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Journal of Bacteriology, August 2004, p . 5031-5039, Vol . 186,
No . 15
A Type
II Protein Secretory Pathway Required for Levansucrase Secretion by
Gluconacetobacter diazotrophicus
Juan G . Arrieta,* Mailin Sotolongo,
Carmen Menéndez, Dubiel Alfonso, Luis E . Trujillo, Melvis Soto, Ricardo Ramírez,
and Lázaro Hernández
Plant-Microbe Interactions Lab, Plant Division, Center for Genetic
Engineering and Biotechnology, Havana 10600, Cuba
Received 24 November 2003/ Accepted 30 April 2004
The endophytic diazotroph Gluconacetobacter diazotrophicus secretes
a constitutively expressed levansucrase (LsdA, EC 2.4.1.10) to
utilize plant sucrose . LsdA, unlike other extracellular levansucrases
from gram-negative bacteria, is transported to the periplasm by a
signal-peptide-dependent pathway . We identified an unusually
organized gene cluster encoding at least the components LsdG, -O, -E,
-F, -H, -I, -J, -L, -M, -N, and -D of a type II secretory system
required for LsdA translocation across the outer membrane . Another
open reading frame, designated lsdX, is located between the
operon promoter and lsdG, but it was not identified in BLASTX
searches of the DDBJ/EMBL/GenBank databases . The lsdX, -G, and
-O genes were isolated from a cosmid library of strain SRT4
by complementation of an ethyl methanesulfonate mutant unable
to transport LsdA across the outer membrane . The downstream genes
lsdE, -F, -H, -I, -J, -L, -M,
-N, and -D were isolated through chromosomal walking . The
high G+C content (64 to 74%) and the codon usage of the genes
identified are consistent with the G+C content and codon usage of the
standard G . diazotrophicus structural gene . Sequence analysis
of the gene cluster indicated that a polycistronic transcript is
synthesized . Targeted disruption of lsdG, lsdO, or
lsdF blocked LsdA secretion, and the bacterium failed to grow on
sucrose . Replacement of Cys162 by Gly at the C terminus of
the pseudopilin LsdG abolished the protein functionality, suggesting
that there is a relationship with type IV pilins . Restriction
fragment length polymorphism analysis revealed conservation of the
type II secretion operon downstream of the levansucrase-levanase (lsdA-lsdB)
locus in 14 G . diazotrophicus strains representing 11
genotypes recovered from four different host plants in diverse
geographical regions . To our knowledge, this is the first report of a
type II pathway for protein secretion in the Acetobacteraceae .
Gluconacetobacter (formerly Acetobacter) diazotrophicus is
a nonpathogenic, nitrogen-fixing endophyte of sugarcane and other
predominantly sucrose-rich crops (11, 20,
47) . This gram-negative bacterium lacks a sucrose
transport system (3) and depends on the secretion
of a constitutively expressed levansucrase (LsdA, EC 2.4.1.10) to
utilize plant sucrose (16, 17) . The
levansucrase gene (lsdA) and an exolevanase gene (lsdB)
downstream form a chromosomal operon with a high level of
conservation among G . diazotrophicus isolates (17,
26) .
All known levansucrases are extracellular proteins, although they
follow different secretion routes . Levansucrase secretion in
gram-positive bacteria involves cleavage of signal-peptide-containing
precursors in Bacillus subtilis (43), Bacillus
amyloliquefaciens (46), Geobacillus
stearothermophilus (24), Paenibacillus polymyxa
(7), Streptococcus salivarius (34),
Actinomyces naeslundii (6), Arthrobacter
nicotinovorans (36), and Lactobacillus reuteri
(49) . However, with the exception of LsdA, the other
gram-negative levansucrases characterized so far are secreted by a
signal-peptide-independent pathway; this occurs in Zymomonas
mobilis (41), Erwinia amylovora (14),
Rahnella aquatilis (42), Pseudomonas syringae (18,
23), and Gluconacetobacter xylinus (45) .
LsdA is synthesized as a precursor with a 30-residue N-terminal
signal peptide, which is cleaved off during transport to the
periplasm, where the enzyme adopts its final conformation . Then, in a
rate-limiting step, the mature LsdA is transferred across the outer
membrane and released into the extracellular medium without further
proteolytic cleavage (15) .
