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Journal of Bacteriology, August 2004, p . 5486-5495, Vol . 186,
No . 16
Identification of the Secretion and Translocation Domain of the Enteropathogenic
and Enterohemorrhagic Escherichia coli Effector Cif, Using TEM-1
ß-Lactamase as a New Fluorescence-Based Reporter
Xavier Charpentier and Eric Oswald*
UMR 1225, Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique, Ecole Nationale
Vétérinaire de Toulouse, 31076 Toulouse Cedex, France
Received 1 April 2004/ Accepted 14 May 2004
Enteropathogenic and enterohemorrhagic Escherichia coli (EPEC
and EHEC) strains are human and animal pathogens that inject effector
proteins into host cells via a type III secretion system (TTSS) . Cif
is an effector protein which induces host cell cycle arrest and
reorganization of the actin cytoskeleton . Cif is encoded by a
lambdoid prophage present in most of the EPEC and EHEC strains . In
this study, we analyzed the domain that targets Cif to the TTSS by
using a new reporter system based on a translational fusion of the
effector proteins with mature TEM-1 ß-lactamase . Translocation was
detected directly in living host cells by using the fluorescent
ß-lactamase substrate CCF2/AM . We show that the first 16 amino acids
(aa) of Cif were necessary and sufficient to mediate translocation
into the host cells . Similarly, the first 20 aa of the effector
proteins Map, EspF, and Tir, which are encoded in the same region as
the TTSS, mediated secretion and translocation in a type
III-dependent but chaperone-independent manner . A truncated form of
Cif lacking its first 20 aa was no longer secreted and translocated,
but fusion with the first 20 aa of Tir, Map, or EspF restored both
secretion and translocation . In addition, the chimeric proteins were
fully able to trigger host cell cycle arrest and stress fiber
formation . In conclusion, our results demonstrate that Cif is
composed of a C-terminal effector domain and an exchangeable
N-terminal translocation signal and that the TEM-1 reporter system is
a convenient tool for the study of the translocation of toxins or
effector proteins into host cells .
Enteropathogenic Escherichia coli (EPEC) is associated with
diarrheal diseases in young animals and children and is an important
cause of infant mortality in the developing world . This human and
animal enteric pathogen is closely related to the emerging zoonotic
pathogen enterohemorrhagic E . coli (EHEC), which causes acute
gastroenteritis, hemorrhagic colitis, and hemolytic uremic syndrome
in developed countries (32) . In adhering to intestinal
epithelial cells, EPEC and EHEC strains subvert the host cellular
architecture to produce a histopathological feature known as
attaching and effacing lesions . These are characterized by the
localized destruction of brush border microvilli and intimate
attachment of the bacteria to the plasma membrane of the host
epithelial cells (14) . The genes required for the formation
of attaching and effacing lesions are clustered together in a
chromosomal pathogenicity island known as the locus for enterocyte
effacement (LEE), which codes for a type III secretion system (TTSS)
(19, 28) .
TTSSs are present in many gram-negative pathogens and symbionts .
These multisubunit molecular machines are used to transfer effector
proteins directly into eukaryotic cells, where the normal cellular
functions are subverted for the benefit of the bacteria . The set of
translocated effector molecules tends to be unique to each pathogen
and reflects the needs and specific niches of each bacterial species
(18) . To date, seven EPEC and EHEC effector
molecules have been shown to be injected into the host cell by the
TTSS . Five translocated effectors are encoded by the LEE: Tir/EspE (8,
21), Map (22), EspF (29),
EspG (12), and EspH (44) . Two
effectors are encoded outside the LEE: Cif (26) and
NleA/EspI (17, 31) . In addition to
effectors, the LEE sequence encodes chaperones CesT and CesF, which
contribute to the secretion and translocation process of Tir/Map (1,
5, 11) and EspF (13),
respectively .
Cif is encoded by a lambdoid prophage present in most of the EPEC
and EHEC serovars, but cif is absent or truncated in EHEC
strain Sakai and in EPEC strain E2348/69 (26) . In epithelial
cells, Cif triggers an irreversible cytopathic effect (CPE)
characterized by a progressive recruitment of focal adhesion plaques
leading to the assembly of stress fibers and the inhibition of the
cell cycle G2/M phase transition (10,
26, 33) . The cytostatic effect
can be summarized as follows . Cells progressively accumulate at 4C
and 8C DNA content and do not display signs of mitosis . This
cytostatic effect is not functionally related to cytoskeletal
rearrangement but is linked to the maintenance of the cyclin-dependent
kinase Cdk1, a key effector driving entry into mitosis, in a
premitotic tyrosine-phosphorylated state (26,
33) . The ability of EPEC and EHEC strains to induce both
cytoskeletal alterations and to block the G2/M phase
transition depends on a functional LEE type III secretion machinery
but not on intimin or Tir (27, 34) .
The mode of action of Cif is not yet elucidated, and its functional
domains remain to be defined . In addition, despite the fact that
several TTSS substrates have been characterized, the mechanisms that
drive Cif and other EPEC and EHEC effectors to the TTSS remain poorly
understood .
