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Journal of Bacteriology, February 2004, p . 777-784, Vol . 186,
No . 3
The
RecA Protein of Helicobacter pylori Requires a Posttranslational
Modification for Full Activity
Wolfgang Fischer* and Rainer Haas
Max von Pettenkofer-Institut für Hygiene und Medizinische Mikrobiologie,
Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität, D-80336 Munich, Germany
Received 18 July 2003/ Accepted 27 October 2003
The RecA protein is a central component of the homologous recombination
machinery and of the SOS system in most bacteria . In performing
these functions, it is involved in DNA repair processes and plays an
important role in natural transformation competence . This may be
especially important in Helicobacter pylori, where an
unusually high degree of microdiversity among strains is generated by
homologous recombination . We have suggested previously that the H .
pylori RecA protein is subject to posttranslational modifications
that result in a slight shift in its electrophoretic mobility . Here
we show that at least two genes downstream of recA are
involved in this modification and that this process is dependent on
genes involved in glycosylation and lipopolysaccharide biosynthesis .
Site-directed mutagenesis of a putative glycosylation site results in
production of an unmodified RecA protein . This posttranslational
modification is not involved in membrane targeting or cell division
functions but is necessary for the full function of RecA in DNA
repair . Thus, it might be an adaptation to the specific requirements
of H . pylori in its natural environment .
The gram-negative bacterial pathogen Helicobacter pylori is
the principal cause of chronic active gastritis and peptic ulcer
disease and has been implicated in the development of gastric
mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue lymphoma and gastric cancer (29,
40) . The very special habitat of H . pylori at the
surface of gastric epithelial cells or in the mucus layer covering
the epithelium suggests that this bacterium has evolved specialized
features for adaptation . A comparison of the two published genome
sequences shows a considerable diversity in gene content, with
about 7% of all putative genes being strain specific (1) .
Moreover, some H . pylori strains display high mutation
frequencies (3), and more diversity is created by
horizontal gene transfer and free recombination between strains (41),
although infections with multiple strains are not very common . Since
H . pylori is naturally competent for transformation,
horizontal gene transfer is supposed to occur mainly by this
mechanism .
Thus, homologous recombination is an important function which
helps to generate diversity, but it is also involved in maintaining
genome integrity and thus species barriers (28) . These
functions are achieved by a complex machinery which is highly
regulated and which involves many proteins (9) . The
RecA protein is one of the central components of this machinery . One
of its main functions is the recognition of stretches of
single-stranded DNA, which are subsequently complexed by helical RecA
filaments . In Escherichia coli, this filamentous form of RecA
is activated as a coprotease that regulates cellular functions such
as the SOS response or the induction of trans-lesion DNA
synthesis . Both this coprotease activity and the recombination
function are thought to play major roles in the bacterial response to
DNA damage . The RecA protein of H . pylori has likewise been
shown to be necessary for DNA repair (36,
44), although SOS response and error-prone
trans-lesion synthesis pathways do not seem to be present in
H . pylori, as concluded by the absence of homologous genes (10) .
Here we describe a posttranslational protein modification of the
RecA protein in H . pylori, and we show that this modification
is necessary for the full function of RecA in response to DNA damage .
Bacterial strains and growth conditions. H . pylori
strains were grown on GC agar plates (Difco) supplemented with
vitamin mix (1%), horse serum (8%), vancomycin (10 mg/liter),
trimethoprim (5 mg/liter), and nystatin (1 mg/liter) (serum plates)
and incubated for 16 to 60 h in a microaerobic atmosphere (85% N2,
10% CO2, 5% O2) at 37°C . E . coli strains HB101
(4), GC6 (43), and DH5
(Bethesda Research Laboratories) were grown on Luria-Bertani agar
plates or in Luria-Bertani liquid medium (33)
supplemented with ampicillin (100 mg/liter), chloramphenicol (30
mg/liter), or kanamycin (40 mg/liter), as appropriate . Strains ß2150
and ß2155 (6) were grown on the same media
supplemented with diaminopimelic acid (0.2 mM) .
DNA manipulations. Standard cloning and DNA analysis
procedures were performed according to the methods described in
reference 33 . Plasmid DNA was purified from E .
coli by the boiling procedure, and E . coli cells for
electroporation were prepared according to the protocol recommended
for the Gene Pulser (Bio-Rad) . Plasmid DNA was isolated from
Helicobacter strains by using Wizard minipreps (Promega)
according to the protocol of the manufacturer . Amplification of DNA
fragments by PCR was performed as described previously (15) .
