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Journal of Bacteriology, July 2004, p . 4645-4654, Vol . 186,
No . 14
Structure and Electrophysiological Properties of the YscC Secretin from the Type
III Secretion System of Yersinia enterocolitica
Peter Burghout,1 Ria van Boxtel,1 Patrick Van
Gelder,2 Philippe Ringler,3 Shirley A . Müller,3
Jan Tommassen,1* and Margot Koster1
Department of Molecular Microbiology and Institute of Biomembranes, Utrecht
University, 3584 CH Utrecht, The Netherlands,1 Department of
Ultrastructure, Flemish Interuniversity Institute of Biotechnology, Free
University Brussels, 1050 Brussels, Belgium,2 Maurice E . Müller
Institute, Biozentrum, University of Basel, CH-4056 Basel, Switzerland3
Received 23 December 2003/ Accepted 5 April 2004
YscC is the integral outer membrane component of the type III protein
secretion machinery of Yersinia enterocolitica and belongs to
the family of secretins . This group of proteins forms stable
ring-like oligomers in the outer membrane, which are thought to
function as transport channels for macromolecules . The YscC oligomer
was purified after solubilization from the membrane with a nonionic
detergent . Sodium dodecyl sulfate did not dissociate the oligomer,
but it caused a change in electrophoretic mobility and an increase in
protease susceptibility, indicating partial denaturation of the
subunits within the oligomer . The mass of the homo-oligomer, as
determined by scanning transmission electron microscopy, was
approximately 1 MDa . Analysis of the angular power spectrum from
averaged top views of negatively stained YscC oligomers revealed a
13-fold angular order, suggesting that the oligomer consists of 13
subunits . Reconstituted in planar lipid bilayers, the YscC oligomer
displayed a constant voltage-independent conductance of approximately
3 nS, thus forming a stable pore . However, in vivo, the expression of
YscC did not lead to an increased permeability of the outer membrane .
Electron microscopy revealed that the YscC oligomer is composed
of three domains, two stacked rings attached to a conical domain .
This structure is consistent with the notion that the secretin forms
the upper part of the basal body of the needle structure of the type
III secreton .
The outer membrane of gram-negative bacteria not only protects the
cell against harmful compounds in the extracellular environment, such
as antibiotics, detergents, and digestive enzymes, but also forms a
barrier to the secretion of proteins and uptake of nutrients . The
passage of small hydrophilic molecules across the outer membrane is
facilitated by the presence of a large number of proteinaceous
channels, formed by general and substrate-specific porins and
TonB-dependent receptors (31, 41) .
Gram-negative bacteria have evolved several specialized pathways for
the secretion of proteins . These pathways all require one or more
integral outer membrane proteins, which in the cases of the type II
and III protein secretion systems are related and belong to the
family of secretins (19) . Other members of this family
are involved in the assembly of type IV pili or in the secretion of
filamentous phages .
The best-studied secretins with respect to structure and channel
formation are XcpQ of Pseudomonas aeruginosa and PulD of Klebsiella
oxytoca, both components of type II secretion pathways, the
filamentous phage protein pIV, and the PilQ protein of Neisseria
meningitidis that is involved in the assembly of type IV pili .
Secretins exist in the outer membrane as stable oligomeric complexes
that have been purified and visualized by electron microscopy (EM) .
Top views of the oligomers show them to be large ring-like structures
with an internal cavity that might function as an export channel (2,
4, 7, 35,
42) . The fact that the PilQ protein of Neisseria gonorrhoeae
is essential for a periplasmically assembled pilus to traverse the
outer membrane (55) is consistent with this
notion . Further, on some micrographs, the internal cavity of the
purified secretin oligomers is occluded (4, 8,
43, 44) . Side views of the oligomers
reveal cylindrical structures composed of at least two stacked
ring-like regions (35, 43) .
Purified pIV (37), XcpQ (4), and PulD (42)
oligomers have been shown to display pore-forming activity when
inserted in phospholipid bilayers . The conductance of the channels
was voltage dependent, suggesting that the secretins change their
conformation in response to the transmembrane potential . The level of
conductance was very irregular, especially for XcpQ and PulD, which
also indicates that the channels are gated . In contrast, in vivo
expression of secretins seems to have no effect on the permeability
of the outer membrane (4, 37),
which makes it likely that in the cell the secretin is closed . How
the channel is opened to facilitate export is unknown, but probably
interactions with substrates or other components of its cognate
system induce a conformational change .
The homology between the members of the secretin family is particularly
marked in their C-terminal halves . Deletion mutagenesis (20)
and limited proteolysis (4, 43) have
shown that this domain participates in oligomerization and pore
formation, while the N terminus is probably involved in
system-specific interactions (12,
49) . A small nonconserved domain C terminal to the conserved part
of the protein functions as the binding site for a small lipoprotein
in a number of secretins (11, 13,
47, 49) . These so-called pilot
proteins protect the secretin against proteolysis and mediate its
stable insertion into the outer membrane (10,
13, 16, 23,
32, 49) . In the Pul system of K .
oxytoca, the PulS pilot protein remains associated with the
secretin after its insertion into the membrane (42) .
Secretins have been shown to be major components of type III
secretion systems (33, 48,
51) . These systems, which include approximately 20 proteins (9,
28), play a central role in the interaction
between gram-negative bacteria and their eukaryotic hosts by allowing
the bacteria to inject proteins directly into the cytosol of
eukaryotic target cells (28) . Secretins of two
type III systems have been purified and visualized by EM and are
ring-shaped oligomeric molecules (10, 32) .
However, these purified oligomers have not been analyzed further . In
this study, we describe the pore formation and EM analysis of the
YscC secretin of the type III secretion system of Yersinia
enterocolitica .
