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Journal of Bacteriology, April 1999, p. 2422-2429, Vol. 181, No. 8
0021-9193/99/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1999, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Structural and Functional Significance of the FGL
Sequence of the Periplasmic Chaperone Caf1M of Yersinia
pestis
David A. G.
Chapman,1
Anton V.
Zavialov,2
Tatiana V.
Chernovskaya,2
Andrey V.
Karlyshev,1,
Galina A.
Zav'yalova,2
Anatoly M.
Vasiliev,2
Igor V.
Dudich,2
Vyacheslav M.
Abramov,2
Vladimir P.
Zav'yalov,2 and
Sheila
MacIntyre1,*
Microbiology Division, School of Animal and
Microbial Sciences, University of Reading, Reading RG6 6AJ, United
Kingdom,1 and Institute of Immunological
Engineering, 142380 Lyubuchany, Moscow Region, Russia2
Received 2 October 1998/Accepted 26 January 1999
 |
ABSTRACT |
The periplasmic molecular chaperone Caf1M of Yersinia
pestis is a typical representative of a subfamily of specific
chaperones involved in assembly of surface adhesins with a very simple
structure. One characteristic feature of this Caf1M-like subfamily is
possession of an extended, variable sequence (termed FGL) between the
F1 and subunit binding G1
-strands. In contrast, FGS subfamily
members, characterized by PapD, have a short F1-G1 loop and are
involved in assembly of complex pili. To elucidate the structural and
functional significance of the FGL sequence, a mutant Caf1M molecule
(dCaf1M), in which the 27 amino acid residues between the F1 and G1
-strands had been deleted, was constructed. Expression of the
mutated caf1M in Escherichia coli resulted in
accumulation of high levels of dCaf1M. The far-UV circular dichroism
spectra of the mutant and wild-type proteins were indistinguishable and
exhibited practically the same temperature and pH dependencies. Thus,
the FGL sequence of Caf1M clearly does not contribute significantly to
the stability of the protein conformation. Preferential cleavage of
Caf1M by trypsin at Lys-119 confirmed surface exposure of this part of the FGL sequence in the isolated chaperone and periplasmic
chaperone-subunit complex. There was no evidence of surface-localized
Caf1 subunit in the presence of the Caf1A outer membrane protein and
dCaf1M. In contrast to Caf1M, dCaf1M was not able to form a stable
complex with Caf1 nor could it protect the subunit from proteolytic
degradation in vivo. This demonstration that the FGL sequence is
required for stable chaperone-subunit interaction, but not for folding of a stable chaperone, provides a sound basis for future detailed molecular analyses of the FGL subfamily of chaperones.
 |
INTRODUCTION |
Over 30 different operons, encoding
virulence-associated surface structures of gram-negative bacteria, have
now been identified as members of a family using the chaperone-usher
protein-assisted assembly pathway (21). In contrast to the
apparent complexity of the general secretory (type II) (13)
and contact-dependent (type III) pathways (18), the
chaperone-usher pathway appears to be rather simple. In addition to the
structural subunits, the latter operons encode only two proteins
involved in export and assembly. One is a periplasmic chaperone which
shows specificity for the structural subunit(s). The other is a large
outer membrane protein which is required for translocation across the
outer membrane and which may form a large gated channel. The prototype
of this pathway has been the PapD chaperone-PapC usher-mediated
assembly of Pap pili in Escherichia coli (21).
The three-dimensional structure of PapD has been solved (7).
It has two domains, each with a
-barrel and an immunoglobulin-like
fold. The crystal structure of PapD complexed with the C-terminal 19 residues of PapG revealed that the carboxyl terminus of the peptide was
anchored in the interdomain cleft with the peptide bound to the G1
-strand of the chaperone via a parallel
-strand (or
-zipper
interaction) (15). Studies indicate that this interaction
may occur at the level of the inner membrane and may be required for
correct folding prior to release of the subunit from the inner membrane
(10). Less is known about the specificity of the subsequent
interaction of chaperone-subunit complex with the outer membrane protein.
The caf operon, responsible for production and assembly of
the capsule-like Caf1 surface antigen of Yersinia pestis,
belongs to this family. It encodes a 26.5-kDa periplasmic chaperone
(Caf1M) and a 90.4-kDa outer membrane protein (Caf1A), which together can mediate surface assembly of Caf1 antigen in recombinant E. coli (5, 11, 12). The steric structure of Caf1M has
been constructed by computer modelling using the atomic coordinates of
PapD (26). The most striking differences between these two proteins are possession by Caf1M of (i) two Cys residues close to the
putative subunit binding pocket and (ii) an additional 18 residues
between the F1 and G1
-strands. Possession of these conserved Cys
residues together with an extended variable sequence between the F1 and
G1
-strands was used to identify a Caf1M-like subfamily of seven
chaperones (26). Moreover, it was noted that all members of
the Caf1M-like subfamily are involved in assembly of simple structures
(26). For example, Y. pestis F1 capsule and pH
6.0 antigen are each composed of a single subunit that polymerizes to
form a granule-like capsule and flexible fibrillae, respectively
(17). This is in contrast to assembly of Pap pili, which
involves interaction of the PapD chaperone with six different subunits
to form the structurally more complex rigid pili. Hung et al.
(8) have named these two families the FGL family (possessing a long sequence between the F1 and G1 strands, e.g., Caf1M) and the FGS
family (with a short F1-G1 loop, e.g., PapD). In the Caf1M model, it
has been suggested that this additional sequence may form two short
