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Journal of Bacteriology, July 2004, p . 4613-4619, Vol . 186, No . 14
The
Vibrio cholerae FlgM Homologue Is an Anti-
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| ABSTRACT |
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Vibrio cholerae has a single polar sheathed flagellum that propels
the cells of this bacterium . Flagellar synthesis, motility, and
chemotaxis have all been linked to virulence in this human pathogen.
V . cholerae expresses flagellar genes in a hierarchy
consisting of
54-
and
28-dependent
transcription . In other bacteria,
28
transcriptional activity is controlled by an anti-
28
factor, FlgM . We demonstrate that the V . cholerae FlgM
homologue (i) physically interacts with
28,
(ii) has a repressive effect on some V . cholerae
28-dependent
flagellar promoters, and (iii) is secreted through the polar sheathed
flagellum, consistent with anti-
28
activity . Interestingly, FlgM does not have a uniform repressive
effect on all
28-dependent
promoters, as determined by measurement of
28-dependent
transcription in cells either lacking FlgM (
flgM)
or incapable of secretion (
fliF) .
Further analysis of a
fliF
strain revealed that this flagellar assembly block causes a decrease
in class III (FlrC- and
54-dependent)
and class IV (
28-dependent),
but not class II (FlrA- and
54-dependent),
flagellar transcription . V . cholerae flgM and fliA (encodes
28)
mutants were only modestly affected in their ability to colonize the
infant mouse intestine, a measure of virulence . Our results
demonstrate that V . cholerae FlgM functions as an anti-
28
factor and that the sheathed flagellum is competent for secretion of
nonstructural proteins .
| INTRODUCTION |
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Studies of bacterial flagellar assembly have revealed that the
flagellum is assembled in a stepwise fashion that begins by insertion
of a type III export apparatus into the cytoplasmic membrane
(reviewed in reference 27) . Flagellar components are
then secreted through this export machinery to be added to the
growing tip of the flagellum in the specific order in which they are
assembled (reviewed in reference 42) . The bulk of the
flagellum is composed of flagellin subunits, which are only
added to the flagellum after the basal-body-hook structure is
completed . Transcription of flagellar genes generally occurs in a
hierarchical fashion that mirrors assembly of the nascent flagellum;
i.e., the genes encoding early flagellar components are transcribed
prior to the genes encoding late flagellar components, such as
flagellin subunits (24; reviewed in reference
41) .
In Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium, transcription of
the flagellin gene is repressed until the basal-body-hook structure
is completed, through the action of an anti-sigma factor, FlgM .
The flagellin gene is transcribed by RNA polymerase (RNAP) containing
the alternate sigma factor
28
(encoded by fliA) (34) . FlgM binds to
28
and prevents its association with RNAP, preventing flagellin gene
transcription (23) . However, once the basal-body-hook
structure is assembled, FlgM is secreted through the flagellar export
apparatus to the extracellular milieu, which allows
28
to associate with RNAP and transcribe the flagellin gene (15) .
Thus, the function of FlgM is to couple flagellar assembly to
appropriate temporal flagellar gene transcription .
Flagellar gene transcription in Vibrio cholerae, which possesses
a single polar sheathed flagellum, is also organized into a
transcription hierarchy (35) . However, the four-tiered
transcription hierarchy has notable differences from the three-tiered
hierarchy of S . enterica serovar Typhimurium, which possess
multiple peritrichous flagella . In V . cholerae, the genes
encoding the early structural components of the flagellum
(basal-body-hook) are transcribed in two distinct temporal classes
(II and III) by RNAP containing the alternate sigma factor
54;
in contrast, transcription of the equivalent genes in S . enterica
serovar Typhimurium occurs within the single "early" temporal class
(II) by RNAP containing the housekeeping
70
subunit . However, the last temporal class of flagellar genes in V .
cholerae (class IV), as in S . enterica serovar Typhimurium
(class III), is transcribed by RNAP containing
28 .
The main
28-dependent
genes are four distinct flagellin genes, flaB, flaC,
flaD, and flaE (20, 35).
54-dependent
transcription of a fifth flagellin gene, flaA, precedes
transcription of the other four flagellin genes (20) .