A wide spectrum of gram-negative bacteria, mainly plant- and
animal-interacting species, utilize the type II secretion pathway for
extracellular release of particular proteins, such as hydrolytic
enzymes and toxins . Following translocation to the periplasm by the
signal-peptide-dependent Sec or TAT system (32,
52), the folded substrate protein is transported
across the outer membrane by the type II secretion apparatus,
consisting of a multiprotein complex of at least 12 components
(reviewed in reference 38) .
Here we report that the endophytic bacterium G . diazotrophicus
possesses a type II secretion operon required for LsdA transport
across the outer membrane . The locus was identified downstream
of the levansucrase-levanase (lsdA-lsdB) operon on the chromosome
of the 14 strains tested, recovered from different host plants
in diverse geographical regions . To our knowledge, this is the first
report of a type II secretion pathway in the Acetobacteraceae .
Bacterial strains, media, and plasmids. Escherichia coli
strains DH5
[ 80dlacZ M15
recA1 endA1 gyrA96 thi-1 hsdR17 (rK–
mK+) supE44 relA1 deoR
(lacZYA-argF)U169]
and S17-1 {thi pro hsdR recA [RP4-2(Tc::Mu) (Km::Tn7)]} (40)
were used as a cloning host and a conjugative donor host, respectively .
Both strains were grown at 37°C in Luria broth . The G . diazotrophicus
strains listed in Table 1 were grown at 28°C in LGIE
medium containing 5% (wt/vol) sucrose and 1% (vol/vol) glycerol (4) .
Antibiotics were added at the following concentrations: ampicillin,
100 µg ml–1; tetracycline, 20 µg ml–1;
chloramphenicol, 30 µg ml–1; and kanamycin, 30 µg ml–1
for E . coli and 120 µg ml–1 for G . diazotrophicus .
Plasmids used in this study are listed in Table 2 .
| TABLE 1 . G . diazotrophicus strains used in this study
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| TABLE 2 . Plasmids used in this study
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DNA manipulation and analysis. Standard methods were used for
recombinant DNA procedures (37) .
High-specific-activity DNA probes were generated by using a
Prime-a-Gene labeling kit (Promega) with [ -32P]dATP
(>3,000 Ci mmol–1; Amersham Pharmacia Biotech) . Automatic
chain termination DNA sequencing was performed on both strands with
an ALFexpressII DNA sequencer (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech) . The
nucleotide sequences were compiled and analyzed by using the BioSOS
program package (8) . The BLAST program (2)
was used for similarity searches in protein databases, and the
CLUSTAL W program (48) was used to obtain
multiple-sequence alignments . Promoter prediction was performed by
the NNPP method (35) (software is available at the
website
http://www.fruitfly.org/seq_tools/promoter.html) .
Complementation experiments. Broad-host-range plasmids were
used to transform E . coli strain S17.1 and were mobilized to
G . diazotrophicus by conjugative mating as previously
described (4) . The transconjugants were selected on
LGIE agar medium supplemented with tetracycline and chloramphenicol;
the latter antibiotic was used to counterselect E . coli
donors . Intracellular and extracellular LsdA activities of mucous and
nonmucous colonies were examined as described previously (15) .
Cloning of type II secretion system genes from G . diazotrophicus
strain SRT4. Cosmid p21R1 was digested with BamHI totally and EcoRI
partially and was electrophoresed in an LMP agarose gel (Gibco-BRL) .
An agarose slice containing fragments ranging from 3.5 to 20 kbp
long was melted and mixed in a ligation reaction with BamHI-EcoRI-digested
pUC8 vector . The ligation products were used to transform E .
coli DH5 .