In this study, we analyzed the Cif secretion and translocation
domain by using TEM-1 ß-lactamase as a new fluorescence-based
reporter . We showed that Cif is a modular protein composed of an
exchangeable N-terminal secretion and translocation signal (STS)
linked to a C-terminal effector domain and that construction of
fusions with the mature form of TEM-1 ß-lactamase in combination with
the use of fluorescent substrate CCF2/AM is a convenient tool for the
analysis of TTSS effectors .
Cell line and bacterial strains. Human epithelial HeLa cells
(ATCC CCL-2) were cultivated in Eagle minimum essential medium (MEM)
supplemented with 10% fetal calf serum (FCS), L-glutamine
(2 mM), and gentamicin (80 µg/ml) at 37°C in a 5% CO2
atmosphere .
E22 is a rabbit EPEC strain of serotype O103:H2 (34) . E22
cif::FRT
is a cif deletion mutant (26) obtained according
to the procedure described by Datsenko and Wanner (6) .
E22 espB::Kan and E22 escN::Kan are E22 mutants in
which the espB and escN genes are interrupted by a
kanamycin resistance gene (26, 34) . E22
cesT::Kan
is a cesT deletion mutant obtained according to the procedure
described by Datsenko and Wanner (6) . Bacterial strains
were cultured in Luria-Bertani broth or in Dulbecco's modified Eagle
medium (DMEM) buffered with 25 mM HEPES (pH 7.4) . Antibiotics
were used at the following final concentrations: carbenicillin, 50
µg/ml; kanamycin, 50 µg/ml; chloramphenicol, 25 µg/ml; tetracycline,
12.5 µg/ml .
Construction of the ß-lactamase TEM-1 fusion cloning plasmid and
effector-TEM fusion proteins. A pBR322 derivative was constructed by
ligating the EcoRI-ScaI-digested plasmid pHB6 (Roche) to an EcoRI and
blunt end PCR product from plasmid p46Lbla (2)
obtained with primers 5'-GCG AAT TCG CAC CCA GAA ACG CTG GTG AAA GTA
and 5'-GGC TCC AAT TCT TGG AGT GGT GA . This resulting plasmid carries
the lacIq gene, the Ptrc promoter upstream
of the blaM gene (encoding TEM-1), and the tetracycline
resistance gene from pBR322 . The NdeI restriction site near the ColE1
origin has been destroyed by digestion, fill-in with Klenow, and
ligation . Inverse PCR with primers 5'-ATG TTA TTC CTC CTT ATT TAA TCG
ATA C and 5'-ATG GGA AGC TTG GGT ACC TCC GCG G was performed to
generate a unique NdeI site at the starting translational codon, thus
creating a multiple cloning site (NdeI, KpnI, and EcoRI) upstream of
blaM . The resulting plasmid pCX340 encodes the mature form of
TEM-1 under the control of the isopropyl-ß-D-thiogalactopyranoside
(IPTG)-inducible Ptrc promoter and allows cloning of effector
protein genes with blaM to generate effector-TEM fusion
proteins (Fig . 1) . The cif, tir,
map, and espF genes were amplified from E22 genomic DNA
with primers adding an NdeI restriction site at the start codon and
an EcoRI (or KpnI for tir) restriction site on the codon
replacing the stop codon . PCR products were digested with NdeI and
EcoRI (or KpnI for tir) and ligated to the corresponding sites
in pCX340 . The resulting plasmids pCX313, pCX302, pCX303, and pCX304,
respectively, encode the Cif-TEM, Tir-TEM, Map-TEM, and EspF-TEM
fusion proteins . The plasmid pCX329, encoding the Tir1-26-TEM
fusion, was obtained by cloning an NdeI-KpnI PCR fragment amplified
from plasmid pCX302 in the NdeI-KpnI-digested plasmid pCX340 .
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FIG . 1 . Schematic representation of the TEM-1 reporter system used to
study translocation of TTSS effectors into live eukaryotic cells . (A)
Upon passive entry into the eukaryotic cell, the nonfluorescent
esterified CCF2/AM substrate is rapidly converted by cellular esterases
in charged and fluorescent CCF2 . Excitation of the coumarin moiety
(represented by a circle) at 409 nm results in fluorescence energy
transfer (FRET) to the fluorescein moiety (represented by a hexagon),
which emits a green fluorescence signal at 520 nm . Injection of an
effector fused to TEM-1 into a CCF2-loaded cell induces catalytic
cleavage of the CCF2 ß-lactam ring (represented by a square), disrupting
FRET . This produces an easily detectable and measurable change in CCF2
fluorescence from green to blue emission . (B) Map of the effector-TEM
fusion cloning vector . The blaM gene encodes the mature form of
the ß-lactamase TEM (the first two residues are boxed) . The NdeI, KpnI,
and EcoRI restriction sites are unique . The origin of replication (ori)
is derived from ColE1.
