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J Bacteriol, May 1998, p. 2285-2291, Vol. 180, No. 9
Department of Microbiology and Immunology,
School of Medicine, Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia 30322
Received 22 December 1997/Accepted 3 March 1998
Endospores of Bacillus subtilis are enclosed in a
proteinaceous coat which can be differentiated into a thick, striated
outer layer and a thinner, lamellar inner layer. We found that the
N-terminal sequence of a 25-kDa protein present in a preparation of
spore coat proteins matched that of the Mn-dependent superoxide
dismutase (SOD) encoded by the sodA locus.
sodA is transcribed throughout the growth and sporulation
of a wild-type strain and is responsible for the SOD activity detected
in total cell extracts prepared from B. subtilis.
Disruption of the sodA locus produced a mutant that
lacked any detectable SOD activity during vegetative growth and
sporulation. The sodA mutant was not impaired in the
ability to form heat- or lysozyme-resistant spores. However,
examination of the coat layers of sodA mutant spores
revealed increased extractability of the tyrosine-rich outer coat
protein CotG. We showed that this condition was not accompanied by
augmented transcription of the cotG gene in sporulating
cells of the sodA mutant. We conclude that SodA is required
for the assembly of CotG into the insoluble matrix of the spore and
suggest that CotG is covalently cross-linked into the insoluble matrix
by an oxidative reaction dependent on SodA. Ultrastructural analysis
revealed that the inner coat formed by a sodA mutant was
incomplete. Moreover, the outer coat lacked the characteristic striated
appearance of wild-type spores, a pattern that was accentuated in a
cotG mutant. These observations suggest that the
SodA-dependent formation of the insoluble matrix containing CotG is
largely responsible for the striated appearance of this coat layer.
An important determinant of the
resistance, longevity, and germination properties of Bacillus
subtilis endospores is a proteinaceous structure known as the
coat. The coat is assembled from a heterogeneous (in both size and
amino acid composition) group of over 2 dozen polypeptides and in its
final state is differentiated into a lamella-like inner layer and a
striated, electron-dense outer layer (1, 11, 18, 50).
Biogenesis of the spore coat is the result of a complex process of
macromolecular assembly that is controlled at different levels. It
involves intricate genetic regulation, with the sequential
participation of at least four mother cell-specific transcription
factors in the order The mechanisms enforcing these interactions are poorly understood, but
the available evidence points to proteolysis and reversible or
irreversible protein cross-linking (2, 8, 24, 25, 48).
Inter- or intramolecular cross-linking is likely to be an important
determinant of the spore coat functional architecture, since about 30%
of the total coat protein is confined in a fraction that is refractory
to extraction under reducing conditions and to electrophoretic analysis
(37, 48). Recently, ( In this report, we provide evidence reinforcing the view that oxidative
cross-linking is an important mechanism in spore coat assembly. We
found that a SodA mutant lacking an Mn-type superoxide dismutase (SOD)
produces spores with altered coat layers. We propose that SodA is
required to fix at least one major coat structural protein, CotG, into
a structure from which it is not easily extracted. This process has
dramatic consequences for the architecture of the coat.
Bacterial strains and general methods.
With the exception of
ZB307 (51), all of the B. subtilis strains
utilized in this study are congenic derivatives of Spo+
strain MB24 (Table 1). Escherichia
coli DH5
0021-9193/98/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1998, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Involvement of Superoxide Dismutase in Spore Coat
Assembly in Bacillus subtilis

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ABSTRACT
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials & Methods
Results
Discussion
References
![]()
INTRODUCTION
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials & Methods
Results
Discussion
References
E, SpoIIID,
K, and
GerE (31, 46). The transcriptional control guarantees that
the production of coat structural components, as well as the
morphogenetic proteins that guide their assembly, occurs in the mother
cell chamber of the sporulating cell in a defined temporal order.