Natural transformation and bacterial conjugation. Shuttle
plasmids and suicide plasmids were introduced into H . pylori
strains by conjugation or transformation as described previously (16),
except that in conjugation experiments E . coli strains ß2150
(for plasmids conferring kanamycin resistance) and ß2155 (for
plasmids conferring chloramphenicol resistance) were used as donors
and ß2150(pRK2013) was used as a mobilizing strain . H . pylori
transformants were selected on serum plates containing 6 mg of
chloramphenicol/liter or 8 mg of kanamycin/liter . For the
determination of transformation rates, DNase (1 mg/ml) was added to
H . pylori grown in liquid culture 1 h after the addition of
plasmid DNA . The cultures were incubated for a further 6 to 12 h and
then plated on selective agar plates and in parallel on nonselective
agar plates to estimate the number of viable bacteria .
Plasmid constructions. Plasmid pDH38, which was used for the
complementation of an H . pylori recA deletion mutant, was
described earlier (36) . For the construction of
the enolase mutants, an EcoRI/BamHI deletion derivative
of plasmid pWS48, which contains the recA-eno region of
H . pylori strain P1 (36), was constructed . The enolase
gene was disrupted by replacing an internal 260-bp SphI fragment
with an aphA-3 resistance gene cassette, resulting in
plasmid pWS55, or with a terminatorless cat resistance gene
cassette, resulting in plasmid pGAH3 . Plasmid pWS106 was constructed
by cloning the recA gene amplified with primers WS67
(5'-GAAGATCTTATTCCATTTCTTCTAAAG-3') and WS68
(5'-CGGAATTCGCAATAGATGAAGACAAAC-3') into the EcoRI and BamHI
sites of the expression vector pEV40 (31) . The recA-eno
downstream region comprising genes hp155 to hp158 was
amplified with primers ET10 (5'-CGCGGATCCAAGAGTTGTTTAAGCATGGC-3') and
ET11 (5'-TAATGCACTGCAGCCCACAATACGACAAAATC-3') from chromosomal
DNA of strain 26695 and cloned into the PstI and BamHI sites
of pBluescript II KS (Stratagene) . From there, the recA-eno
downstream region was subcloned into the BglII and XhoI
sites of plasmid pMin1 (22), resulting in plasmid
pWS124 . The site-specific mutation was introduced into the recA
gene as follows . A 5' portion of the recA gene of strain P1
was amplified by PCR with primers RH147
(5'-AGCTGGGTCGACTTTCTTAACGCGTGGCTC-3') and DH13
(5'-GGGGTACCAAGCTTATCGCGCTCACATC-3') and cloned into the KpnI
and SalI sites of vector pIC20R1 (26), resulting in
plasmid pGAH4 . A 3' portion of the recA gene containing the
site-specific mutation was amplified with primers WS86
(5'-GCTCTAGACTGCAGAGATCAAAGGATCTTCTT-3') and WS87
(5'-AACGGACGCGTTAAGAAAAATCACCGGTGTTTTGCACAAAATGAATACTATG-3') and
cloned into the MluI and BglII sites of plasmid pGAH4 . The
mutagenized recA gene was excised from the resulting plasmid
pWS126 and subcloned into the KpnI and BglII sites of the
shuttle plasmid pHel3 (16) to yield plasmid
pWS127 .
Transposon shuttle mutagenesis. TnMax5 transposon
mutagenesis of plasmid pWS124 was performed as described previously (22) .
Production of anti-RecA antiserum and immunoblotting. A His6-tagged
RecA fusion protein derived from strain P1 was overproduced in E .
coli 2136 from plasmid pWS106 and purified from inclusion bodies
according to the method described in reference 39 .
The purified fusion protein was used to raise the polyclonal rabbit
antiserum AK263 . Sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel
electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) and Western blotting were performed as
described previously (36) . For the development of Western
blots, nitrocellulose filters were blocked with 3% bovine serum
albumin in TBS (50 mM Tris-HCl [pH 7.5], 150 mM NaCl) and incubated
with AK263 at a dilution of 1:3,000 . Protein A-conjugated alkaline
phosphatase was used to visualize bound antibody .