Bacterial strains and growth conditions. Escherichia coli
strains DH5
(21), S17-1b (50), and BL21(DE3)
(Novagen) were used for routine gene cloning, conjugational
transfer of plasmids to Y . enterocolitica, and expression of
genes under T7 promoter control, respectively . Y . enterocolitica
KNG22703 is a blaA mutant derivative of strain W22703, in which
the gene encoding ß-lactamase has been replaced by the luxAB
genes (30) . KNG22703(pAA203) carries the aphA-3
cassette in the yscC gene creating a nonpolar mutation (32) .
The pYV-cured Y . enterocolitica strain CE1525 was obtained by
growing strain W22703 on calcium-depleted medium at 37°C .
Fast-growing colonies were screened, and a strain from which no
plasmid could be isolated was selected .
E . coli strains were routinely grown at 37°C in a modified
Luria-Bertani broth (LB) (52), and Y . enterocolitica
strains were grown at room temperature in LB supplemented with 0.4%
glucose . To induce expression of yscC, Y . enterocolitica
strains were inoculated at an optical density at 600 nm of 0.1 in
brain heart infusion broth supplemented with 0.4% glucose, 20 mM MgCl2,
and 20 mM sodium oxalate (BHI-OX) . Alternatively, cells were
grown in brain heart infusion broth supplemented with 5 mM CaCl2
(BHI-Ca2+) . The cultures were grown for 2 h at room
temperature, isopropyl-thio-ß-D-galactopyranoside
(IPTG) (final concentration, 0.1 mM) was added to the cultures, and
the cultures were grown for 2 h at 37°C . For Y . enterocolitica,
ampicillin (1 mg/ml), kanamycin (50 µg/ml), nalidixic acid (25
µg/ml), and tetracycline (10 µg/ml for cultures grown in LB and
BHI-Ca2+ and 20 µg/ml for cultures grown in BHI-OX) . For
E . coli, ampicillin (100 µg/ml), kanamycin (25 µg/ml),
and tetracycline (10 µg/ml for cultures grown in LB and 20 µg/ml for
cultures grown in BHI-OX) were used .
Cloning of the yscC and yscW genes.
Recombinant DNA methods were performed essentially as described
previously (45) . Plasmids were introduced into E . coli
by transformation using the CaCl2 procedure (45)
and into Y . enterocolitica by conjugation on LB agar plates
overnight at room temperature .
The 3,077-bp EcoRI-PstI fragment of plasmid pSM3 (32),
carrying the beginning of the virC operon including the
full-length yscC gene, was cloned into the vector pUR6500 (18),
resulting in pSM3km . To obtain a construct that encodes a
six-histidine-tagged YscW (His6-YscW), the part of the
yscW gene encoding YscW without its signal sequence and
N-terminal cysteine residue was amplified by PCR . PCR was performed
using the pYV plasmid of strain W22703 as the template and using
primers MCK16 (5'-CATCATTTCTTTTCATATGGTAGATCTCGCCACCCCCCCA-3') and
MCK17 (5'-CCAATATAATAAATCACC-3') . The amplified sequence was cloned
into the SmaI site of pBC18R (6) in the direction
opposite that of the lac promoter, resulting in pEW1 . The EcoRI-SalI
fragment of this plasmid was cloned into vector pBluescript
(Stratagene) to create pEW2 . The BamHI-NdeI fragment of pEW2 was
cloned into pET16b (Novagen), thereby placing the yscW gene in
pEW3 behind an N-terminal histidine tag and the T7 promoter .
Purification of YscC. Unless stated otherwise, the entire
YscC purification protocol was performed on ice or at 4°C . The
pYV-cured Y . enterocolitica strain CE1525 carrying plasmids
pSM3km and pRS6 (1) containing the yscC and
yscW genes, respectively, was grown in 2.5 liters of BHI-OX,
and production of YscC was induced by the addition of IPTG as
described above . Cells were washed with 0.9% NaCl solution,
resuspended in 50 ml of lysis buffer (1 mM EDTA, 50 mM Tris-HCl [pH
8.5]), and frozen at –20°C . After thawing and sonication, cells were
removed by centrifugation for 5 min at 3,000
x g . The cell envelopes were pelleted
by centrifugation for 1 h at 20,000 x
g, and the YscC oligomer was solubilized with 8.5 ml of
extraction buffer containing 3% Elugent (Calbiochem), 250 mM NaCl, 5
mM EDTA, and 50 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.8) in the presence of protease
inhibitor (complete protease inhibitor; Boehringer) for 30 min at
room temperature . Insoluble debris was removed by centrifugation for
60 min at 150,000 x g .
After the addition of sucrose to a final concentration of 15%
(wt/wt), the extracted cell envelope proteins were layered on top of
a 20 to 40% (wt/wt) sucrose gradient in gradient buffer (0.3%
Elugent, 250 mM NaCl, protease inhibitor, 5 mM EDTA, 50 mM Tris-HCl
[pH 7.8]) and centrifuged for 28 h at 38,000 rpm in an SW41 rotor
(Beckman) . Fractions from the gradient containing the YscC oligomer
were pooled, dialyzed against chromatography buffer (0.1% Elugent,
100 mM NaCl, 0.1 mM EDTA, 10 mM Tris-HCl [pH 7.8]) and concentrated
to 2 ml in a microcentrifuge YM-100 tube (Centricon) . One milliliter
of concentrated protein solution was loaded on a MonoQ HR 5/5
ion-exchange column, which was eluted with a salt gradient ranging
from 100 mM to 1 M NaCl in chromatography buffer . The proteins of the
column fractions that contained the YscC oligomer, which eluted at
450 to 500 mM NaCl, were combined and concentrated to 2 ml in a
microcentrifuge YM-100 tube and stored at –20°C .
