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Journal of Bacteriology, January 2004, p . 68-79, Vol . 186,
No . 1
RtsA
Coordinately Regulates DsbA and the Salmonella Pathogenicity Island 1
Type III Secretion System
Craig D . Ellermeier1,
and James M . Slauch1,2*
Department of Microbiology,1 College of Medicine, University of
Illinois, Urbana, Illinois 618012
Received 5 June 2003/ Accepted 6 October 2003
Salmonella serovars cause a wide variety of diseases ranging
from mild gastroenteritis to life-threatening systemic infections . An
important step in Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium
infection is the invasion of nonphagocytic epithelial cells, mediated
by a type III secretion system (TTSS) encoded on Salmonella
pathogenicity island 1 (SPI1) . The SPI1 TTSS forms a needle complex
through which effector proteins are injected into the cytosol of host
cells, where they promote actin rearrangement and engulfment of the
bacteria . We previously identified the Salmonella-specific
regulatory protein RtsA, which induces expression of hilA and,
thus, the SPI1 genes . Here we show that the hilA regulators
RtsA, HilD, and HilC can each induce transcription of dsbA,
which encodes a periplasmic disulfide bond isomerase . RtsA induces
expression of dsbA independent of either the SPI1 TTSS or the
only known regulator of dsbA, the CpxRA two-component system .
We show that DsbA is required for both the SPI1 and SPI2 TTSS to
translocate effector proteins into the cytosol of host cells . DsbA is
also required for survival during the systemic stages of infection .
We also present evidence that production of SPI1 effector proteins is
coupled to assembly of the TTSS . This feedback regulation is mediated
at either the transcriptional or posttranscriptional level, depending
on the particular effector . Loss of DsbA leads to feedback inhibition,
which is consistent with the hypothesis that disulfide bond
formation plays a role in TTSS assembly or function .
The salmonellae are invasive pathogens that cause a range of human
diseases . Nontyphoid Salmonella usually causes gastroenteritis .
Although this is often a self-limiting disease marked by diarrhea
and abdominal cramps, the infection can be more severe, resulting
in bacteremia, fever, or even death (56) . To initiate
infection, Salmonella spp . colonize the small intestine and
invade the intestinal epithelium (10,
41) .
Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium invades intestinal epithelial
cells by using a type III secretion system (TTSS) encoded by
Salmonella pathogenicity island 1 (SPI1) (19) . The
SPI1 TTSS forms a needle-like structure or needle complex (NC)
capable of injecting effector proteins directly into the cytosol of
host cells (43, 47,
48) . The SPI1 proteins PrgH, PrgK, and InvG make up a multiring
base similar to the flagellar basal body (43,
48) . These proteins are secreted in a sec-dependent
manner (44, 48) and are
required for assembly of the NC (69) . PrgH and
PrgK are thought to form a ring which spans the inner membrane, while
InvG, a member of the secretin family of proteins, forms a ring that
spans the peptidoglycan layer and outer membrane (14,
15, 43) . Targeting of InvG to the outer
membrane requires the lipoprotein InvH (14,
15) . PrgI is the main subunit of the needle
portion of the SPI1 TTSS and is secreted through the apparatus (43,
48) . The length of the needle is thought to be
regulated by InvJ (48) .
Based on a comparison of the SPI1 proteins to those of analogous
systems, it is thought that the export apparatus is a multiprotein
complex located inside the PrgHK ring on the cytoplasmic face of the
inner membrane (44, 69) . Mutational
analysis revealed that the SpaPQRS and InvA proteins, which are
predicted to be integral inner membrane proteins, as well as SpaO,
InvC, and OrgC, which are predicted to be cytosolic proteins, are
essential for secretion of PrgI (69) . InvC has F0/F1
ATPase activity that is required for protein export (24) .
The successful injection of effector proteins into the cytoplasm
of eukaryotic cells involves two steps; first the effector proteins
must be secreted across the inner and outer membranes of the
bacterial cell, and then type three secretion (TTS) effectors must be
translocated across the membrane of the host cell . The completed NC
is sufficient for secretion of effector proteins, but translocation
requires a translocase complex consisting of SipB, SipC, and SipD,
which are secreted by the SPI1 TTSS . SipB and SipC localize to the
eukaryotic host cell plasma membrane within 15 min after infection (66) .
In strains containing sipB or sipD mutations, SipC is
still secreted, but it is unable to target the host cell plasma
membrane, suggesting that SipB, SipC and SipD form a pore complex in
the plasma membrane (66) . SipB and SipC also
function as effectors (34, 36,
77), but it is not clear if SipD has any effector
activity . A number of phenotypes have been attributed to the SPI1
TTSS and its effector proteins, including rearrangement of the actin
cytoskeleton, which promotes invasion (77),
necrosis of macrophages (8, 36,
59, 60), enteropathogenesis (73),
and transepithelial migration of polymorphonuclear leukocytes (50,
54) .
In gram-negative organisms a number of periplasmic proteins
require the formation of disulfide bonds to fold or function properly
(13) . In Escherichia coli, de novo formation of
periplasmic disulfide bonds requires the products of the dsbA
and dsbB genes (13) . DsbA is a soluble
periplasmic enzyme that contains an active site CXXC motif . DsbA
functions as an oxidizing protein by accepting electrons from
cysteine residues of periplasmic proteins (13) .
DsbA is oxidized by DsbB, an inner membrane protein that contains two
CXXC motifs (7, 58) . The electrons are then
passed from DsbB to the quinone pool and eventually to the cytochrome
oxidases in the inner membrane (5, 6,
46) .