However, assembly of the inner or outer coat layers does not closely
reflect the order of transcription of coat structural genes
(cot) but rather is largely dependent on a topological plan that is laid down early in the process and requires the products of
three morphogenetic genes, spoIVA, spoVID, and
cotE (3, 40, 45, 50). Mutations in these genes
affect the assembly of many coat proteins around the forespore but, at
least to some extent, do not interfere with the interactions among
specific components. Coat structural proteins of spoIVA and
spoVID mutants can still associate to form long swirls of
coat material in the mother cell cytoplasm (3, 40, 45).
Evidently, assembly of the spore coat involves interactions among
individual coat polypeptides and mechanisms that promote interactions
of higher-order building blocks.
-
)-glutamyl-lysyl isopeptide
bonds were detected in spores and purified coat material (25). A transglutaminase activity was subsequently purified, and the corresponding gene was cloned and characterized
(24). (
-
)-Glutamyl-lysil isopeptide bonds are known to
be present in other biological structures such as the eye lens
crystallin and keratins (16, 18, 47). In other systems,
dityrosine cross-links are generated by the activity of peroxidase with
H2O2. Formation of
o,o-dityrosine bonds is known to take place in
the hardening of the nematode cuticle, the insect egg chorion, and the
sea urchin fertilization membrane (13, 27, 43). Dityrosine bonds are also important in elicitor- and wound-induced oxidative cross-linking of plant cell wall proteins (6, 26). In all cases, cross-linking of structural proteins results in the
insolubilization of specific components and confers a high degree of
chemical and mechanical resistance on the final structure (16, 43,
47). Because purified coat material has a high tyrosine content,
Pandey and Aronson (37) proposed that
o,o-dityrosine formation could be an important
mechanism in coat assembly. However, the demonstration of dityrosine
cross-links in coat material has been difficult (15). In
addition, the putative peroxidase(s) has not been found, nor has a
system for the generation of H2O2.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials & Methods
Results
Discussion
References
(Bethesda Research Laboratories) was used for routine
molecular cloning procedures. Luria-Bertani medium was used for the
routine growth of E. coli or B. subtilis. Difco
sporulation medium was used for sporulation of B. subtilis
(35). The extent of sporulation was measured by the titer of
heat, chloroform, or lysozyme CFU per milliliter at 18 h after the
onset of sporulation (18, 19). All of the other general
techniques used were described previously (18, 19).
TABLE 1.
B. subtilis strains used in this study
Extraction and analysis of spore coat proteins. Coat proteins were extracted from Renografin-purified spores as described before (18, 19). Their resolution was accomplished by sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)-15% polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE). Electrotransfer of polypeptides from SDS-PAGE gels to polyvinylidene difluoride membranes and N-terminal sequence analysis were done as described before (42).
Cloning of a sodA fragment and disruption of the corresponding chromosomal locus. The N-terminal sequence (MAYELPELPY) of a polypeptide of about 25 kDa associated with the coat layers of cotE insertional mutant AH64 (19) matched that of several bacterial Mn-dependent SODs. We synthesized degenerate oligonucleotides corresponding to the N-terminal sequence (OM86) and to an 8-amino-acid-long region near the C terminus that is highly conserved among SOD enzymes from different species (OM87) (38, 39). The sequence of oligonucleotide OM86 is 5'-ATGGCITAYGAYCTKCCKGAYCTKCCKTAYGCI-3', and that of OM87 is 5'-IAGRTARTAIGCRTGYTCCCAIACRTC-3', where Y represents C+T, R is A+G, K is T+G, and I is deoxyinosine (36). A similar strategy was used to clone and characterize SOD-encoding gene fragments from several gram-positive bacteria (39). OM86 is similar to d2 of Poyart et al. (39), except that our sequence was optimized in accordance with the B. subtilis codon usage (44). A single PCR fragment of about 550 bp was obtained after 30 reaction cycles of 94°C for 1 min, 50°C for 1 min and 30 s, and 72°C for 2 min. The PCR fragment was purified and inserted into HincII-digested pAH250 to create plasmid pAH402. The orientation of the insert is such that its 5' end is close to the PstI site in the vector. Plasmid pAH402 was used to convert wild-type strain MB24 (Table 1) to Spr. Transformants were the consequence of a single reciprocal crossover event (Campbell-type mechanism) at the chromosomal region of homology, which inactivated the sodA locus and produced SOD null mutant strain AH1490 (Table 1).
