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Journal of Bacteriology, August 2004, p . 5078-5086, Vol . 186,
No . 15
Secretion and Function of Salmonella SPI-2 Effector SseF Require Its
Chaperone, SscB
Shipan Dai and Daoguo Zhou*
Department of Biological Sciences, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana
47907
Received 1 March 2004/ Accepted 5 May 2004
Salmonella strains utilize a type III secretion system for their
successful survival and replications inside host cells . SseF is
one of the several effector proteins that are required for conferring
this survival ability by altering the trafficking of the
Salmonella-containing vacuoles . These effector proteins often
require appropriate chaperones to maintain their stabilities inside
the bacteria . These chaperones are also known to assist the
subsequent secretion and translocation of their substrates . We report
here that SscB acts as the chaperone for SseF, an effector for the
Salmonella pathogenicity island 2 (SPI-2) . We found that the
sscB gene is required for the formation of Salmonella
sp.-induced continuous filaments in epithelial cells . Efficient
Salmonella replication in macrophages requires SscB function .
Intracellular and secretion levels of SseF are greatly reduced in an
sscB mutant strain compared to the wild-type strain . A protein
stability assay demonstrated that the half-life of SseF is
significantly shortened in the absence of SscB . Transcriptional
analysis of the sseF gene showed that the effect of SscB on
the SseF level is not at the transcriptional level . A coprecipitation
experiment indicated that SscB interacts with SseF . In summary, our
results indicate that SscB is a chaperone for SPI-2 effector SseF to
facilitate its secretion and function inside the host cells .
Salmonella species cause a number of food-borne diseases in
humans and other warm-blooded animals; these diseases range from mild
intestinal diarrhea to the more severe typhoid fever (1,
42) . Virulent Salmonella strains possess the ability
to successfully enter, survive, and replicate inside mammalian
cells including professional macrophages . Salmonella species
stay inside a closed membrane compartment after entry . Previous
studies have demonstrated that Salmonella play a key role in
subverting the cellular process for the biogenesis of the Salmonella-containing
vacuoles (SCVs) (4, 12,
15, 17, 22,
26, 37, 44,
45, 47, 50) .
Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium encodes two type III
secretion systems (TTSS) within the Salmonella pathogenicity
island 1 (SPI-1) and SPI-2 (14, 40) . These
type III protein secretion and translocation systems function to
inject a number of bacterial proteins (effectors) into the host cells
to promote bacterial entry and subsequent survival inside the SCV (14,
40) . These two TTSS have distinct functions during
Salmonella-host interactions . Whereas SPI-1-encoded TTSS injects
effector proteins into host cells to trigger invasion (51),
the SPI-2-encoded TTSS injects effector proteins to facilitate the
biogenesis of SCV inside the cells (25) . Effector
proteins contain secretion and translocation signals that are often
located in their N termini, presumably recognized by the TTSS (30) .
Genes located in SPI-2 encode proteins that make up the type III
secretion apparatus, serve as transcriptional regulators, and
function as effector proteins inside the host cells (22) .
A number of effector proteins are also encoded outside the SPI-2
locus . Most genes encoding components and effectors of the SPI-2
type III secretion are clustered and appear to be in the same
transcriptional operon (19-21) . This
operon includes sseA-G and sscA-B . It was recently
determined that SseB, SseC, and SseD are secreted proteins and are
required for the translocation of other effector proteins (32) .
SseF and SseG, are putative effector proteins implicated in the
formation of Salmonella-induced aggregation of host endosomes
(17) . More-recent studies have suggested that SseG
is responsible for targeting Salmonella to the host Golgi
network through poorly understood mechanisms (38) .
Effector proteins often require appropriate chaperones to maintain
their stabilities and subsequent secretion and translocation across
the TTSS into mammalian cells (33) . Several studies have
described chaperones for SPI-1 secretion apparatus and effectors,
including InvB, SicA, and SicP which are encoded within SPI-1 (3,
8, 13, 46) . SseA is the
only reported chaperone for the SPI-2-encoded secretion apparatus
proteins SseB and SseD (7, 36,
53) . No chaperones have been reported for any of the SPI-2
effector proteins, although SscA and SscB have been proposed to
act as chaperones based on sequence analysis (6,
22) . However, there is no experimental evidence to
support this hypothesis .