Three resultant plasmids with different restriction patterns,
designated pALS30, pALS31, and pALS32, were inserted into a
broad-host-range vector to obtain the mobilizable plasmids pALS33,
pALS34, and pALS35, respectively (Fig . 1), which were
tested for complementation of LsdA secretion in the G . diazotrophicus
mutant M31 . Cloning of a 7.4-kbp fragment downstream of the
complementing region of pALS35 was achieved by three successive
chromosomal walking steps . Three partial SRT4 DNA libraries
containing 3- to 4-kbp HindIII-SphI fragments, 1- to 2-kbp SacII-KpnI
fragments, and 4- to 6-kbp SalI-EcoRI fragments were constructed in
pUC19 or pBluescript SK(+) . Hybridizations performed with around
1,000 colonies from each library yielded three positive overlapping
clones, pALS119, pALS143, and pALS152 (Fig . 2) . The
inserts of pALS32, pALS119, pALS143, and pALS152 were digested with
appropriate restriction enzymes for subcloning and sequencing .
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FIG . 1 . Localization of the region of the library cosmid p21R1
complementing LsdA secretion in mutant M31 . lsd genes are
represented by arrows . lsdA and lsdB encode levansucrase
and levanase, respectively . lsdX, -G, and -O are
the first genes of the type II secretion operon . The ability of each
plasmid to restore LsdA secretion is indicated in parentheses . Plasmid
pALS118 encodes a mutated LsdG (C126G) . Restriction sites: E, EcoRI; B,
BamHI; Bg, BglII.
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FIG . 2 . Physical and genetic map of the G . diazotrophicus
levansucrase-levanase and type II secretion operons . Genes are
represented by arrows and are identified by italic letters . The lsdD
gene is incomplete . The bent arrows indicate promoter positions . Inserts
of the recombinant plasmids pALS32, pALS119, pALS143, and pALS152 are
indicated . Restriction sites: B, BamHI; Bg, BglII; E, EcoRI; H, HindIII;
K, KpnI; S, SalI; N, NcoI; Sc, SacII; Sp, SphI . The 1.1-kbp NcoI band of
pALS32 was used as a hybridization probe for RFLP analysis.
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Expression of the lsdA gene from the promoter region upstream of
lsdX. The region encoding the amino terminus of lsdA was
amplified from pALS5 by using primers
5'-CTTCAGGAGGATGCCATGGCGCATGTACGCC-3' and
5'-CAGCGACCGCCCGGGGAAGAGCGGGCCGCC-3' in a 198-bp PCR band and was
inserted at the SmaI site of pUC19 in the direction opposite that of
the lac promoter . The resulting plasmid, designated pALS60,
was digested with SmaI-BamHI and ligated to the 1,967-bp SmaI-BglII
fragment from pALS5, and the construct was designated pALS141 . A band
containing the 552-bp region upstream from lsdX was amplified
by PCR from plasmid pALS5 with primers 5'-CTACGGGGACCGGAAGCTTCCGCAGG-3'
and 5'-CGATCGGCAATTACCATGGCCACACC-3' . This band was digested at
the HindIII and NcoI sites introduced by the PCR and ligated in a
triple-ligation procedure to HindIII-SmaI-digested pUCNCO and the
2,114-bp NcoI-NruI fragment from pALS141 to obtain pALS182 . Plasmid
pALS184 resulted from insertion of HindIII-linearized pALS182 into
the HindIII site of pRK293 (Table 2) . LsdA activity
was assayed in cell extracts of E . coli DH5
carrying pALS182 and in culture supernatants of the G .
diazotrophicus mutant AD5 carrying pALS184 .
Cloning of lsdX and lsdG genes from nonsecreting mutant
M31. The insert of the complementing plasmid pALS35 included a 1.1-kbp
NcoI fragment containing the type II secretion genes lsdX and
lsdG of strain SRT4 . Since this fragment had an internal PstI
site, total DNA from mutant M31 was digested with NcoI and PstI
and electrophoresed in an LMP agarose gel . DNA bands ranging from 400
to 700 bp long were isolated from the gel and ligated to the
NcoI-PstI-digested pUCNCO vector . The E . coli transformants
were screened by hybridization to the 1.1-kbp NcoI band from pALS32
(Fig . 2) . Positive plasmids with the 640- and 440-bp
NcoI-PstI inserts were purified and sequenced .
Gene disruption by marker exchange. The suicide plasmids
pALS89, pALS127, and pALS130 were used to create disruptions in the
genes lsdG, lsdF, and lsdO, respectively, on the
chromosome of G . diazotrophicus SRT4 by marker exchange .
