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Journal of Bacteriology, January 2001, p. 512-519, Vol. 183, No. 2
Division of General Microbiology, Department
of Biosciences,1 and Institute of
Biotechnology,2 FIN-00014 University of
Helsinki, Finland, and Microbiology and Tumor Biology
Center, Karolinska Institute, 17177 Stockholm,
Sweden3
Received 7 June 2000/Accepted 20 October 2000
The GafD lectin of the G (F17) fimbriae of diarrhea-associated
Escherichia coli was overexpressed and purified
from the periplasm of E. coli by affinity chromatography on
GlcNAc-agarose. The predicted mature GafD peptide comprises 321 amino
acids, but the predominant form of GafD recovered from the periplasm
was 19,092 Da in size and corresponded to the 178 N-terminal amino acid
residues, as judged by mass spectrometry and amino acid sequencing, and
was named
0021-9193/01/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JB.183.2.512-519.2001
Copyright © 2001, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
The gaf Fimbrial Gene Cluster of
Escherichia coli Expresses a Full-Size and a Truncated
Soluble Adhesin Protein

GafD. Expression of gafD from the cloned
gaf gene cluster in DegP-, Lon-, and OmpT-deficient
recombinant strains did not significantly decrease the formation of
GafD. The peptide was also detected in the periplasm of the
wild-type E. coli strain from which the gaf
gene cluster originally was cloned. We expressed gafD
fragments encoding C-terminally truncated peptides. Peptides GafD1-252, GafD1-224, GafD1-189, and the GafD1-178, isolated
from the periplasm by affinity chromatography, had apparent sizes
closely similar to that of
GafD. Only trace amounts of truncated
forms with expected molecular sizes were detected in spheroplasts. In contrast, the shorter GafD1-157 peptide was detected in spheroplasts but not in the periplasm, indicating that it was poorly translocated or
was degraded by periplasmic proteases. Pulse-chase assays using gafD indicated that
GafD was processed from GafD and is
not a primary translation product. The
GafD peptide was soluble by biochemical criteria and exhibited specific binding to GlcNAc-agarose. Inhibition assays with mono- and oligosaccharides gave a similar inhibition pattern in the hemagglutination by the G-fimbria-expressing recombinant E. coli strain and in the binding of
[14C]
GafD to GlcNAc-agarose.
GafD bound
specifically to laminin, a previously described tissue target for the G
fimbria. Our results show that a soluble, protease-resistant
subdomain of GafD exhibits receptor-binding specificity similar to that
for intact G fimbriae and that it is formed when gafD is
expressed alone or from the gaf gene cluster.
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Division of
General Microbiology, Department of Biosciences, P.O. Box 56, FIN-00014 University of Helsinki, Finland. Phone: 358-9-19159251. Fax:
358-9-19159262. E-mail: Benita.Westerlund{at}Helsinki.Fi.
Present address: National Agency for Medicine, FIN-00300 Helsinki, Finland.
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