Membrane preparations. H . pylori cells were grown on
solid or in liquid media for 24 to 48 h, then harvested, washed, and
resuspended in preparation buffer (10 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.0) . Bacteria
were lysed by sonication, centrifuged for 10 min at 7,000
x g to remove unbroken cells
and cell debris . The supernatant was collected and separated by
ultracentrifugation (45 min, 230,000 x g)
into cytoplasmic and total membrane fractions . Proteins in the
cytoplasmic fractions were concentrated by chloroform-methanol
precipitation (46), and the membrane fractions
were washed with preparation buffer and resuspended in SDS-PAGE
sample solution .
UV and metronidazole sensitivity measurements. The
susceptibility of H . pylori strains to UV radiation was
determined as described previously (36) . For the
determination of metronidazole sensitivity, E-test strips (AB
Biodisk, Solna, Sweden) were placed on serum agar plates inoculated
with standard H . pylori suspensions according to the method
described in reference 44 . MICs were scored after
5 days of growth .
Nucleoid staining and microscopy. Bacteria grown in liquid
culture were harvested by centrifugation, washed twice, and
resuspended in phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) . The suspension was
centrifuged onto coverslips (5 min, 1,500
x g) and fixed with 3.7%
paraformaldehyde in PBS for 30 min at room temperature . After two
washes with PBS, coverslips were incubated for 30 min in PBS
containing 1 µg of 4',6'-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI)/ml, washed
twice with PBS, and placed upon a slide containing a single drop of
Fluoprep (BioMérieux) . Cells were photographed with a Leica DM
fluorescence microscope equipped with a Diagnostic Instruments
SP401-220 digital camera .
Size variation of the H . pylori RecA protein. The
recA gene in H . pylori encodes a protein with a calculated
size of 37.6 kDa . During previously published complementation studies
(36), it was noticed that H . pylori RecA migrates at
an apparent size of 38 kDa when expressed from the shuttle plasmid
pDH38 in E . coli but at a size of 40 kDa when the same shuttle
plasmid was used in H . pylori (Fig . 1) . Thus, we
suspected that H . pylori RecA might be subject to a
posttranslational modification . RecA is a highly conserved protein
among bacterial species, and in many cases, bacterial recA
genes are capable of complementing an E . coli recA phenotype
(for examples, see references 12 and
23) . Since the H . pylori recA gene was not able to do
so (despite a protein sequence similarity of 74% and identity of
62%), we also suspected that this posttranslational modification
might be necessary for the function of the H . pylori RecA
protein (36) .
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FIG . 1 . Construction and complementation of H . pylori recA and
eno mutants . (A) The isogenic recA mutant in strain P1 (P33)
was constructed by replacing a central part of the recA gene by a
terminatorless chloramphenicol resistance (cat) cassette, and the
eno mutant was constructed by insertion of an aphA-3
gene in an internal SphI site . P33 was complemented by using the
recA gene including its promoter cloned on the shuttle vector
pHel3 (pDH38) . (B) Total cell lysates of H . pylori strains P1,
P33, P33(pDH38) and P1 eno and of E . coli strain
GC6(pDH38) were applied to an SDS 6 to 12% gradient gel, blotted, and
reacted with antiserum AK263 . The size difference between the RecA
proteins produced in P33(pDH38) and GC6(pDH38) suggests that RecA is
subject to posttranslational modification in H . pylori.
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Production of an unmodified RecA protein in H . pylori.
The recA gene in H . pylori is followed downstream by a gene
encoding an enolase homologue (eno) . The two genes are
cotranscribed, and mutations in the eno gene have been shown
to result in a slightly increased sensitivity of the bacteria to
DNA-damaging agents, which was attributed to an effect on recA
expression (44) . Therefore, we constructed an
enolase mutant by inserting a kanamycin resistance cassette into the
eno gene of strain P1 (Fig . 1A) to detect
effects on RecA production and/or size . The P1 eno strain did
not produce lower amounts of RecA protein, as the wild-type P1 strain
did, as estimated by immunoblotting (Fig . 1B) . But
the RecA protein seems to be unmodified in the P1 eno strain;
its electrophoretic mobility is higher than in the wild-type and
seems to be the same as in the E . coli strain GC6(pDH38)
expressing H . pylori recA . Since mutations in the enolase gene
have been reported to confer enhanced sensitivity to DNA-damaging
agents (44), we were interested in the phenotypes
of the enolase mutant . We were, however, unable to detect a
difference between the wild type and the enolase mutant regarding
transformation competence or sensitivity to UV radiation (data not
shown) . The only obvious phenotype of the enolase mutant was its
growth in an elongated cell shape, which is presumably due to a cell
division defect (see below) .
