation, we examined the localization of GerQ-GFP in
tgl mutant spores . Previous fluorescence microscopy has shown
that GerQ-GFP localizes as a dot close to the developing forespore
early in sporulation and assembles around the periphery of the spore
only later during development (33) . In the tgl
mutant, GerQ-GFP was both localized and assembled as in the wild-type
strain (data not shown) . These results suggest that Tgl is not
essential for the proper localization and assembly of GerQ in the
spore coats .
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FIG . 3 . GerQ in extracts from spores of various strains . Spores of
strains KB29 (gerQ; lanes A), KB81 (tgl; lanes B) and
PS832 (wild-type; lanes C) were decoated by treatment for 30 min at 70°C
with 0.1 M NaCl-0.1 M NaOH-1% SDS-0.1 M DTT as described in Materials
and Methods . Extracted coat proteins and the insoluble fraction of
extracts from mechanically disrupted, decoated, and intact spores were
run on SDS-PAGE (10% polyacrylamide), proteins were transferred to an
Immobilon-P membrane, and GerQ was detected as described in Materials
and Methods . Samples from identical amounts of spores (5 OD600
units;
0.6
mg [dry weight]) were run in each lane . The bars on the right of the
figure indicate the migration positions of molecular mass markers in
kilodaltons.
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Effect of transglutaminase on spore properties. We were
interested in determining whether there is some functional role of
this transglutaminase-mediated cross-linking of GerQ . Consequently we
studied a number of the properties of tgl spores . Initial
experiments showed that germination of tgl spores in either
nutrients or Ca2+-DPA was similar to that of wild-type
spores (Fig . 4) . GerQ is a spore coat protein essential for
the presence of another coat protein, CwlJ, which together with
SleB carries out spore cortex hydrolysis during germination (3,
12, 24, 33) . CwlJ
action is triggered by the Ca2+-DPA released early in
germination, thus initiating spore cortex hydrolysis (24,
33) . Given the role of GerQ in CwlJ localization, we
therefore asked whether cross-linking of GerQ is essential for CwlJ
function during germination . For this purpose, we used spores lacking
both the cortex lytic enzyme, SleB, as well as Tgl . Spores of
the sleB tgl strain germinated as well as wild-type spores,
giving rise to similar numbers of colonies when applied as spots to
nutrient agar plates, while colony formation by cwlJ sleB
spores was more than 104-fold lower than that of wild-type spores
(24, 33) . The germination efficiency
of the sleB (FB112) spores had been shown previously to be
similar to that of wild-type spores (24,
33) . For strains FB112 (sleB) and KB82 (sleB tgl),
the numbers of spores germinated with nutrients were 3.1
x 107 and 3.0
x 107 CFU/ml, respectively . The
percentage of germination with Ca2+-DPA was
99%
for each of these strains . (For details, see Materials and Methods.)
Moreover, CwlJ localization was also likely not affected by the
absence of cross-linked GerQ, since sleB tgl spores germinated
as well as wild-type spores in response to both internal and external
sources of Ca2+-DPA . To confirm that the localization of
CwlJ does not require cross-linked GerQ, we examined the levels of a
His-tagged version of CwlJ in the coats of tgl spores by
Western blot analysis (3, 33)
and found that CwlJ was present in the coats of the tgl spores
at levels similar to those in wild-type spores (Fig . 5) . Thus
transglutaminase-mediated cross-linking of GerQ is essential
neither for the spore's ability to germinate nor for the proper
localization of CwlJ .
|
FIG . 4 . Germination of spores of various strains in nutrients . Spores of
the wild-type strain PS832 ( ),
the gerQ strain (KB29) ( ),
and the tgl strain (KB81) ( )
were heat activated and incubated in 2x
YT medium with 10 mM L-alanine at 37°C . The OD600
of each sample was measured at various times, indicated as [OD600
(t)], and is plotted as the fraction of the initial OD600
at time zero [OD600 (t)/OD600 (t0)]
versus time.
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FIG . 5 . Detection of the CwlJ-His tag protein in the coats of wild-type
and tgl spores . Spores of strains KB102 (cwlJ-His tag
tgl; lanes A, B, and C) and PS3449 (cwlJ-His tag; lanes D, E,
and F) were decoated by treatment for 90 min at 37°C with 50 mM Tris-HCl
(pH 8)-8 M urea-10 mM EDTA-1% SDS-50 mM DTT as described in Materials
and Methods . The extracted coat proteins (lanes C and D) and the soluble
(lanes A and F) and insoluble (lanes B and E) proteins from mechanically
disrupted decoated spores were run on SDS-PAGE (12.5% polyacrylamide),
proteins were transferred to an Immobilon-P membrane, and CwlJ-His tag
was detected as described in Materials and Methods . All lanes were
loaded with extracts from identical amounts of spores (7.5 OD600
units;
0.9
mg [dry weight]) . Note that proteins from the tgl coat extracts
had a slightly different migration profile relative to the proteins from
the wild-type coat extracts, most probably due to the different amounts
and species of coat proteins extracted by the decoating of spores of the
two strains . The bars on the right of the figure indicate the migration
positions of molecular mass markers in kilodaltons.
|
|
Spores show remarkable resistance to chemical agents, and the coats
are an important factor in spore chemical resistance (34) .