-strands that extend into the binding site cleft of the chaperone
(26). While the intensively studied Pap system represents an
excellent basic model for chaperone-mediated pilus assembly, a detailed
comparison with the more distant relatives of the FGL subfamily will
provide a more comprehensive picture of this assembly pathway.
A previous study addressed the significance of the conserved Cys
residues of the FGL family (23). Evidence was presented to
show that the Cys residues of Caf1M form a disulfide bond, the
formation of which is important to in vivo folding but not maintenance
of the overall structure of native chaperone. The reduction and
alkylation of Caf1M significantly increased the dissociation constant
of the Caf1M-Caf1 complex [Kd = (4.77 ± 0.50) × 10
9 M for native Caf1M to (3.68 ± 0.68) × 10
8 M for the modified protein]. Thus, the oxidation
state of Caf1M may affect the efficiency of chaperone-subunit
interaction and capsule assembly in vivo and offers a potential point
of control of capsule assembly. To further investigate the importance
of the unique properties of the FGL family of chaperones, we have now
studied the role of the FGL sequence of Caf1M in the structure and
function of this chaperone.
 |
MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Bacterial strains and culture conditions.
The
bacterial strains used were E. coli DH5
[supE44
recA1 gyrA relA1
lacU169 deoR (
80 lacZ
M15)]
(2) and JCB570 [MC1000 phoR
zih12::Tn10] (3). Cultures
carrying the appropriate plasmid were routinely grown at 37°C in
Luria-Bertani (LB) broth, which contained ampicillin (100 µg/ml) and
tetracycline (10 µg/ml) as required. Cultures of E. coli
cells carrying the plasmid were routinely maintained in the presence of
0.6% glucose. For induction, overnight cultures were diluted 1 in 50 and grown to the mid-exponential phase (optical density at 600 nm
[OD600] of 0.4 to 0.5) prior to induction with 0.75 mM
isopropyl-
-D-thiogalactopyranoside (IPTG) for 2 h.
Plasmids.
The plasmids p12R (11), pTCA1
(24), and pFM1 (24) have been described
previously. pFM'1S, formerly called pFM1S (23), encodes a
short nonfunctional fragment of Caf1M upstream of the complete
caf1 gene. To reconstruct the whole system in the pTrc99A derivative, caf1A was amplified from pFS2 (6) by
PCR. Primers 5'gtcgacGGGACGGGAAATAATGAGGTATTC and
5'gtcgacTCAGTTATTTAAGATGCAGGTTG corresponded to
the beginning and end of caf1A, respectively (EMBL accession
no. X61996). (Start and stop codons are in boldface, and
SalI sites used in subsequent subcloning are in lowercase.) An additional A residue (underlined) was included between the Shine-Dalgarno sequence and start codon in the forward primer. PCR was
performed by using Taq Plus polymerase (Stratagene), 0.5 µg of DNA, and 400 ng of each primer with 10 cycles of 93°C for 1 min, 55°C for 1 min, and 72°C for 2 min, with a 10-s extension time
for each cycle. The 2.52-kb PCR fragment was gel purified and initially
cloned in pGEM-T vector (Promega) to give pGEM-Tcaf1A. The
caf1A gene was excised from pGEM-Tcaf1A by
SalI digestion and ligated into the unique SalI
site of pFM1 to give pFMA1. DNA sequencing of amplified
caf1A in pGEM-Tcaf1A identified a single silent
PCR-induced mistake (X61996; 2323 C
T). A summary diagram of the
structure and products of all plasmids is shown below in Fig. 1.
Caf1M
105-133 (pFM1-M
1 and related plasmids).
DNA (81 bp) encoding amino acids Lys-105 to Ala-133 of Caf1M was removed from
pFM1 by inverse PCR. Primers
5'TTCGagatctATTAATAATTGCATTAAG and
5'ATCCTTagatctTGGTGGAATCCCTTTTAC corresponded to
nucleotides 1697 to 1720 and 1621 to 1598, respectively, of the
caf operon (EMBL accession no. X61996). Taq Plus
polymerase (Stratagene) was used for amplification with 100 ng of
template DNA, 100 ng of each primer, and 1.5 mM MgCl2 in a
100-µl final volume and the following conditions: 95°C for 10 s; 30 cycles of 95°C for 1 min, 50°C for 2 min, and 72°C for 3 min; and a final 5-min extension at 72°C. The 5.2-kb PCR product was
gel purified, digested with BglII (inserted BglII
sites in primer sequences are underlined), and ligated at approximately
500 ng of DNA/50 µl of buffer prior to transformation of E. coli DH5
. Plasmids of the correct size were screened for
possession of the unique BglII site, and the DNA sequence of
the mutated caf1M gene and wild-type caf1 gene of
one isolate (pFM1-M
1) was confirmed. pTCA1-M
1 (encoding dCaf1M alone) was constructed by PstI digestion and religation at a
low DNA concentration to remove caf1. pFMA1-M
1 (encoding
Caf1A and Caf1 in addition to dCaf1M) was created by insertion of the
pGEM-Tcaf1A-derived 2.5-kb SalI fragment into the
SalI site of pFM1-M
1.
Isolation of periplasmic fraction by osmotic shock.
Routinely, induced cells (1 OD600 unit) were suspended in
100 µl of 20% (wt/vol) sucrose in 20 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.0)-5 mM EDTA and subjected to osmotic shock as previously described (23).
Purification of recombinant Caf1M and mutant dCaf1M.
Caf1M
was isolated from the periplasmic fraction of induced E. coli DH5
/pTCA1 by MonoQ and Superose 12 H/R chromatography as
previously described (24). dCaf1M was isolated from induced cultures of E. coli JCB570/pTCA1-M
1. The periplasmic
fraction was adjusted to pH 5.65 with 0.1 N HCl and applied to a MonoS (5/5) column equilibrated with 10 mM ammonium acetate (pH 5.65). dCaf1M
was eluted at 15 mM NaCl by using a linear gradient to 1 M NaCl in the
same buffer. Fractions containing dCaf1M were pooled, diluted with 20 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.5) to a total protein concentration of 0.1 mg/ml, and
applied to a MonoQ column equilibrated with 20 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.5).
dCaf1M, recovered in the unbound fraction, was precipitated with
ammonium sulfate (70% [wt/vol] saturation) and stored at 4°C.