Disruption of the yqgE locus. The yqgE locus (GenBank accession no. D84432) resides immediately downstream of sodA in the chromosome (29, 32). Insertional disruption of the locus was accomplished in three steps. First, we used the PCR to generate a DNA fragment internal to the yqgE coding sequence. The primers used were OM185 (5'-CTGTCTTCCTCTGCAGGAATGATCGG-3'), which carries a naturally occurring PstI site, and OM186 (5'-ATGTAAGTGATGCATATGGCACAAGCA-3'), in which an NsiI site was created by changing an A in the original sequence to a G (in boldface). Second, the 545-bp PCR product was purified, digested with PstI and NsiI, and inserted at the PstI site of pUS19 (4), producing pAH406. Finally, pAH406 was used to transform wild-type strain MB24 to Spr. A representative transformant was picked for further analysis and named AH1499 (Table 1).
Reporter gene fusions.
A PCR fragment encompassing the
cotH-cotG promoter region (33, 41) was obtained
with oligonucleotides OM118 (5'-TAATTCACGCAAGCTTTTGGATGAACA-3') and OM119 (5'-GGGAACGATAAGCTTTTTTGTGTGTGC-3').
OM118 anneals to position 38 in the cotG sequence
(accession no. U14964) (41). The base at position 51, a T in
the original sequence of cotG, was deleted to generate a
HindIII site. OM119 anneals to position 707 in the
complementary strand and incorporates an A-to-C change (in boldface), a
change that also introduces an HindIII site. The 669-bp
PCR product was generated with Pfu polymerase, purified,
digested with HindIII, and cloned into pTKlac in both orientations (23). The resulting plasmids, pAH413 and
pAH417, carry fusions of the cotG and cotH
promoters, respectively, to the lacZ gene. Strain ZB307
(SP
S) was then transformed to Cmr with
ScaI-linearized pAH413 or pAH417, causing incorporation of
the cotG- or cotH-lacZ fusion into the resident
heat-inducible Sp
prophage (strains AH1494 and AH1517; Table 1). The
MB24 lysogens of SP
cotG-lacZ and
SP
cotH-lacZ were named AH1495 and AH1518 (Table 1).
Strain AH763 is a lysogen of SP
cotE-lacZ whose origin was
described in reference 19.
Other constructions.
A strain carrying a null allele of
cotG was obtained by transforming MB24 with pMS43 (a gift
from E. Ricca; 41) with selection for
Cmr. The cotG null mutant was named AH1497
(Table 1). The same plasmid was introduced into strain AH1490
(SOD
) to create sodA-cotG double mutant AH1498
(Table 1).
Enzyme assays.
To assay for
-galactosidase or
-glucuronidase activity, 0.3-ml samples of sporulating cultures were
harvested every 30 min throughout growth and sporulation.
-Galactosidase activity was assayed as described before (19,
22) and is expressed in Miller units. The specific activity of
-glucuronidase is expressed in nanomoles of
p-nitrophenyl-
-D-glucoside hydrolyzed per
milligram (dry weight) of culture per minute (19, 22).
) were grown in
sporulation medium, and 10-ml samples were collected at various times.
The cells were harvested by centrifugation, and the pellets were
resuspended in 2 ml of lysis buffer (42) and passed twice
through a French press at 19,000 lb/in2. Approximately 30 µg of protein was loaded onto nondenaturing 12.5% polyacrylamide
gels, separated under nondenaturing conditions, and subjected to the
SOD assay as previously described (5).