Antibody preparation against YscW. For overproduction and
purification of His6-YscW, a culture of E . coli
BL21(DE3) carrying pEW3 that had been grown overnight was diluted
1:20 in LB and grown for 1 h at 37°C . After the addition of IPTG to a
final concentration of 1 mM, the bacteria were grown for another 2 h
at 37°C . Cells were collected by centrifugation, and the cell pellet
was resuspended in a solution consisting of 100 mM NaCl, 1 mM EDTA,
and 50 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.0) and sonicated . The lysate was centrifuged
for 25 min at 3,000 x g at
4°C, and the pelleted inclusion bodies were solubilized in 8 M
urea-50 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.0) . After centrifugation for 1 h at 100,000
x g at 15°C, solubilized His6-YscW
from the supernatant was purified with Ni-nitrilotriacetic acid beads
(Qiagen), following the manufacturer's instructions . A rabbit
was injected subcutaneously with 0.15 mg of purified protein in
Freund's complete adjuvant . Seven booster doses of the same protein
preparation in Freund's incomplete adjuvant were given, one every 4
weeks .
SDS-PAGE and immunoblotting. Proteins were routinely
separated by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel
electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) (34) with 0.2% SDS in the running
gel . For seminative SDS-PAGE, the loading buffer contained no
ß-mercaptoethanol and only 0.1% SDS instead of 2% SDS, the gels
contained no SDS, and electrophoresis was performed at 4°C . The
detergent-solubilized YscC oligomer was dissociated by treatment with
hot phenol (22) . Alternatively, the YscC oligomer
was dissociated by treatment with trichloroacetic acid (TCA) and
trifluoroacetic acid (TFA) . One volume of cell culture was mixed with
1 volume of 10% TCA, and the mixture was incubated for 20 min on ice .
Insoluble material was collected by centrifugation at 20,000
x g for 20 min at 4°C, washed twice
with 2 volumes of ice-cold acetone, and dried . To increase the
dissociation efficiency, 50 µl of TFA was added to the pellet, which
was then immediately evaporated by a stream of air . Protein
bands were stained either with Coomassie brilliant blue or with
silver (38) . Alternatively, proteins were transferred onto
nitrocellulose membranes by semidry electroblotting . After incubation
with primary antibodies and with horseradish peroxidase-coupled
anti-rabbit immunoglobulin G (diluted 1:3,000) (Biosource), the
immunoblots were developed by enhanced chemiluminescence (Pierce) .
The primary antibodies used were 1:1,000 dilutions of rabbit antisera
directed against a synthetic YscC peptide (32) or
YscW .
Stability assay for the purified YscC oligomer. The
stability of the purified YscC oligomer in the presence of detergents
was evaluated by incubating the oligomer for 1 h at 40°C in 2%
Elugent, octyl-polyoxyethylene (OPOE) (Alexis), sulfobetaine 12
(SB12) (Sigma), SDS (J . T . Baker), Triton X-100 (Serva), or
Zwittergent 3-14 (Calbiochem) in chromatography buffer . Similarly,
the stability of the oligomer in the presence of 20 mM dithiothreitol
(DTT) was evaluated . After the incubations, the samples were placed
on ice . The loading buffer for seminative gel electrophoresis was
added just before the gel was loaded .
Protease accessibility of the YscC oligomer. Purified YscC
oligomer was diluted 1:10 in chromatography buffer containing 2% SDS,
and the solution was either boiled for 10 min or left untreated . The
samples were incubated with different concentrations of proteinase K
for 10 min at room temperature . Subsequently, SDS-PAGE loading buffer
was added, the samples were boiled for 10 min, and proteolytic
degradation was immediately evaluated by SDS-PAGE .
Mass determination by STEM. The protein stock was diluted
1:2 with chromatography buffer without Elugent, and 6-µl aliquots
were adsorbed for 60 s to glow-discharged scanning transmission
electron microscopy (STEM) films, which are thin carbon films that
span a thick fenestrated carbon layer covering 200-mesh/in.,
gold-plated copper grids . The grids were then blotted, washed on 8
drops of quartz double-distilled water, and freeze-dried at –80°C
and 5 x 10–8 torr overnight
in the microscope . Tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) particles served as
mass standard . These particles were similarly adsorbed (45 s) to
separate microscopy grids, washed on 4 droplets of 10 mM ammonium
acetate, and air dried .
A STEM HB-5 vacuum generator interfaced to a modular computer
system (Tietz Video and Image Processing Systems GmbH, Gauting,
Germany) was employed (39) . Series of dark-field images (512
by 512 pixels) were recorded from the unstained samples at an
accelerating voltage of 80 kV and a nominal magnification of
x200,000 . The recording dose was 345 ± 45
electrons/nm2 . The digital images were evaluated using the
program package IMPSYS (39) . Accordingly, the
projections were selected in circular boxes, and the total scattering
of each region was calculated . The background scattering of the
carbon support film was then subtracted, and the mass was calculated .
The results were scaled according to the mass measured for TMV and
corrected for beam-induced mass loss on the basis of the behavior of
proteins in a similar mass range (40; unpublished
data) . The mass values were then displayed in histograms and
described by Gauss curves .
Negative stain EM. The grids were prepared as described
above for mass measurement except that after the washing step, they
were negatively stained on 2 droplets of 2% uranyl acetate (pH 4.5),
blotted, and air dried . The grids were examined in the STEM, and
digital, dark-field images (512 by 512 pixels) were recorded at an
accelerating voltage of 100 kV and a nominal magnification of
x500,000 . Bright-field images of
larger regions of the same grids were subsequently recorded on
photographic film using an Hitachi 7000 TEM at an accelerating
voltage of 100 kV and a magnification of x50,000 .
The negatives were digitalized using a Primescan D7100 scanner
at a sampling step size of 0.4 nm/pixel .
Projections were manually selected from the STEM images and
examined; averaging procedures were not employed . Top- and side-view
projections of the complexes were also manually selected from the TEM
images and placed in galleries using the EMAN (36) and
SEMPER image-processing packages (46) . The galleries
were analyzed individually . The side-view projections were angularly
and translationally aligned to arbitrarily selected reference
particles using the SEMPER programs . Projections with the specified
correlation factor ( 0.3
and
0.5
for side views of the single and double complexes, respectively) to
the reference were subsequently superimposed and averaged . The SPIDER
image-processing package (17) was employed to
align the top-view projections without the use of a reference .
Repeated alignment cycles yielded several class averages . Their
rotational power spectra were determined using the SEMPER programs .