Before use, the recovered pellet containing dCaf1M was passed through a
PD-10 column in the appropriate buffer. As judged by sodium dodecyl
sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) and isoelectric
focusing, purified Caf1M and dCaf1M proteins were 95 to 97% pure.
FPLC fractionation and ELISA quantitation of periplasmic Caf1M
and Caf1.
Periplasmic samples (50 µl) were fractionated on a
Superose 12 H/R 10/30 column in 20 mM Tris-HCl buffer (pH 7.2)
containing 0.14 M NaCl (TS buffer) at 0.5 ml/min with a standard
fast-performance liquid chromatography (FPLC) system (Pharmacia).
Fractions of 0.25 ml were collected from 12.5 to 32 min and assayed for
Caf1M and Caf1 by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). ELISA was basically performed as described previously (23) with Flow
microtiter plates coated with 10 µl of sample diluted to 100 µl in
0.02 M phosphate buffer (pH 7.2), blocking buffer (10 mM Tris-HCl [pH 7.5], 150 mM NaCl, 2% bovine serum albumin, 0.05% Tween 20), mouse monoclonal anti-Caf1M immunoglobulin G (IgG [2 µg/ml]) or rabbit monospecific anti-Caf1 IgG (10 µg/ml) and the appropriate peroxidase conjugate (Sigma).
Pulse-chase experiments and immunoprecipitation.
Exponentially growing cells (OD600 = 0.5 to 0.6) in 10 ml
of LB broth with 0.6% glucose were recovered and resuspended in 10 ml
of M9 medium containing 50 µg of each amino acid per ml (except
methionine and cysteine) and 6% glycerol (2). After a
30-min incubation at 37°C, IPTG was added and cultures were incubated
for a further 30 min at 37°C, at which time, cells were concentrated
10-fold in the same medium and incubated for 5 min at 26°C. Cultures
(1 ml) were then labelled for 30 s at 26°C with [35S]methionine (50 µCi/ml, >1,000 Ci/mmol; Amersham).
Following addition of L-methionine (200 µg/ml) and
chloramphenicol (125 µg/ml), samples were taken at the indicated
times and subjected to trichloroacetic acid precipitation followed by
immunoprecipitation, basically as described previously (9),
by using 20-µl of anti-Caf1 serum and 200 µl of Pansorbin cells
(Calbiochem)/ml of solubilized antigen suspension. Immunoprecipitated
Caf1 was subjected to SDS-PAGE and quantitated with a PhosphorImager S1
and ImageQuant software (Molecular Dynamics).
CD and fluorescence spectroscopy.
Circular dichroism (CD)
spectra were recorded on a J-500A dichrograph (Jasco, Tokyo, Japan)
with a 1-mm-diameter temperature-controlled cell. Concentration of
Caf1M samples was measured on a Shimadzu UV-2100 spectrophotometer
(Japan) with an extinction coefficient of E280 = 1.4 M
1 cm
1. Fluorescence spectra were
recorded on an MPF-44A spectrofluorimeter (Perkin-Elmer, Norwalk,
Conn.) with a 3-mm-diameter temperature-controlled cell.
Molecular modelling.
The three-dimensional models were
constructed by using the molecular modelling software packages Chem-X
(Chemical Design, Ltd., Oxford, United Kingdom) and MOLMOL
(14) on a Hewlett-Packard Vectra workstation.
DNA manipulation and sequencing procedures.
DNA
manipulations were performed according to standard procedures
(2). DNA sequencing was performed by the AMS sequencing service, University of Reading, Reading, United Kingdom, by using an
automatic ALFexpress DNA sequencer (Pharmacia) and cycle sequencing of
Qiagen-purified plasmid DNA.
Other protein procedures.
Concentrations of purified
proteins were estimated with the Bio-Rad protein assay kit with bovine
serum albumin as a standard. N-terminal sequencing of tryptic fragments
was performed by P. Barker (Microchemical Facility, IAPGR Cambridge
Research Station, Cambridge, United Kingdom) as described previously
(4). SDS-PAGE (16% polyacrylamide) was performed by the
basic Laemmli procedure (2). Samples were heated at 100°C
for 5 min in SDS sample buffer with 0.1 M dithiothreitol (DTT), unless
otherwise indicated, prior to electrophoresis. Nondenaturing gels
contained 15% acrylamide and Laemmli buffer with no SDS. Samples were
incubated in sample buffer (without SDS) for 5 min at 37°C prior to
electrophoresis at 200 V for 2.5 h. Caf1 was visualized on immunoblots
with an ECL (enhanced chemiluminescence) kit (Amersham) by using a
1:20,000 dilution of both rabbit anti-Caf1 serum and peroxidase
conjugate. To quantitate surface-assembled Caf1, cells from induced
cultures were incubated sequentially with a 1:1,000 dilution of
anti-Caf1 serum and a 1:500 dilution of antirabbit IgG-fluorescein
conjugate (Sigma) and fluorescence quantitated with a BioLumin
fluorescence plate reader (Molecular Dynamics).
 |
RESULTS |
Expression of individual caf genes in E. coli.
The basic plasmids required for this study, constructed as
described in Materials and Methods, are shown in Fig.
1. The set of plasmids permitted analyses
and isolation of high levels of periplasmic chaperone (pTCA1),
periplasmic chaperone-subunit complex (pFM1), periplasmic subunit
(pFM'1S), and surface-assembled subunit (pFMA1). Expression of
periplasmic chaperone and complex was optimized in E. coli
DH5
. Induction with 0.75 mM IPTG for 2 to 3 h was optimal, at
which time, chaperone or complex represented 60 to 80% of total
protein in osmotic shock fractions (periplasm). Higher concentrations
of IPTG and longer induction times led to precursor accumulation and
cell death. Surprisingly, expression of chaperone alone (pTCA1) was as
toxic to E. coli DH5
as the subunit (pFM'1S). In the
absence of chaperone (pFM'1S), the subunit was largely degraded in
E. coli JCB570, but in E. coli DH5
, Caf1
appeared to be slightly more stable and could be recovered in the
periplasmic fraction (Fig. 1 [and see Fig. 6B and C below]). Whether
this was due to differences in proteases present in the two strains or
to limited cross-talk with a related specific periplasmic chaperone of
DH5
is not known. Caf1 subunit was only localized to the cell surface in constructs (pFMA1 or p12R) expressing caf1A.