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Plasmids for expression of gradually truncated Cif proteins fused to
TEM. Plasmid pCX327, encoding the TEM-1 fusion with the first 16
residues of Cif (Cif1-16-TEM), was obtained by deleting the
complementary domain of Cif (residues 17 to 282) by inverse PCR
on the template plasmid pCX313 . To facilitate screening for positive
clones, an NheI restriction site was introduced at the junction
between the first 16 residues of Cif and TEM-1 . Other truncated forms
of Cif fused to TEM-1 were obtained by the same procedure (Table
1) .
| TABLE 1 . List of strains and plasmids
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Plasmids for expression of the exchangeable first 20 residues of EPEC
effectors. The Ala-Met-Gly coding sequence GCC ATG GGC,
containing an NcoI restriction site (underlined), was inserted by
inverse PCR at codon 21 of each effector-TEM-encoding sequence . The
resulting plasmids pCX351, pCX352, pCX353, and pCX354 encode,
respectively, CifAMG-TEM, TirAMG-TEM, MapAMG-TEM
and EspFAMG-TEM fusions, which carry an insertion of the
tripeptide Ala-Met-Gly (AMG) at position 21 . Digestion of these
plasmids with NcoI and EcoRI, followed by fill-in with Klenow and
ligation, gave the plasmids pCX361, pCX362, pCX363, and pCX364, which
encode, respectively, TEM-1 fusions with the first 20 residues of
Cif, Tir, Map, and EspF (Cif1-20-TEM, Tir1-20-TEM,
Map1-20-TEM, and EspF1-20-TEM) . Hybrid proteins
containing the first 20 residues of each effector fused to Cif with a
deletion of its first 20 residues were obtained by replacing the
NcoI-EcoRI fragments of pCX352, pCX353, and pCX354 with the
NcoI-EcoRI fragment from plasmid pCX351 . This gave plasmids pCX372,
pCX373, and pCX374, encoding the Tir1-20-Cif (1-20)-TEM,
Map1-20-Cif (1-20)-TEM,
and EspF1-20-Cif (1-20)-TEM
fusions . Plasmid pCX351 was digested with NdeI and blunted by
treatment with mung bean nuclease, the NcoI site was filled with
Klenow, and the whole molecule was ligated to itself . This gave
plasmid pCX371, encoding the Cif (1-20)-TEM .
All constructions were verified by sequencing .
Interaction between epithelial cells and bacteria for translocation
analysis. On the day before interaction, HeLa cells were trypsinized
and seeded in black with clear bottom 96-well plates (Becton
Dickinson) at 2 x 104
cells per well in MEM to obtain 100% confluence on the following day .
The same day, bacterial strains were inoculated in Luria-Bertani
broth with tetracycline . On the day of infection, overnight bacterial
cultures were inoculated at a 1/100 dilution in 24-well plates in 1.5
ml of DMEM supplemented with 1% mannose, 5% FCS, and 2 mM
L-glutamine . Bacterial strains were then grown
as static cultures at 37°C in a 5% CO2 atmosphere for 3 h
to reach an optical density at 600 nm (OD600) of 0.2 to 0.25 .
HeLa cells were washed twice with Hanks' balanced salt solution
(HBSS) and directly infected with the DMEM bacterial culture
(multiplicity of infection of about 100 bacteria per cell) . After 30
min of infection, IPTG was added at a final concentration of 1 mM and
the infection was allowed to proceed for an additional hour . Cell
monolayers were washed twice with HBSS and covered with 100 µl of
HBSS plus 20 µl of 6x CCF2/AM solution
freshly prepared with the CCF2/AM loading kit (CCF2/AM final
concentration, 1 µM; Invitrogen) . The cells were incubated for 90 min
at room temperature, fluorescence was quantified on an FL600
microplate reader (Bio-Tek) with excitation at 405 nm (10-nm
band-pass), and emission was detected via 460-nm (40-nm band-pass,
blue fluorescence) and 530-nm (30-nm band-pass, green fluorescence)
filters . Translocation was expressed as the emission ratio at 460/530
nm to normalize the ß-lactamase activity to cell loading and the
number of cells present in each well . The presented data are mean
values of the results from triplicate wells from two to three
experiments . For statistical analyses, two-sided Student's t
test was used with independent samples . P values of less than
0.05 were considered statistically significant .
Fluorescence microscopy for observation of translocation and analysis
of CPE. Cell infections were performed as described above except that
3 x 104 cells were seeded
in Labtek eight-well chamber slides (Becton Dickinson) in 500 µl of
MEM . For microscopic observation of translocation, cells were washed
twice after infection with HBSS, loaded for 1 h with 1 µM CCF2/AM
(Invitrogen), and washed twice again with HBSS . The slides were then
covered with coverslips, and live cells were observed on a Leica
fluorescence microscope with a 4',6'-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI)
filter set (340- to 380-nm excitation and 425-nm long-pass emission) .
Pictures were taken under a true color camera . To analyze the
Cif-related CPE, cells were infected as described above, except that
after infection they were washed five times with HBSS and incubated
for 3 days in MEM with 10% FCS, 2 mM L-glutamine,
and 200 µg of gentamicin/ml . Cells were washed twice in
phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) and fixed for 20 min with 3.7%
formaldehyde . Actin stress fibers and nuclei were labeled with
rhodamine-phalloidin and DAPI, respectively .
Analysis of production and secretion of TEM fusion proteins.