Planar lipid bilayer experiments. Planar lipid bilayer
experiments were performed essentially as described previously (54)
with 5 mM CaCl2 in the electrode buffer . Briefly, after
formation of the lipid bilayer, 50 ng of YscC was added to the
aqueous subphase . After a potential of 100 mV was applied over the
membrane, insertions of the protein into the bilayer were monitored
as stepwise increments of the current . To study the effect of calcium
on channel activity, the electrolyte buffer was prepared without CaCl2 .
Voltage-ramp experiments were performed by applying an increasing
potential from 0 to +200 or –200 mV over a time span of 100 s .
Zero-current membrane potentials were determined after establishing a
10-fold KCl gradient (1 M in the cis cell and 100 mM in the
trans cell) across the bilayer .
Uptake of chromogenic ß-lactam antibiotics. The pYV-cured
Y . enterocolitica strain CE1525 carrying plasmid pSM3 (containing
the yscC gene) with or without plasmid pRS6 (containing the
yscW gene) were grown in BHI-OX or BHI-Ca2+, and
expression of yscC was induced by the addition of IPTG as
described above . Cells were washed and resuspended to an optical
density at 600 nm of 0.5 in phosphate-buffered saline (45) .
After the addition of CENTA ß-lactamase substrate (Merck) or
nitrocefin (Calbiochem) to a final concentration of 50 µg/ml, the
conversion of these substrates by periplasmic ß-lactamase was
monitored for 1 min by determining the optical density at 400 or 486
nm . Transport across the outer membrane is the rate-limiting step in
the degradation of these antibiotics in this assay (53) .
As a control for possible leakage of periplasmic ß-lactamase, the
conversion of the ß-lactam antibiotics in the supernatant of the cell
suspension was measured .
Purification of the YscC oligomer under nondenaturing conditions.
In the protocol for the purification of the YscC oligomer of Koster
et al . (32), SDS was used for its extraction from cell
envelopes of the Y . enterocolitica wild-type strain KNG22703 .
Although the oligomer did not dissociate, it is possible that
the protein was partially denatured during the extraction . Therefore,
a new purification method was developed in which the nonionic
detergent Elugent was used to solubilize the cell membranes instead
of SDS . A pYV-cured Y . enterocolitica strain (the virulence
plasmid pYV carries the genes for all the components of the secretion
machinery) was used to produce the YscC oligomer . Two plasmids,
pSM3km encoding YscC and pRS6 encoding YscW, the pilot protein
required for the production of high levels of YscC and proper
localization of the YscC oligomer (5, 32),
were introduced into the strain . Membrane proteins from this strain
were solubilized in 3% Elugent, and YscC was purified using
sucrose gradient centrifugation followed by ion-exchange chromatography
(see Materials and Methods) . A NaCl concentration of at least
100 mM had to be present in the purification buffers to prevent
aggregation of the solubilized secretin . The final preparation
contained almost exclusively the oligomeric form of YscC (Fig .
1A) . Similar to what was reported previously (32),
a small amount of the secretin was purified in its 64-kDa monomeric
form (Fig . 1A), as confirmed by immunoblot analysis
(data not shown) . It is possible that unstable assembly intermediates
of the YscC oligomer copurified during the procedure . Upon treatment
with hot phenol, the oligomer dissociated into the constituent YscC
monomers (Fig . 1B) . No other proteins were detected,
showing purified YscC to be homo-oligomeric . Immunoblot analysis
confirmed that YscW fractionated differently than YscC on the sucrose
gradient (data not shown) . The yield of the purification procedure
was approximately 0.25 mg/liter of culture, which was approximately
30% of the initial amount of YscC present in the preparation .
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FIG . 1 . Purification of the YscC oligomer with the nonionic detergent
Elugent . (A) Protein fractions of the different steps of the
purification procedure were analyzed on a 3 to 15% polyacrylamide
gradient gel and stained with silver . Samples were adjusted to contain
equal amounts of YscC oligomer . Lane 1, protein fraction from whole
cells (lane 1); lane 2, protein fraction from cell envelopes; lane 3,
soluble protein fraction obtained after membrane extraction with
Elugent; lane 4, protein fraction obtained after sucrose gradient
centrifugation; lane 5, purified YscC oligomer after ion-exchange
chromatography . (B) The purified YscC oligomer was dissociated with hot
phenol, loaded on an 11% polyacrylamide gel, and visualized with
Coomassie brilliant blue staining . The positions of the molecular mass
markers (in kilodaltons) and of the YscC oligomer and monomer are
indicated to the left and right of the gels, respectively.
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Modification of the YscC oligomer by temperature and SDS.
Interestingly, analysis of the purified secretin by seminative
SDS-PAGE revealed two high-molecular-weight oligomers (Fig .
2, lane 1), which were both recognized by antibodies directed
against YscC (data not shown) and thus represent two forms of
the secretin oligomer . When boiled in the presence of 2% SDS, the
more- abundant, faster-migrating form was completely converted into
the slower-migrating form (Fig . 2, lane 2) . This may be
the result of SDS partially unfolding the polypeptides within
the oligomer without dissociating it but thereby affecting its
electrophoretic mobility . A small proportion of the purified YscC
oligomer was always in the slower-migrating form after seminative
SDS-PAGE (Fig . 2, lane 1) possibly due to the presence
of 0.1% SDS in the sample buffer . The fast-migrating YscC oligomer
was also the most prominent form in cell envelopes that were
directly analyzed by seminative SDS-PAGE (Fig . 2, lane 3),
indicating that this form represents the most native configuration of
YscC . These results indicate that the YscC oligomer normally has a
densely packed structure, which partially unfolds in the presence
of SDS . Thus, even though SDS does not dissociate the YscC oligomer,
it appears to strongly affect its structure .