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FIG. 1.
Structure and products of recombinant caf
plasmids. Details of plasmids are given in Materials and Methods. With
the exception of p12R, which carries the original subcloned
caf operon in pUC19, and pGEM-Tcaf1A, all
plasmids are pTrc99A (Pharmacia) derivatives and carry
lacIq. Only restriction sites used in
manipulation of caf genes are shown. B,
BamHI; Bg, BglII; Bs,
BspHI; H, HpaI; N,
NcoI; P, PstI; S,
SalI; Sm, SmaI. Brackets ({})
indicate corresponding plasmids encoding the deletion mutant chaperone,
dCaf1M, and the level of product from each respective plasmid. The
unique BglII site (Bg in parentheses) created at the site of
deletion within caf1M is also shown. The Product columns
summarize the amount of each caf gene product detectable
following induction in E. coli DH5 . Levels were estimated
from Coomassie blue-stained SDS-PAGE of periplasmic fractions
(chaperone and subunit), whole cells (chaperone and subunit), and outer
membrane (OM) preparations (4) (Caf1A). For periplasmic
chaperone and subunit, +++ corresponds to approximately 20 to 40 µg/ml/OD600 culture in the final osmotic shock fraction.
l, location of subunit. Surface location, s, was identified by a
positive reaction in the quantitative immunofluorescence assay, with
only low levels present in the osmotic shock fraction; periplasmic
location, p, was identified by a negative reaction (i.e., no higher
than background, or <3% of the value of E. coli/pFMA1) in
the quantitative immunofluorescence assay, and the subunit was
recovered in the osmotic shock fraction from E. coli DH5
or E. coli JCB570.
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Accessibility of the FGL sequence of Caf1M to trypsin.
The FGL
sequence of Caf1M, as identified in previous alignments (8,
26), is shown in Fig. 2A.
Interestingly, following prediction of putative signal sequence
cleavage sites, it was noted that members of the FGL family of
chaperones also possess a longer sequence N terminal to the conserved
Arg residue (Arg-20 in Caf1M) (Fig. 2B). The average length of this
sequence was 19 residues in Caf1M-like proteins, compared to N-terminal
sequences of only 7 to 9 residues for mature PapD-like chaperones. The
only exception was the most distant relative of the FGL subfamily, CssC.