Involvement of other genes in the recA locus. In the
two published H . pylori genome sequences, the recA gene
is the first gene of a putative operon containing, in addition to
eno, a shikimate kinase gene homologue (aroK) and three open
reading frames with unknown function (Fig . 2A) . Two of
these open reading frames (hp155 and hp156) have
homologues in Campylobacter jejuni (cj1671c and
cj1670c, respectively), which are also located downstream of the
recA gene there (Fig . 2A) . The third open
reading frame (hp158) displays significant homology to a C .
jejuni gene termed pglG, which is part of a gene locus involved
in protein glycosylation in C . jejuni (42) . We
reasoned that in H . pylori the putative operon structure of
the recA locus might reflect a functional correlation between
the corresponding gene products . Therefore, we decided to examine the
role of mutations in recA-eno downstream genes on the
production or function of RecA . The recA-eno downstream
region was amplified by PCR and cloned into the minimal vector pMin1,
resulting in plasmid pWS124 . Using this plasmid, the recA-eno
downstream region was subjected to TnMax5 transposon
mutagenesis . Transposon insertions were mapped to the reading frames
hp156 and hp158 (Fig . 2A), and
corresponding H . pylori P1 mutants were generated by natural
transformation . Immunoblotting experiments with antiserum AK263
showed that in all of these insertion mutants the RecA protein was
obviously unmodified . Since insertion of the kanamycin resistance
cassette in the eno gene may have a polar effect on the
expression of downstream genes such as hp158, we sought to
check whether the eno gene itself is involved in modification .
Therefore, we constructed a P1 mutant with a terminatorless
chloramphenicol resistance cassette (11) inserted into the
eno gene . This mutant produced an unmodified RecA protein as well
(data not shown), suggesting that both eno and hp158 (and
possibly other genes in the locus) are involved in RecA modification .
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FIG . 2 . Presence of a putative operon at the recA locus in H .
pylori and effect of downstream genes on RecA size . (A) Downstream
of the enolase gene, there are four further genes which are putatively
cotranscribed with recA and eno . Homologues to the first
four genes are arranged identically in the C . jejuni recA locus .
The last gene of the putative operon displays a significant homology to
the C . jejuni gene pglG, whose product is involved in
protein glycosylation . Numbers in parentheses are percents
identity/similarity between the H . pylori and C . jejuni
proteins . (B) TnMax5 transposon insertions in the genes hp156
and hp158 in strain P1 result in the production of unmodified
RecA proteins.
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Glycosylation as a possible modification. The C . jejuni
general glycosylation locus consists of 10 pgl genes (pglA
to pglJ) that have been shown to be involved in protein
glycosylation (25, 42), but it also
contains the galE gene, which is usually associated with
lipopolysaccharide (LPS) biosynthesis . Although protein glycosylation
is not a common feature of cytoplasmic proteins, we considered the
possibility of a RecA glycosylation in H . pylori . Genes
involved in early steps of LPS biosynthesis may provide the
substrates for glycosylation reactions . Therefore, we constructed
isogenic H . pylori P1 mutants defective in the galE
gene (hp360) encoding a UDP-glucose-4-epimerase, or the pmi
gene (also called rfbM or hp43) encoding a bifunctional
mannose-6-phosphate isomerase/GDP-mannose pyrophosphorylase, both of
which are involved in LPS biosynthesis (8) . The galE
gene of strain P1 was disrupted with plasmid pGH26 (24),
and the pmi gene was disrupted with plasmid pDHO25::TnMax5-3
(18) . Both mutations resulted in the production of
a RecA protein without an apparent modification (Fig . 3),
suggesting that the RecA modification may indeed be a glycosylation .