The four-tiered
54-
and
28-dependent
flagellar transcription hierarchy of V . cholerae (35)
is likely to be identical to the polar hierarchy of V .
parahaemolyticus (18), is remarkably similar
to those of Pseudomonas aeruginosa (3) and
Campylobacter jejuni (14), and has similarities to
that of Helicobacter pylori (1), suggesting
that this flagellar hierarchy may be common among gram-negative
bacteria with polar flagella .
The
54-dependent
FlaA flagellin is essential for V . cholerae motility and
flagellar synthesis, while the
28-dependent
FlaB, FlaC, FlaD, and FlaE flagellins are largely dispensable both
singly and in combination (20) . A fliA strain
(lacking
28)
is nonmotile and does not transcribe flaB, flaC,
flaD, or flaE but produces a truncated flagellum,
indicating that some FlaA subunits are assembled (35) .
Because FlaA transcription and assembly into the flagellum appear to
precede the transcription and incorporation of the other flagellin
subunits, it suggests that the checkpoint that controls
28-dependent
transcription may differ between V . cholerae and S .
enterica serovar Typhimurium, where completion of the
basal-body-hook structure causes the export of FlgM and
28-dependent
transcription (17) . Also, the presence of a sheath
enveloping the V . cholerae flagellum, which is contiguous with
the outer membrane (7), could inhibit or prevent
the secretion of nonstructural proteins, such as an anti-sigma
factor, through the flagellum; S . enterica serovar Typhimurium
flagella are not sheathed . These observations invited the question of
whether V . cholerae FlgM functions similarly to FlgM of S .
enterica serovar Typhimurium .
FlgM homologues have been identified and characterized in the
gram-negative polar flagellates H . pylori (1,
16) and P . aeruginosa (6) .
These studies demonstrated that the FlgM homologues in these bacteria
physically interact with
28
and inhibit
28-dependent
transcription, but they did not address the question of whether
FlgM is secreted through the flagellum . In fact, Josenhans et al .
suggested that FlgM is not secreted through the sheathed H . pylori
flagellum (16) . A report on a flgM C . jejuni mutant
(14) demonstrated that the FlgM of that organism has
only weak repressive activity on
28-dependent
transcription but also did not address FlgM secretion . We report here
that the V . cholerae FlgM homologue has the characteristics of
the S . enterica serovar Typhimurium anti-
28
factor: it physically interacts with
28,
it represses transcription from some
28-dependent
promoters, and it is secreted through the (polar sheathed) flagellum .
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Bacterial strains and media. Escherichia coli strain DH5
(11) was used for cloning manipulations, SM10
pir
(32) was used to transfer plasmids to V . cholerae by
conjugation, and BL21(DE3) (Novagen) was used for protein expression .
The V . cholerae strains used in this study are listed in Table
1 . Construction of chromosomal deletions and insertions
with pKEK229, a pCVD442 derivative with the sacB gene (4),
has been described previously (2) . Bacteriophage
CP-T1ts-mediated transduction (12) was used to
construct KKV1441(
flgM::Cmr);
the correct construction of all strains was verified by PCR and
sequencing .
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Luria broth (LB) was used for both liquid and agar media . Antibiotics
were added when appropriate at the following concentrations:
ampicillin, 50 µg/ml; chloramphenicol, 2 or 20 µg/ml (for V .
cholerae and E . coli, respectively); streptomycin, 100
µg/ml . Agar plates consisting of LB with 0.3% agar were used to
measure motility . For counterselection with sacB-containing
plasmids, LB without NaCl and with 10% sucrose was used .
Plasmid construction. All of the plasmids and
oligonucleotide primers used are listed in Table 1.
V . cholerae O395 chromosomal DNA was used as the template for
PCR amplification . The in-frame deletion in flgM (
flgM)
was constructed by first amplifying the 5' fragment with
oligonucleotides FLGMDEL1 and FLGMDEL2, digesting the amplified
product with EcoRI and BamHI, and then ligating it into similarly
digested pWSK30 (39) to form pKEK375 . The 3' fragment was PCR
amplified with oligonucleotides FLGMDEL3 and FLGMDEL4, digested
with EcoRI and HindIII, and ligated into similarly digested pKEK375
to form pKEK381 (
flgM) .