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FIG. 2.
FGL sequence of Caf1M and N-terminal sequences of the
FGL subfamily. (A) FGL sequence of Caf1M, between the end of the F1
-strand and the beginning of the G1 -strand. Arrows indicate
proposed -strands (see Fig. 7 below for further details). Conserved
cysteine residues involved in disulfide bond formation are in boldface.
The sequence of the corresponding region of the deletion mutant,
dCaf1M, is shown for comparison. (B) Alignment of N-terminal sequences
of the FGL subfamily. PapD is shown as an example of the FGS subfamily
(more than 20 thus far sequenced). , signal sequence (SS) cleavage
site predicted by the SignalP program (19). For Caf1M, the
SS cleavage site was confirmed by N-terminal sequencing; numbering of
amino acid residues has been accordingly altered from the earlier
system (5). For PsaB, the SS cleavage site was predicted by
using the ATG start codon at position 2664 rather than 2740 to give a
recognizable SS. EMBL accession numbers are as follows: Caf1M, X61996;
PsaB, M86713; MyfB, Z21953; AfaB, X76688; NfaE, S61968; AggD, U12984;
CS3-1 (CstA), X16944; SefB, L11009; CssC, U04846; and PapD, X61239.
Numbers in parentheses give the number of residues in the predicted
mature protein N terminal to the absolutely conserved Arg (R in
boldface).
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On trypsin treatment of periplasmic fractions containing Caf1M
chaperone, Caf1M was cleaved within the FGL sequence (Fig.
2 and
3). Comparison of the SDS-PAGE profiles
with and without
reducing agent confirmed that a disulfide bond between
Cys-98
and Cys-137 held the two tryptic fragments (approximately 12 and
14 kDa) together (Fig.
3A, lanes 4 to 6). N-terminal sequencing
identified a single susceptible bond within this region