A sequence comparison of RecA proteins from different organisms
reveals the presence of an asparagine glycosylation site in the RecA
proteins of H . pylori and C . jejuni but not in the RecA
proteins of most other bacteria (Fig . 4A) . Although
enzymatic deglycosylation of the H . pylori RecA protein with
N-glycosidase F was not successful (data not shown), we
wondered whether the putative asparagine glycosylation site is
important for the RecA modification . Therefore, we decided to
introduce a site-specific mutation into the glycosylation site . By a
PCR-based mutagenesis procedure, we replaced the codon ACT for the
second threonine in the motif with an ATG codon, resulting in a
threonine-to-methionine (T189M) mutation . A methionine is present at
this position in the RecA protein of Bordetella pertussis and
thus should be tolerated . The mutated recA gene was introduced
into H . pylori P33 on the pHel3 shuttle vector (pWS127) .
Western blot analysis of the corresponding H . pylori strain
demonstrates the overproduction of a RecA protein which indeed seems
to be unmodified (Fig . 4B) .
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FIG . 3 . Effect of mutations in the galE and pmi genes .
Total cell lysates of wild-type strain P1 and the isogenic mutants
eno, galE, and pmi were separated by SDS-PAGE,
immunoblotted, and reacted with antiserum AK263.
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FIG . 4 . (A) Sequence comparison of RecA proteins from different
bacteria . A putative N-glycosylation site (boxed) is present in
the RecA proteins of H . pylori and C . jejuni but not in
RecA proteins of other bacteria . Hpy, H . pylori; Cje,
C . jejuni; Eco, E . coli; Pae, Pseudomonas
aeruginosa; Bpe, B . pertussis; Ngo, N .
gonorrhoeae . (B) Size difference between the wild-type RecA protein
and the RecA protein with a site-specific mutation (T189M).
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Membrane association of the H . pylori RecA protein. One
possible function of posttranslational modifications of a cytoplasmic
protein might be membrane targeting . Localization of the H . pylori
RecA protein has not been examined so far, but RecA has been shown to
be targeted to the cytoplasmic membrane during transformation in the
naturally competent bacteria Streptococcus pneumoniae (27).
H . pylori cells were separated into cytoplasmic and total
membrane fractions, and the RecA content of these fractions was
determined by immunoblotting (Fig . 5) . Considerable
amounts of the protein were associated with the total membrane
fractions, but RecA was also present in the cytoplasmic fractions .
Membrane-bound RecA could be removed by treatment with 1 M NaCl or
with 0.1 M sodium carbonate buffer (pH 11), which indicates a
peripheral membrane association (data not shown) . The distribution
between the cytoplasm and the total membrane fraction was, however,
independent of the size of the RecA protein, suggesting that the
putative modification is not involved in membrane targeting . This is
also supported by the RecA (T189M)-producing mutant, which displays
the same distribution (data not shown) . Interestingly, however, the
modification seems to be removed in the cytoplasmic form of RecA
during cell fractionation but not in the membrane-bound form . Since
we detect only the modified form in a total cell lysate, we would
conclude that an activity which removes the modification is released
during fractionation which does not affect the membrane-bound form .
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FIG . 5 . Association of H . pylori RecA with the bacterial
membrane . H . pylori wild-type strain P1 and the isogenic eno
and hp158 mutants were separated into total membrane fractions
and cytoplasmic fractions . Immunoblotting with AK263 reveals not only a
RecA association with the membranes but also a localization in the
cytoplasm . Equal amounts of membrane fractions and cytoplasmic fractions
were loaded in each lane.
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Phenotypic effects of RecA modification. Since the enolase
mutant displayed a morphology that suggested a cell division defect
and since RecA has an effect on cell division in Bacillus subtilis
(37), we first examined the influence of RecA
modification on bacterial cell morphology . Whereas the wild-type
strain P1 grown in liquid culture exhibited a curved morphology with
a certain degree of clumping (Fig . 6A), the
hp156 (data not shown) and the hp158 mutants (Fig . 6B)
seemed to be shorter and more spiral shaped . An influence on cell
division, however, was only visible in the enolase mutant (Fig.
6C), as it displays a considerable number of
elongated cells . This cell division defect becomes especially
apparent after nucleoid staining with DAPI (Fig . 6D) .
Since only the enolase mutant but not mutants defective in hp156
or hp158 display this phenotype, it is probably independent of
the RecA modification but dependent on the presence or absence of the
enolase .
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FIG . 6 . Effect of mutations in the recA locus on bacterial
morphology . H . pylori wild-type strain P1 (A) and the isogenic
mutants P1hp158 (B) and P1eno (C and D) were grown in
liquid culture and prepared for microscopy during exponential growth .