Electron microscopy. Spores were purified on Renografin step gradients as previously described (18, 19). Usually, about 105 spores were fixed in 3 ml of fixative. To increase the rate and depth of penetration of the fixative, a combination of 1.25% formaldehyde, 4% paraformaldehyde, and 2% dimethyl sulfoxide in phosphate-buffered saline was employed. This is an adaptation of the concentrations in Kalt's fixative (21). Following 12 to 18 h of fixation at 4°C, the cells were further processed for electron microscopy. Staining of internal structures was enhanced with additional 1-h steps in 0.01% tannic acid, 1% osmium tetroxide, and aqueous 4% uranyl acetate at room temperature. Following dehydration in a graded ethyl alcohol series, the cells were embedded in ultralow-viscosity embedding medium (28). Postsection staining was completed with 2% alcoholic uranyl acetate and calcined lead citrate (17) for 5 min each. Observation and photography of the samples were performed with a Philips CM-10 transmission electron microscope operated at 60 kV.
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RESULTS |
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Mn-dependent SOD is associated with the inner coat layers. Coat proteins were extracted from purified spores produced by a cotE deletion mutant, by treatment with SDS and dithiothreitol (DTT) as previously described (18, 19). This procedure extracts a heterogeneous protein sample from wild-type spores and a less complex one from cotE mutant spores. After transfer of the electrophoretically resolved proteins to a polyvinylidene difluoride membrane, we obtained the N-terminal amino acid sequence of a 25-kDa polypeptide and found that it matched that of several Mn-dependent SODs. We cloned a 550-bp DNA fragment internal to the sodA gene into an integrational plasmid, creating pAH402 (Fig. 1). Sequence analysis of the cloned insert confirmed that a fragment of a SOD-encoding gene had been cloned. The complete sequence of the gene encoding the Mn-dependent SOD from B. subtilis (yqgD or sodA) was later deposited in the GenBank database (accession no. D84432) (29). The sodA gene is predicted to encode a 25.3-kDa polypeptide, in good agreement with our initial estimation. Alignment of the complete amino acid sequence with those of other bacterial enzymes confirmed its assignment as an Mn-dependent SOD (29, 38, 39). Four conserved residues are ligands to the metal cofactor: the histidines at positions 27, 82, and 168 and the aspartate at position 164. Moreover, among the residues involved in discriminating between iron or manganese as the cofactor, the two glycines at positions 77 and 78, the histidine at position 79, the phenylalanine at position 85, the glutamine at position 149, and aspartate 150 are nearly invariant in the Mn-dependent SODs (38, 39, and data not shown). In the structurally related Fe-dependent enzymes, the corresponding positions are preferentially occupied by an alanine, a glutamine, a tyrosine, an alanine and a glycine (38).
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sodA is expressed throughout growth and
sporulation.
Because the enzyme was found to be associated with
the coat layers, we wanted to know if the enzyme activity could be
detected in sporulating cells at the time of coat formation or in
purified spores. We prepared whole-cell lysates during the growth
and sporulation of a wild-type strain and resolved about 30-µg
protein samples on duplicate nondenaturing acrylamide gels which were
run in parallel. The same amount of protein was loaded in each well, as
shown by Coomassie staining of one of the gels (data not shown). The
replica gel was then stained for SOD activity by the NBT method (see
Materials and Methods). A single activity band was detected during the
growth and sporulation of wild-type strain MB24 (Fig.
2). Casillas-Martinez and Setlow
(7) have recently reported similar results. This SOD
activity was also present in sporulating cells at the time (T8) of coat assembly. In agreement with these
results, when a fusion of the sodA promoter region to the
gusA gene (Fig. 1) was introduced at the amyE
locus,
-glucuronidase activity was detected throughout growth and
sporulation (data not shown). We did not succeed in extracting the SOD
activity from purified spores. One explanation for this is that our
extraction conditions inactivated the enzyme. Alternatively, the enzyme
is a minor component of the coat or is not extractable from the coats
of wild-type spores.