To detect the secretion of the different TEM-1 fusion proteins,
overnight bacterial cultures were diluted to 1:100 in DMEM supplemented
with 1% mannose and 2 mM L-glutamine . Bacteria were
then grown as static cultures at 37°C in a 5% CO2
atmosphere for 5 h 30 min to reach an OD600 of 0.6 to 0.7
and then induced with 1 mM IPTG for an additional hour . Bacterial
cultures were centrifuged for 15 min at 16,000
x g at 4°C . Culture supernatants were
filtered (0.22-µm pore size, Millex GV; Millipore) and
precipitated for 1 h at 4°C with 10% trichloroacetic acid . Pellets
were washed twice with ice-cold acetone, resuspended in
Tris-saturated sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel
electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) loading buffer, and loaded onto a Nupage 4
to 12% gradient gel (Invitrogen) . Bacterial pellets were resuspended
in PBS to a final OD600 of 4 . A 4-µl aliquot was boiled
for 5 min in SDS-PAGE sample buffer and subjected to denaturing PAGE
on a Nupage 4 to 12% gradient gel (Invitrogen) . To assess the
solubility of Cif-TEM fusions, bacteria from resuspended bacterial
pellets were lysed by repeating freeze-thaw cycles . The lysates were
sonicated to shear genomic DNA and centrifuged at 16,000
x g for 1 h at 4°C . Centrifuged
lysates were subjected to PAGE as described above .
Immunoblot analysis of TEM fusion proteins. Proteins from
SDS-polyacrylamide gels were electrophoretically transferred to
nitrocellulose sheets (Schleicher and Schuell) and subsequently
stained with Ponceau S (Sigma) to check the loading of the lanes .
Sheets were blocked with 10% nonfat dried milk in PBS with 0.1% Tween
20 . Sheets were then analyzed by Western blotting with monoclonal
antibody directed to the TEM-1 ß-lactamase (5 µg/ml; QED Bioscience)
as a primary antibody and an anti-mouse peroxidase conjugate
(1/10,000; Sigma) as a secondary antibody . Nitrocellulose sheets were
revealed with the Enhanced ChemiLuminescence detection system
(Amersham Pharmacia Biotech) and Biomax films (Kodak) . Image analyses
were performed on a Macintosh computer with the public domain
NIH Image program (developed at the U.S . National Institutes of
Health and available at
http://rsb.info.nih.gov/nih-image/) .
In silico analysis of STS-encoding sequences. EPEC effectors
and their respective STS-encoding sequences (alone or fused to TEM-1)
have been subjected to secondary structure prediction, producing a
consensus prediction from several algorithms (3) .
The secondary structure predictions of the STS-encoding sequences at
the mRNA level have been performed with Mfold (version 3.1) on a web
server (48) .
Translocation of EPEC effector proteins fused to TEM-1 reporter protein
into live eukaryotic cells. To test TEM-1 as a reporter for type III
translocation, we fused TEM-1 to the C terminus of Tir, Map, EspF,
and Cif, four different EPEC and EHEC effector proteins encoded or
not by the LEE . As negative controls, we constructed fusions with two
E . coli cytoplasmic proteins, the mature form of maltose
binding protein (MBP) and glutathione S-transferase (GST) . We
verified the production of the fusion proteins in bacterial
whole-cell lysates (data not shown) and analyzed the translocation of
these fusions in infected HeLa cells (Fig . 2) . EPEC
strains expressing each of the fusion proteins were grown in DMEM and
used to infect HeLa cells . After 90 min, the epithelial cells were
washed and incubated for an additional 90 min with the ß-lactamase
substrate CCF2/AM . The cells were then analyzed by fluorescence
microcopy with a long-pass emission filter, enabling the simultaneous
observation of the green fluorescence emitted by the CCF2 substrate
and the blue fluorescence emitted by the cleaved CCF2 product .
Uninfected HeLa cells or cells infected with EPEC strains expressing
GST-TEM or MBP-TEM fusions appeared green, indicating the absence of
TEM-1 activity in these cells (Fig . 2) . In contrast, cells
infected with bacteria expressing the type III effector Cif
fused to TEM-1 appeared blue (Fig . 2), indicating that TEM-1
was translocated into the host cells . Similar results were obtained
with Tir-TEM, Map-TEM, and EspF-TEM fusions (Fig . 2) .
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FIG . 2 . Demonstration of the translocation of EPEC effector proteins
into live HeLa cells by using TEM-1 fusions and fluorescence microscopy .
HeLa cells were infected with wild-type EPEC strains expressing
different TEM-1 fusion proteins . After infection, HeLa cells were washed
and loaded with CCF2/AM . ß-Lactamase activity in HeLa cells is revealed
by the blue fluorescence emitted by the cleaved CCF2 product, whereas
uncleaved CCF2 emits a green fluorescence . No detectable fluorescence
arises from adherent bacteria (indicated by arrowheads) . Bars, 10 µM.
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Analysis of the roles of the translocator, chaperone, and STS with the
TEM-1 reporter system. EPEC strains expressing TEM-1 fusion proteins
were used to infect HeLa cells grown in 96-well tissue culture
plates . After interaction with the bacteria, the HeLa cells were
infected as before and then loaded with CCF2/AM, and fluorescence was
measured and reported as the ratio between blue emission fluorescence
(460 nm) and green emission fluorescence (520 nm) (Fig .
3A) . In cells infected with EPEC strains expressing either
MBP-TEM or GST-TEM fusions, the emission ratio was similar to the
emission ratio of uninfected HeLa cells (Fig . 3A) .