Panels A to C are phase-contrast micrographs, and panel D shows the same
view as in panel C but with DAPI fluorescence.
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The H . pylori RecA protein is necessary for natural transformation
competence (36), for resistance against DNA damage
caused by UV radiation, chemical mutagens, or antimicrobial agents
such as metronidazole, and for survival at low pH (44) .
To determine the influence of RecA modification on these phenotypes,
we performed transformation competence measurements and UV radiation,
low pH, and metronidazole sensitivity assays . Surprisingly, we did
not find any difference between the wild-type strain P1, the
isogenic mutants in the enolase, hp156, or hp158 genes, and
the RecA (T189M)-producing strain with respect to transformation
competence, UV, or acid resistance (data not shown) . When we
compared, however, the sensitivity against metronidazole, the
wild-type and mutant bacteria behaved differently (Fig . 7) .
In comparison to the recA mutant, both the eno and hp158
mutants displayed an increased resistance to metronidazole, but it
was significantly lower than in the wild type . The metronidazole
sensitivity of the recA mutant could be complemented with wild-type
RecA produced from the shuttle plasmid pDH38, whereas it was
only incompletely complemented with RecA (T189M) produced from
plasmid pWS127 . These results suggest that the modification is needed
for the full function of the RecA protein in H . pylori .
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FIG . 7 . Influence of RecA modification on metronidazole sensitivity .
H . pylori wild-type strain P1, the isogenic recA (P33),
eno, and hp158 mutants, and P33 complemented with wild-type
RecA (pDH38) or with RecA (T189M) (pWS127) were assayed for
metronidazole sensitivity with an E-test . Due to variations between
individual experiments, results were calculated as ratios of MICs for
the mutants in comparison to those for the wild-type for each
experiment . The MIC for the P1 wild-type strain was on average 0.25
µg/ml . All results are expressed as means of the results from at least
three independent experiments . *, The MIC for strain P33 was 0.016 µg/ml
in only one of five experiments, otherwise it was <0.016 µg/ml.
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Posttranslational modification, such as glycosylation, phosphorylation,
or acylation, is a common means for modulating structural and
functional properties of proteins . In eucaryotic cells, for instance,
most of the cell surface and secreted proteins are glycosylated . Such
modifications are less abundant in bacteria, but more and more
posttranslational modifications of surface-exposed proteins are being
described . In particular, the glycosylation of bacterial surface
proteins is now recognized as a common posttranslational modification
(2, 32) . For example, the pilin
subunits of Neisseria meningitidis (45) and the
flagellins of C . jejuni (7,
14), Helicobacter felis (20), and H . pylori
(21, 35) are modified by
glycosylation . We describe here a putative modification of the H .
pylori RecA protein, which as a cytoplasmic protein, is more
unusual and has not been described for any bacterial RecA protein so
far .
The RecA protein is a ubiquitous protein which combines many
functions on a relatively short polypeptide chain . In E . coli,
it has different DNA-binding sites, an ATP-binding site, and
coprotease activities for the LexA repressor, the UmuD protein, and
various phage repressors . Accordingly, there are various mechanisms
involving RecA for repairing damaged DNA . Since a LexA homolog is not
present in the H . pylori genome and since an SOS response
pathway also seems to be absent in H . pylori, a coprotease
activity may be dispensable for the H . pylori RecA protein .
However, the RecA protein of S . pneumoniae, where a lexA
homologue is also lacking, is nevertheless able to cleave the E .
coli LexA protein (38) . In E . coli, one of the
main functions of RecA in response to DNA-damaging agents is to help
in repairing stalled replication forks . There are two mechanisms for
this situation: error-free replication restarts catalyzed by
polymerase II (PolB), probably in conjunction with the restart
primosome containing (among other proteins) PriA (34),
and error-prone trans-lesion synthesis catalyzed by polymerase
V (UmuD'2C) (13) . Both mechanisms
involve RecA for strand invasion during D-loop formation or for
formation of an activated nucleoprotein filament (RecA*) ahead of the
stalled replication fork, respectively (13) . It
has been suggested that the role of RecA in these processes is not
its recombinational activity but possibly only its DNA-pairing
activity (5) . H . pylori does not seem to possess
homologues to either polB, umuC, or umuD, but
there are homologues to priA, the restart primosome components
dnaB and dnaG, and to the recR gene (10),
whose product is thought to be involved in loading RecA to
single-stranded DNA . It is not clear what the absence of polymerases
II and V (and also DinB or polymerase IV) means for the importance of
repairing stalled replication forks in H . pylori . However, it
may be possible that the posttranslational modification of RecA is an
adaptation to this different situation . The fact that the absence of
the modification has only a slight influence on DNA repair is no
contradiction to such a putative role: in E . coli, polB
mutants also do not have any phenotype with respect to UV
sensitivity, probably because polymerases II and V can complement
each other, although acting at different time points after the
induction of damage (30) .