This results in the removal of 165 nucleotides that correspond to
amino acids 29 to 83 of the predicted gene product . The
chloramphenicol acetyltransferase gene from pACYC184 (37)
was amplified by PCR with primers CAT1 and CAT2 (22),
digested with MfeI, and ligated into pKEK381 digested with EcoRI to
form pKEK411 (
flgM::Cmr) .
The
flgM
and
flgM::Cmr
mutations were moved into plasmid pKEK229 via NotI and SalI digestion
and ligation to form pKEK389 and pKEK427, respectively .
To construct a plasmid for the expression of FlgM with an amino-terminal
FLAG tag (FLAG-FlgM), flgM was PCR amplified with primers FLAGFLGM
and FLGMUBAMHI, digested with NcoI and BamHI, and ligated into
similarly digested pET15b (Novagen) to form pKEK460 . pKEK460 was then
digested with PshAI and HindIII and ligated with a PshAI-HindIII
fragment of pACYC184 (37) to generate pKEK470 .
This plasmid still contains the T7lac promoter and FLAG-FlgM,
but with p15A ori and Cmr from pACYC184 . For expression of
FLAG-FlgM in V . cholerae, pKEK470 was digested with NcoI and
HindIII and ligated into similarly digested pBAD24 (10)
to form pKEK474 . The plasmid used for expression of
28
with an amino-terminal His6 tag (His-
28)
was constructed by PCR amplification of fliA with primers
FLIANDEI and FLIAUBAMHI, followed by digestion with NdeI and BamHI
and ligation into similarly digested pET-15b to form pKEK462 .
ß-Galactosidase assays. V . cholerae strains were
transformed with the promoter-lacZ fusion-containing plasmids
listed in Table 1, grown in LB plus antibiotic, and
then harvested at an optical density at 600 nm of
0.2
to 0.4 . Bacterial cells were permeabilized with chloroform and sodium
dodecyl sulfate (SDS) and assayed for ß-galactosidase activity by the
method of Miller (31) . All experiments were
performed at least three separate times .
Electron microscopy. Strains were grown to mid-log phase in
LB, centrifuged, and then resuspended in 0.15 M NaCl . Samples were
allowed to adhere to a carbon-coated grid and stained with 1% uranyl
acetate before microscopy with a JEOL 1230 microscope . The AMT
software was used to measure the lengths of flagella on wild-type and
flgM
mutant V . cholerae strains (25 of each), which were determined
to be significantly different by Student's two-tailed t test .
In vivo colonization assays. The infant mouse colonization
assay has been described previously (9) . The
inocula consisted of
106
CFU for both wild-type and mutant bacteria .
Protein detection. For coprecipitation of His-
28
and FLAG-FlgM, plasmids pKEK470 and/or pKEK462 were transformed into
BL21(DE3) and expression of the proteins was induced by growth in LB
with 1 mM isopropyl-ß-D-thiogalactopyranoside
(IPTG) for 5 h at 37°C . Supernatants of sonicated cells were mixed
with anti-His Dynabeads (Dynal Biotech), pelleted, and eluted in
accordance with the manufacturer's instructions .
For detection of FLAG-FlgM secretion, KKV598 (wild type) and
KKV1247 (
fliF)
were transformed with pKEK474 . These strains were grown in LB plus
0.1% arabinose at 37°C for 2 h . Samples were removed and centrifuged
at 17,000 x g for 30 min . The
supernatants were passed through a 0.2-µm syringe filter and
concentrated with 10% trichloroacetic acid (TCA) . Samples were then
centrifuged (68,000 x g
for 1.5 h), and the pellets were washed twice with cold acetone .
Samples were separated by SDS-15% polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, probed by Western immunoblotting with either His-Tag (Novagen) or anti-FLAG M2 (Sigma) monoclonal antibody, and detected with ECL detection reagent (Amersham-Pharmacia) .
| RESULTS |
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Interaction of FlgM with
28.
The gene encoding a FlgM homologue was identified in the V .
cholerae genome sequence (VC2204) (13) . The flgM
gene is predicted to encode a protein of 11.3 kDa . As we noted
previously (35), V . cholerae FlgM has
homology with S . enterica serovar Typhimurium FlgM (28%
identity) . If V . cholerae FlgM functions as an anti-
28
factor, it is predicted to physically interact with
28
(FliA) . To detect a physical interaction between FlgM and
28,
His-tagged V . cholerae
28
and FLAG-tagged V . cholerae FlgM were coexpressed from
different compatible plasmids within E . coli (Fig . 1) .