In cells infected with EPEC strains expressing effector TEM-1
fusions, the emission ratio increased significantly, indicating that
the different fusion proteins were translocated into the host cells
(Fig . 3A) . In contrast, no increase in the emission
ratio was observed for all fusion proteins expressed in the espB
mutant, confirming that the translocation was type III dependent and
required a functional translocation pore . When the effector fusions
were expressed in the cesT mutant, the emission ratios for Tir
and Map fusions were significantly reduced compared to the same
fusions expressed in the wild-type EPEC strain . This means that
the translocation was affected but not completely abolished, in
agreement with previously published results (1,
5, 11) . In contrast, the emission ratio for
EspF was not changed in a cesT mutant, in agreement with the
fact that EspF interacts with another chaperone, namely CesF (13) .
Similarly, the translocation of Cif-TEM was not affected in a cesT
mutant, indicating that CesT is probably not a chaperone for Cif .
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FIG . 3 . Analysis of the role of the translocator, chaperone, and STS
with the TEM-1 translocation reporter system . (A) Activity of the EspB
translocator and the CesT chaperone on effector translocation . HeLa
cells were infected with wild-type EPEC E22 strains expressing MBP-TEM
or GST-TEM fusion protein or the different effector-TEM protein fusions .
After infection, HeLa cells were washed and loaded with CCF2/AM .
ß-Lactamase activity in HeLa cells was detected by measuring cleavage of
the CCF2/AM substrate with a fluorescence microplate reader and is
presented as the emission ratio between blue fluorescence (460 nm) and
green fluorescence (530 nm) . (B) Secretion of TEM-1 fused to the
secretion signal of Tir . Culture supernatants from wild-type E22
expressing TEM-1 alone, the Tir1-26-TEM fusion, and the
Tir-TEM fusion were subjected to Western blot analysis with anti-TEM-1
antibody . Molecular mass markers (in kilodaltons) are indicated to the
left . (C) Translocation of TEM-1 fused to the secretion signal of Tir .
HeLa cells were infected with E22 strains expressing TEM-1 alone, the
Tir1-26-TEM fusion, and the Tir-TEM fusion . The presented
translocation data are averages of triplicate values of the results from
three experiments.
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In addition to the need for specific chaperone(s) and translocators,
type III effector proteins have been shown to possess an STS present
in the first codons . Tir was, so far, the only EPEC and EHEC effector
molecule in which such a domain has been identified (4) .
This observation prompted us to compare the translocation and
secretion of the Tir-TEM fusion and a fusion of the first 26 amino
acids of Tir to TEM-1 (Tir1-26-TEM) . These two fusion
proteins expressed in EPEC strains were detected in culture
supernatants, although Tir1-26-TEM was secreted less than Tir-TEM
(Fig . 3B) . When HeLa cells were infected with EPEC
strains expressing Tir1-26-TEM or Tir-TEM, the ratio
between blue and green emission fluorescence increased significantly,
indicating that these two different fusion proteins were translocated
(Fig . 3C) . However, the emission ratio due to the
translocation of Tir1-26-TEM was lower than the one of
Tir-TEM and correlates to the lower secretion level of Tir1-26-TEM
compared to that of the Tir-TEM . This is in agreement with the
results of Crawford and Kaper (4) obtained with the
Cya system and indicates that translocation mediated by the
N-terminal domain of Tir is less efficient than the translocation
mediated by the full-length effector .
Identification of the minimal N-terminal domain of Cif that can
mediate translocation into eukaryotic cells. To identify the STS of
Cif, we have constructed a set of truncated forms of Cif . The
deletion sites were chosen to be junctions between two predicted
-helices
or between the predicted
-helix
and ß-sheet (Fig . 4A) . Plasmids expressing each fusion
were transformed into an EPEC strain with a deletion of cif .
Western blot analysis of the bacterial pellets revealed that
the fusions were produced at a similar level (Fig . 4B) . The
full-length Cif-TEM was well secreted and translocated (Fig .
4C and D), whereas no secretion and no translocation were
observed with TEM-1 alone (Fig . 4C and D) . Analysis
of the different fusions revealed that the first 16 amino acids of
Cif were able to mediate the secretion and translocation of TEM-1 .
TEM fusions carrying the 32, 62, or 86 N-terminal Cif residues were
also secreted and translocated but with a lower efficiency than
full-length Cif (Fig . 4C and D) . The other fusions
with larger forms of Cif were not secreted and translocated or were
less secreted and translocated (Fig . 4C and D) .
Analysis of the soluble fraction of the bacterial lysates by SDS-PAGE
and immunoblotting revealed the poor solubility or absence of
solubility of these fusion proteins, which were therefore less
competent or not competent for secretion (Fig . 4E) .
In conclusion, Cif contains an N-terminal sequence which functions as
an STS, but truncations in the C terminus greatly affected the
solubility of the protein .
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FIG . 4 . Identification of the minimal N-terminal domain of Cif that can
mediate translocation into eukaryotic cells . (A) Schematic
representation of the predicted secondary structure of Cif . Light and
dark gray boxes represent ß-sheets and
-helices,
respectively . Black arrows indicate the different sites of fusion to
TEM-1 . (B) Expression of Cif1-X-TEM fusions in EPEC . EPEC
whole-cell lysates were subjected to Western blot analysis with
anti-TEM-1 antibody . Molecular mass markers (in kilodaltons) are
indicated to the left . (C) Secretion of the produced Cif1-X-TEM
fusions . Culture supernatants from E22
cif
expressing TEM-1 alone and Cif1-X-TEM fusions were subjected
to Western blot analysis with anti-TEM-1 antibody . (D) Translocation of
Cif1-X-TEM fusions in HeLa cells . The presented data are
averages of triplicate values of the results from three experiments .