One of the functions of RecA-mediated recombination in H . pylori
is in natural transformation, where incoming DNA has to be recombined
into the chromosome . DNA transport across the bacterial membranes
is accomplished by a type IV transport system (17), and
it may be speculated that there is a direct contact of incoming DNA
with membrane-associated RecA . In S . pneumoniae, RecA has been
shown to be membrane-associated during phases of competence (27) .
Membrane association in this organism is mediated by the accessory
protein CinA (colligrin or competence- and damage-inducible protein) .
The cinA gene is cotranscribed with the recA gene, and
expression is induced during competent phases . Genes with homology to
cinA can be found in a number of species, but in many cases,
homology extends only to the 3' region . This is also the case in
H . pylori, where the hp952 gene displays a 3' cinA
homology . Since the C-terminal part of CinA is probably the
RecA-binding domain, this suggests that HP952 would not be able to
mediate a membrane association . The RecA protein in H . pylori
is indeed membrane associated, but this association is not dependent
on the posttranslational modification . Our observation that the
modification is removed in the cytoplasmic form of RecA but retained
in the membrane-associated form, suggests some kind of function for
membrane targeting . Defined transformation-competent states or phases
have not been described for H . pylori, although competence is
highest during the early logarithmic phase (19) .
However, the modification status of RecA does not change during
growth phases (data not shown), which suggests that it is not
critical for competence .
The recA locus in H . pylori consists of a putative operon of
seemingly unrelated genes, one of which encodes a glycolytic
enzyme and another which encodes an enzyme involved in biosynthesis
of aromatic amino acids . We show here that at least two of these
genes are necessary for RecA modification . It is currently unclear
what the contribution of the enolase as a metabolic enzyme might be .
Interestingly enough, the closely related organism C . jejuni
has a recA locus with a similar gene arrangement . The recA gene
is also the first gene of a putative operon, followed by an
enolase gene, two genes with homology to hp155 and hp156,
respectively, and a putative DNA ligase gene (genes cj1673c to
cj1669c) . The product of the hp156 homolog cj1670c
has recently been termed Campylobacter glycoprotein A (CgpA)
due to its lectin-binding activity, and it has been shown to be
posttranslationally modified by a glycan containing N-acetylgalactosamine
residues (25) . More recently, the chemical
structure of the glycan was determined and shown to be present on at
least 21 further C . jejuni proteins (47) .
Since HP156 has a signal sequence, we would predict that it is not
involved in the modification process but might rather be a
glycosylated surface protein in H . pylori as well .
Although we were so far unable to prove this conclusion directly,
several lines of evidence suggest that H . pylori RecA is
posttranslationally modified by glycosylation . (i) It contains a
putative asparagine glycosylation motif in contrast to most other
RecA proteins . This motif is rather uncommon in bacterial sequences .
Of 114 RecA sequences (InterPro entry IPR001553), only 9 contain a
putative asparagine glycosylation motif . (ii) Modification is
dependent on a gene whose homologue is involved in protein glycosylation
in C . jejuni . (iii) Site-specific mutagenesis of the glycosylation
motif results in production of an unmodified RecA protein, which
also has a functional defect . However, a direct detection and
molecular characterization of the putative glycosylation remains to
be established in further studies .
We are grateful to C . Förster for excellent technical assistance and
to G . Poplutz for plasmid constructions .
This work was supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft
(grant HA2697/3-3 to R.H.) .
* Corresponding author . Mailing address: Max von
Pettenkofer-Institut für Hygiene und Medizinische Mikrobiologie,
Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität, Pettenkoferstr . 9a, D-80336 Munich, Germany .
Phone: 49-89-51605277 . Fax: 49-89-51605223 . E-mail:
fischer@m3401.mpk.med.uni-muenchen.de .
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