Magnetic metal chelation beads (anti-His; Dynal Biotech) were
then used to precipitate His-
28
from the E . coli lysate . Eluates from the magnetic beads were
separated by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and then probed
with either anti-His or anti-FLAG antibodies by Western
immunoblotting .
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When His-
28
is expressed alone, it is efficiently captured by the anti-His
magnetic beads (lane 2); in contrast, when FLAG-FlgM is expressed
alone, there is no detectable capture of this protein by the anti-His
magnetic beads (lane 4), despite the presence of a large amount of
FlgM protein in the lysate (lane 3) . However, when His-
28
and FLAG-FlgM are coexpressed within the same cell, capture of His-
28
by magnetic beads causes the cocapture of a large amount of FLAG-FlgM
(lane 6) . These results demonstrate protein-protein interaction
between His-
28
and FLAG-FlgM, consistent with the predicted anti-
28
activity of FlgM .
Secretion of FlgM through the V . cholerae flagellum.
The S . enterica serovar Typhimurium FlgM protein is secreted
through the flagellar export apparatus . To monitor secretion of V .
cholerae FlgM through the flagellar export apparatus, a FLAG tag
was fused to the N terminus of FlgM to facilitate detection; a FLAG
tag at the N terminus of S . enterica serovar Typhimurium FlgM
does not inhibit secretion through the flagellum (K . Hughes, personal
communication) . To determine if the V . cholerae FlgM protein
is likewise secreted through the flagellum, the FLAG-FlgM protein was
expressed in a wild-type (flagellated) V . cholerae strain .
FLAG-FlgM was also expressed within a
fliF
V . cholerae strain, which lacks the MS ring, the first component
assembled in the flagellum, and thus this strain lacks any flagellar
structure or export apparatus . Protein in the filtered supernatant
was concentrated by TCA precipitation, separated by SDS-polyacrylamide
gel electrophoresis, and then subjected to Western immunoblot
analysis with anti-FLAG antibodies .
FLAG-FlgM could be detected both in the supernatant (S) and in the
cell pellet (P) of the wild-type (flagellated) strain (WT, Fig.
2) . However, FLAG-FlgM was only found within the cell
pellet (P) of the
fliF
(nonflagellated) strain (fliF) and there was no detectable
FLAG-FlgM present in the supernatant (S) . These results indicate that
there is a requirement for the flagellum to achieve secretion of FlgM
into the supernatant, consistent with FlgM secretion through the
V . cholerae polar (sheathed) flagellum . Interestingly, the FlgM
protein in the supernatant has a slightly different mobility in the
gel than the FlgM protein within the cells, suggesting either some
C-terminal processing or an SDS-resistant conformational change .
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Construction of a V . cholerae flgM mutant. To study the
function of V . cholerae FlgM, we constructed a strain with an
in-frame deletion within the flgM gene . Construction of this
strain was difficult; our initial attempts to introduce the
flgM
mutation into the chromosome of a wild-type V . cholerae strain
via suicide plasmid integration into the chromosome and subsequent
sucrose counterselection to remove the plasmid were unsuccessful .
Only wild-type (flgM+) strains were recovered,
despite multiple attempts . We reasoned that this may be due to the
deleterious effect of unregulated
28
activity in a flgM strain, so the attempt at strain
construction was repeated with a
fliA
strain, KKV1113 (35) . In the
fliA
background, the
flgM
chromosomal mutation was readily obtained; approximately one-half
of the sucrose-resistant colonies contained this mutation . These
results demonstrate that there is selective pressure against
obtaining a
flgM
mutation in a fliA+ strain background, suggesting
that flgM exerts its effects through fliA .