We therefore examined the ability of tgl spores to tolerate
two agents that have been shown to affect spores with coat defects .
One is lysozyme, which destroys spores without a proper outer
coat due to the absence of the morphogenetic protein CotE (Table
2) (41) . However, lysozyme-treated tgl
spores showed similar numbers of survivors, as did gerQ and
wild-type spores (Table 2) (33) .
The second agent tested, sodium hypochlorite, is particularly
effective in inactivating spores with defective coats (Table
2) (39) However, tgl spores treated
with sodium hypochlorite exhibited survival similar to that of
wild-type spores (Table 2) . Previous work has shown
that absence of GerQ also does not reduce spore hypochlorite
resistance (Table 2) (33) .
| TABLE 2 . Chemical resistance of spores of various strains
|
|
GerQ cross-linking occurs very late in sporulation, after mother cell
lysis. The next point we addressed was when GerQ cross-linking occurs
during sporulation . Wild-type and mutant strains were induced
to sporulate by the resuspension method (36), and the
cross-linking of GerQ was monitored in sporulating cell extracts by
Western blot analysis . Surprisingly, the high-molecular-mass GerQ
species were detected only very late in sporulation (24 h after the
initiation of sporulation) (Fig . 6A and B) . Analysis by
phase-contrast microscopy indicated that the appearance of the
cross-linked GerQ species began only when the majority (>75%) of the
spores had been released from their mother cells, which also was only
24
h after the initiation of sporulation (data not shown) . These
observations, in addition to the results noted above, reinforced the
idea that cross-linking of GerQ occurs well after it is properly
localized in the spore coat, a process that occurs 7 h after the
initiation of sporulation (33) . To confirm this
point, we studied the appearance of cross-linked GerQ species in
strains lacking either of the coat morphogenetic proteins, CotE and
SpoIVA, previously shown to be essential for assembly and
localization of GerQ on the spore coats (33) . Fluorescence
microscopy has shown that GerQ-GFP is targeted to the forespore
normally in sporulating cotE cells, but fails to assemble properly
around the spore periphery later in sporulation (33) .
In sporulating spoIVA cells, GerQ-GFP is not even targeted to
the forespore and remains in the mother cell cytoplasm until cell
lysis (33) . As expected from these results, no
cross-linked GerQ products were detected in extracts of sporulating
cotE cells (Fig . 7A) . Possibly the initial
18-kDa GerQ product normally expressed in the sporulating cell early
in sporulation fails to remain associated with the released cotE
spore after mother cell lysis (Fig . 7A) . In the
spoIVA mutant, the 18-kDa GerQ product accumulated early in
sporulation, but as found in the cotE mutant, it was not
properly assembled in the spore coat and hence did not form
cross-linked species (Fig . 7B) .
|
FIG . 6 . Detection of GerQ in extracts of sporulating cells . Strains
PS832 (wild type) and KB29 (gerQ) were induced to sporulate by
the resuspension method, samples were collected at various times after
the initiation of sporulation (time zero), and protein extracts were
prepared as described in Materials and Methods . A fraction (10%) of the
extract from each sample was run on SDS-PAGE (10% polyacrylamide),
proteins were transferred to an Immobilon-P membrane, and GerQ was
detected as described in Materials and Methods . The bars on the left of
the figure indicate the migration positions of molecular mass markers in
kilodaltons . Note that the results in panels A and B are from two
different experiments.
|
|
|
FIG . 7 . Detection of GerQ in extracts of sporulating cells of various
strains . PS3328 (cotE) (A), KB104 (spoIVA) (B), KB81 (tgl)
(C), KB29 (gerQ) (A, B, and C), and PS832 (wild type [WT]) (A, B
and C) were induced to sporulate by the resuspension method, and samples
were collected at various times . Protein extracts were prepared, a
fraction (10%) was run on SDS-PAGE (10% polyacrylamide), proteins were
transferred to an Immobilon-P membrane, and GerQ was detected as
described in Materials and Methods . The bars to the left of the figure
indicate the migration positions of molecular mass markers in
kilodaltons . The three mutant strains were induced to sporulate in
parallel with the wild-type strain (the results appear in Fig.