that between
Lys-119 and Phe-120. At 5 µg of trypsin per ml, a low level of
cleavage also occurred at the extreme N terminus. This was complete
only at higher trypsin concentrations

50 µg/ml (compare Fig.
3B,
lanes 5 and 6). The tryptic fragment pattern was the same for
the
chaperone-subunit complex (Fig.
3A, lanes 1 to 3). Although
only
approximately 50% of chaperone is complexed to the subunit
in isolated
periplasmic fractions (see Fig.
6A), all chaperone
was cleaved by
trypsin. Thus, at least the immediate region around
Lys-119 and Phe-120
must remain accessible on interaction with
the Caf1 subunit.

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FIG. 3.
Sensitivity of Caf1M and dCaf1M to trypsin. Periplasmic
fractions from E. coli DH5 expressing chaperone alone or
subunit plus chaperone were treated with or without trypsin for 30 min
at 37°C in 50 mM Tris (pH 7.5) and then heated at 100°C in sample
buffer for 5 min prior to SDS-PAGE. Coomassie blue-stained gels are
shown. (A) Caf1M plus Caf1 (lanes 1 to 3) and Caf1M chaperone alone
(lanes 4 to 6) treated with (+) or without ( ) trypsin (5 µg/ml) and
prepared in SDS-PAGE sample buffer with (+) or without ( ) DTT. (B)
dCaf1M (lanes 1 to 4) and native Caf1M-Caf1 complex (lanes 5 and 6).
The trypsin concentrations are indicated. (A and B) Solid arrow, Caf1M
chaperone; open arrows, Caf1 subunit; arrowheads 1, 2, and 3, typical
profile of tryptic fragments sequenced. The N-terminal sequences
following digestion with 5 µg of trypsin per ml were as follows:
purified Caf1M (profile similar to that with 50 µg of trypsin per ml
[B, lane 6]), arrowhead 1, N-terminal fragment, FASKEY (12.78 kDa)/EYGVTI, 3:2 ratio; arrowhead 2, C-terminal fragment, FNPDKD (12.89 kDa), dCaf1M; arrowhead 3, N terminus, AQPDIK (23.48 kDa), FASKEY.
(Sizes of tryptic products were calculated from the primary sequences,
assuming there was no additional C-terminal cleavage.) The anomalous
slow migration of the Caf1M N-terminal fragment must be attributed to
unusual properties of the FGL sequence, because (i) the cleaved
polypeptide migrated more slowly under nonreducing conditions and (ii)
both fragments of dCaf1M migrated close to their expected sizes of
11.15 kDa (N terminal) and 11.41 kDa (C terminal).
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Caf1M
Lys-105-Ala-133 (dCaf1M) folds into a stable
conformation.
As an initial step in assessing the importance of
the FGL region of Caf1M to the structure and function of this
chaperone, caf1M
105-133 (encoded by pTCA1-M
1), was
constructed. In this mutant, the entire sequence between proposed F1
and G1 strands was deleted, leaving only sufficient residues to form a
-turn (see Fig. 2 and Fig. 7B below). Lys-105 and Ala-133 of Caf1M
were replaced by Arg and Ser, respectively. Expression of
caf1M
105-133 in E. coli DH5
or JCB570
resulted in accumulation of high levels of periplasmic dCaf1M
(molecular mass of 23.5 kDa [Fig. 3B]), indicating that the dCaf1M
protein lacking the accessory sequence folded into a stable
conformation. Interestingly, dCaf1M was much less toxic than Caf1M, for
example, following 2 h of induction, cultures expressing dCaf1M
typically had an OD650 of 1.2 compared to an
OD650 of 0.6 for similarly induced cultures expressing
caf1M.
N-terminal sequencing confirmed that dCaf1M retained the native, mature
N terminus, Ala-Gln-Pro. The experimental isoelectric
point of dCaf1M
had increased from a pI of 8.7 to 9.65. This can
be attributed to the
large number of Asp residues present in the
accessory segment of Caf1M
and thus lost in dCaf1M. dCaf1M was
relatively resistant to low
concentrations of trypsin (5 µg/ml).
Approximately 50% of dCaf1M was
cleaved, but only at the extreme
N terminus after Lys-5 (Fig.
3B). At
higher levels of trypsin
(50 µg/ml), dCaf1M was further cleaved and
fragment sizes were
consistent with cleavage at the newly created PPRS
site that replaced
the entire FGL sequence. SDS-PAGE in the absence of
DTT confirmed
that, as with Caf1M (Fig.
3A, lanes 4 and 5), the dCaf1M
tryptic
fragments were linked by a disulfide bond (not shown).
Formation
of the disulfide bond and the similarity in the tryptic
profiles
of Caf1M and dCaf1M provide supportive evidence that the
mutant
protein was folded in a conformation close to the native
conformation.
Comparison of purified Caf1M and dCaf1M by CD and fluorescence
spectroscopy.
The secondary structures of native Caf1M and dCaf1M
were compared by CD spectroscopy. No significant difference was
observed between the previously published far-UV spectra or the near-UV spectra of Caf1M (23) and the corresponding spectra of
dCaf1M. This demonstrates the absence of any major difference in the
overall secondary structure content of Caf1M (estimated at 50%
-structure, 3%
-helix) and dCaf1M. The profile of the
temperature dependence of the CD spectra of dCaf1M also looked very
similar to that previously published for Caf1M (23). Figure
4A shows the temperature dependence of
ellipticity at 228 nm for Caf1M and dCaf1M. For both samples, a highly
cooperative transition was observed in the range 55 to 70°C with
effectively the same transition temperature (Td)
(Td = 63.5 ± 1°C for dCaf1M and
63.0 ± 1°C for Caf1M). The pH dependence properties of the CD
spectra of dCaf1M and Caf1M were also very similar (shown only for
Caf1M [Fig. 4B]). Figure 4C shows the pH dependence of ellipticity at
208 nm for Caf1M and dCaf1M. Despite the difference in pIs of the
native and mutant proteins, the two proteins exhibited similar
properties with respect to acid denaturation. There was no significant
change in CD spectra down to a pH of 3.0. Further acidification induced
an abrupt transition indicative of acid denaturation for both proteins.
The similarity in the heat and acid denaturation curves of Caf1M and
dCaf1M indicates an absence of any significant difference in the
stabilities of the three-dimensional structures of the two proteins.
The fluorescence spectra of Caf1M and dCaf1M were typical for
fluorescence of tryptophan (20) (spectra not shown). There
was a small, but statistically valid shift in the maximum of
fluorescence from 336.5 ± 0.25 nm for Caf1M to 335 ± 0.25 nm for dCaf1M. Caf1M contains five tryptophan residues, one of which
(Trp-110) is located in the FGL sequence that is absent in dCaf1M. This
slight shift might reflect a more hydrophilic microenvironment of
Trp-110 than the mean of the other Trp residues.

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FIG. 4.
Comparison of conformational properties of Caf1M and
dCaf1M by CD measurements. (A) Temperature dependency of ellipticity at
228 nm (wavelength at which the most pronounced differences at
different temperatures are observed for Caf1M and dCaf1M). The protein
concentration was 0.3 mg/ml in 20 mM Na-phosphate buffer (pH 7.2). (B)
pH dependency of the CD spectrum of Caf1M. (C) pH dependency of
ellipticity of Caf1M and dCaf1M at 208 nm. (B and C) Protein
concentrations were 0.25 to 0.26 mg/ml in 20 mM Na-phosphate buffer (pH
7.2), in 0.1 M Na acetyl buffer (pH 6, 5, and 4), and 0.1 M glycine-HCl
buffer (pH 3, 2.5, 2, and 1.5).
|
|
Deletion of Lys-105
Ala-133 abolishes in vivo function of the
Caf1M chaperone.
dCaf1M and the subunit were coexpressed from
pFM1-M
1 in E. coli JCB570. In contrast to the Caf1M
chaperone, dCaf1M was unable to protect the subunit from proteolytic
degradation. Following 2 h of induction, levels of Caf1 subunit in
periplasmic fractions of JCB570/pFM1-M
1 were as low as that seen
from JCB570/pFM'1S (subunit alone) (Fig.
5). The rate of degradation of subunit
was monitored in a pulse-chase experiment with
[35S]Met-labelled JCB570 carrying pFM1 or pFM1-M
1
(Fig. 5). In the presence of Caf1M, there was an initial slight
increase in Caf1 subunit recovery with time, presumably due to
continued processing of pre-Caf1. In contrast in the presence of
dCaf1M, Caf1 was rapidly degraded (half-life of <5 min). By 7.5 min,
cultures of JCB570/pFM1-M
1 possessed only 10% of the expected
subunit level, as extrapolated from levels of Caf1 in JCB570/pFM1. In
the presence of dCaf1M, processing of precursor continued, but the
mature Caf1 polypeptide was rapidly degraded shortly after or during
translocation across the bacterial inner membrane. Using quantitative
immunofluorescence, there was no evidence of surface-localized Caf1
subunit on either E. coli DH5
/pFM1-M
1 or E. coli JCB570/pFM1-M
1 (i.e., on strains expressing the outer
membrane Caf1A usher as well as the subunit and mutant chaperone) (Fig.
1).