The role of DsbA in virulence has been addressed in several
pathogens, but its role in Salmonella virulence has not been
determined . In Vibrio cholerae, DsbA (TcpG) is required for
biogenesis of the toxin-coregulated pilus (Tcp) and for formation of
active cholera toxin (62, 76) . DsbA is
also required for the systemic stages of an E . coli K1
infection, although it is not known what factors are directly
affected (29) . In Yersinia pestis (40),
Shigella flexneri (74), Pseudomonas aeruginosa
(31), and Pseudomonas syringae (45),
dsbA mutations block the secretion of effector proteins by the
TTSS . In Y . pestis, dsbA mutations result in an
unstable YscC (InvG homolog) complex (40) . YscC
forms a pore that allows the needle structure to cross the outer
membrane (40) . In S . flexneri, a dsbA mutation
causes accumulation of oxidized Spa32 (74) . Spa32 is
thought to control needle length and is essential for secretion of
effector proteins (51) . Site-directed mutagenesis
of the cysteine residues in Spa32 caused the same phenotype as a
dsbA mutation, suggesting that Spa32 requires DsbA to function
appropriately (74) .
In E . coli, the only known regulator of dsbA transcription is
the two-component system CpxRA (for a review see reference
64), which induces expression of dsbA approximately
sixfold in response to periplasmic stress (16) . In
serovar Typhimurium, it was recently determined that a gene
immediately upstream of dsbA, rdoA (yihE),
controls expression of dsbA by modulating the response of the
Cpx system (70) . In V . cholerae, dsbA (tcpG)
is a member of the ToxR regulon, suggesting that some pathogens
coordinately regulate expression of the isomerase with virulence
factors that require proper formation of disulfide bonds to function
(62) .
In a number of pathogenic organisms, the CpxRA regulatory system
has been implicated in virulence . In strains of uropathogenic E .
coli, the Pap fimbriae mediate attachment to kidney epithelial
cells . Mutations in the cpx pathway block formation of a complete
Pap pilus (39) . In Salmonella enterica serovar
Typhi, mutations in cpxA block invasion of epithelial cells in
vitro (49), but the molecular mechanism is not
known . In Shigella sonnei, the CpxRA pathway is required for
maximal expression of virF, a major regulator of the S .
sonnei TTSS (61) . It is thought that
phosphorylated CpxR activates expression of virF by binding to
the DNA upstream of the virF promoter (61) .
In serovar Typhimurium, relatively little is known about cpxRA
and dsbA other than what is assumed by extension from E . coli,
and even less is known about the role, if any, of these genes
in virulence . We previously identified a Salmonella-specific
regulatory operon consisting of two genes, rtsAB (26) .
RtsB represses expression of the flagellar regulon . RtsA induces
expression of the SPI1 TTSS by increasing expression of hilA
(26) . HilA directly and indirectly induces expression
of the SPI1 TTSS and its effector proteins (26) .
Here we report that RtsA and the related hilA regulators, HilD
and HilC, coordinately regulate expression of dsbA and the
SPI1 TTSS . We also present evidence that DsbA is required for the
proper function of both the SPI1 and SPI2 TTSS .
Media, reagents, and enzymatic assays. Luria-Bertani (LB)
medium was used in all experiments for growth of bacteria, and SOC
was used for recovery of transformants (52) .
Bacterial strains were routinely grown at 37°C; the exceptions were
strains containing the temperature-sensitive plasmids pCP20 and
pKD46, which were grown at 30°C . In most cases antibiotics were used
at the following concentrations: ampicillin, 50 µg/ml;
chloramphenicol, 20 µg/ml; and kanamycin, 50 µg/ml . Integration of
pAH125 and its derivatives required 10 µg of kanamycin per ml and 25
µg of tetracycline per ml . Enzymes were purchased from
Invitrogen (Carlsbad, Calif.) or New England Biolabs (Beverly, Mass.)
and were used according to the manufacturers' recommendations .
Primers were purchased from IDT Inc . (Coralville, Iowa) . ß-Galactosidase
assays were performed by a microtiter plate assay as previously
described (68) with strains grown under the conditions
indicated below .
Strain and plasmid construction. Bacterial strains and
plasmids are described in Table 1 . All serovar
Typhimurium strains created for this study are isogenic derivatives
of strain ATCC 14028 and were constructed by using P22 HT105/1 int-201
(P22)-mediated transduction (52) . The Pi-dependent
plasmids used in this study were maintained in DH5 pir .
All plasmids were passaged through a restriction-minus
modification-plus Pi+ Salmonella strain (JS198) (25)
prior to transformation into derivatives of strain ATCC 14028 .
Analysis of the RtsA-activated dsbA promoter was performed by
cloning fragments of a 1.4-kb upstream region . Deletion analysis of
the 3' end of this region was performed by using PCR to clone four
different fragments which sequentially removed DNA from the 3' end .
Deletion analysis of the 5' end was performed by digesting pCE85 with
SacII, SalI, BstBI, or PstI and SphI,
blunt ending the linearized vector with T4 DNA polymerase, and
self-ligating the plasmid by using T4 DNA ligase . The base pairs
cloned upstream of lacZ are indicated in Table 1 .
| TABLE 1 . Strains and plasmids
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Construction of chromosomal deletions and insertions and lac
fusions. Deletion of the dsbA, cpxR, baeR, pspF,
sitA-pphB
( SPI1),
and dsbB genes and insertion of a chloramphenicol resistance
cassette were accomplished by using lambda Red-mediated recombination
(22, 75) as described by Ellermeier
et al . (25) . The
hilC-D
mutation also removed prgHIJK, which are essential components
of the SPI1 TTSS, and was described previously (26) .
The endpoints of each deletion are indicated in Table 1 .
In all cases, appropriate insertion of the antibiotic resistance
marker was checked by P22 linkage to known markers and/or PCR
analysis . In each case, the constructs resulting from this procedure
were moved into a clean wild-type background (ATCC 14028) by P22
transduction . Antibiotic resistance cassettes were removed by using
the temperature-sensitive plasmid pCP20 and were converted to
transcriptional lac fusions by using the FLP/FRT-mediated
site-specific recombination method as previously described (25) .
The fusion joint is indicated in Table 1 .
Western blot analysis of Salmonella secreted proteins.