Some of the hallmarks for putative type III effector chaperones
are (i) that they are small proteins with a low molecular mass of <15
kDa; (ii) that genes encoding the chaperones are often situated in
the vicinity of genes encoding their corresponding substrates; (iii)
that these chaperones possess amphipathic helices at their C termini;
and (iv) that these chaperones often have acidic pIs . SscB has been
proposed as a chaperone based on its 23% identity and 36% similarity
over 98 amino acid residues to IppI, a chaperone for Shigella
flexneri invasion proteins (2,
22) . Consistent with being a chaperone, SscB has a predicted
molecular mass of 16.3 kDa and an acidic pI of 4.92 and is also
predicted to contain a mostly alpha-helical secondary structure that
extends throughout its entire length . In addition, the sscB
gene is located immediately upstream of the sseF gene in the
effector/chaperone region of SPI-2 . We present evidence here that
SscB is a chaperone for SseF .
Bacterial strains. Bacterial strains and plasmids used in the
present study are listed in Table 1 . Escherichia
coli and serovar Typhimurium strains are routinely cultured in
Luria-Bertani (LB) broth . Salmonella trains were grown under
SPI-1 TTSS-inducing conditions (LB broth with 0.3 M NaCl) for all of
the invasion experiments . When SPI-2 TTSS-inducing conditions were
desired, the strains were grown in MgM minimal medium adjusted to
either pH 7.0 (MgM7) or pH 5.0 (MgM5) (10) .
Antibiotics were used at the indicated concentrations: ampicillin at
120 µg ml–1, streptomycin at 25 µg ml–1,
kanamycin at 40 µg ml–1, and tetracycline at 12 µg ml–1 .
| TABLE 1 . Bacterial strains and plasmids
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Mammalian cell lines and bacterial infection assay. The murine
macrophage RAW264.7 (TIB-71, American Type Culture Collection [ATCC])
and the human epithelial cell line HeLa (CCL-2 [ATCC]) were purchased
from the ATCC cell biology stock center (Manassas, Va.) . Both were
maintained in Dulbecco modified Eagle medium (DMEM) containing 10%
fetal bovine serum . Salmonella infection of mammalian cells
was conducted as previously described (52) at a
multiplicity of infection (MOI) of 10 . Bacterial infection of
RAW264.7 macrophages and survival assays were carried out as
described before (9, 22) . Briefly,
macrophages were seeded in 24-well plates at a density of 5
x 105 cells/well 24 h before
infection . Bacteria were cultured to early stationary phase in
LB medium at 37°C and diluted to an optical density at 600 nm of 0.1 .
The bacteria were opsonized for 20 min in DMEM containing 10% normal
mouse serum (Gemini Bio-Products, Woodland, Calif.) at 37°C .
Opsonized bacteria were added to RAW264.7 macrophage monolayer at an
MOI of 10 . Bacterial attachment was facilitated by centrifugation at
500 x g for 5 min at room
temperature . The bacteria-cell mixtures were incubated for 30 min at
37°C in 5% CO2 . After infection, the macrophages were
washed twice with phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) to remove
extracellular bacteria and incubated further in DMEM containing 10%
fetal bovine serum and 16 µg of gentamicin ml–1 . At 2
and 24 h after gentamicin treatment, infected macrophages were
washed three times in PBS and lysed with 1% Triton X-100 and 0.1%
sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) . Samples were then serially diluted and
plated on selective medium to enumerate the intracellular bacteria .
The extent of replication was then determined by dividing the number
of intracellular bacteria at 24 h by the number at 2 h .
Strain and plasmid constructions. In-frame chromosomal
deletions of genes in Salmonella strains were generated by
using an allelic-exchange suicide vector as previously reported (24) .
Briefly, the DNA fragment with the in-frame deletion was cloned into
the suicide vector pSB890 . The resulting plasmid constructs (pZP226
for ssaV deletion and pZP227 for sseF) were transferred
into serovar Typhimurium via conjugation, where they were integrated
into the chromosome by homologous recombination . In order to
construct the sscB mutant, a HincII promoterless kanamycin
resistance gene cassette from pSB1046 was introduced into the SmaI
site of the sscB gene . The inactivated sscB gene was
then cloned into the suicide vector pSB890 to generate pZP259 .