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FIG . 2 . Effects of heat and SDS on the purified YscC oligomer . The
seminative 3 to 9% polyacrylamide gradient gel was loaded with purified
YscC oligomer (lane 1), purified YscC oligomer that had been incubated
for 10 min at 100°C in the presence of 2% SDS (lane 2), and cell
envelopes from the pYV-cured Y . enterocolitica strain CE1525
carrying plasmids pSM3km and pRS6 . Proteins were visualized by staining
with silver . The positions of the native and partially denatured
(nonnative) forms of the YscC oligomer are indicated to the right of the
gel.
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Stability of the native YscC oligomer. The stability of the
native form of the YscC oligomer was studied in more detail . In a
buffer containing 0.1% Elugent, 100 mM NaCl, 0.1 mM EDTA, and 10 mM
Tris-HCl (pH 7.8), the native form of the YscC oligomer remained
stable during incubation for 10 min at temperatures up to 60°C (Fig.
3A) . After incubation at 80 or 100°C, neither form
of the oligomer was detected (Fig . 3A), and there
was no concomitant increase in the amount of monomeric YscC observed
(data not shown) . Therefore, heat modification of the oligomer in
this buffer most likely caused aggregation . When the YscC oligomer
was incubated in the presence of 2% SDS, conversion of the native
YscC oligomer into the slow-migrating form was already observed at
temperatures above 20°C, and this conversion was detected at all
higher temperatures tested (Fig . 3A) . Hence, the
presence of SDS promotes partial denaturation at lower temperatures
and prevents aggregation of the oligomer at higher temperatures .
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FIG . 3 . Stability of the native YscC oligomer . (A) Elugent-solubilized
YscC oligomer was incubated in the absence or presence of 2.0% SDS for
10 min at the indicated temperatures . (B) Elugent-solubilized YscC
oligomer was incubated in the presence of 2% Elugent (e), OPOE (o), SB12
(sb), SDS (s), Triton X-100 (t), or Zwittergent 3-14 (z) for 1 h at
40°C . All samples were loaded on seminative 3 to 9% polyacrylamide
gradient gels, subjected to electrophoresis, and stained with silver .
The positions of the native and nonnative forms of the YscC oligomer are
indicated to the right of the gels.
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The stability of the native YscC oligomer was also determined in
other detergents that are often used for the extraction of cell
envelope proteins . The native form of the oligomer was still present
after incubation for 1 h at 40°C in 2% Elugent, OPOE, SB12, Triton
X-100, or Zwittergent 3-14 (Fig . 3B) .
The susceptibility of the two forms to proteolytic degradation was
studied by incubating the purified YscC oligomer with 2% SDS either
at room temperature or at 100°C to obtain the native or nonnative
form, respectively, followed by treatment with proteinase K . The
nonnative form showed increased sensitivity to the protease compared
to the native form (Fig . 4), which substantiates
the notion that SDS induces partial unfolding of the YscC oligomer at
high temperatures .
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FIG . 4 . Protease susceptibility of the purified YscC oligomer . Purified
YscC oligomers were incubated with 2% SDS for 10 min at room temperature
for analysis of the native form or at 100°C for analysis of the
nonnative form . The oligomers were then incubated with the indicated
concentrations of proteinase K for 10 min at room temperature . Samples
were loaded on a 3 to 9% polyacrylamide gradient gel . The position of
the YscC oligomer to indicated on the right of the gels . Proteins were
visualized by staining with silver.
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The nonconserved C-terminal domain of YscC contains four cysteine
residues that form at least one intramolecular disulfide bond (29) .
To investigate whether this bond helps to stabilize the native
oligomeric form of YscC, the purified oligomer was incubated in the
presence of 20 mM DTT for 10 min at 40°C . The minor shift in
electrophoretic mobility of the monomers obtained after dissociation
of these oligomers with TCA and TFA indicates that at least one
disulfide bond was broken by the DTT treatment (Fig . 5A) .
In its reduced state, the oligomeric secretin was still in its native
form after incubation at 40°C (Fig . 5B), which
implies that the disulfide bond is not essential to retain the YscC
oligomer in this conformation .
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FIG . 5 . Role of disulfide bonds in the stability of the SDS-sensitive
YscC oligomer . Purified YscC oligomer was incubated in the absence (–)
or presence (+) of 20 mM DTT for 10 min at 40°C and was either
dissociated into monomers by treatment with TCA and TFA and loaded on a
8% polyacrylamide gel (A) or directly loaded on a seminative 3 to 9%
polyacrylamide gradient gel (B) . The positions of the reduced and
oxidized forms of the YscC monomer and the native and nonnative forms of
the YscC oligomer are indicated to the right of the gels . Proteins were
visualized by staining with silver.
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Mass analysis of the purified YscC oligomers. The purified YscC
oligomers were adsorbed to thin carbon films and imaged by STEM for
mass measurements . Evaluation of the images yielded a histogram
displaying a major mass peak and two minor mass peaks (Fig.
6A) and a few higher mass values (data not shown) .
More than 75% of all the particles had a mass of 985 ± 175 kDa (n
= 546; standard error [SE] of ±7 kDa), the overall uncertainty being
±50 kDa considering the SE of the measurement and the 5% calibration
uncertainty of the instrument . As shown in the left gallery of Fig.
6B, these particles generally had circular
projections
14
nm in diameter . The following smaller peak on the histogram indicates
a mass of 1,928 ± 254 kDa (n = 97; SE of ±26 kDa) and
arises from the association of two oligomers . The corresponding
projections were typically both elongated and of uniform mass
density, implying that the oligomers were viewed side on (Fig .
6B, center gallery) . The third peak indicates a mass of 3,079
± 374 kDa (n = 53; SE of ±51 kDa) and arises from the
association of three oligomers to form aggregates with distinctly
triangular projections (Fig . 6B, right gallery) .
|
FIG . 6 . STEM mass analysis of unstained, Elugent-purified YscC
oligomers . (A) Histogram of the mass values . The different populations
have masses of 985 ± 175 kDa (n = 546), 1,928 ± 254 kDa (n
= 97), and 3,079 ± 374 kDa (n = 53), indicating the presence of
one, two, and three YscC oligomers, respectively . Correction was made
for beam-induced mass loss using the factor 1.029 (see Materials and
Methods) . (B) Galleries showing particles with masses in the range of
the first, second, and third mass peaks (left, middle, and right
galleries, respectively) . Protein is displayed in white . Bar, 25 nm.
|
|
Purely on the basis of the mass of 64.25 kDa predicted from the
sequence of the mature YscC monomer, particles in the main population
yielding the peak at 985 kDa are composed of 15 ± 1 YscC monomers .