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FIG. 5.
Kinetics of Caf1 subunit degradation in the presence of
Caf1M or dCaf1M. E. coli JCB570 cells carrying pFM1 or
pFM1-M 1 were induced and radiolabelled, and
[35S]Met-labeled Caf1 was immunoprecipitated and
quantitated as described in Materials and Methods. *, percent Caf1
recovered relative to the time zero value. In a preliminary experiment,
the profile of Caf1 degradation in JCB570/pFM'1S (subunit alone) was
similar to that seen in JCB570/pFM1-M 1. (Insert) Coomassie
blue-stained SDS-PAGE gel of periplasmic fractions (10 µl) following
a 2-h induction of pFM1 (lane 1 [Caf1M]), pFM1-M 1 (lanes 2 and 3 [dCaf1M]), and pFM'1S (lane 4 [no chaperone]) in E. coli
JCB570. An arrowhead indicates the subunit.
|
|
With
E. coli DH5

as the host bacterium, some periplasmic
Caf1 subunit remained even in the absence of functional chaperone
(Fig.
6B). Therefore, periplasmic fractions of
E. coli DH5

/pFM1
and
E. coli DH5

/pFM1-M

1
were analyzed by gel filtration chromatography
to assess whether the
mutant dCaf1M was capable of forming a stable
complex with the Caf1
subunit (Fig.
6A). Following 2 h of induction,
approximately half
of Caf1M eluted as a complex with the subunit
(estimated size, 47.3 kDa), while the other half eluted close
to the monomer size of 26.6 kDa. dCaf1M eluted at approximately
23 kDa, and there was no indication
of complex (expected molecular
mass, 44 kDa). In addition, it was
evident from the gel filtration
experiment (Fig.
6A) that
multimerization of Caf1 occurred in
both samples, and in the presence
of functional chaperone, multimerization
appeared to be more efficient.
This was confirmed by analyses
of the samples by nondenaturing PAGE
(Fig.
6C). Nondenaturing
PAGE also revealed that while the periplasmic
profile from DH5

/pFM1-M

1
(dCaf1M) was quite different from that
of
E. coli DH5

/pFM1, it
was virtually identical to the
periplasmic profile of DH5

/pFM'1S
(no chaperone). These differences
may have reflected differences
in the conformation of the subunit
following interaction with
Caf1M chaperone or may simply have reflected
differences in the
total subunit concentration in the different
strains. It is clear,
however, that dCaf1M was unable to form a stable
complex with
the subunit and that the subunit remained in the same
state in
strains expressing dCaf1M as in strains with no chaperone.

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|
FIG. 6.
Identification of chaperone-subunit complex and
polymerization of the Caf1 subunit. (A) Periplasmic fractions from
induced cultures of E. coli DH5 /pFM1 or E. coli DH5 /pFM1-M 1 fractionated by FPLC on a Superose 12 H/R
column. The column was calibrated with RNase A (13.7 kDa),
-lactamase (29 kDa), ovalbumin (43 kDa), bovine serum albumin (66 kDa), and blue Dextran 2000 (2,000 kDa) (Pharmacia). Caf1 ( ) and
Caf1M ( ) were quantitated by ELISA. (B) SDS-PAGE of periplasmic
fractions from E. coli DH5 carrying pFM1 (lane 1),
pFM1-M 1 (lane 2), or pFM'1S (lane 3). Open arrow, dCaf1M; solid
arrow, subunit (confirmed by immunoblotting with anti-Caf1 serum). The
gel depicted in panel C is the same as for panel B, except that samples
were separated on a nondenaturing PAGE gel and visualized by
immunoblotting with anti-Caf1 serum. Under these conditions, Caf1M was
only detected at the top of the separation gel by immunoblotting with
anti-Caf1M serum.
|
|
Model of the three-dimensional structure of Caf1M.
The studies
of trypsin digestion of Caf1M presented above indicated that the
Lys-119-Phe-120 peptide bond was more efficiently cleaved than the
bond between Lys-6 and Phe-7 and that the Lys-6-Phe-7 bond was
accessible in dCaf1M. To test if this might be attributed to
inaccessibility of Lys-6 in the presence of the FGL sequence, a
Lys-117-Ala-Lys-119-Ala Caf1M mutant was similarly treated with trypsin. This mutant was more resistant to trypsin than the wild-type chaperone, with eventual partial cleavage (presumably at Lys-105) at 25 µg of trypsin/ml. Despite this there was no detectable N-terminal cleavage of the intact chaperone analogous to that observed with dCaf1M
(Fig. 3B, lanes 2 to 4) (data not shown). In light of these experimental data, a modification of the previously suggested model of
the three-dimensional structure of Caf1M (23, 25) is
presented in Fig. 7a. In the new version
of the Caf1M model, both predicted
-strands in the FGL sequence (FG'
and FG") form part of an FG'FG"GFCD
-sheet of domain 1. As a result,
the more hydrophobic FG"
-strand is proximal to the functionally
important G
-strand, while the hydrophilic FG'
-strand is located
relatively far from the subunit binding site. The predicted A0
-strand in the extended N terminus forms part of an A0ABE
-sheet
and interacts both with the A and the FG'
-strands of the two
different
-layers. Side chains of the amino acid residues forming
the predicted structure of the FGL sequence are shown in Fig. 7b.