Analysis of secreted proteins in strains expressing RtsA from the
araBAD promoter was performed by diluting overnight cultures of
strains 1/20 in 10 ml of LB medium containing ampicillin and 0.2%
L-arabinose . These cultures were grown with shaking
at 225 rpm on a platform shaker for 4 h at 37°C . Cultures used
for Western blot detection of the SopA-M45 or SopB-M45 (SigD) fusions
were grown statically overnight in LB medium containing ampicillin
and 0.2% L-arabinose . Strains expressing the
SlrP-CyaA fusion were grown statically overnight in LB medium
containing kanamycin . The culture supernatants were prepared as
previously described (26) . The whole-cell extracts were lysed
in 2x loading buffer (4) .
All strains grew equally well under the conditions used . Therefore,
the equivalent of 1.5 ml of culture supernatant and 50 µl of whole
cells ( 2.5
x 107 cells) were separated by
sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)- 12.5% polyacrylamide gel
electrophoresis (PAGE) (4) and blotted onto
nitrocellulose (MSI, Westboro, Mass.) by using a Panther semidry
blotter (Owl Separation Systems, Portsmouth, N.H.) for 2 h at
300
mA . The blots were then blocked with 5% nonfat dried milk in
phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) containing 0.1% Tween 20 . The
antibody dilutions used were as follows: mouse anti-M45, 1/200; mouse
anti-CyaA (Santa Cruz Biotech, Santa Cruz, Calif.), 1/200;
horseradish peroxidase (HRP)-conjugated goat anti-mouse
immunoglobulin G (Sigma, St . Louis, Mo.), 1/2,500; rabbit anti-DsbA
polyclonal antibody (Medical and Biological Laboratories Ltd.),
1/10,000; rabbit anti-ß-lactamase polyclonal antibody (Chemicon
International, Temecula, Calif.), 1/5,000; and HRP-conjugated goat
anti-rabbit immunoglobulin G (Zymed, South San Francisco, Calif.),
1/10,000 . ECL and ECL Hyperfilm (Amersham, Piscataway, N.J.) were
used according to the manufacturer's protocols to detect HRP-labeled
antibody .
cAMP assays. Translocation of SlrP by the SPI1 TTSS was
assayed by using an SlrP-CyaA fusion protein as previously described
(55) . Briefly, strains were grown under
SPI1-inducing conditions and used to infect RAW264.7 macrophages at a
multiplicity of infection of 10 for 1 h . Infected macrophages were
then washed three times with PBS . The cells were lysed with 200 µl of
0.1 M HCl and heated for 10 min at 95°C . The levels of cAMP were
assayed by using a Direct cAMP Correlate-EIA kit (Assay Designs, Ann
Arbor, Mich.) . The protein content of each sample was determined
by a BCA assay (Pierce, Rockford, Ill.) . All cAMP assays were
performed in triplicate and repeated at least two times; the results
of a representative experiment are described below .
To assay SPI2-dependent TTS, cultures of serovar Typhimurium
strains producing SspH2-CyaA fusions grown under SPI2-inducing
conditions were opsonized with 50% mouse serum (Equitech-Bio,
Kerrville, Tex.) for 20 min at 37°C (55) . The opsonized
bacteria were then used to infect RAW264.7 cells at a 10:1 ratio .
After 1 h, the macrophages were washed three times with PBS and
1 ml of RPMI 1640 containing 10% fetal bovine serum, and 6.25 µg of
gentamicin per ml was added . The infection was allowed to proceed for
5 h . The macrophages were washed, and the cAMP levels were assayed as
described above .
Virulence assays. Strains used in virulence assays were
grown overnight in LB broth at 37°C with aeration . Bacteria were
washed and diluted in 0.15 M saline . Female BALB/c mice (Harlan
Sprague-Dawley, Inc., Indianapolis, Ind.) were inoculated
intraperitoneally with
1,000
organisms from an equal mixture of mutant and wild-type strains . The
competitive index was determined and statistically analyzed as
previously described (37, 38) .
Production of RtsA increases DsbA levels. We have previously
shown that RtsA induces expression of the SPI1 TTSS by inducing
expression of hilA (26) . HilA directly or
indirectly induces expression of the entire SPI1 TTSS, which can be
observed by the presence of TTS effector proteins in the culture
supernatant (26) . During this analysis, we observed
the appearance of a 22-kDa protein band in the culture supernatants
of strains producing RtsA . The presence of this band was not
dependent on a functional SPI1 TTSS, as a mutation in either hilA
or an apparatus structural gene had no effect (data not shown) . To
identify this protein, the band was removed from the gel and
subjected to trypsin digestion and matrix-assisted laser desorption
ionization-time of flight mass spectrometry . Analysis of the
resulting mass spectrometry peaks by using PROWL suggested that the
protein was DsbA, a disulfide bond isomerase normally found to be
soluble in the periplasm of numerous gram-negative bacteria (data not
shown) .
DsbA is a periplasmic protein that is required for disulfide bond
formation in the periplasm . This raised the question of why a
periplasmic protein, which requires interaction with the inner
membrane protein DsbB to function, was found in the culture
supernatant, where it is presumably inactive . To address this
question, we performed Western blot analyses using anti-DsbA and
anti-ß-lactamase antibodies with both concentrated culture
supernatants and whole-cell extracts . Figure 1A shows
that ß-lactamase, a soluble periplasmic protein that is roughly
the same size as DsbA, was present in the culture supernatants at a
low level in all strains except strains lacking bla (e.g.,
ATCC 14028) . Thus, the presence of periplasmic proteins in culture
supernatants is probably due to lysis of some cells in the culture,
independent of RtsA . Figure 1B shows that in
whole-cell extracts of strains producing RtsA, the levels of DsbA
were increased, while the levels of ß-lactamase remained constant .