6B) . Sporulation of strain KB104 (spoIVA) was
blocked early, and no mature spores were released.
|
|
In the absence of the transglutaminase, a low level of high-molecular-mass
GerQ species was still detectable in the spore extracts (Fig .
2, lane A) . In agreement with our observation with the
wild-type strain, the appearance of this low level of
higher-molecular-mass GerQ species also occurred only after tgl
spores were released from their mother cells late in sporulation
(Fig . 7C) .
There have been a number of reasons why the coats of B . subtilis
spores have attracted study: (i) the ability of spores to resist
the action of chemicals and lytic enzymes is due to the presence
of an intact coat (5, 6,
11, 34), (ii) some proteins involved
in spore germination are components of the coat (3,
12, 24, 33),
and (iii) the formation of the spore coat is the result of the
coordinated assembly of many proteins (5, 6,
11) . Early studies suggested that some coat
proteins are resistant to solubilization, perhaps due to their
covalent cross-linking (29) . In support of this
suggestion,
-( -glutamyl)
lysine cross-links were discovered in spore coat protein fractions
and a transglutaminase activity that could generate these cross-links
was detected in spores and sporulating cells (15,
16) . Only one transglutaminase has been identified
in B . subtilis to date, and this enzyme is the product of the
tgl gene, which is expressed in the mother cell late in
sporulation under the control of the
K
transcription factor (11, 14,
16;
http://genolist.pasteur.fr/SubtiList/) . While recent proteomic
analysis has confirmed that Tgl is a spore component (17),
it is still not known if it is present in the coat and no
transglutaminase substrate has been identified . Previous studies
suggested that CotX and CotM may be transglutaminase substrates, but
no direct evidence for this suggestion has yet been presented (9,
40) . Here we show that GerQ becomes cross-linked
in the spore coat and that this cross-linking is mediated by Tgl, the
spore transglutaminase . Since GerQ contains a large number of
glutamine, lysine, and tyrosine residues and is resistant to
extraction from spores by standard decoating procedures, it may be
cross-linked in the spore coats either through formation of
di-tyrosine or isopeptide cross-links or both . While Tgl is essential
for GerQ cross-linking, there is no evidence that Tgl is directly
responsible for generating the GerQ cross-links, as it is formally
possible that this is an indirect effect of Tgl action, since we have
not yet characterized the cross-link in GerQ . Thus it is formally
possible that Tgl plays only a structural role in GerQ cross-linking .
However, since GerQ is localized normally in the absence of Tgl, we
find it difficult to conceive how Tgl is a structural component
essential for GerQ cross-linking and not GerQ localization . We tested
whether GerQ becomes cross-linked to cortex peptidoglycan by treating
extracts of mechanically disrupted spores with lysozyme, and
GerQ was still present in the high-molecular-mass species in these
treated extracts (data not shown) . The implication therefore is that
GerQ is either cross-linked to itself or to some other coat proteins .
Since the sizes of the cross-linked GerQ species are not multiples of
GerQ itself, we suspect that GerQ becomes cross-linked to a number of
other coat proteins, although the identity of the latter is not
clear . Transglutaminases act on glutamine and lysine residues of
proteins (19) and there are many coat proteins
containing glutamine, lysine, or both, with which GerQ could become
cross-linked . Early studies suggested that products of the
cotVWXYZ gene cluster are involved in the formation of insoluble
coat material (40) . It is thus possible that GerQ
is part of this material and is cross-linked to some or all of these
proteins . Future work will identify if these or other candidate spore
coat proteins are all cross-linked together .
One protein that GerQ could be cross-linked to is CwlJ . Since GerQ
is essential for the localization of CwlJ in the spore coats (33),
an obvious possibility is that CwlJ becomes cross-linked to GerQ .
However, no differences were seen in GerQ localization or
cross-linking in either the presence or absence of CwlJ (33;
data not shown) . In addition, previous results have shown that
CwlJ can be readily extracted by decoating regimens (3,
24), indicating that the probability of CwlJ being
cross-linked with GerQ in an insoluble complex is low . The lack of a
role for Tgl in cross-linking of CwlJ to GerQ is also suggested by
the normal germination of sleB tgl spores . Indeed, the
relatively normal resistance of tgl spores to lysozyme and
sodium hypochlorite indicates that cross-linking of GerQ or other
coat proteins by Tgl is not essential for the integrity of the spore
coat . Consequently, we are as yet unable to ascribe any functional
significance to Tgl-mediated cross-linking of GerQ . Indeed,
previous studies have shown that removal of a group of insoluble coat
proteins encoded by the cotVWXYZ gene cluster had no effect on
spore chemical resistance (40) . Perhaps the cross-linking
of coat proteins by Tgl is essential for building a spore coat
structure that will render spores resistant to mechanical stress .
Studies to date indicate that GerQ remains cross-linked in germinated
spores (data not shown), and it is possible that the cross-linked
coat also provides the germinated spore with some protection against
mechanical disruption as well (5, 6) .