Plasmid pALS89 was constructed by inserting in a quadruple-ligation
procedure the 546-bp NcoI-EcoRI band from pALS5, the 1.6-kbp EcoRI
fragment from pUC4KIXX containing the kanamycin-bleomycin resistance
(nptII-ble) cassette, and the 945-bp EcoRI-HincII fragment
from pALS32 into NcoI-HincII-digested pUCNCO . Plasmid pALS130 was
constructed by joining in a quadruple-ligation reaction the 3,991-bp
BamHI-HindIII fragment from pALS32, the 1.6-kbp HindIII nptII-ble
cassette from pUC4KIXX, and the 3,560-bp HindIII-KpnI fragment from
pALS119 in BamHI-KpnI-digested pBluescript SK(+) . The three plasmids
were separately introduced into G . diazotrophicus SRT4 by
electroporation, and the recombinant colonies were selected on
kanamycin-containing LGIE medium plates as described previously (4) .
Insertion of the nptII marker into the lsd type II secretion
genes in the chromosomes of nonmucous colonies was confirmed by
Southern hybridization . Intracellular and extracellular LsdA
activities in the mutants were examined as described previously (15) .
Site-directed mutagenesis of Cys162 in the lsdG
gene of G . diazotrophicus SRT4. A 1,050-bp DNA fragment
comprising the promoter and the first two genes (lsdX and
lsdG) of the SRT4 type II secretion operon was amplified by PCR
by using plasmid pALS32 as the template and primers 5'-TGCCGAAGGGGTCGACGCCACCATTCACG
and 5'-CATGGATCCCACGATCAGGGATTGCAGATC with base
substitutions (boldface type) to create SalI and BamHI restriction
sites (underlined) . The PCR product was digested with SalI-BamHI
and inserted into the corresponding sites of pUC19 to obtain plasmid
pALS113 . In another PCR the TGC codon (Cys162) of the SRT4
lsdG gene was replaced with GGC (Gly) by using the same
template and upstream primer along with downstream primer 5'-CATGGATCCCACGATCAGGGATTGCCGATC .
The A-to-C substitution (boldface type) in the latter primer replaces
the TGC codon with GGC and abolishes the BglII site at the end of
lsdG . The amplified 1,050-bp fragment was digested with SalI-BamHI
and inserted into pUC19 to obtain plasmid pALS114 . Plasmids pALS113
and pALS114 were linearized with HindIII and inserted into the
broad-host-range vector pRK293 to obtain the mobilizable plasmids
pALS117 and pALS118, respectively (Fig . 1), which were tested
for complementation of LsdA secretion in ethyl methanesulfonate
(EMS)-treated mutant M31 .
Nucleotide sequence accession number. The sequence of the
identified type II lsd genes is available in the
DDBJ/EMBL/GenBank databases under accession number
L41732 .
Identification of a gene cluster encoding a type II protein secretory
pathway in G . diazotrophicus SRT4. Seven G . diazotrophicus
mutants that had active LsdA in the periplasm but were unable to
transfer the enzyme across the outer membrane were previously
isolated by EMS treatment of strain SRT4 (4) .
Introduction of the library cosmid clone p21R1 restored the Sec+,
levan-forming (mucous colony) phenotype in one of the seven mutants
(Fig . 1) . This mutant, designated M31, was fully
complemented by the derivative plasmid pALS35 containing a region
downstream of the structural levansucrase gene (lsdA) and the
levanase-encoding gene (lsdB) . Introduction of plasmid pALS15
carrying only the lsdA gene increased the amount of LsdA in
the periplasm (data not shown) but did not restore protein secretion
(Fig . 1) .
Sequencing of the 4,614-bp DNA insert of pALS35 revealed the
presence of three consecutive open reading frames (ORFs) in the same
orientation as the lsdA-lsdB operon (Fig . 1) . The first
ORF, designated lsdX, encodes a polypeptide with no detected
similarities in databases . The second ORF encodes a polypeptide
with the highest identity scores for the type II secretion component
GspG (Table 3), and therefore it was designated lsdG .