Numbers indicate the different sites of Cif fused to TEM-1 . (E)
Solubility analysis of the produced Cif1-X-TEM fusions . EPEC
cells were lysed, and the soluble fraction was obtained after the
removal of insoluble proteins, cell debris, and unbroken cells by
centrifugation.
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The first 20 codons of Cif, Tir, Map, and EspF mediate both secretion
and translocation of TEM in a type III-dependent but chaperone-independent
manner. We have shown that, in addition to the LEE-encoded effector
Tir, the non-LEE-encoded effector Cif also possess an N-terminal
STS . In an attempt to define the structural properties of EPEC
and EHEC strain STS, we tried to identify other STS in the first 20
codons of EPEC and EHEC effectors . We constructed fusions to TEM-1 of
the first 20 residues of Map, EspF, Cif, and Tir . These fusions were
expressed in a wild-type EPEC strain (Fig . 5A), and
secretion and translocation efficiencies were measured as before
(Fig . 5B) . As expected, the sequence encoding the
first 20 amino acids of Cif and Tir mediated both secretion and
translocation . Similarly, the TEM fusions carrying the first 20
residues of Map and EspF were secreted in the culture medium . The Map1-20-TEM
and EspF1-20-TEM fusions were also translocated, producing
a higher emission ratio than the ones obtained for Cif1-20-TEM
and Tir1-20-TEM . Thus, all analyzed effectors contain an
STS encoded in their first 20 codons . To confirm that the secretion
and translocation mediated by these STS were type III dependent, we
transformed these constructions in an escN mutant unable to
secrete the needle components of the type III apparatus and in an
espB mutant unable to form the translocation pore in the
eukaryotic cell membrane . As shown in Fig . 5A, the
secretion of these TEM fusions was abolished in an escN mutant .
Likewise, the translocation of TEM fusions was abolished in an
espB mutant (Fig . 5B) . However, when STS-TEM fusions
were expressed in a cesT mutant, the levels of secretion and
translocation were similar to those observed with the wild-type
strain, although CesT is the chaperone of Tir and Map . From these
results, we concluded that Cif, Tir, Map, and EspF possess an STS
located in their first 20 codons and that these STS-encoding
sequences direct secretion and translocation specifically via the
TTSS without the need for a chaperone .
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FIG . 5 . The first 20 residues of Cif, Tir, Map, and EspF mediate both
secretion and translocation of TEM-1 in a type III-dependent manner . (A)
Production and secretion of Cif1-20-TEM, Tir1-20-TEM,
Map1-20-TEM, and EspF1-20-TEM fusions in wild-type
E22, the escN mutant (TTSS defective), and the cesT mutant
(defective for Tir/Map chaperone) . Molecular mass markers (in
kilodaltons) are indicated to the left . (B) Translocation in HeLa cells
of Cif1-20-TEM, Tir1-20-TEM, Map1-20-TEM,
and EspF1-20-TEM fusions in wild-type E22, the cesT
mutant, and the espB mutant (translocation defective) . The
presented data are averages of triplicate values of the results from
three experiments . (C) Alignment of the first 20 residues of Cif, Tir,
Map, and EspF.
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Cif is composed of a C-terminal effector domain and an exchangeable
N-terminal translocation signal. As shown above, STS from LEE-encoded
or non-LEE-encoded effectors have similar behavior . To test the
specificity of these STS, we exchanged the STS of the non-LEE-encoded
Cif effector with the STS from the LEE-encoded Tir, Map, and EspF
effectors . To do so, we constructed a Cif variant with a linker
between amino acids 20 and 21, enabling the deletion or replacement
of the N terminus by heterologous STS-encoding sequences from Tir,
Map, and EspF or by the homologous STS-encoding sequences from
Cif . The deletion of this region resulted in an N-terminally
truncated form of Cif (1-20)-TEM
fusion that was produced in a cif mutant at a level similar to
that observed with the full-length Cif-TEM fusion (Fig .
6A) . Solubility experiments showed that this N-terminal deletion
did not alter the solubility of the protein (data not shown) .
However, no secretion (Fig . 6A) and no
translocation could be detected (Fig . 6B) . The addition of
the first 20 codons of Cif restored the secretion and translocation
at a level similar to that observed with the initial Cif-TEM
fusion . We then examined the possibility of complementing the
secretion and translocation of the Cif (1-20)-TEM
fusion with the STS from Tir, Map, and EspF . These hybrid protein
fusions were expressed in a cif mutant at a level similar to
that of the original Cif-TEM fusion (Fig . 6A) . The
addition of the STS from Tir, Map, and EspF restored the secretion of
Cif to a level similar to that observed with the Cif-TEM fusion (Fig.