However, as YscC is a membrane protein, detergent will also be
present, making this number the upper limit .
Negative stain EM. Negatively stained samples of the
purified YscC oligomers were first examined by STEM . Most projections
were ring-shaped, top views of the particles, which from the mass
measurement results and image galleries are single oligomers (Fig.
6) . The projections have outer and inner diameters
of
14
and
4.5
nm, respectively (Fig . 7A) . There was a
considerable tendency to aggregate; large rosette-shaped aggregates
were frequently detected (Fig . 7B) . Various side
views of the oligomer were also observed, and again there was a high
tendency for aggregation . The overall shape of these projections was
rectangular (Fig . 7C), star-like (Fig .
7D), or square (Fig . 7E) . The rectangular
structures have a total length of
23.5
nm, whereas the star-like and square projections are composed of
three or four
12-nm-long
units, respectively . In accordance with the mass measurements (Fig.
6), these dimensions suggest that the rectangular
projections arise from dimers formed by head-to-head or tail-to-tail
interactions and that the star-like structures are trimers . Further,
they imply that the single YscC oligomer is approximately 12 nm long
and 14 nm wide . The square projections may arise from both tetramers
and pentamers, as a central density with dimensions consistent with a
top view of the oligomer was sometimes observed (Fig .
7E) .
|
FIG . 7 . STEM analysis of Elugent-purified YscC oligomers . (A to E) STEM
images of YscC oligomers that have been negatively stained with uranyl
acetate . The contrast of the dark-field images has been inverted to show
protein as gray . (A) Ring-like top views . (B) Rosette-shaped aggregates
showing predominantly top views of the oligomer . (C) Rectangular side
views that correspond to dimers of the oligomer . The thick band at the
center of the oligomer resolves into two in some projections . The outer
ends of the oligomer display various orientations . (D) Star-shaped side
views of trimeric aggregates . (E) Essentially square side views formed
by the association of four or five oligomers . The micrographs in panels
A to E are all shown at the same magnification . Bar, 20 nm . (F) TEM
analysis . (Top left) Average side-view projection of a single oligomer (n
= 8 of 16); (top right) average side-view projection of two oligomers
associated end-to-end (n = 16 of 16); (bottom right) average top
view projection (n = 58 of 81) . Bar, 10 nm . The graph shows the
angular power spectrum of the top-view average, illustrating the
presence of a strong 13-fold angular harmonic . (G) Interpretation of the
rectangular side views demonstrated using a STEM image . The protein
structure is highlighted, and a discontinuous black line indicates the
interface between the two oligomers . The different domains within the
structure, i.e., the conical domain (C), the lower ring (L), and the
upper ring (U), are labeled . Bar, 10 nm.
|
|
A few side views of the single oligomers (n = 16) and further
rectangular side views from dimers (n = 16) were detected when
large areas of the grids were scanned by TEM . The average dimensions
of the projections (Fig . 7F, top micrographs) are 10 to 11 and
20 to 23.5 nm long, respectively, and
14
nm wide . These dimensions agree well with the STEM results and
confirm the proposed assignments . Both the single oligomer and dimer
side views reveal internal stain-filled regions up to 6 nm in
cross-section . The reference-free alignment and classification of 81
top-view projections selected from the TEM images yielded the average
projection shown in Fig . 7F (bottom right
micrograph) . The average projection was calculated from 58
projections, i.e., 72% of those selected, and has outer and inner
diameters of
14
and
4
nm, respectively . Further, the calculated angular power spectrum
displays a strong 13-fold angular harmonic (Fig . 7F,
graph) .
Both the individual STEM and the average TEM side-view projections
reveal that the oligomeric secretin is composed of three domains as
indicated in the cartoon (Fig . 7G): (i) a conical domain
that shows some variation in form as illustrated in Fig . 7C,
(ii) a lower ring), and (iii) a less prominent upper ring that
is located at the interface of the dimer .
Channel formation of YscC in lipid bilayers. The
pore-forming activity of the purified secretin was investigated in
planar lipid bilayer experiments . Channel activity with conductance
steps of three different size classes were detected at a potential of
100 mV (Fig . 8A and B) . Interestingly, only openings and
no closings were recorded . Two types of openings, having conductance
increments of approximately 2.6 and 3.0 nS, were only slightly
different from each other . The third type of opening had a conductance
increment of approximately 0.5 nS and was often recorded after
a 2.6-nS transition . This result suggests that the YscC oligomer has
two conductance states and can undergo a conformational change,
leading to the transition from the lower to higher conductance level .
To determine whether this conformational change is similar to the one
induced by SDS treatment, the purified YscC oligomer was incubated
for 10 min in the presence of 2% SDS at 95°C prior to its addition to
the aqueous subphase of the planar lipid bilayer system . The
SDS-treated oligomer did not show any channel activity, suggesting
that either the channel is blocked upon denaturation or the
SDS-treated oligomer is unable to insert into the phospholipid
bilayer .
|
FIG . 8 . Pore activity of the YscC oligomer . (A) Channel recording of
multiple insertions of the purified YscC oligomer in a planar lipid
bilayer at a membrane potential of 100 mV . The sizes of the transitions
are indicated . (B) Amplitude histogram of channel openings (n =
204) at 100 mV . (C) Voltage-ramp analysis of multiple YscC channels from
0 to 200 mV and 0 to –200 mV over a total time span of 200 s.
|
|
Voltage-ramp recordings of multiple channels showed that the
conductance of the pores was constant over the entire voltage range
tested, i.e., from 0 to 200 mV, and was identical at positive and
negative potentials (Fig . 8C) . A zero-current transmembrane
potential of 39 ± 3 mV was measured after the application of a
10-fold KCl gradient across the membrane (the trans compartment
more diluted), indicating that the channels are anion selective .