To obtain a fliA+ strain with the
flgM
mutation, we first constructed a
flgM::Cmr
chromosomal mutation in
fliA
mutant strain KKV1113 via suicide plasmid pKEK427 (strain KKV1365)
and then moved the
flgM::Cmr
mutation into the wild-type (fliA+) strain (KKV1441)
via CP-T1ts-mediated transduction (12) . Cmr
transductants in the fliA+ background took 2 days
to form colonies on plates, compared to Cmr transductants
in the fliA mutant background, which only took 1 day to form
colonies . PCR analysis demonstrated that these Cmr
transductants had a chromosomal
flgM::Cmr
mutation (not shown) . The
flgM::Cmr
mutation was then replaced with
flgM
(without any insertion) via suicide plasmid pKEK389 . In this
manner we constructed
flgM
mutant V . cholerae strain KKV1461 . Interestingly, although the
flgM
strain took 2 days to form colonies on selective plates, its growth
curve is indistinguishable from that of the wild-type strain in
liquid LB (not shown) .
Motility of the
flgM
mutant strain was measured in motility agar plates (Fig.
3A) . The swimming pattern of this strain was
slightly reduced compared to that of the wild-type strain, indicating
that the
flgM
mutation has a modest negative effect on the ability of the bacteria
to swim from the point of inoculation in this assay . In contrast, the
fliA
mutation abolished motility, as we have shown previously (35) .
A
fliF
mutant strain, which contains a mutation in the structural gene for
the MS ring, the first component of the flagellum assembled (27),
is also nonmotile in this assay, as expected . A flgM mutant of
P . aeruginosa showed a significant motility defect in this
assay (6), suggesting possible differences between
the function of V . cholerae FlgM and that of P . aeruginosa
FlgM .
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flgM
mutant V . cholerae cells were visualized by electron microscopy
(Fig . 3C) . The cells possessed single polar flagella
that were noticeably longer than those of the wild-type strain (Fig.
3B) . Measurement of flagella of the wild-type and
flgM
mutant strains revealed a significantly longer flagellum (P =
0.001) in the
flgM
strain (6.95 ± 1.18 µm) in comparison to that of the wild-type strain
(5.71 ± 1.42 µm), consistent with the notion that FlgM plays a
repressive role in flagellar length .
FlgM has repressive effects on
28-dependent
transcription. If FlgM functions as an anti-
28
factor, its absence in a
flgM
mutant would be predicted to cause an increase in
28-dependent
transcription . Transcription of the five V . cholerae flagellins
was measured by promoter-lacZ transcriptional fusion plasmids
(20) in the wild-type,
fliA,
flgM,
and
fliA
flgM
strains (Fig . 4) . The flaA promoter is a
54-dependent
class III promoter, while the flaB, flaC, flaD,
and flaE promoters are
28-dependent
class IV promoters (35) .
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As we have shown previously, the lack of
28
(in a
fliA
mutant) eliminates transcription of the flaB, flaC,
flaD, and flaE promoters but has no effect on flaA
transcription compared with transcription in a wild-type strain (35) .
The lack of FlgM (in the
flgM
strain) had an approximately twofold stimulatory effect on flaD
and flaE transcription, in comparison with transcription in
the wild-type strain . Oddly, there was a decrease in flaC
transcription in the
flgM
strain, and transcription of the flaB promoter was unaffected
by the lack of FlgM . The effect of the lack of FlgM seen at these
four promoters is due to
28-dependent
transcription because introduction of a
fliA
mutation into the
flgM
background (the
fliA
flgM
strain) eliminates flaB, flaC, flaD, and flaE
transcription . There was no effect of the
flgM
or
fliA
flgM
mutations on flaA transcription . Our results demonstrate a
repressive effect of FlgM on
28-dependent
transcription of flaD and flaE, as would be expected of
an anti-
28
factor . However,
28-dependent
transcription of the flaB and flaC promoters was either
unaffected or increased in the presence of FlgM, indicating a lack of
uniform repressive FlgM activity at all
28-dependent
promoters .
Lack of the MS ring causes decreases in class III and IV and
increases in class II flagellar transcription. Because the MS ring is
the first structural component assembled in the nascent flagellum (27),
absence of the MS ring in a
fliF
V . cholerae mutant will prevent export and subsequent assembly
of any flagellar component located exterior to the cytoplasm .
To determine the effect on transcription of blocking flagellar
assembly at the initial step, we measured the transcription of a
number of class II, III, and IV promoters in the V . cholerae
wild-type and
fliF
mutant strains (Fig . 5) .