6A) . Moreover, cells infected with the cif
mutant complemented with plasmids expressing Tir1-20-Cif (1-20)-TEM,
Map1-20-Cif (1-20)-TEM,
or EspF1-20-Cif (1-20)-TEM
produced emission ratios identical to the emission ratio obtained
with the cif mutant complemented with a plasmid expressing the
Cif-TEM fusion, suggesting that these chimeric proteins were also
injected into HeLa cells at a similar level (Fig . 6B) .
We then examined the ability of these protein fusions to trigger the
Cif-related CPE . As expected, the nontranslocated Cif (1-20)-TEM
fusion was not able to complement the cif mutant . In contrast,
all chimeric fusions were able to fully complement the cif
mutant, producing a typical CPE characterized by distended cells with
large nuclei without mitotic spindles and by the formation of actin
stress fibers (Fig . 6C) .
|
FIG . 6 . Cif is composed of a C-terminal effector domain and an
exchangeable N-terminal translocation signal . (A) Production and
secretion of chimeric Cif-TEM fusions . Molecular mass markers (in
kilodaltons) are indicated to the left . (B) Translocation in HeLa cells
of chimeric Cif-TEM fusions . The presented data are averages of
triplicate values of the results from two independent experiments . (C)
CPE triggered by chimeric Cif-TEM fusions . HeLa cells were infected
under conditions used to monitor translocation . At the end of the
interaction, bacteria were killed with gentamicin and HeLa cells were
incubated for a further 3 days . Actin and nuclei were stained,
respectively, with rhodamine-phalloidin and DAPI . Bars, 10 µM.
|
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Since the first 20 amino acids of Cif, Tir, Map, and EspF share no
sequence homology and secondary structure similarity, these results
suggest that Cif is a modular protein composed of an exchangeable
N-terminal STS linked to a larger functional domain which promotes
the cell cycle block and the formation of actin stress fibers .
Among LEE-encoded effectors, only the Tir effector has been studied
to determine the domains involved in translocation . In this study, we
analyzed the properties of Cif, the first described non-LEE-encoded
effector, as a type III secretion substrate . The signals of Cif that
mark the protein for secretion into the extracellular media and
delivery into host cells were investigated by using the TEM-1
ß-lactamase protein as a new reporter system . This approach revealed
that the first 16 N-terminal residues of Cif are sufficient for
secretion and delivery of the TEM-1 reporter by wild-type EPEC
strains . We have also shown and confirmed that Tir, Map, and EspF
contain an STS in their N termini . This result suggests that
LEE-encoded and non-LEE-encoded effectors use the same molecular
mechanisms to be exported from the bacterial cell via the TTSS . As
shown in Fig . 5C, the amino acids of the STS of
Cif, Tir, Map, and EspF share no similarity and failed to produce
significant alignments . The STS from EspF and Map have been predicted
to form an
-helix
with an amphipathic profile, consistent with the hypothesis
that amphipathicity can serve as a signal (24,
25) . However, Tir and Cif have not been predicted to form
-helices,
and thus, this latter hypothesis cannot be applied to these
effectors . Similar analysis at the mRNA level also failed to identify
conserved nucleic acid composition or particular secondary
structures . The nature of the secretion signal has been the subject
of many studies with Yersinia but still remains a matter of
debate (for reviews and models, see references 20
and 37) .
The observation that the Cif1-16-TEM fusion is less secreted
and translocated than the full-length Cif-TEM is in agreement
with previous studies showing that the N-terminal signal mediates
secretion and translocation with lower efficiency than full-length
effectors (38-40) and suggests, as for
Tir, that a chaperone is required for the translocation of Cif .
Preliminary studies with cosmids carrying the functional LEE from
EPEC and EHEC strains suggest that the Cif chaperone (if any) is
probably encoded by the LEE (data not shown) . However, none of the
chaperones previously shown to be involved in the translocation of
LEE-encoded effectors, namely CesT for Tir and Map and CesF for EspF,
could be shown to be Cif chaperones, since the translocation of Cif
was not affected in a cesT mutant (Fig . 3A) and a
cesF mutant (data not shown) . Alternatively, it is also
possible that Cif does not require a specific chaperone for its
translocation into the host cell . In a recent study with the
plasmid-borne minimal TTSS of Yersinia, it has been shown that
translocation of YopE and YopT require their respective chaperones,
whereas YopM did not require a chaperone for translocation (43) .
So efficient translocation could be achieved without a specific
chaperone . As proposed by Gauthier and Finlay (16), the
action of a chaperone, such as CesT, which directly binds EscN, would
be to drive the effector to EscN to engage it into the channel .
In this study, Gauthier and Finlay have also shown that Tir alone can
also interact with EscN . Based on this finding, it is possible that
Cif can directly bind EscN . The differential translocation
efficiencies observed between Cif1-16-TEM and the full
Cif-TEM fusion protein could then be explained by their differential
abilities to bind EscN .