Plasmid pZP259 was subsequently transferred into Salmonella by
conjugation and integrated into the chromosome by homologous
recombination as described above . To generate expression plasmids
from the SseA promoter, a 450-bp DNA fragment containing the SPI-2
promoter ProsseA was obtained as described before (18)
and cloned into the HindIII/EcoRI-digested pWSK29 to obtain pZP545 .
Various SPI-2 genes with the M45 tag were subcloned into the
EcoRI/XbaI-digested pZP545 .
To generate M45-tagged or His-tagged fusion proteins, the entire
gene encoding the corresponding full-length protein was amplified by
PCR and cloned into pBAD24 by using standard molecular biology
techniques (29) . The sseF gene was amplified by PCR
with the primers 5'-CGGAATTCGCATGAAAATTCATATT-3' and
5'CGCCATGGATGGTTCTCCCCGAGAT-3', and the sifB gene was
amplified with the primers 5'-GCGAATTCCCATGCCAATTACTATCGGGAGAG-3' and
5'-GCGGATCCACTCTGGTGATGAGCCTCATT-3' . The sseJ gene was amplified
with the primers 5'-GGAATTCCCATGCCATTGAGTGTTGG-3' and
5'-GCGGATCCTTCAGTGGAATAATG-3', and the sscB gene was amplified
with the primers 5'-CGGAATTCGTATGATGATGAAAGA-3' and
5'-GCGATATCAGCAATAAGAGTATCAA-3' .
Intracellular protein level and secretion. The desired
serovar Typhimurium strains were grown under SPI-2-inducing
conditions described previously (10) . Briefly, to check the
intracellular level of different proteins, ZP18 ( ssaV)
and ZP41 ( ssaV
sscB)
containing pZP281 and pZP546 (encoding SseF-M45), pZP284 and pZP549
(encoding SscB and SseF-M45), pZP430 and pZP556 (SifB-M45), or pZP492
(SseJ-M45) were grown at 37°C for 8 h in LB medium . Bacterial
cultures were washed twice and diluted 1:100 in MgM5 or MgM7 . The
cultures were grown with agitation at 200 rpm for 16 additional
hours . Production of fusion proteins was induced by addition of 1 mM
arabinose during the last 2 h of growth when expressed from the pBAD
promoter . Bacteria were then pelleted by centrifugation at 10,000
x g for 20 min . Cells were
lysed with SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE) sample
buffer and subjected to SDS-PAGE analysis and immunoblotting . For
protein secretion assays, wild type and ZP22 (sscB) containing
pZP281 (encoding SseF-M45), pZP284 (encoding SscB and SseF-M45),
pZP430 (SifB-M45), or pZP492 (SseJ-M45) were cultured as described
above . Bacteria were pelleted by centrifugation at 10,000
x g, and the supernatants passed
through a 0.2-µm-pore-size filter . Secreted proteins were collected
by precipitation with 10% trichloroacetic acid and resuspended
in SDS-PAGE sample buffer, followed by SDS-PAGE and Western blot
analysis with anti-M45 antibody .
Transcriptional fusions and ß-galactosidase assay. A
promoterless lacZ gene was introduced into the same XbaI site
of pZP226 (in-frame deletion of ssaV in the suicide vector pSB890)
and pZP227 (in-frame deletion of sseF in the suicide vector
pSB890), respectively . The resulting plasmids pZP428 ( ssaV::lacZ)
and pZP369 ( sseF::lacZ)
were then introduced into wild-type Salmonella or into the
sscB mutant strain via conjugation and integrated into the
chromosome by homologous recombination . The resulting strains—ZP31 ( sseF::lacZ),
ZP33 (sscB
sseF::lacZ),
ZP39 ( ssaV::lacZ),
and ZP40 (sscB
ssaV::lacZ)—were
grown overnight in LB medium, washed twice and diluted 1:50 in MgM5
or MgM7, and grown for 6 h . ß-Galactosidase assays were
performed as previously described (39) .
