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J. Bacteriol., May 1995, 2684-2694, Vol 177, No. 10
RA Garduno, BM Phipps and WW Kay
The various functions attributed to the S-layer of Aeromonas salmonicida
have been previously identified by their conspicuous absence in
S-layer-defective mutants. As a different approach to establish the
multifunctional nature of this S-layer, we established methods for
reconstitution of the S-layer of A. salmonicida. Then we investigated the
functional competence of the reconstituted S-layer. S- layers were
reconstituted in different systems: on inert membranes or immobilized
lipopolysaccharide (LPS) from purified S-layer protein (A- protein) or on
viable cells from either A-protein or preassembled S- layer sheets. In the
absence of divalent cations and LPS, purified A- protein in solution
spontaneously assembled into tetrameric oligomers and, upon concentration
by ultrafiltration, into macroscopic, semicrystalline sheets formed by
oligomers loosely organized in a tetragonal arrangement. In the presence of
Ca2+, purified A-protein assembled into normal tetragonal arrays of
interlocked subunits. A- protein bound with high affinity (Kd, 1.55 x
10(-7) M) and specificity to high-molecular-weight LPS from A. salmonicida
but not to the LPSs of several other bacterial species. In vivo, A-protein
could be reconstituted only on A. salmonicida cells which contained LPS,
and Ca2+ affected both a regular tetragonal organization of the reattached
A-protein and an enhanced reattachment of the A-protein to the cell
surface. The reconstitution of preformed S-layer sheets (produced by an
S-layer-secreting mutant) to an S-layer-negative mutant occurred
consistently and efficiently when the two mutant strains were cocultured on
calcium-replete solid media. Reattached A-protein (exposed on the surface
of S-layer-negative mutants) was able to bind porphyrins and an
S-layer-specific phage but largely lacked regular organization, as judged
by its inability to bind immunoglobulins. Reattached S-layer sheets were
regularly organized and imparted the properties of porphyrin binding,
hydrophobicity, autoaggregation, adherence to and invasion of fish
macrophages and epithelial cells, and resistance to macrophage
cytotoxicity. However, cells with reconstituted S-layers were still
sensitive to complement and insensitive to the antibiotics streptonigrin
and chloramphenicol, indicating incomplete functional reconstitution.
Copyright © 1995, American Society for Microbiology
Physical and functional S-layer reconstitution in Aeromonas salmonicida
Department of Biochemistry and Microbiology, University of Victoria, British Columbia, Canada.
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