Application of the Goldman-Hodgkin-Katz equation (26)
revealed an eightfold preference for chloride over potassium .
The planar lipid bilayer experiments were routinely conducted in a
buffer containing 5 mM CaCl2 . In vivo, calcium depletion
of the growth medium induces type III secretion in Y . enterocolitica .
To test the possibility that calcium directly influences the
structure of the YscC secretin, its effect on the conductance of
secretin in planar lipid bilayers was determined . No differences in
channel behavior were observed when the experiments were performed in
the presence or absence of calcium (data not shown) .
In vivo pore activity. The uptake of chromogenic ß-lactam
antibiotics by intact cells was used to study the pore-forming
activity of the YscC oligomer in vivo . In this assay, the diffusion
of the antibiotics across the outer membrane is the rate-limiting
step in their degradation by periplasmic ß-lactamase . Simultaneous
expression of yscC and yscW from pSM3 and pRS6,
respectively, in the pYV-cured Y . enterocolitica strain CE1525
did not increase the rate of degradation of the antibiotics (data not
shown) . Also, when these cells were grown in calcium-depleted medium,
the rate of degradation of the antibiotics was not affected
(data not shown) . Apparently, the permeability of the outer membrane
did not change upon yscC expression, suggesting that the YscC
oligomer was closed . Hence, in vivo, the secretion channel formed by
YscC remains closed in the absence of the other components of the
type III secretion system .
Here, we report structural and functional data for the YscC secretin
of the type III protein secretion system of Y . enterocolitica .
The use of a nonionic detergent for solubilization allowed the YscC
secretin to be purified in its oligomeric form . Analysis of the
oligomer by seminative SDS-PAGE always revealed two bands (Fig.
2), both recognized by YscC antibodies . The faster-migrating
form was completely converted into the slower-migrating one
upon incubation in SDS at temperatures above 20°C . In the absence of
SDS, the faster-migrating form was stable at temperatures up to 60°C .
The drastic shift in electrophoretic mobility may be explained by the
denaturation of a normally tightly folded YscC domain . This finding
that unfolding affects the electrophoretic behavior has been observed
for other outer membrane proteins (25) and is
often used to monitor the refolding of outer membrane proteins in
vitro (15) . Moreover, the shift in mobility was
accompanied by an increase in protease sensitivity, which is also
indicative of a change in the folding state of the YscC oligomer .
Thus, although the oligomer does not dissociate in SDS, its structure
appears to be drastically changed . Importantly, the SDS sensitivity
of the YscC oligomer allowed us to monitor the conservation of the
folded state during the purification procedure . Since the highly
conserved C-terminal halves of secretins are involved in
oligomerization, it is probably the N-terminal part of YscC that
unfolds in response to heat and SDS . We did not detect a similar
SDS-induced change in the electrophoretic mobility of the P .
aeruginosa XcpQ and the N . meningitidis PilQ secretins
that are involved in type II secretion and type IV pili assembly,
respectively (unpublished observations), which could indicate that
the N termini of these secretins already denature under the mild
conditions of seminative SDS-PAGE .
As documented by Fig . 1B, the purified secretin is
homo-oligomeric, being formed from YscC alone . Interestingly, in
contrast to the pilot protein PulS, which copurifies with the
secretin PulD (42), the pilot protein YscW did not
copurify with YscC and is therefore not a stable constituent of the
oligomeric structure .
A mass of 600 kDa was reported earlier for the YscC complex (32) .
However, in that case the size of the oligomer was estimated by
SDS-PAGE, where it migrated well above the highest molecular mass
marker protein, preventing the accurate determination of its size .
The mass of the Elugent-purified, YscC oligomers determined by STEM
was significantly higher, 985 kDa (Fig . 6) . Since YscC
is a membrane protein, this value will include a contribution
from the detergent, making the indicated number of monomers (15 ± 1)
an overestimate . The amount of detergent retained by a membrane
protein depends on both the size of the latter's hydrophobic domain
and the detergent used . STEM mass measurements made on approximately
250-kDa photosystem II complexes solubilized in the nonionic
detergent n-dodecyl-ß-maltoside indicated the association of
one 50-kDa detergent micelle (24) . Since the
detergent mixture used, Elugent, is of the same type, several
micelles are probably required to solubilize the much larger YscC
oligomer . Accordingly, the latter is most likely composed of 13 or
14, rather than 15, YscC monomers .
As confirmed by mass measurements of unstained samples, the single
YscC oligomers adsorbed preferentially with their long axis
perpendicular to the air-glow-discharged carbon microscopy film,
resulting in circular (unstained samples; Fig . 6) or
ring-shaped (negatively stained samples; Fig . 7C and F,
bottom right micrograph) projections . Subsequent analysis of the
latter recorded from negatively stained samples by TEM yielded an
average with strong 13-fold angular order (Fig . 7F,
graph) . In agreement with the mass measured, this implies the
presence of 13 YscC monomers in the oligomer . While the presence of
14 subunits has been reported for the pIV secretin oligomer (37,
44), a dodecameric structure has been proposed for
the PilQ (7) and PulD (42) secretins .
Thus, despite their homology, the number of subunits in the
oligomer seems to differ between members of the family of secretins .
The top views of negatively stained, Elugent-purified YscC oligomers
recorded by STEM (Fig . 7A) and the TEM projection
average (Fig . 7F, bottom right micrograph) show the
secretin to have a stain-accessible central cavity and an outer
diameter of
14
nm . The latter is considerably smaller than the 20 nm reported
earlier for the SDS-purified YscC oligomer (32) .