This induction of DsbA was independent of RtsB, a functional SPI1
TTSS, or the known regulator of dsbA, CpxR .
|
FIG . 1 . Effect of RtsA on production of DsbA: Western blot analyses of
culture supernatants (top panel) or whole-cell extracts (bottom panel)
with anti-DsbA and anti-ß-lactamase antibodies . Except for the ATCC
14028 control, the strains are
rtsAB
and contain the plasmids and mutations indicated above the lanes .
Equivalent amounts of sample were separated by SDS-12.5% PAGE . The
strains used were plasmid-containing derivatives of JS250, JS332, JS333,
and JS334.
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RtsA induces transcription of dsbA. RtsA is a known
transcriptional regulator that induces expression of the SPI1 TTSS (26) .
Therefore, we tested if the RtsA-mediated increase in DsbA production
was a transcriptional effect . We constructed strains containing a
dsbA-lac transcriptional fusion and either pBAD or pRtsA .
The ß-galactosidase activities of the resulting strains were
determined after 3 h of growth in the presence of L-arabinose .
As shown in Fig . 2, expression of dsbA was
induced sixfold in strains producing RtsA . Thus, the increased levels
of DsbA found in strains producing RtsA was the result of increased
transcription of dsbA . We did not observe an effect of an
rtsA deletion on expression of dsbA even in the absence of
cpxR (data not shown) . This was likely due to the fact that
under the conditions tested rtsA was not highly expressed .
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FIG . 2 . RtsA induces expression of dsbA independent of known
periplasmic stress regulators . The strains were
rtsAB
and contained a dsbA-lac transcriptional fusion and either
pBAD30 or pRtsA, as well the mutations indicated below the graph . The
hilA, cpxR, pspF, and baeR mutations are
deletions and insertions of a chloramphenicol cassette . The
SPI1
mutation deletes sitA to pphB, which includes the SPI1
regulatory genes, hilA, hilC, hilD, sprB,
and invF . Overnight cultures were subcultured in LB medium
containing ampicillin and 0.2% L-arabinose and
grown to an optical density at 600 nm (OD600) of
0.6 .
ß-Galactosidase activity values were determined as follows: (micromoles
of o-nitrophenol formed per minute)
x 103/(OD600 x
milliliters of cell suspension) . The values are means ± standard
deviations (n = 4) . The strains used were plasmid-containing
derivatives of JS336 through JS341 . WT, wild type.
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RtsA induction of dsbA is independent of CpxR and SPI1.
We wanted to determine the mechanism by which RtsA induces expression
of dsbA . The only known regulator of dsbA expression is the
CpxRA two-component system, which responds to envelope stress (64) .
We constructed cpxR-null dsbA-lac fusion strains containing
either pBAD or pRtsA . Figure 2 shows that although the
cpxR mutation caused a slight decrease in the absolute level
of transcription, RtsA induced dsbA expression approximately
eightfold . Thus, RtsA induction of dsbA is independent of
CpxRA . This is consistent with the data in Fig . 1B,
which show that RtsA increased the levels of the DsbA protein
independent of CpxR .
It is possible that RtsA indirectly induces expression of dsbA
by activating expression of the SPI1 TTSS, thereby inducing
periplasmic stress . We addressed this possibility by introducing
either a deletion of hilA, the major SPI1 regulator, or a deletion
of the entire SPI1 TTSS into the dsbA-lac fusion strains . As
shown in Fig . 2, loss of HilA or the entire SPI1 TTSS
did not affect RtsA induction of dsbA . Thus, RtsA induces
expression of dsbA independent of the SPI1 TTSS . We also
tested the ability of RtsA to induce expression of dsbA in the
absence of PspF and BaeR, two additional regulators implicated in
periplasmic stress (1, 17,
63) . Figure 2 shows that RtsA induced
expression of dsbA-lac approximately 8- to 10-fold in the
absence of these regulators . These data suggest that RtsA induces
expression of dsbA independent of the known regulators of
dsbA, the previously identified RtsA-regulated genes hilA,
hilC, hilD, and invF (26), or
the general periplasmic stress response .
HilC, HilD, and RtsA differentially induce expression of dsbA.
RtsA, HilC, and HilD all belong to the AraC/XylS family of transcriptional
regulators and appear to function in similar ways (26,
65) . We have previously demonstrated that RtsA
binds to the same region of the hilA promoter as HilC and HilD
(26, 65) . These three
regulators can independently activate transcription of hilA (26,
65) . We wanted to determine if HilC and HilD are also
capable of inducing expression of dsbA . Therefore, we introduced
pBAD, pRtsA, pLS118 (HilD), or pLS119 (HilC) into strains from
which rtsA, hilC, and hilD had been deleted and which
contained either a hilA-lac fusion or a dsbA-lac
fusion . We assayed the ß-galactosidase activity produced from the
fusions after 3 h of growth in the presence of L-arabinose .
We then compared the relative abilities of the regulators to induce
expression of hilA and dsbA . As shown in Table
2, hilA expression was induced
40-fold
by RtsA,
20-fold
by HilD, and
120-fold
by HilC . These levels are consistent with previous data (26,
65) . Interestingly, RtsA is capable of inducing
dsbA 10-fold, while HilC and HilD induce expression of dsbA
approximately two- and fourfold, respectively . Thus, if the abilities
of these proteins to induce dsbA and hilA are compared,
it becomes apparent that RtsA and HilD are better able to induce
expression of dsbA than HilC is (Table 2) .
It is not clear why activation of hilA by all three regulators
is more efficient than activation of dsbA .
| TABLE 2 . RtsA, HilC, and HilD induction of dsbA-lac and
hilA-lac
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RtsA induces expression of dsbA from a previously unidentified
promoter. In serovar Typhimurium, there are three known dsbA
promoters, PrdoA, PdsbA1, and PdsbA2
(Fig . 3A) (28) . To identify the region
of the dsbA promoter required for RtsA-mediated induction, we
cloned various promoter fragments upstream of the promoterless
lacZ gene in pAH125 (Fig . 3A) (32) .