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The absence of the MS ring in the
fliF
mutant caused an increase in transcription (up to threefold) of all
three class II (FlrA- and
54-dependent)
flagellar promoters, flhA, fliE, and flrB, in
comparison with that in the wild-type strain . In contrast,
transcription of the four class III (FlrC- and
54-dependent)
flagellar promoters, flgK, flgB, flaG, and flaA,
was decreased (up to threefold) in the
fliF
mutant, compared to that in the wild-type strain . Finally,
transcription of three class IV (
28-dependent)
flagellar promoters, flaC, flaD, and flaE, was
reduced more than twofold in the
fliF
mutant, in comparison to that in the wild-type strain . Oddly,
transcription of the class IV flaB promoter was unaffected by
the absence of the MS ring, just as it was unaffected by the absence
of FlgM (see above) . In general, these results demonstrate that
blocking flagellar assembly at the initial step causes an increase in
class II gene transcription and decreases in class III and IV gene
transcription .
flgM and fliA have little effect on intestinal colonization. Flagellar synthesis, regulation, and chemotaxis have all been linked to V . cholerae colonization defects in the infant mouse (2, 26, 40), but the connection between these phenomena remains unclear . To determine the effect of flgM and fliA mutations on V . cholerae intestinal colonization of the infant mouse, a competition assay was performed with an inoculum that consisted of both mutant and isogenic wild-type strains (see Materials and Methods) . Colonization defects are recognized by a competitive index (CI) of less than 1 .
The
fliA,
flgM,
and
fliA
flgM
mutant strains demonstrated modest colonization defects in this assay
(Fig . 6) . The
fliA
and
fliA
flgM
mutant strains were more affected for colonization (CI,
0.3)
than the
flgM
strain (CI, 0.601), indicating that loss of
28
is more deleterious for colonization than is loss of FlgM . Still,
these are modest colonization defects, demonstrating that
28
and FlgM play little role in intestinal colonization . Control
experiments showed wild-type growth rates of all strains in LB at
37°C; thus, no obvious in vitro growth defects account for the modest
in vivo colonization defects of these strains .
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| DISCUSSION |
|---|
The control of
28-dependent
transcription via anti-
28
factor FlgM is a fascinating example of how temporal transcription
within the bacterial cytoplasm can be controlled by the assembly
of an external organelle . In S . enterica serovar Typhimurium,
FlgM binds to
28
and prevents its association with RNAP until completion of the
basal-body-hook structure, at which point FlgM is secreted through
the nascent flagellum (15) . This allows
28
holoenzyme to transcribe class III flagellar genes, the products of
which are then assembled into the flagellar filament . The bulk of the
filament is composed of flagellin subunits, and these are not needed
until completion of the basal-body-hook structure; thus, FlgM
prevents their expression until an appropriate point in flagellar
assembly .
V . cholerae possesses a single polar sheathed flagellum that
contains five distinct flagellin subunits; four of the flagellin
genes are transcribed by
28
holoenzyme, while a fifth flagellin gene is transcribed by
54
holoenzyme (20) . Transcription and assembly of the
54-dependent
flagellin, FlaA, appear to precede transcription and assembly of the
28-dependent
flagellins (35) . This situation differs from that
in S . enterica serovar Typhimurium, where there is a single
flagellin gene transcribed by
28
holoenzyme upon completion of the basal-body-hook structure,
suggesting that control of
28-dependent
transcription differs between V . cholerae and S . enterica
serovar Typhimurium . Also, the V . cholerae flagellum, unlike
those of S . enterica serovar Typhimurium, is covered by a
sheath that may impede the secretion of nonstructural proteins, such
as FlgM .
Our results demonstrate that V . cholerae FlgM interacts with
28,
is secreted through the flagellum, can inhibit transcription of some
28-dependent
promoters, and represses flagellar length; all of these functions are
consistent with anti-
28
activity, as initially characterized in S . enterica serovar
Typhimurium . One would therefore anticipate that the absence of FlgM
would result in increased
28-dependent
transcription at all of the
28-dependent
flagellin promoters, and in fact flaD and flaE
transcription increased in the
flgM
strain . However, flaC transcription actually decreased in a
flgM
strain while flaB transcription was unaffected . Perhaps
unregulated
28
activity causes sequestration of a limited amount of
28
holoenzyme at certain promoters (flaD, flaE), causing a
decrease in transcription at other promoters (flaC) .