The N-terminal part of the deduced LsdG also showed a high degree of
similarity with type IV pilins . The translation initiation codon of
lsdG is an ATG, which is not preceded by a Shine-Dalgarno
sequence but overlaps by one base lsdX, suggesting that the
two genes are translated consecutively without ribosome dissociation .
The third ORF, designated lsdO, starts with an ATG codon located
12 bp downstream of the lsdG stop codon and encodes a polypeptide
with the essential characteristics of the type IV prepilin peptidase
family members . The gene product is highly similar to the GspO
component of several type II secretory pathways (Table 3) .
| TABLE 3 . Similarity between type II secretion components of G .
diazotrophicus SRT4 and their homologues in other bacteriaa
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Through chromosomal walking, three contiguous fragments downstream of
lsdO were cloned in plasmids pALS119, pALS143, and pALS152
(Fig . 2) . The assembled nucleotide sequence contained eight
full ORFs and one partial ORF, which were designated lsdE, -F,
-H, -I, -J, -L, -M, -N, and -D
based on their similarities to components of type II secretory
systems (Table 3) . Most of the genes have ATG
translation initiation codons; the only exception is lsdH,
which begins with TTG . The initiation and stop codons of the lsdF,
-H, -I, -J, -L, -M, -N, and -D
genes overlap or are separated by seven or fewer bases . The lsdE
start codon is located 23 bp downstream of the lsdO stop
codon, and it is preceded by the putative ribosome-binding sequence
AGGAA at position –13, suggesting that lsdE is translated
independent of lsdO . However, the presence of a small ORF
comprising the 22-bp intergenic region and overlapping lsdO
and lsdE by one base also makes coupled translation of these
genes possible .
The consecutive arrangement of the 12 genes suggests the existence
of an operon . A 50-bp sequence starting 104 bp upstream of lsdX
was predicted to be a transcriptional promoter with a probability
of 99% . The putative transcription start is flanked by TTGAAATCCC
direct repeats . The first ATG of lsdX is preceded by the potential
ribosome-binding sequence AGAAGGAG at position –10 and should
initiate translation of the polycistronic mRNA . Fusion of the 548-bp
region upstream from lsdX, containing the putative promoter,
with the lsdA gene in pALS182 and pALS184 led to constitutive
LsdA expression in the recombinant hosts E . coli and G . diazotrophicus,
respectively .
The G+C contents of the type II secretion genes from strain SRT4
ranged from 64 to 74%, which is consistent with the high G+C content
of the G . diazotrophicus genome . The codon usage of the 12
genes shows a strong preference for C and G (78 to 91%) in the third
position of the triplets, except for the amino acids Glu, His, Asn,
and Tyr . This codon usage is basically shared by other G .
diazotrophicus structural genes, including lsdA (4)
and lsdB (26) .
Genetic features of the G . diazotrophicus type II secretion
system. The deduced sequences of the G . diazotrophicus type II
components LsdG, -H, -I, and -J have the main characteristics of type
IV pilins and pseudopilins . Their N-terminal regions have the
consensus pattern G-F-T-L-(LIV)-E, with the putative peptidase
cleavage site between Gly and Phe, followed by a stretch of about 20
highly hydrophobic residues . Most of the signal peptides are
hydrophobic and short (9 to 11 residues); the only exception is the
signal peptide for LsdG, which has 34 residues and is among the
longest signals in the family (Fig . 3A) . At position
147 the precursor LsdG contains a conserved Ser residue that
aligns with Ser121 of Pseudomonas aeruginosa XcpT (GspG)
involved in the protein interaction with the component XcpR (GspE) (21)
(Fig . 3B) .
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FIG . 3 . Partial protein sequence alignments . (A) Alignment of G .
diazotrophicus pseudopilin N terminus . The arrowhead indicates the
putative beginning of mature pilins . (B, C, and D) Alignment of LsdG,
LsdO, and LsdE with their homologues in other type II secretion systems .
S147 in LsdG, C39, C42,C 64,
C67, D124, and D188 in LsdO, and Walker
A, Walker B, and aspartic acid boxes in LsdE are indicated above the
alignments . The sequences, identified by their SwissProt entry names,
correspond to the following species: Xanthomonas campestris,
Vibrio cholerae, P . aeruginosa, Aeromonas hydrophila,
Erwinia carotovora, E . coli, Klebsiella pneumoniae,
and Erwinia chrysanthemi . Identical and similar residues are
indicated by white letters on a black background and by black letters on
a gray background, respectively . Groups of residues considered similar
in the alignment are described in Table 3, footnote
a . The numbers in the alignment indicate the positions of the
residues in the precursor proteins.