We integrated the resulting lac fusion plasmids into the
serovar Typhimurium chromosome at the
attB
site using
Int
(32) . The resulting integrated fusions were
transduced into strains containing a deletion of rtsAB and
either pBAD or pRtsA . The construct containing the largest promoter
fragment (fragment A), corresponding to
300
bp upstream of rdoA to a few bases downstream of the DsbA
translational start site, was induced approximately 10-fold by RtsA
(Fig . 3B) . Constructs corresponding to 3' deletions
that removed both PdsbA1 (fragment B) and PdsbA2
(fragment C) were still regulated, indicating that these promoters
are not required for RtsA-mediated induction . Deletion of an
additional 256 bp (fragment D) resulted in a loss of induction (Fig.
3B) . We also constructed fusions with deletions
from the 5' end of fragment C (Fig . 3A) . RtsA
induced expression of these constructs (fragments F to I) approximately
10- to 15-fold (Fig . 3B) . These results demonstrate that
RtsA induces expression of dsbA from a previously
uncharacterized promoter located between bp -132 and -451 relative to
the DsbA translational start site .
|
FIG . 3 . Deletion analysis of the RtsA-inducible dsbA promoter
region . The serovar Typhimurium strains were
rtsAB
and contained pBAD30 or pRtsA and lacZ transcriptional fusions to
the region of dsbA indicated below the graph . The locations of
the regions (in precise base pairs) are shown in Table 1 .
The E . coli strains were ara+ derivatives of
MC4100 with either pBAD30 or pRtsA and contained either a serovar
Typhimurium dsbA-lac fusion integrated at the
att
site or an E . coli dsbA-lac fusion integrated at the
att
site . Overnight cultures were subcultured in LB medium containing
ampicillin and 0.2% L-arabinose and were grown to
an optical density at 600 nm (OD600) of
0.6 .
ß-Galactosidase activity values were determined as follows: (micromoles
of o-nitrophenol formed per minute)
x 103/(OD600 x
milliliters of cell suspension) . The values are means ± standard
deviations (n = 4) . The fold induction values for the fusions are
indicated at the bottom . The strains used were plasmid-containing
derivatives of JS342 through JS351, JS353, and JS354.
|
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RtsA does not induce expression of E . coli dsbA.
Activation of dsbA by RtsA could be either direct or indirect
via another regulator . To address this question, we constructed E .
coli strains containing either a serovar Typhimurium dsbA-lac
fusion (fragment A) or the corresponding E . coli dsbA-lac fusion
(fragment J) (Fig . 3) . We then introduced either pBAD or
pRtsA into these strains and assayed the ß-galactosidase
activity produced from the fusions after growth in the presence of
L-arabinose . Figure 3 shows that in
E . coli, RtsA is capable of inducing expression of serovar
Typhimurium dsbA-lac approximately 10-fold, similar to the
induction levels observed in serovar Typhimurium . However, we found
that RtsA was unable to induce expression of an E . coli dsbA-lac
fusion that contains the analogous 1.4-kb promoter region (Fig.
3) (16) . These results suggest
that RtsA can directly regulate serovar Typhimurium dsbA and
that the site at which it acts is not found in the E . coli dsbA
promoter region . If RtsA acts indirectly through another regulator,
then this protein is found in E . coli, and its normal function
is different than the function in Salmonella . The latter model
seems less likely .
DsbA is required for translocation of effectors via the SPI1 TTSS.
RtsA induces expression of dsbA concurrently with expression
of the SPI1 TTSS . This coordinate regulation suggests that DsbA plays
a role in SPI1 TTSS function . To assay the function of the SPI1 TTSS,
we utilized an SlrP-CyaA fusion protein in which the N-terminal 228
amino acids of SlrP, a known SPI1 TTSS effector (55,
71), are fused to the catalytic domain of CyaA, the
Bordetella pertussis adenylate cyclase toxin, which converts ATP
to cAMP in the presence of host cell calmodulin (33) .
Only if the SlrP-CyaA fusion protein is translocated into the cytosol
of host cells do the cAMP levels increase, as monitored by an
enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay . We assayed the translocation of
the SlrP-CyaA fusion protein from the wild-type strain, as well as
hilC-D,
dsbA,
and
cpxR
strains . The
hilC-D
mutation also removes the prgHIJK genes, which encode
components of the SPI1 TTSS . Figure 4A shows that
host cells infected with a wild-type strain producing the SlrP-CyaA
fusion had significantly increased levels of cAMP compared to the
levels in cells infected with a strain expressing a control LacZ-CyaA
fusion protein, which cannot be translocated . As expected, the
hilC-D
mutation completely blocked translocation of the SlrP-CyaA protein . A
dsbA mutation also completely blocked translocation of the
SlrP-CyaA fusion protein, while a mutation in cpxR had no
effect (Fig . 4A) . This suggests that DsbA is
required for SPI1-mediated translocation of proteins into host cells
and that expression of dsbA under these conditions is not
dependent upon CpxRA . It also suggests that other members of the CpxR
regulon are not essential for SPI1 TTSS function .
|
FIG . 4 . Effect of a dsbA mutation on translocation of SPI1 (A)
and SPI2 (B) TTS effectors . The strains contained the protein fusions to
the CyaA catalytic domain indicated below the graphs . For panel A the
strains were either wild type or contained a deletion of hilC-D
(which removed hilC-prgHIJK-hilD), dsbA, or cpxR,
and they were grown under SPI1-inducing conditions . For panel B the
strains were either wild type or contained a deletion of ssaT (a
SPI2 TTSS structural gene), dsbA, or cpxR and were grown
under SPI2-inducing conditions . The cAMP levels were determined as
described in Materials and Methods . The strains used were JS355 through
JS363 . WT, wild type.
|
|
DsbA is required for secretion of effector proteins via the SPI1 TTSS.