Protein stability assay by gentamicin treatment. The desired
serovar Typhimurium strains, ZP18 ( ssaV)
and ZP41 ( ssaV
sscB::aphT) containing pZP281 (encoding SseF-M45) or pZP430
(SifB-M45) were grown under SPI-2-inducing conditions . Fusion
proteins were induced by addition of 1 mM arabinose for 2 h . Bacteria
were collected by centrifugation, and the pellets were washed three
times with PBS to remove the residual arabinose . Gentamicin was added
to 100 µg ml–1 . Samples were taken at different times
after the addition of gentamicin . Bacterial lysates were analyzed by
SDS-PAGE and Western blotting as described above .
Protein copurification. Serovar Typhimurium strain ZP36( ssaV
sseF
sscB::aphT) carrying plasmid pZP434 (encoding SseF-M45 and
His-SscB), pZP284 (encoding SseF-M45 and SscB), or pZP445 (encoding
SseF-M45 and His-ADF) were grown in SPI-2-inducing minimal medium as
described above and the expression of SseF-M45 and His-SscB were
induced by addition of 1 mM arabinose . Cells were collected by
centrifugation and lysed by sonication in lysis buffer containing 50
mM NaH2PO4, 300 mM NaCl, 10 mM imidazole, and 1
mM phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride (pH 8.0) . Slurry of
Ni-nitrilotriacetic acid (NTA) agarose beads (Qiagen, Valencia,
Calif.) was then added to the lysates, followed by incubation for 1 h
at 4°C with rotation . The Ni-NTA beads were pelleted by
centrifugation, washed five times with 50 mM NaH2PO4,
300 mM NaCl, 20 mM imidazole, and 1 mM phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride
(pH 8.0) . Copelleted proteins were dissolved by adding SDS-PAGE
sample buffer, followed by boiling for 5 min . Samples were analyzed
by SDS-PAGE and Western blotting with anti-M45 antibodies .
Immunofluorescence. For immunofluorescence analyses, HeLa
cells were infected for 30 min with Salmonella at an MOI of 10
as described before . Extracellular bacteria were removed by washing
with PBS and incubated with DMEM containing 10% fetal calf serum
supplemented with gentamicin (100 µg ml–1) for 1 h . The
medium was subsequently replaced with DMEM containing 10% fetal calf
serum and 16 µg of gentamicin ml–1 for the remainder
of the experiment . After infection, HeLa cells were washed three
times with PBS and fixed with 3% paraformaldehyde for 15 min at room
22°C temperature before being permeabilized with 0.2% Triton X-100 in
PBS . Cells were incubated with the primary antibody for 30 min after
being blocked with 5% skim milk, washed three times with PBS, and
incubated with the secondary antibody for 30 min . Serovar Typhimurium
were identified by using rabbit anti-Salmonella O-antigen
group B (Difco) and a secondary anti-rabbit antibody-Texas red
conjugant (Molecular Probes, Eugene, Oreg.) . LAMP-2 was detected with
mouse anti-human LAMP-2 (H4B4; Developmental Studies Hybridoma Bank,
The University of Iowa) and a secondary anti-mouse AF488 conjugant
(Molecular Probes) .
The sscB gene is required for the stability of SseF.
Chaperones for the type III secretion apparatus and related effectors
often affect the stability and/or secretion of their cognate
substrates (33) . To investigate the possible role of
SscB as a chaperone for SseF, the intracellular level of SseF
was examined in the ssaV mutant and the sscB ssaV double-mutant
strains . Examining the intracellular level of SseF in an ssaV
mutant background eliminated the potential secretion variation
because this strain is unable to secrete any known SPI-2 effectors (21) .
To facilitate the detection of SseF, a plasmid expressing a
M45-tagged SseF from its native promoter (ProsseA) was introduced
into the ssaV mutant and the sscB ssaV double-mutant
strains . Levels of SseF-M45 were determined by Western blotting with
a monoclonal antibody to the M45 epitope when grown in SPI-2-inducing
MgM5 or MgM7 minimal medium . As shown in Fig . 1A, the
intracellular levels of SseF in whole-cell lysates were not detected
in the absence of SscB but were restored by coexpressing the sscB
gene with sseF-M45 in the sscB ssaV mutant strain (Fig.
1A) . This result suggests that SscB is required for
the stability of cytoplasmic SseF .