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Multiple-sequence alignments of other G . diazotrophicus type
II components with their counterparts from diverse gram-negative
bacteria revealed conservation of several remarkable residues . The
putative prepilin peptidase and methylase LsdO contains the residues
Asp124 and Asp188 that must be located at the enzyme
active site (22), the residue Gly62 probably
involved in the methyltransferase activity (29),
and the residues Cys39, Cys42, Cys64,
and Cys67, whose analogues in P . aeruginosa PilD are
required for efficient activity (44) (Fig.
3C) . However, not all members of the PilD family
contain the four Cys residues, suggesting that they are not cysteine
proteases but are aspartic proteases (22) . The
putative nucleotide-binding protein LsdE contains a domain rich in
glycine and lysine (GPTGSGKT) that extends from residue 323 to
residue 330 and resembles the functional Walker box A (31,
53) . A less-conserved Walker box B is also present
in LsdE (501AAGTIAELLEPDE512) but includes only one
Gly instead of two Gly residues, which is the form that occurs
in most of the family members . LsdE possesses two aspartic acid boxes
(residues 349 to 355 and 383 to 396), which are highly conserved in
the GspE family (Fig . 3D) .
Restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) analysis of the type
II secretion locus in 14 representative G . diazotrophicus strains.
Total DNA from 14 G . diazotrophicus strains representing 11
different genotypes (electrophoretic types) (Table 1) was
digested with EcoRI, BglII, SphI, or SalI, and probed with a 1.1-kbp
NcoI fragment containing the lsdX and lsdG genes and part of
the lsdO gene from strain SRT4 (Fig . 2) . Two
hybridizing EcoRI fragments (1.3 and 3.2 kbp) were detected in 11 of
the 14 isolates, including the plasmidless strain PAL 5T
(Fig . 4A) . Replacement of the largest band by a new
3.8-kbp fragment in the coffee plant-associated strains CFN-Cf52,
CFN-Cf50, and UAP-Cf51 corresponded to the absence of the second
EcoRI site in the lsdA gene, as determined previously (17) .
The 14 strains had the expected 2.2-kbp BglII fragment extending from
lsdB to the end of lsdG and an additional band that
must extend beyond the lsdD gene (Fig . 4B) .
DNA digestion with SalI or SphI revealed in each case a single
hybridizing band that was three different sizes in the strains (Fig.
4C and D) . The polymorphisms are located in the
type II secretion operon considering that all the isolates contain
the SalI and SphI sites of the upstream lsdA gene (17) .
The 6.3-kbp SalI band of strain SRT4 is conserved in five of
the seven sugarcane isolates, as well as in strains PRC 1 and UAP-Ac7
recovered from Cameron grass and a pineapple plant, respectively . Two
strains from different hosts produced a band at approximately 7.6 kbp
because of the loss of the SalI site in the lsdF gene . A
shorter band ( 5.5
kbp) appeared in the four coffee plant isolates and the sugarcane
endophyte PAl 3 due to the presence of a new SalI site, probably at
the beginning of the lsdF gene . The majority of the strains
shared the 5.8-kbp SphI fragment of SRT4 . Strains PAl 3 and UAP-Ac7
showed a hybridizing band at approximately 6.2 kbp, revealing the
loss of the SphI site in the lsdH gene, whereas hybridization
in strains CFN-Cf50 and UAP-Cf51 corresponded to a band at about 2
kbp, indicative of the occurrence of an SphI site in lsdO .
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FIG . 4 . RFLP analysis of the type II secretion locus in 14 G .
diazotrophicus strains . Total DNA was digested with EcoRI (A), BglII
(B), SalI (C), and SphI (D) and probed with a 32P-labeled
1.1-kbp NcoI fragment carrying the lsdX and lsdG genes and
partial lsdO gene from strain SRT4 (Fig . 2) .