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The yqgE locus is not required for viability, SOD activity, or sporulation. Examination of the sodA region of the chromosome identified an associated downstream open reading frame designated yqgE in the sequence given GenBank accession no. D84432 (29). The start codon of yqgE is separated from the sodA stop codon by only 33 bp, and no possible transcription terminators or obvious promoters could be identified in the intergenic region (Fig. 1). The 429 residue YqgE protein (about 48 kDa) is predicted to have 10 to 12 hydrophobic segments, indicating a possible association with the membrane. Interestingly, genes encoding highly similar products are located downstream of SOD genes in B. stearothermophilus (accession no. P28754) and B. caldotenax (accession no. X62682). Because these observations suggested a functional linkage between sodA and yqgE, we wanted to know whether the absence of the SOD activity band in strain AH1490 was due to a polar effect on the expression of yqgE. For this purpose, strain AH1499 was analyzed for the presence of a SOD activity band on native gels (the strain carries a disruption of the yqgE locus caused by the integration of pAH406). Strain AH1499 retained SOD activity and produced wild-type levels of heat- and lysozyme-resistant spores (data not shown). We concluded that the band observed in SOD activity gels is sodA dependent and that expression of this activity does not require yqgE function. We further concluded that yqgE is not essential for growth of B. subtilis.
sodA mutants form spores with altered coat layers. We hypothesized that SodA could have a role in spore coat assembly, since the enzyme was found in preparations of coat proteins and because the SOD activity was detected in whole-cell extracts at times that included the period during sporulation when the coat is assembled. To examine whether SodA participates in spore coat assembly, we analyzed by gel electrophoresis the profile of SDS-DTT-extractable proteins from the coat of sodA mutant spores. In parallel, coat proteins were extracted from equal numbers of wild-type (strain MB24) and gerE (AH94) or cotE (AH64) mutant spores, which lack the inner or outer coat layer, respectively (30, 50). The samples of purified coat material were analyzed by SDS-15% PAGE, and examples are shown in Fig. 3. Approximately the same amount of spore suspension was used in all cases, as confirmed by the relative intensity of a band of about 15 kDa (asterisk in lane 1) whose extractability remained essentially unaffected in cotE and gerE mutants (Fig. 3, lanes 3 and 4, respectively) compared to that in wild-type spores (lane 2).
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SodA controls the assembly of CotG into coat layers.
Transcription of the cotG gene by the
K form
of RNA polymerase is dependent on DNA-binding protein GerE
(41). GerE is a regulator that affects the transcription of
several cot genes (49). We examined the
transcription of a cotG-lacZ fusion integrated in single
copy in the prophage SP
in wild-type and sodA mutant cells. We found that the pattern of cotG-lacZ expression in
the sodA mutant did not differ from that observed in
wild-type cells (Fig. 4). Moreover,
cotG-lacZ expression in the sodA mutant was still
dependent on GerE (data not shown). We conclude that the sodA::pAH402 allele did not affect the
transcription of cotG. Assembly of CotG into the outer coat
layers is known to depend on CotE and CotH (33, 41).
Expression of cotE-lacZ and cotH-lacZ in the
sodA mutant did not differ from the profile obtained with wild-type cells (data not shown). Furthermore, the extractability of
proteins of the size of CotE (24 kDa) or CotH (43 kDa) was not altered
in coat material purified from sodA mutant spores (Fig. 3),
suggesting that their production or assembly was unaffected. These results indicate that the increased representation of CotG in the extracts of coat proteins from spores of the sodA
mutant is not caused by increased transcription of the cotG
gene or by increased levels of the proteins that normally recruit CotG
for assembly. It seems more likely that loss of SodA results in a change in CotG that makes it more easily extractable from the spore
coat.