Translocation of effectors into the host cell cytoplasm is complex
and requires multiple steps . In order to narrow the possible role of
DsbA in this process, we monitored a more limited function of the
TTSS, namely, secretion of epitope-tagged SPI1 effector proteins
SopA-M45, SopB-M45 (SigD), and SlrP-CyaA into the culture
supernatant, using Western blot analysis . In these constructs,
transcription of sopA and sopB is controlled by the
arabinose-inducible PBAD promoter, while transcription of
the slrP-cyaA fusion is controlled by its natural
promoter . Figure 5 shows that SopA-M45 and SopB-M45
were secreted into the culture supernatant by wild-type cells . The
amounts of SopA-M45 and SopB-M45 in the supernatant were
significantly reduced in both the
hilC-D
( prgHIJK)
and
dsbA
backgrounds, while the cpxR mutation had no effect . Presumably,
residual protein in the supernatants, evident in the
hilC-D
strain, was due to some bacterial lysis in the cultures . In
whole-cell extracts, the levels of SopA-M45 and SopB-M45 remained
relatively constant . These results suggest that DsbA is required for
the SPI1 TTSS to appropriately secrete effector proteins .
|
FIG . 5 . Effect of a dsbA mutation on secretion of SPI1 TTS
effector proteins . The strains contained the protein fusions indicated
above the lanes and were either wild type or were deleted for hilC-D
(which removed hilC-prgHIJK-hilD), dsbA, or cpxR .
The SopA-M45 and SopB-M45 strains also contained the ara623::Tn10dTc
insertion . Stationary-phase cultures were subcultured in either
high-salt LB medium containing ampicillin and 0.2% L-arabinose
(SopA-M45 and SopB-M45) or high-salt LB medium containing kanamycin
(SlrP-CyaA) and were grown statically overnight . Culture supernatants
were prepared as described Materials and Methods . Equivalent amounts of
samples from the supernatants or whole-cell extracts of the strains were
separated by SDS-12.5% PAGE . The resulting gels were blotted, and
proteins were detected by using mouse anti-M45 (SopA-M45 and SopB-M45)
or mouse anti-CyaA (SlrP-CyaA) and HRP-labeled rabbit anti-mouse
secondary antibody . The strains used were JS356 through JS359 and JS364
through JS371 . WT, wild type.
|
|
The effect of the dsbA mutation on SlrP-CyaA secretion was more
complex . The wild-type and cpxR mutant cells were fully capable
of secreting the SlrP-CyaA fusion protein (Fig . 5) . The
SlrP-CyaA fusion protein was also detectable in whole-cell extracts .
However, the
hilC-D
and
dsbA
mutations not only blocked secretion of the SlrP-CyaA fusion but also
blocked our ability to detect the SlrP-CyaA protein within the
bacterial cells (Fig . 5), consistent with the
SlrP-CyaA cAMP assays whose results are shown in Fig .
4A . This suggests that either transcription or translation of
SlrP is dependent on a functional SPI1 TTSS .
Assembly of the SPI1 TTSS feedback mechanism regulates either
transcription or translation of effectors. The SlrP-CyaA protein is
apparently not produced in the absence of a functional SPI1 TTSS . It
has been suggested that in a number of TTSS assembly of the apparatus
controls production of effector proteins (12,
31, 42, 57) . Both
transcriptional and translational mechanisms have been proposed, and
a universal model for the coupling of production and secretion of
effectors has been elusive (3, 20,
42, 53) . Mutation of dsbA blocks
SPI1 TTSS function even though all of the normal SPI1 transcriptional
regulators are intact . We realized that the phenotype conferred by
the dsbA mutation would allow us to determine if a functional
SPI1 TTSS is required for transcription or translation of the SPI1
TTS effectors slrP, sopA, and sopB (sigD) . We
constructed strains containing chromosomal lac fusions to
these genes in either a
dsbA
or
invF
mutant background . We also introduced the
dsbA
mutation into strains containing either a hilA-lac or invF-lac
fusion . We then monitored the ß-galactosidase activity produced
from the fusions under SPI1-inducing conditions .
As shown in Fig . 6, the transcription of slrP was
not affected by loss of either InvF or DsbA . We have previously shown
that InvF is not required for expression of the slrP-lac
fusion (26) . Indeed, our data suggest that RtsA
directly activates slrP transcription (26) .
Thus, the effect of the dsbA mutation on production of the
SlrP-CyaA translational fusion shown in Fig . 5 is at the
posttranscriptional level, most likely at the level of translation,
as has been proposed for other TTSS effectors (3,
42) . In contrast, expression of sopA and
sopB (sigD) was completely abolished in the invF
strain; InvF is known to directly activate sopB (sigD)
(21) . The presence of the dsbA mutation significantly
reduced but did not abolish transcription of sopA and sopB (sigD)
(Fig . 6) . Thus, expression of these genes is dependent
on a functional SPI1 TTSS, and this effect is at the transcriptional
level; translation of these effectors was not affected by loss
of DsbA (Fig . 5) . Whereas all three effectors are feedback
regulated such that they are produced only when the TTSS is fully
functional, the mechanism of the regulation is gene specific . These
data are consistent with the hypothesis that DsbA is required for
the SPI1 TTSS to function properly .
|
FIG . 6 . Effect of a dsbA mutation on transcription of SPI1 TTSS
effectors . The strains contained the lac transcriptional fusions
indicated below the graph and either a dsbA or invF
mutation . Overnight cultures were subcultured in LB medium containing 1%
NaCl and were grown statically overnight, and then the ß-galactosidase
activities were determined . ß-Galactosidase activity values were
determined as follows: (micromoles of o-nitrophenol formed per
minute) x 103/(OD600
x milliliters of cell suspension),
where OD600 is optical density at 600 nm . The values are
means ± standard deviations (n = 4) . ND, not determined . Note
that the invF-lac dsbA strain is invF null . The
strains used were JS279, JS282, JS285, JS289, and JS372 through JS380 .
WT, wild type.
|
|
Transcriptional feedback is at the level of invF transcription.