The sizes of SRT4 hybridizing bands are indicated . Lane 1, strain SRT4;
lane 2, strain UAP 5560; lane 3, strain CFNE 550; lane 4, strain PAl 5T;
lane 5, strain PSP 22; lane 6, strain PAl 3; lane 7, strain 1772; lane
8, strain PRC 1; lane 9, strain CFN-Cf52; lane 10, strain CFN-Cf50; lane
11, strain UAP-Cf51; lane 12, strain UAP-Cf53; lane 13, strain UAP-Ac10;
lane 14, strain UAP-Ac7.
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In summary, 11 polymorphisms were detected for the 70 restriction
sites examined in type II secretion genes of the 14 strains . Six of
these polymorphisms occurred in the four strains recovered from
coffee plants .
Functional analysis of the type II secretion genes in strain SRT4.
To assess the implications of the type II secretion operon in LsdA
secretion, the lsdG, lsdO, and lsdF genes were
independently disrupted in the chromosome of wild-type strain SRT4 .
The ColE1 derivative plasmids pALS88, pALS130, and pALS127 carrying
the nptII cassette inserted at the EcoRI site of lsdG,
the HindIII site of lsdO, and the EcoRV site of lsdF,
respectively, were introduced by electroporation into strain SRT4 .
Kanamycin-resistant, nonmucous colonies occurred in all three cases
as a consequence of double-recombination events, resulting in
replacement of the chromosomal target genes by the disrupted
cassettes of the plasmids, as confirmed by Southern hybridization
(data not shown) . The lsdG::nptII, lsdO::nptII,
and lsdF::nptII mutants, designated AD6, AD8, and AD9,
respectively, did not show extracellular levansucrase activity, but
the intracellular activity increased about fourfold due to
accumulation of LsdA in the cell periplasm (Table 4) .
This finding indicates that the type II secretion operon is
responsible for LsdA transfer across the outer membrane . The mutants
failed to grow in liquid LGIE medium containing sucrose as the sole
carbon source, corroborating the hypothesis that LsdA secretion is
required for sucrose utilization by G . diazotrophicus .
| TABLE 4 . LsdA secretion in G . diazotrophicus strainsa
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Cloning and sequencing of a 1.1-kbp NcoI fragment isolated from the
EMS-treated, nonsecreting mutant M31 revealed the occurrence of a
single mutation consisting of a G-to-A transition in the lsdG
gene . This mutation transformed a TGG codon (Trp111) into
a TGA (stop) codon, eliminating the last 54 residues of the original
polypeptide . Complementation experiments with plasmid pALS117
carrying only the lsdX and lsdG genes (Fig . 1
and Table 4) confirmed that the G-to-A substitution
mutation in M31 had no polar effect on expression of the type II
genes downstream of lsdG .
The pseudopilin LsdG has two C-terminal Cys residues at positions
146 and 162, which may form a disulfide bond in the nonreducing
environment of the periplasm . By PCR-mediated mutation the TGC codon
(Cys162) was replaced by GGC (Gly) in plasmid pALS118 .
This plasmid failed to restore LsdA secretion in the M31 mutant (Fig.
1 and Table 4), indicating that Cys162
has a key role in LsdG functionality .
G . diazotrophicus secretes levansucrase (LsdA) by a two-step
mechanism involving the removal of a 30-residue N-terminal signal
peptide during transport to the periplasm and transfer of the folded
mature protein across the outer membrane via a type II secretion
system . Proteins which are substrates of type II secretion systems
have been found to use the Sec or TAT machinery for crossing the
cytoplasmic membrane (38, 52) . The LsdA
signal peptide has the essential features of a Sec-dependent signal
peptide . By contrast, other gram-negative bacteria, including
the close relative Gluconacetobacter xylinus, secrete levansucrases
by a signal-peptide-independent pathway (14,
18, 23, 41,
42, 45) . Some of these enzymes
have been localized and are fully active in the periplasm of the
native host or a recombinant E . coli strain (14,
18, 19, 23), and the
occurrence of a type II secretion pathway responsible for their
transfer across the outer membrane cannot be ruled out .