Little is known about the functional domains of Cif, but our
results show that Cif lacking its STS can be targeted to the host
cell by using an alternative STS from Tir, Map, or EspF . Since the
first 20 amino acids of Cif, Tir, Map, and EspF share no sequence
homologies and no secondary structure similarities, we believe that
the translocation signal of Cif is not involved in the enzymatic or
binding activity of Cif, in contrast to other effector proteins, such
as YopH from Yersinia, where residues in the N-terminal domain
are critical for substrate recognition (30) . These
results suggest that Cif is a modular protein composed of an
exchangeable N-terminal STS linked to a larger functional domain
which promotes the cell cycle block and the formation of actin stress
fibers . The hypothesis of a C-terminal effector domain is
substantiated by the fact that Cif76-282 is similar to a
domain present in two putative proteins encoded by Burkholderia
pseudomallei and Photorhabdus luminescens (26;
data not shown) . B . pseudomallei is the causative agent of
melioidosis, a serious infectious disease of humans and animals that
is endemic in subtropical areas . P . luminescens is a symbiont
of nematodes and a broad-spectrum insect pathogen . Interestingly,
these two pathogens code for one to three TTSSs, similar to secretion
systems present in Xanthomonas spp . (36),
Salmonella spp . (42), and Yersinia spp .
(45) . This observation, together with the fact
that the C terminus of Cif may also have a role in protein stability
and/or folding, explains the inability of wild-type strains harboring
a 3' truncated cif gene to produce a CPE on epithelial cells (26) .
Several methods have been previously reported to monitor the
determinants of secretion and translocation by the type III pathway .
The first one was the CyaA system involving translational fusion with
the calmodulin-dependent catalytic domain of the Bordetella
pertussis toxin CyaA (41) . This enzyme converts cellular
ATP in cyclic AMP (cAMP) in the presence of the eukaryotic protein
calmodulin . Also extensively used, this assay is relatively
time-consuming . Another method involves a translational fusion with
the phosphorylatable Elk peptide fused to the nuclear localization
signal (NLS) from the large T antigen of simian virus 40 (7) .
The NLS sequence directs the fusion protein to the cell nucleus
where the Elk tag is phosphorylated . The translocated protein can be
detected by Western blotting with phosphospecific Elk peptide
antibodies . Like the CyaA system, the Elk tag system uses cellular
processes to detect proteins that are specifically injected into the
host cell . This confers specificity but may have some limitations .
For the CyaA system, some pathogenic bacteria produce toxins that are
adenylate cyclases, leading to an increase of the cellular cAMP to
supraphysiological levels (for example, the ExoY toxin from
Pseudomonas aeruginosa) (46) . This could mask
the increase of cAMP converted by the CyaA fusion . In the Elk tag
system, the fusion protein needs to be artificially translocated to
the host cell nucleus, but many toxins are naturally targeted to
other compartments such as the mitochondria (Map), the plasma
membrane (Tir), or the Golgi apparatus (NleA) . Thus, the system is
dependent on the efficiency of the simian virus 40 NLS to alter the
original intracellular targeting of the effector protein . Another
method developed by Lee et al . is based on fractionation with
digitonin that solubilizes the eukaryotic plasma membrane but not the
prokaryotic membranes (23) . As for the Cya and Elk
tag systems, this requires disruption of the eukaryotic cell . In
contrast, the TEM-1 is not based on a cellular process but on the
differential entry of the TEM-1 substrate in bacterial and eukaryotic
cells, and the use of the CCF2/AM fluorescent substrate enables
translocation analysis in living cells without disruption of the host
cell . In addition, this new reporter can be fused to the end of
certain effectors without affecting their activity, which means that
double activity tests can be carried out with efficiently
translocated proteins, making the data more reliable . Because fewer
than 100 molecules of TEM-1 can be readily detected within a cell (47),
the system was sensitive enough to detect translocation of a weakly
produced chromosomally encoded Cif-TEM fusion (data not shown) .
In the context of a growing importance of TTSS in bacterial
pathogenicity, TEM-1 fusion used in combination with CCF2/AM
fluorescent substrate is a new powerful tool for identifying
undiscovered bacterially encoded molecules that are delivered into
host cells . A large number of substrates have been described for
other TTSSs, such as the Salmonella sp . strain SPI-1 TTSS,
which secretes at least 19 different proteins (15) . The
recent discovery of five other non-LEE-encoded TTSS substrates (9),
in addition to Cif (26) and NleA/EspI (17,
31), raises the possibility that other type III
translocated effectors may be encoded elsewhere in the EPEC and EHEC
genomes . The recently published genome of EDL933 and Sakai O157:H7
EHEC strains have shown that the genome of pathogenic E . coli
contains a large number of bacteriophages carrying open reading
frames coding for putative proteins of unknown function (35) .
Thus, the number of proteins translocated by the LEE TTSS is very
likely underestimated . We are currently investigating the use of
TEM-1 fusion to identify other TTSS substrates . Identification of
other TTSS substrates will open up new areas of investigation to
increase our understanding of EHEC- and EPEC-mediated diseases .
We thank Philippe Bauchart for the construction of first-generation
TEM-1 fusions and preliminary studies on translocation measurements,
Jean-Philippe Nougayrède for helpful discussions and comments on the
manuscript, and Ilan Rosenshine for suggesting solubility
experiments . We are grateful to Neil Ledger for editorial assistance .
This work was supported by a grant from the European Union Fifth
Framework Quality of Life Programme (QLK2-2000-00600) .
* Corresponding author . Mailing address: UMR 1225, INRA-ENVT,
23 chemin des Capelles, 31076 Toulouse Cedex, France . Phone: 33 561 19 39 91 .
Fax: 33 561 19 39 75 . E-mail: e.oswald@envt.fr.
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