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Ultrastructural analysis reveals that SodA and CotG are important determinants of outer coat organization. Because the sodA null allele affected the extraction properties of an abundant coat component, we thought the mutation would have an impact on the ultrastructural characteristics of the coat structure. We examined purified wild-type and AH1490 spores by electron microscopy. Figure 5A is an electron micrograph of a thin section of a wild-type spore. The coat, delimited by the two arrows, consisted of a lightly staining lamellar inner sublayer closely apposed to a thick, electron-dense, and multilayered outer coat (1, 18, 50). The inner coat structure usually displayed two to five lamellae, whereas the outer coat showed a characteristic pattern of striations, also two to five, depending on the section considered. In contrast, SodA mutant spores had a reduced inner coat and a highly diffuse outer coat which had lost its striated appearance (Fig. 5B). In addition, both coat structures did not seem to associate tightly. We reasoned that if increased extractability of CotG correlated with a decrease in outer coat structural organization, then complete loss of CotG should have a much greater impact on coat morphology. As predicted, the cotG mutation caused a dramatic alteration in the morphology of the coat layers: spores of a cotG insertional mutant had an expanded outer coat that had completely lost its electron density and multilayered type of organization (Fig. 5C). Note that the outer coat appeared to be sandwiched between the inner coat lamellae and a thin layer of material at its outer edge that is slightly more electron dense than the rest of the structure. The significance of this layer is unknown. sodA-cotG double-mutant cells formed spores whose coat layers did not differ greatly from those of a cotG single mutant, suggesting that sodA acts mainly through cotG (Fig. 5D). These characteristics are consistent with a model in which CotG plays a major role in the organization of the outer coat, possibly by forming an insoluble matrix that is the basis for its characteristic multilayered appearance. We propose that SodA is used to cement CotG into this insoluble matrix.
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DISCUSSION |
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An Mn-dependent SOD encoded by the sodA locus of B. subtilis was found to be associated with spore coat proteins. SODs catalyze the disproportionation of superoxide radicals to hydrogen peroxide and oxygen and are thought to have an important role in defending the organism against the toxic effects of oxygen (12). In agreement with the results of Casillas-Martinez and Setlow (7), we detected a single SOD activity throughout the growth and sporulation of B. subtilis. This activity is dependent on the sodA locus, since its inactivation results in cells that lack detectable SOD activity (7 and this work) and sodA is transcribed during growth and sporulation (this work). In confirmation of the results of Casillas-Martinez and Setlow (7), we found that sodA is not essential for viability in rich medium or sporulation and that inactivation of the sodA locus is not compensated for by the expression of other forms of the enzyme. In the bacterium E. coli, the sodB gene (encoding an Fe-dependent SOD) is expressed constitutively, whereas sodA encodes an inducible enzyme (12). It is unclear why in B. subtilis and at least two other members of the gram-positive group (14, 34) the constitutive SOD activity appears to be Mn, as opposed to Fe, dependent. The gene downstream from sodA, yqgE (29), which appears to be associated with genes encoding Mn-containing SODs in at least two other spore-forming Bacillus species, is also dispensable for growth or sporulation. In addition, yqgE is not required for the expression of sodA activity in crude extracts. However, the fact that it probably encodes a membrane protein and the cross-species conservation of the sodA-yqgE unit prompt us to speculate that the activity of SodA might be somehow coupled to a membrane-associated function.
Casillas-Martinez and Setlow (7) showed that sodA plays no role in the resistance of B. subtilis spores to oxidizing agents. Our observations suggest an alternative role for SodA during sporulation. Our results suggest that SodA participates in the assembly of the spore coat, possibly by activating the oxidative cross-linking of a specific coat structural component. Although we initially found SodA in a preparation of coat proteins, it is not known whether SodA is enriched in this fraction or whether most of the cell's SodA is located elsewhere. Since H2O2 produced by SodA would be diffusible, the involvement of SodA in spore coat formation does not require that SodA be a component of the coat. SodA mutant spores exhibit increased extractability of a previously characterized coat protein, CotG, an abundant spore coat component. We found that the sodA mutation does not affect cotG promoter activity. We also found that the sodA mutation does not affect the expression of the cotE and cotH loci (the only known requirements for CotG assembly [33, 41]) or the abundance of the corresponding products in the SDS-DTT-extractable fraction of coat proteins. The CotG protein is tyrosine rich and is organized in nine repeats of a 13-amino-acid sequence whose consensus is H/Y KKS Y R/C S/T H/Y KKSRS (the residues in the smaller font indicate the least-conserved positions) (41). The relatively high level of tyrosines suggests that CotG is a potential substrate for a peroxidase that catalyzes the polymerization of CotG via dityrosine cross-links. We propose that CotG can exist in two forms, a monomeric, soluble form that can be detected by analyzing a sample of purified coat material by SDS-PAGE and a polymeric, cross-linked form that is insoluble and not amenable to electrophoretic resolution. In our model, SodA promotes the oxidative cross-linking and consequent insolubilization of CotG, because it supplies the H2O2 substrate for the putative peroxidase. In the absence of SodA, CotG is found to be more abundant in the readily extractable soluble fraction of the spore coat (Fig. 6). Cross-linking of structural proteins via dityrosine bonds is coupled to H2O2 formation in two well-characterized systems, hardening of the sea urchin fertilization membrane (reviewed in reference 43) and elicitor- or wound-induced cross-linking of plant cell wall proteins (6, 26). In both cases, H2O2 production may be the rate-limiting step in the reaction. In the latter example, the H2O2-dependent cross-linking of pre-existing soluble forms of two proteins, p33 and p100, results in their disappearance from the SDS-extractable fractions of the cell wall (6, 26). Both p33 and p100 are tyrosine-rich proteins that have a highly repetitive primary structure (6, 26). These observations are strikingly analogous to our results.