The G . diazotrophicus type II secretion operon must be transcribed
constitutively, considering that the substrate LsdA is a constitutive
enzyme (16, 17) . The occurrence of
overlaps or short distances between different type II lsd
genes indicates that there is translational coupling, as occurs in
the homologues in other bacteria . The G . diazotrophicus type
II secretion locus has the unusual order lsdXGOEFHIJLMND,
suggesting that there is favored translation of the unidentified
protein LsdX and the putative major pseudopilin LsdG . Most of the
genes initiate at ATG; the only exception is the minor pseudopilin
gene lsdH, whose starting TTG codon may lower the translation
rate . Other bacteria also have minor pseudopilin genes starting at
GTG or TTG . The presence of a ribosome-binding site between the
components lsdO and lsdE also reflects fine-tuning of
translation of the system components .
The G . diazotrophicus pseudopilin LsdG differs from its counterparts
in other type II systems in two main aspects . The LsdG signal
peptide is the longest signal peptide among all of the GspG
homologues and has similarities with the signal peptide of a
hypothetical pilin-like protein from Synechocystis sp . (SPTREMBL,
entry P73235) . LsdG has two C-terminal Cys residues that likely
form a disulfide bond in the nonreducing environment of the
periplasm . An intramolecular disulfide bridge occurs in the
C-terminal part of many type IV pilins and is essential for the
correct alpha-beta roll fold and functionality of the fiber-forming
pilin in Neisseria gonorrhoeae (28) and for
functionality of the pseudopilin PulK in Klebsiella oxytoca (33).
G . diazotrophicus failed to secrete LsdA after replacement of
Cys162 by Gly in LsdG . This result suggests that LsdG
shares structural and functional properties with type IV pilins and
reinforces the idea that pseudopilins and type IV pilins function in
similar ways . In this sense, two previous findings are relevant:
PilA, the major IV pilin of P . aeruginosa, was shown to
interact with pseudopilin XcpT (GspG) and is required for optimal
function of the secreton (25); and the major
pseudopilin GspG from different bacteria assembled into pili when it
was overexpressed in E . coli (51) .
The type II secretion locus was identified downstream of the
levansucrase-levanase (lsdAB) locus on the chromosomes of all
14 tested G . diazotrophicus strains isolated from four different
host plants in geographically distant regions . This finding
suggests that the two loci were simultaneously inherited or acquired
early in the process of speciation . In any case, the coding sequences
have adjusted to the codon usage of the species . No polymorphisms and
few polymorphisms were detected in the lsdAB (17)
and type II secretion loci, respectively, of strains recovered from
sugarcane, Cameroon grass, or pineapple plants . Both loci were much
less conserved in the strains recovered from coffee plants . These
findings support the hypothesis that there is limited genetic
diversity among G . diazotrophicus populations that inhabit
vegetatively propagated hosts (9, 10) .
LsdA should have a fivefold ß-propeller topology, like that
recently determined for the B . subtilis levansucrase (27) .
Type II secreted proteins are rich in ß-sheet content, and this
structural feature may serve as a recognition signal for targeting of
the periplasmic protein to the secretion apparatus (38) .
The N-terminal sequence of the G . diazotrophicus levanase
(LsdB) has the essential characteristics of a Sec-dependent signal
peptide (26) . Similar to LsdA, LsdB was predicted to
have a ß-propeller fold (30) and might also be secreted
via the type II secretory machinery . This issue could not be
investigated since the particular conditions required for lsdB
expression in G . diazotrophicus remain unknown .
Type II secretion systems have been identified mostly in relation
to pathogenesis processes in plants and animals (39) . By
contrast, G . diazotrophicus is a nonpathogenic,
nitrogen-fixing species . Considering that disruption of the type II
secretion genes in strain SRT4 abolished sucrose utilization, we
concluded that the LsdA-secreting system plays a key role in the
beneficial interaction between G . diazotrophicus and sugarcane
or other host plants .
* Corresponding author . Mailing address: Plant-Microbe
Interactions Lab, Plant Division, Center for Genetic Engineering and
Biotechnology, P.O . Box 6162, Havana 10600, Cuba . Phone: (53-7) 271-6022 . Fax:
(53-7) 331779 . E-mail: arrieta@cigb.edu.cu.
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