This suggests that the presence of SDS resulted in conformational
rearrangements at the outer rim of the oligomer, which is in
agreement with the observed effect of SDS on the electrophoretic
mobility . From the average side-view projection of the single
oligomer (Fig . 7F) and the side-view projections of
two (Fig . 7C and F) or three (Fig . 7D)
associated YscC oligomers, the secretin has a total length of 11 to
12 nm and is composed of two stacked rings and a conical domain (Fig.
7G) that can be in a more or less open state as
illustrated in Fig . 7C . Similar conical domains have been
found at the ends of other secretin dimers (7,
35, 43) .
Secretins of type III systems, such as YscC, are part of a much
larger structure, the needle complex, which comprises an external
needle and a basal body that traverses both cell membranes and the
peptidoglycan layer (14, 33,
48, 51) . The latter domain is
formed by two upper and two lower stacked rings linked by a rod-like
structure, which seems to protrude through the upper rings to form
the needle-like extension . The two stacked rings identified in the
side views of the purified YscC secretin (Fig . 7C and D;
annotated U and L in Fig . 7G) would appear to correspond
to the upper rings, which, depending on the bacterial host,
have an outer diameter of 15 to 20 nm and a length of approximately
10 nm . This assignment is strengthened by the observation that
without their needle-like extensions, the basal bodies of isolated
secretion complexes aggregate through their upper rings (33,
51), just as the purified YscC oligomer tends to
aggregate . On the basis of two-dimensional averages of Shigella
needle complexes (3), the conical domain sometimes
visible in the side views of the purified oligomer (Fig.
7C) probably corresponds to the region between the
two upper and two lower rings of the basal body .
The purified YscC oligomer inserted into planar lipid bilayers to
form stable high-conductance channels . These channels had two
conductance levels, 2.6 and 3.0 nS . Conductance increments of about
0.5 nS were often recorded after a 2.6-nS transition, indicating that
the 2.6-nS channels can convert into the 3.0-nS form . It remains
unknown whether this conversion is related to the partial unfolding
of the oligomer, since the inability of SDS-treated oligomers to give
channel activity could be the result of a failure to insert into the
bilayer . The channel activity of YscC has several unique
characteristics compared to those of three other secretins, XcpQ,
pIV, and PulD . First, the conductance was very regular, and no
closings, only openings, were observed . Other secretins, especially
XcpQ (4), display large variations in their
conductance level . Second, the current passing through the YscC
channel increased linearly as the transmembrane potential was
increased . In contrast, the channel activity of the other secretins
is nonlinear at higher potentials, which suggests that these pores
change in a voltage-dependent manner (37,
42) . Third, the direction of the potential field had no
influence on the conductance of the YscC channel, while the
other secretins show an asymmetrical response (4,
37) . The different electrophysiological
characteristics of the YscC channel compared to those of the other
secretins may be a consequence of YscC being part of the type III
protein secretion machinery, which is a stable structure . Once
incorporated into the needle complex, the secretin may remain
continuously open, gating occurring at a different level within the
machinery . In other systems, such as type II secretion, the secreton
might be a more dynamic structure, necessitating the secretin to
close when not actively involved in secretion of substrates .
In vivo, the expression of YscC alone did not lead to increased
permeability of the outer membrane, suggesting that the channel was
closed . This result is not consistent with the electrophysiological
data discussed above . One explanation might be that the conformation
of the YscC oligomer is slightly altered during purification .
Alternatively, interactions with components of the cell envelope,
such as lipopolysaccharide or peptidoglycan, might affect the
structure of the secretin in vivo . However, the channel of the
purified YscC oligomer does not seem to have been in a completely
open conformation in the lipid bilayer either . The theoretical pore
diameter can be derived from the channel activity in planar lipid
bilayers, assuming that the channel is an ideal cylinder (26) .
Since the overall length of the YscC oligomer is
12
nm (see above) and the bulk conductance of the electrolyte is 19.6
S/m, the YscC channel with a conductance of 3.0 nS would have a
pore size of 1.6 nm . This is much smaller than the
4-nm
channel diameter indicated by electron microscopy (Fig .
7F, bottom right micrograph) . However, it is clear from both the
individual and average side views (Fig . 7C and F,
top micrographs) that the secretin does not form an ideal cylinder
and that the conical domain restricts the channel diameter .
Furthermore, protein structures in the cavity of the oligomer might
be covered by the negative stain and therefore remain undetected .
Studies performed on the purified needle complexes of Salmonella
and Shigella suggest that the needle traverses the secretin (3,
33, 51) . In order to accommodate the
needle, the diameter of the YscC channel should be 6 to 7 nm (27),
which is larger than both the electrophysiological and STEM data
suggest . Therefore, possibly, the YscC oligomer adopts its final
conformation only upon contact with another component of the system,
which could be the needle itself . Our attempts to open or widen the
pore in vivo and in vitro by calcium depletion were unsuccessful .
Several secretins have been studied so far, and they share many
characteristics . However, there are also important differences in the
number of subunits forming the oligomer, protein folding, oligomer
stability, and electrophysiological behavior of the channel formed .
These differences probably reflect the role of the secretin in the
various unrelated systems . This makes the study of secretins from
different systems essential to obtain insight in the structure and
function of this group of important and seemingly versatile
transporters .
We thank Vesna Olivieri for STEM, Marco Gregorini for help with the
TEM image processing, and Andreas Engel for many helpful discussions
and critical assessment of the manuscript . We thank R . Diaz-Avalos of
the Institute of Molecular Biophysics at Florida State University for
kindly providing the TMV particles .
This research was supported in part by grant 700-97-012 from the
Council for Chemical Sciences of The Netherlands Organization of
Scientific Research (CW-NWO), grant HPRN-CT-2000-00075 from the
European Community, grant NF 31-59 415.99 from the Swiss National
Foundation, and the Maurice E . Müller Foundation of Switzerland .
* Corresponding author . Mailing address: Department of
Molecular Microbiology, Utrecht University, Padualaan 8, 3584 CH Utrecht, The
Netherlands . Phone: (31) 30 2532999 . Fax: (31) 30 2513655 . E-mail: J.P.M.Tommassen@bio.uu.nl.
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