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FIG . 1 . Effect of SscB on the intracellular level of SseF . The
secretion-deficient ssaV mutant strain (ZP18) and the ssaV
sscB double-mutant strain (ZP41) carrying plasmids expressing either
SseF-M45 (pZP281 and pZP546), SscBSseF-M45 (pZP284 and pZP549), SifB-M45
(pZP430), or SseJ-M45 (pZP492) were grown in the SPI-2-inducing MgM5 or
MgM7 minimal medium, and protein expressions were either driven by the
sseA promoter (A) or were induced by the addition of 1 mM
arabinose (panel B) . Bacteria were collected and lysed, and protein
levels were determined as described in Materials and Methods.
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To investigate whether the sscB mutant has a general defect in
protein stability, we determined the protein levels of SifB and SseJ,
two other SPI-2-secreted effectors . Under similar conditions as
described above, we failed to detect SifB and SseJ from the ProsseA
promoter in the presence or absence of SscB (data not shown) .
Therefore, we sought out to express SifB and SseJ from an
arabinose-inducible promoter (pBAD24) promoter . To aid the detection
of SseF, SifB, and SseJ, plasmids expressing M45-tagged SseF, SifB,
and SseJ from an arabinose-inducible promoter (pBAD24) were
constructed . These expression plasmids were then introduced into the
ssaV mutant and the sscB ssaV double-mutant strains as
described above . Production of the fusion proteins was induced with
arabinose in SPI-2-inducing minimal medium, and the levels of
SseF-M45, SifB-M45, and SseJ-M45 were determined by Western blotting .
Consistent with data shown above (Fig . 1A),
intracellular SseF in the whole-cell lysates was considerably less in
the absence of SscB (Fig . 1B) . This decrease was
complemented by coexpressing sscB with sseF-M45 in the
sscB ssaV mutant strain (Fig . 1) . In contrast, the
levels of SifB and SseJ did not change significantly in the presence
or absence of SscB (Fig . 1B) . This result suggests that
SscB functions for the stability of intracellular SseF but not for
SifB and SseJ .
To further demonstrate that SscB affects the level of SseF by
increasing its stability, we examined the half-life of SseF in the
presence or absence of SscB . Levels of SseF-M45 and SifB-M45 in the
whole bacterial lysates were monitored over time by Western blotting
after the addition of gentamicin, an antibiotic that stops protein
synthesis in bacteria . Intracellular levels of SseF-M45 were
monitored in the ssaV mutant and the ssaV sscB
double-mutant strains . As shown in Fig . 2, although >70%
of SseF-M45 was still detectable in the ssaV mutant strain,
<10% remained in the ssaV sscB double-mutant strain 90 min
after treatment with gentamicin . In addition, the level of SseF-M45
in the ssaV mutant strain was significantly higher than that
in the ssaV sscB double-mutant strain at time zero . This is
consistent with our previous results demonstrating that SscB
affects the intracellular level of SseF-M45 . In contrast, the levels
of SifB-M45 in both the ssaV and the ssaV sscB mutant
strains did not show any significant change over the time course of
the experiments . These results suggested that SscB specifically
affects the level of SseF by influencing its stability .
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FIG . 2 . Effect of SscB on the stability of SseF . The secretion-deficient
strains ZP18 ( ssaV)
and ZP41 ( ssaV
sscB::aphT), harboring pZP281(encoding SseF-M45) or pZP430
(encoding SifB-M45), were grown in MgM7, and protein expression was
induced with 1 mM arabinose . Gentamicin (100 µg ml–1) was
then added to inhibit protein synthesis . (A) The levels of SseF-M45 and
SifB-M45 were examined at different times after gentamicin treatment by
Western blotting with anti-M45 antibody . (B) The protein amounts were
quantified by densitometry scanning . Experiments were repeated three
times.
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The sscB gene is required for SseF secretion. Chaperones
of the TTSS are not only required for the stability of their
corresponding substrate but are also necessary for their secretion .
We thus examined the effect of SscB on the secretion of SseF . A
plasmid expressing the M45-tagged SseF was introduced into the wild
type and into the sscB mutant strain . After growth in acidic
SPI-2-inducing minimal medium, the secreted proteins were collected
by trichloroacetic acid precipitation, and the amounts of SseF were
examined by Western blotting with the monoclonal anti-M45 antibody .