Darwin and Miller (20, 21) have previously
shown that the TTSS chaperone protein SicA interacts with InvF to
activate expression of several effector proteins, including the
protein encoded by sopB (sigD) . This has led to a model
for the coupling of the transcription of effectors to the assembly of
the SP1 TTSS (57) . SicA is a chaperone for SipC
and SipB and is presumably normally bound to these proteins when they
are in the cytoplasm (9, 72) .
The model suggests that upon completion of the SPI1 TTSS, the SipC
and SipB proteins are secreted and SicA is free to interact with InvF
and RNA polymerase to induce expression of the genes encoding
effector proteins (21) . SicA reportedly does not
affect transcription of invF or the stability or levels of the
InvF protein (21), and InvF reportedly does not regulate
its own expression (18, 23) .
Therefore, this model predicts that expression of invF should
not be affected by the presence or absence of a functional SPI1 TTS
apparatus . We specifically tested this hypothesis .
HilA activates invF, and, as expected, the expression of hilA
was not affected by the dsbA mutation (Fig . 6) .
In contrast, expression of invF was reduced approximately
threefold in the dsbA background . This finding is inconsistent
with the proposed model and suggests that the transcriptional
feedback regulation of sopA and sopB (sigD) is,
at least partially, a result of the transcriptional regulation of
invF . Note that this regulation is apparently independent of the
level of HilA and is also not a result of autoregulation by InvF; the
invF-lac fusion is an invF-null .
If the feedback regulation of sopA and sopB (sigD) is
dependent on the level of InvF, then increased production of InvF
should overcome the transcriptional block . Production of RtsA induces
HilA and InvF (26) . As shown in Fig . 7,
we examined the effect of producing RtsA on expression of hilA-lac,
invF-lac, sopA-lac, and sopB-lac in wild-type,
hilC-D
(which removes prgHIJK), dsbA, and invF
backgrounds . In an otherwise wild-type strain, production of RtsA
induced expression of hilA, invF, sopA, and sopB 50-
to 60-fold . Transcription of sopA and sopB was strictly
dependent on InvF . However, under these conditions, transcription was
not affected by loss of DsbA . Rather, production of RtsA uncoupled
transcription of the effectors from the function of the TTSS .
Indeed, transcription was slightly increased in the dsbA mutant
for reasons that are not clear (Fig . 7) . A decrease in
transcription was observed in the
hilC-D
background, but this was most likely due to the effect of the loss of
HilC and HilD on transcription of hilA and invF (2,
65) .
|
FIG . 7 . Overproduction of RtsA suppresses feedback regulation of invF .
The strains were
rtsAB
and contained the lac transcriptional fusion pBAD30 or pRtsA and
deletions of the genes indicated below the graphs . The hilC-D
deletion removed the prgHIJK operon . Overnight cultures were
subcultured in no-salt LB medium containing ampicillin and 0.2%
L-arabinose and were grown to an optical density
at 600 nm (OD600) of
0.6
before ß-galactosidase activity was assayed . ß-Galactosidase activity
values were determined as follows: (micromoles of o-nitrophenol
formed per minute) x 103/(OD600
x milliliters of cell suspension) .
The values are means ± standard deviations (n = 4) . The strains
used were plasmid-containing derivatives of JS275, JS276, JS302, JS304,
JS306, JS308, JS309, JS311, JS318, JS319, JS320, and JS381 through
JS387 . WT, wild type.
|
|
DsbA is required for translocation of effectors via the SPI2 TTSS.
DsbA is required for the SPI1 TTSS to secrete effector proteins, and
it is known that DsbA is required for function of a number of TTSS in
other organisms (31, 40, 45,
74) . Therefore, we wanted to determine if DsbA is
also required for function of the SPI2 TTSS . To do this, we
constructed a CyaA fusion to the N-terminal 219 amino acids of SspH2,
a known SPI2 TTS effector (55) . A CyaA fusion to
the first 43 amino acids of LacZ
served as a negative control . We monitored the cAMP levels 6 h after
RAW 264.7 macrophages were infected with serovar Typhimurium strains
grown under SPI2-inducing conditions and opsonized with mouse
serum . Under these conditions, the SPI2 TTSS should be the predominant
TTSS responsible for translocation of effector proteins (55) .
Macrophages infected with the SspH2-CyaA fusion strain had a
significantly higher level of cAMP than macrophages infected with the
negative control LacZ-CyaA strain (Fig . 4B) . A mutation
in ssaT, which encodes part of the SPI2 apparatus (35),
completely blocked the SspH2-CyaA-induced increase in cAMP .
Similarly, the dsbA mutation blocked the SspH2-CyaA-induced
increase in cAMP . During these experiments, we also observed that the
cytotoxicities of the dsbA and ssaT strains for
macrophages were significantly reduced compared with the cytotoxicity
of the isogenic wild-type strain . This is consistent with the idea
that the dsbA mutation blocks the function of the SPI2 TTSS,
which renders the strains unable to survive within and destroy
macrophages . Indeed, all of these data suggest that DsbA is required
for proper function of the SPI2 TTSS .
DsbA is required for full virulence. To determine if dsbA
contributed to serovar Typhimurium virulence, we compared a dsbA
mutant to the isogenic wild-type strain using an intraperitoneal
competition assay in BALB/c mice . The strain containing the dsbA
null mutation (JS396) was significantly outcompeted by the wild-type
strain (competitive index, 0.00048; n = 5; P < 0.0005) .
Thus, elimination of dsbA decreased virulence by approximately
2,000-fold . This large decrease in virulence is consistent with the
idea that a dsbA mutation has pleiotropic effects on
virulence, as has been previously observed in other organisms,
including V . cholerae and E . coli K1 (29,
62) .
Previous data from our lab suggested that RtsA induces expression of
hilA, thereby inducing expression of the entire SPI1 TTSS (26) .