It is difficult to rationalize the unresponsiveness of the flaB
promoter to both the absence of FlgM and the absence of the MS
ring . This promoter is clearly
28
dependent, yet its activity is not diminished in the absence of
secretion (
fliF
mutant) nor increased in the absence of FlgM; thus, this promoter
behaves differently than other
28-
and FlgM-controlled promoters . These differences in transcriptional
responsiveness of the individual flagellin genes undoubtedly lead to
differences in the composition of the flagellin subunits within the
flagellum under different conditions, and we predict that this leads
to altered swimming behavior . Complex flagella (i.e., composed of
multiple distinct flagellin subunits) are present in many bacteria
with polar flagella (e.g., Vibrio, Pseudomonas, and
Campylobacter spp., etc.), but no studies have been performed yet
that link the flagellin composition under different conditions to
specific attributes of flagellar performance, such as rotation rate,
speed, etc .
The lack of the MS ring in V . cholerae (
fliF
mutant) led to general decreases in class III and IV flagellar
transcription . We have already shown that transcription of class III
genes is dependent on phosphorylation of FlrC (encoded by a class
II gene) (2, 21), which suggests that
the lack of secretion and/or lack of the MS ring inhibits
phosphorylation of FlrC . Although FlrB, the kinase that
phosphorylates FlrC, has been identified (2), it is
not clear what modulates FlrB activity; these results suggest that it
may be either an early structural component or a functional secretion
apparatus . Transcription of the analogous C . jejuni class III
genes, which are regulated by a FlrC homologue, FlgR, have been shown
to depend upon the formation of the flagellar secretory apparatus (14),
so we favor a similar functional, rather than structural, checkpoint
in V . cholerae .
Although a number of bacteria possess sheathed flagella (e.g., Vibrio and Helicobacter spp.), very little is known about the sheath itself . The sheath is hypothesized to mask the proinflammatory flagellin subunits from the host immune system (28) . Limited studies of V . cholerae demonstrated that the sheath possesses lipopolysaccharide, indicating that it is contiguous with the outer membrane (7) . Additional studies of V . alginolyticus and V . anguillarum have identified a specific protein and lipopolysaccharide associated with the flagellar sheath in these species (8, 33) . Analysis of mutations in hook-associated proteins that connect the flagellin filaments to the basal body in V . parahaemolyticus suggested that the sheath acts as a barrier to the secretion of flagellin subunits to the extracellular milieu (29), raising the question of the competence of the sheathed Vibrio flagellum to secrete FlgM (28) .
Our studies demonstrate that V . cholerae FlgM is secreted through
the sheathed flagellum, thus opening up the possibility that
other nonstructural proteins could also be secreted through the
flagellar export machinery . Type III secretion systems (TTSS) are
frequently used by pathogenic bacteria to alter host physiology
during infection, but the only TTSS present in the V . cholerae
genome is the flagellar export apparatus (13) . However,
Yersinia enterocolitica is known to use the flagellar TTSS to
secrete a virulence-associated phospholipase (43) .
Various studies have linked motility and flagellar synthesis to
aspects of V . cholerae virulence (2,
5, 9, 26,
36, 40), but the phenomena are frequently
strain and animal model dependent so it has been difficult to
elucidate the contribution of the flagellum to cholera pathogenesis .
The studies presented here demonstrate that the lack of
28
and/or FlgM has a modest impact on the ability of a classical V .
cholerae strain (O395) to colonize the infant mouse intestine;
this animal model has been useful in predicting colonization behavior
in humans (19) . The effect of these mutations in
other V . cholerae strains and on other aspects of virulence
(intoxication, dissemination, reactogenicity, etc.) may be more
profound .
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
|---|
We thank Kelly Hughes for helpful discussions .
This work was supported by NIH AI43486 to K.E.K .
| FOOTNOTES |
|---|
* Corresponding author . Mailing address: Department of Biology,
University of Texas San Antonio, 6900 N . Loop 1604 West, San Antonio, TX
78249-0662 . Phone: (210) 458-6140 . Fax: (210) 458-5658 . E-mail: klose@utsa.edu .
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