The sscB mutation completely abolished extracellular SseF,
whereas it had no obvious effect on the extracellular level of SifB
and SseJ (Fig . 3), indicating that the SPI-2
secretion pathway is not impeded in the sscB mutant strain .
SseF secretion can be rescued by coexpressing sscB with
sseF-M45 in the sscB mutant strain (Fig . 3) . This
result indicates that SscB influences not only the intracellular
levels of SseF but also its secretion .
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FIG . 3 . Effect of SscB on the secretion of SseF . Secretion of SseF-M45
(pZP281), SifB-M45 (pZP430), and SseJ-M45 (pZP492) were detected
in either wild type (SL1344) or an sscB mutant strain (ZP22) .
Bacteria were grown in MgM5, and the culture supernatants were collected
after centrifugation . Secreted proteins were precipitated and analyzed
as described in Materials and Methods.
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SscB does not significantly affect sseF transcription.
It has been reported that some chaperones affect the transcription
and even the translation of their cognate substrates (8,
46) . The selective effect of SscB on SseF could be
partly explained if SscB alters the transcription of the sseF
gene . To investigate this possibility, we constructed a
transcriptional fusion of lacZ to the intact sseF gene
and to ssaV, an SPI-2 TTSS apparatus gene, in the chromosome
of the wild type or the sscB mutant strain . ß-Galactosidase
activities were determined in bacteria grown in SPI-2-inducible
minimal medium MgM5 or MgM7 . As shown in Fig . 4,
there was no significant difference in the expression of lacZ
fused to sseF or ssaV in the presence or absence of
SscB . This result suggests that SscB exerts its effect on the level
of SseF posttranscriptionally .
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FIG . 4 . Effect of the sscB mutation on sseF transcription .
Transcription of sseF-lacZ (A) and ssaV-lacZ (B [control])
were measured in the wild type or in the sscB mutant strain
containing a chromosomal fusion of lacZ with sseF (ZP31
and ZP33, respectively) or ssaV (ZP39 and ZP40, respectively) .
Stationary-phase bacteria grown in LB medium were washed twice, diluted
in MgM5 or MgM7, and grown for an additional 6 h . Samples were then
collected and assayed for ß-galactosidase activities (Miller units) . The
experiments were carried out three times with similar results.
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SscB interacts with SseF. Chaperones often exert their function
by associating specifically with their cognate substrates (41,
49) . To examine the interaction between SscB and
SseF, we coexpressed the M45-tagged SseF with His-tagged SscB from a
plasmid with an arabinose-inducible promoter in the
secretion-deficient Salmonella ssaV sseF sscB triple-mutant
strain . Strains harboring the plasmid were grown in SPI-2-inducing
minimal medium or LB medium in the presence or absence of arabinose .
His-SscB was precipitated by the addition of Ni-NTA agarose beads,
and His-SscB-associated proteins were then examined by Western
blotting with an anti-M45 antibody . As a control, an untagged SscB
and His-ADF (for actin depolymerization factor in eukaryotes) were
produced in the same plasmid, and "pull-down" experiments carried out
in an identical manner . As shown in Fig . 5,
SseF-M45 was detected in the precipitated His-SscB fraction when
His-SscB was used . In contrast, SseF-M45 was not detected when an
untagged SscB or His-ADF was used in place of His-SscB (Fig.
5) . These data showed that SscB specifically interacts
with SseF, supporting the hypothesis that SscB serves as the
chaperone for SseF .
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FIG . 5 . SseF interacts with SscB in a coprecipitation assay . Serovar
Typhimurium mutant strain ZP36 ( ssaV
sseF
sscB::aphT) containing plasmids expressing SseF-M45 and
His-SscB (pZP434), SseF-M45 and SscB (pZP284), or SseF-M45 and His-ADF
(pZP445) was grown in MgM7, and protein expression was induced with 1 mM
arabinose . His-tagged proteins were precipitated from lysates by Ni-NTA
agarose beads . Samples were taken before the addition of the beads (Pre)
and after bead binding (Post) . Coprecipitated proteins (Pull-down), Pre,
and Post samples were all examined by Western blotting with the anti-M45
antibody.