Here we present evidence that RtsA also coordinates expression of the
SPI1 TTSS and dsbA, which encodes a periplasmic disulfide bond
isomerase . RtsA induces expression of dsbA independent of the
SPI1 TTSS and its regulators and independent of CpxRA, the only
previously known regulator of dsbA expression . RtsA-dependent
induction of dsbA occurs from a previously uncharacterized promoter .
While we have not definitively proven that RtsA directly induces
expression of dsbA in serovar Typhimurium, our data suggest
that this is the case . RtsA induces expression of serovar Typhimurium
dsbA in E . coli but not expression of E . coli dsbA in
E . coli (Fig . 3) . Thus, if RtsA controls
expression of serovar Typhimurium dsbA indirectly via another
regulator, this regulator is present in E . coli but does not
perform the same function, control of dsbA expression . A
comparison of the dsbA promoter regions corresponding to
fragment I in Fig . 3 from E . coli and serovar
Typhimurium showed that they are 80.6% identical . It is not obvious
what differences account for the inability of RtsA to activate the
E . coli dsbA promoter .
It is clear that DsbA, produced independent of CpxR, is required
for the SPI1 TTSS to function properly . However, it is not certain
how important RtsA-induced expression of dsbA is in an animal .
Indeed, regulation of dsbA during an infection may be quite
complex, as it was recently shown that dsbA expression is decreased
10-fold within macrophages (as is rtsA expression), while
expression of other genes induced by CpxR remains constant (ppiA,
cpxRA) or increases 10-fold (cpxP) (27) .
While we have demonstrated that DsbA is critical during the systemic
stages of a serovar Typhimurium infection, the role of other members
of the CpxR regulon remains to be investigated .
A dsbA mutation blocks both secretion and translocation of SPI1
TTSS effector proteins . However, it is not clear if the loss of
DsbA decreases the ability of the SPI1 TTSS to properly assemble or
if DsbA is required for the fully assembled SPI1 TTSS to secrete
effectors . The former model seems more likely . One critical question
is what protein component of the SPI1 NC, if any, requires DsbA for
formation of disulfide bonds and proper function . Of the proteins
that form the SPI1 NC, only InvH contains two cysteine residues after
cleavage of a putative signal sequence . InvH helps target InvG to the
outer membrane, where InvG forms a multimeric pore complex through
which the needle is thought to pass (14,
15) . The remainder of the proteins involved in
formation of the SPI1 NC lack multiple cysteine residues after
cleavage of a putative signal sequence . Several proteins, including
InvG, contain a single cysteine residue, and it is possible that DsbA
is required to form disulfide bonds between, for example, two InvG
monomers or between InvG and some other TTSS component . It is also
possible that the loss of TTSS function is an indirect effect,
namely, the inability to form disulfide bonds in some non-SPI1
protein that is required for assembly of the SPI1 TTSS . Additional
studies are required to determine how a dsbA mutation blocks
secretion of effectors via both the SPI1 and SPI2 TTSS . It is
becoming increasingly clear that DsbA is required for a number of
pathogenic organisms to cause disease (31, 40,
74) . This suggests that DsbA may be a good target
for novel antibiotic compounds .
We also provide data which support the hypothesis that there is
feedback regulation that ensures that effector proteins are produced
only when the SPI1 TTSS is functional . We found that the mechanism of
this regulation is gene specific; SlrP production is controlled
posttranscriptionally, while SopA and SopB production is controlled
at the level of transcription . The expression of slrP is
controlled by RtsA, a hilA regulator, suggesting that slrP
is transcribed before the SPI1 TTSS is completed (26) .
Our data suggest that SlrP is translated only when the SPI1
TTSS is functional, although we cannot rule out the possibility that
the protein is degraded if it is not exported . This differential
feedback regulation of effectors could provide a timing mechanism;
SlrP could be produced and translocated immediately after completion
of the SPI1 TTSS, while other effectors under transcriptional control
could be translocated at later times .
Transcription of the InvF-regulated effector genes, sopA and
sopB (sigD), is significantly decreased by the presence of a
dsbA mutation . Interestingly, expression of the invF gene
was also decreased 3.5-fold by a dsbA mutation, while
expression of hilA was not affected (Fig . 6) .
Thus, the decreased expression of sopA and sopB (sigD)
could be due to decreased levels of InvF . It has previously been
proposed that SicA, a TTSS chaperone, coordinates transcription of
effector proteins with assembly of the SPI1 TTSS (18,
20, 21, 57) . However,
this model does not explain the decreased expression of invF
caused by a mutation in dsbA . InvF is not autoregulated (the
invF fusion is an invF-null), nor is SicA reportedly
required for expression of invF (18,
20, 23) . At this time it is not clear how
a dsbA mutation decreases expression of invF, although
our data clearly demonstrate that expression of hilA is not
affected, suggesting that the dsbA effect acts downstream of
hilA transcription . We presume that this effect is a direct
response to the absence of a functional TTSS . However, at the moment,
we cannot rule out the possibility that there is a more indirect
effect caused by loss of DsbA . Additional experiments are required to
determine how transcription of InvF-regulated genes is coupled to the
function of the SPI1 TTSS .
This work was supported by grant 00-25 from the Roy J . Carver
Charitable Trust .
We thank Pat Hearing for providing the M45 antibody, Theresa Ho
for providing pTH807, Cathy Lee for providing pLS118 and pLS119, Tom
Silhavy for providing the E . coli dsbA-lac strains, Barry
Wanner for providing pAH125, Daoguo Zhou for providing plasmids
pZP188 and pZP212, and members of the Slauch lab for providing
valuable comments .
* Corresponding author . Mailing address: Department of
Microbiology, University of Illinois, B103 Chemical and Life Sciences
Laboratory, 601 S . Goodwin Ave., Urbana, IL 61801 . Phone: (217) 244-1956 . Fax:
(217) 244-6697 . E-mail: slauch@uiuc.edu.
Present address: Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology,
Harvard University, Cambridge, MA 02138 .
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