Studies on the role of Tgl in the mechanical resistance of spores are
in progress .
Tgl may not be the only factor involved in GerQ cross-linking,
since some GerQ species with higher molecular mass than the monomer
are present in mechanically disrupted tgl spores . All
extractions of GerQ were performed in the presence of disulfide
reducing agents, and GerQ does not contain any cysteine residues .
Therefore the high-molecular-mass species of GerQ in tgl spores
cannot be the result of disulfide bridge formation . Coat protein
cross-linking could also be mediated by di-tyrosine bond formation
(5, 6, 11) . Indeed,
the tyrosine-rich coat proteins CotC, CotB, and CotG have been shown
to form multimers (13, 42) . Although
the enzyme responsible for di-tyrosine formation has not been
identified, studies have shown that SodA, a superoxide dismutase, is
essential for the multimerization of CotG (10) . GerQ is also
rich in tyrosines and could in theory be a substrate for a coat
peroxidase and become cross-linked via di-tyrosine bonds . However,
the absence of SodA had no effect on GerQ cross-linking . Consequently,
the factors in addition to Tgl that cross-link GerQ are not
clear .
We were most surprised to find that the high-molecular-mass GerQ
species appeared very late in sporulation . Since spore formation by
the resuspension method is thought to be complete in
8
h, except for ultimate spore release from the mother cell (7;
data not shown), it was surprising to detect GerQ cross-linking only
16 h after the apparent completion of spore formation . Two possible
explanations for this apparent anomaly are that GerQ cross-linking is
either coupled to the mother cell lysis and spore release that begins
at this later time or that GerQ cross-linking is a time-dependent
event in spore maturation that is not coupled to spore release from
the mother cell . We favor the first possibility because we failed to
detect any significant level of GerQ cross-linked intermediates
between the time of apparent completion of spore formation (8th h)
and spore release from the mother cell (24th h), indicating that
spore release may be the triggering event for the cross-linking
reaction . It is noteworthy that the cross-linking events occurred
after mother cell lysis and spore release whether the cross-links
were due to Tgl action or to some other mechanism . By the time of
mother cell lysis, all proteins must be assembled on the spore and
all the events that comprise the developmental pathway must have
largely taken place (7, 31) . Perhaps mother
cell lysis signals the transglutaminase or other cross-linking
factors somehow, indicating that all components have been positioned
properly on the developing spore, and thus coat cross-linking
can commence . Previous studies indicated that Tgl activity appears
long before mother cell lysis, at
6 h after the initiation of sporulation (15,
16) . However, these studies indicate merely the
expression of the tgl gene and not Tgl activity per se, since
the transglutaminase assay was performed on lysed sporulating cells .
Experiments reported here show that GerQ cross-linking is blocked in
mutants in which coat protein assembly is perturbed . Moreover, GerQ
and CwlJ are properly assembled in the spore coats in the absence of
Tgl activity . These findings reinforce the idea that proteins
assemble on the spore coat first and become cross-linked later . This
could be because GerQ cross-linking is blocked in the environment of
the mother cell or is activated only once the mother cell lyses .
However, the signals or requirements for GerQ cross-linking are not
clear . Interestingly, GerQ, CwlJ, and Tgl are absent from the genomes
of anaerobic spore-formers such as various Clostridium species
(33), and perhaps GerQ cross-linking requires the
oxidizing environment found after mother cell lysis in aerobic spore
formers . However, it is not clear why an oxidizing environment might
activate transglutaminase-dependent cross-linking .
This study supports the suggestion that some spore coat proteins
become cross-linked through the function of a transglutaminase (15,
16) . We provide evidence that in the absence of Tgl, the
coat protein GerQ is no longer cross-linked into high-molecular-mass
species and it is completely extracted by decoating procedures .
Consequently, the tgl mutant strain could be of great use in
proteomic studies of coat proteins, since those proteins that are no
longer cross-linked in tgl spores could be easily extracted
and analyzed . Moreover, such proteomic studies could serve to
identify other proteins that are Tgl substrates . Finally, the results
presented here lead us to suggest that cross-linking of coat
components in general may be a very late event in spore coat
formation and may not be essential for protein-protein interactions
during the process of coat assembly .
We are grateful to Patrick Eichenberger and Adam Driks for motivating
discussions . We also appreciate the comments of Adam Driks on the
manuscript .
This work was supported by a grant from the NIH to P.S . (GM19698) .
* Corresponding author . Mailing address: Department of
Molecular, Microbial and Structural Biology, University of Connecticut Health
Center, Farmington, CT 06032 . Phone: (860) 679-2607 . Fax: (860) 679-3408 .
E-mail: setlow@nso2.uchc.edu.
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