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The sscB gene is required for the formation of continuous
Salmonella-induced filaments. Previous studies have shown that
Salmonella infection induces the formation of filamentous
structures (Sif) that are rich in lysosomal membrane glycoproteins (16).
Salmonella-induced Sifs are connected to the
bacterium-containing vacuoles (16) . The formation
of these filaments is dependent on the function of SPI-2 (26) .
Interestingly, strains that are deficient in SseF were still capable
of forming aggregated endosomes, but the distribution of lysosomal
membrane glycoproteins appeared to be punctate rather than continuous
(26) .
The ability of the sscB mutant strain to form filamentous structures
in HeLa cells was analyzed by immunofluorescence microscopy .
Consistent with previous studies, wild-type Salmonella sp . induced
aggregation of LAMP-2-containing filamentous structures (Fig .
6) . In contrast to the continuous distribution of LAMP-2 along
Sifs induced by the wild-type Salmonella, the sscB mutant
strain induced Sifs displaying punctate distribution of LAMP-2 (Fig .
6) . This discontinuous distribution pattern of LAMP-2 is
similar to the "pseudo-Sif" induced by the sseF mutant strain
as reported previously (26) . This result is
consistent with the hypothesis that SscB functions as a chaperone for
SseF .
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FIG . 6 . The sscB mutation induced discontinuous Sifs . HeLa cells
were infected with wild-type (SL1344), the sseF mutant (ZP19), or
the sscB mutant (ZP22) strains . Sifs and vacuolar membranes were
labeled with mouse anti-LAMP-2 H4B4 antibody and secondary Alexa Fluor
488 (green) . Bacteria were visualized by staining with rabbit anti-O
antigen and secondary antibody-Texas red (red) . Arrows indicates Sifs,
and arrowheads indicate the "pseudo-Sifs."
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SscB is required for efficient Salmonella replication in
macrophages. Previous studies have shown that SseF contributes to
intracellular replication of serovar Typhimurium in macrophages (22) .
If SscB functions as a chaperone for SseF, mutations in sscB
should affect Salmonella intracellular proliferation due to a
reduced level and/or translocation of SseF . As shown in Fig.
7, the sscB mutant strain replicated less
efficiently inside macrophage and was similar to that of the sseF
mutant strain . This defect was complemented by introducing a plasmid
(pZP283) encoding the full-length SscB into the sscB mutant
strain . This complementation indicates that the slower replication of
the sscB mutant strain was not due to a polar effect on a
downstream sseF gene . This result further supports our
hypothesis that SscB functions as a chaperone for SseF .
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FIG . 7 . SscB is required for efficient intracellular survival of serovar
Typhimurium in macrophages . RAW264.7 macrophages were infected with
wild-type serovar Typhimurium and various mutant strains at an MOI of
10 . Extracellular bacteria were removed by washing and gentamicin
treatment . At 2 and 24 h after bacterial invasion, cells were lysed and
the number of intracellular bacteria was determined by plating on LB
medium-streptomycin plates . The data shown were obtained from three
independent experiments, each performed in duplicate.
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Salmonella strains utilize the SPI-2 for their successful survival
and replications inside host cells by translocating SPI-2 effectors,
including SseF, into the host cell . It has not been clear whether
these SPI-2 effector proteins require any chaperones for their
functions . We report here that SscB acts as the chaperone for SseF .
Our data show that the SscB is required for the stability of
cytoplasmic SseF and for its secretion into the culture medium . This
is further corroborated by the protein stability assay demonstrated
that the half-life of SseF is significantly shortened in the absence
of SscB . The effect of SscB on SseF was shown to be
posttranscriptional . In addition, SscB interacted with SseF in a
coprecipitation experiment . Taken together, our results indicate that
SscB functions as a chaperone for SseF .
It is becoming evident that many type III secretion components
require cognate chaperones for their secretion into the extracellular
medium and/or translocation into the host cells . In addition, complex
functions have been described for chaperones SicA, SicP, InvB, and
SseA involving the Salmonella TTSS apparatus and effectors .