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A peroxidase activity has been detected during the sporulation of B. cereus and localized to the forespore membranes (20). In B. subtilis, a peroxidase activity has been proposed (37) but not detected. However, it has been proposed that CotE shares sequence similarity with heme-containing peroxidases and may have peroxidase activity (T. Diets, cited in reference 11). CotE is thought to form a ringlike structure at the interface between the inner and outer coat layers and is required for assembly of the outer coat (10, 50). Because cotE mutants fail to assemble the outer coat and SodA was found to be associated with coat proteins from a cotE mutant, SodA may, at least in part, associate with the inner coat layers. Interestingly, a nonheme catalase, the CotJC protein, is known to be a component of the inner coat layers (19, 42). This catalase could modulate the degree of SodA-dependent cross-linking, or the two enzymes may serve to protect specific cellular structures during the developmental process. The two models are not mutually exclusive.
Finally, we propose that cross-linking of CotG contributes to the multilayered pattern of outer coat striations. Support for this idea comes from the observations that the sodA mutation introduces distortions into this structure and that cotG mutant spores completely lack the normal organization and electron density of the outer coat structure. The phenotype caused by the cotG mutation is restricted to the outer coat layers, a finding that confirms the previous assignment of CotG as an outer coat protein on the basis of cotE dependency (41). Thus, both a putative peroxidase, CotE (T. Deits, cited in reference 11), and a proposed peroxidase substrate, CotG (this work), are implicated in outer coat assembly. The cotG mutant lacks only two of the proteins normally present in the extractable soluble fraction of the spore coat: CotG and CotB. In light of the dramatic impact of the cotG mutation on the electron microscopic appearance of the coat layers, one has to assume that the organization of the coat components is profoundly changed. Alternatively, proteins in the extractable soluble fraction may normally contribute very little to the electron micrographic appearance of the outer coat. In that case, the observed phenotype is due to lack of either CotG or other components of the insoluble fraction which are CotG dependent. In either case, our results point to CotG as an important organizer of the outer coat structure. We believe that this property of CotG depends, in part, on its ability to serve as a substrate for the formation of an insoluble cross-linked network upon which other coat proteins can assemble.
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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We thank J. Pohl of the Emory Microchemical Facility for N-terminal sequence analysis and for the synthesis of the degenerate oligomers used in this study. We thank E. Ricca for plasmids and J. Helmann, J. Whittaker, and D. E. Edmondson for helpful discussions.
A. O. Henriques was the recipient of a fellowship from the Junta Nacional de Investigação Científica e Tecnológica (J.N.I.C.T.). This work was supported by PHS grant GM54395 to C.P.M. from the National Institutes of Health.
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FOOTNOTES |
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* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of Microbiology and Immunology, School of Medicine, Emory University, 3001 Rollins Research Center, Atlanta, GA 30322. Phone: (404) 727-5969. Fax: (404) 727-3659; E-mail: Moran{at}microbio.emory.edu.
Present address: Instituto de Tecnologia Química e
Biológica, Universidade Nova de Lisboa, Apartado 127, 2780 Oeiras Codex, Portugal.
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