Although their substrates range from the type III secretion apparatus
and effectors, they all have the ability to stabilize their
substrates in the bacterial cytoplasm (3, 7,
8, 11, 13,
28, 36, 46,
53) . Interestingly, SicA has been shown to regulate
sopE gene transcription, possibly through InvF (8,
46) . In addition, the Yersinia SycH
chaperone was shown to relieve the posttranscriptional repression of
Yop effector synthesis by binding to YscM1 and YscM2 (5) .
No chaperones have been reported for SPI-2 effectors despite
speculation based on sequence homologies . Our data indicate that
chaperones are also required for SPI-2 effector protein, SseF .
Although SscB is essential for both the stability and the secretion
of SseF, it appears to have a greater influence on SseF secretion
than on its intracellular level, suggesting that the effect on SseF
secretion may be independent of its effect on stability (Fig.
1B and 3) . These data are consistent
with previously published results, suggesting a role for chaperones
in partially unfolding the substrates in order to maintain
secretion-competent state for the type III secretion apparatus (43) .
The phenotype of the sscB mutant can be complemented by coexpressing
sscB with sseF in a bicistronic vector . Interestingly, the
interaction between SscB and SseF can be detected only if SscB and
SseF are coexpressed from the bicistronic vector (Fig .
5) . No interaction was observed when SscB and SseF were expressed
separately and bacteria lysates were mixed later . A similar
requirement of a 40-kDa chaperone for the crystallization of the
34-kDa protein and formation of the inclusion bodies was reported in
Bacillus thuringiensis subsp . thompsoni (35) .
It is tempting to speculate that proper folding of SseF requires the
presence of SscB immediately after or during SseF translation . This
hypothesis is consistent with the genetic arrangement of the sscB
gene upstream of sseF in the Salmonella chromosome and
apparently in the same operon (32) . Further
studies are required to explore this possibility .
The sseG gene, which encodes another SPI-2 effector of the TTSS,
is located immediately downstream of the sseF gene and appears
to be in the same transcriptional operon as sseA-G and sscA-B
(19-21) . SseG is also a putative
effector protein implicated in the formation of Salmonella-induced
aggregation of host endosomes (17) . Recent studies
have suggested that SseG is responsible for targeting Salmonella
to the host Golgi network through an undefined mechanism (38) .
It has been suggested that SscB acts as a chaperone for both SseF and
SseG (6, 22) . One reason hampering
the functional study of SPI-2 determinants is the difficulty in
expressing these proteins in vitro for biochemical analysis . For
example, we have not been able to detect any SseF when it is
expressed from the chromosomal gene under its native promoter even
though the sseF gene is transcribed (Fig . 4 and data
not shown) . Our data suggest that expressing these SPI-2 effector
proteins from a medium-copy-number plasmid would facilitate
their functional characterization . Our preliminary data have shown
that the intracellular level of SseG is significantly decreased in
the absence of SscB (data not shown) . However, numerous attempts to
express SseG to a detectable secretion level have failed (data not
shown) . Further studies are needed to explore whether SscB acts as a
chaperone for SseG .
It is known that SPI-1 functions to promote invasion (51)
and that SPI-2 functions to facilitate the biogenesis of SCV inside
cells (25) . These two TTSS apparently function in very
different environments . Recent studies have shown that the
chaperone-binding domain of SopE and SptP might, in addition to their
stabilizing activities, confer secretion specificity . These two
effectors are secreted through the flagellum-associated export system
instead of SPI-1 TTSS when their chaperone-binding domains are
deleted (27) . Our data indicate that SscB is required both
for stability and for secretion of SseF, suggesting that SscB may
function in a mechanism similar to that of the SPI-1 effector
chaperones . Analysis of how SscB functions may help us understand
whether SPI-2 effector chaperones function differently from the SPI-1
effector chaperones, perhaps when salmonellae encounter different
surrounding environments .
This research was supported by NIH grant AI49978 and AHA grant
0230286N to D.Z .
We thank Ferric Fang for providing technical help with the macrophage
survival assay and Patrick Hearing for providing monoclonal
anti-M45 antibodies . We thank Arthur Aronson for critically reviewing
the manuscript .
* Corresponding author . Mailing address: Department of
Biological Sciences, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN 47907 . Phone: (765)
494-8159 . Fax: (765) 494-0876 . E-mail:
zhoud@purdue.edu .
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