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|
FIG. 7.
Predicted molecular models of three-dimensional
structure of Caf1M and dCaf1M. (a) Models are based on PapD coordinates
(Brookhaven Protein Data Base; identification no. 3DPA). -Strands
are shown by arrows. The predicted -strands A0, FG', and FG" of
domain 1 of Caf1M are absent from PapD (see text for details); all
other -strands are present in PapD. In the models of Caf1M and
dCaf1M, the positions of Pro-104 and I-134, connected via the
additional Arg and Ser residues in dCaf1M, are indicated. Arrows
indicate peptide bonds most sensitive to trypsin. (b) Predicted
structure of Caf1M FGL sequence (between the F1 and G1 -strands of
domain 1) showing the side chains of all amino acid residues. Predicted
FG' and FG" -strands are shown in boldface. (a and b) The numbering
of residues of Caf1M has been modified in accordance with
identification of the N terminus of mature Caf1M as AQPD (see Fig.
2).
|
|
 |
DISCUSSION |
The Y. pestis chaperone Caf1M is a typical
representative of the FGL subfamily of periplasmic chaperones
characterized by possession of two cysteine residues and a variable,
long sequence between the F1 and G1
-strands (8, 26).
Because these two features lie immediately adjacent to the subunit
binding G1
-strand, clarification of their role in chaperone
structure and subunit binding, folding, and export is important. We
have previously demonstrated that DsbA interaction is essential for
folding of Caf1M (23). Recent studies with a Cys-98-Ser
mutant have confirmed that this disulfide bond is essential for folding
of the chaperone in vivo (27), although it is not essential
for maintenance of the overall finally folded structure
(23). In contrast, the data presented here with the deletion
mutant Caf1M
105-133 (dCaf1M) demonstrate that the Caf1M FGL
sequence does not significantly affect the folding of the cooperative
three-dimensional structure of the protein.
Alignment of the amino acid sequences of the nine members of this
family of Caf1M-like chaperones revealed that as well as the
characteristic long, variable sequence between the F1 and G1
-strands (8, 26), eight of these proteins have an
N-terminal extension to the A1
-strand compared to the classic PapD
structure. The studies of trypsin accessibility of the Lys-6-Phe-7
peptide bond of Caf1M and two mutant derivatives indicate that the
N-terminal extension is shielded from trypsin in the presence of the
FGL sequence. Possession of this N-terminal extension may simply
reflect the close evolutionary relationship of members of the FGL
family of chaperones (22). In addition, it may also be
important for stabilization of the FGL sequence and correct topology of
the binding site cleft. The latter possibility and the trypsin data are
consistent with the predicted arrangement of the Caf1M FGL sequence
presented in Fig. 7. In this tentative model, the accessory sequence
forms a loop followed by two short
-strands (FG' and FG"), one of
which (FG') interacts with the A0
-strand, formed by the extended N
terminus. Notably, the conserved Arg-20, which by analogy with the Pap
system is almost certainly involved in anchoring the carboxyl terminus
of the Caf1 subunit, lies within the A
-strand. In the model, the
extended N terminus (A0) also interacts with the A
-strand and could
influence the positioning of Arg-20 within the cleft. Detailed
information on the structural relationship of the FGL sequence to the
rest of the protein will most likely be clarified on resolution of the
crystal structure of Caf1M chaperone (currently in progress).
PapD-like chaperones, involved in assembly of complex rigid pili, must
recognize and bind a number of different subunits. In contrast, Caf1M
and most other members of the FGL subfamily interact with only a single
species of subunit (8, 26). Thus, ordered binding of subunit
by chaperone and interaction at the outer membrane (21) are
not essential in F1 capsule assembly. Possession of the FGL sequence
may confer a more specific interaction of chaperone with subunit.
dCaf1M (lacks FGL sequence) was unable to function as a chaperone in
vivo. There might be several explanations for this. Caf1M evidently
binds the COOH terminus of the Caf1 subunit via a
-zipper
interaction with the G1 strand (8, 15, 23). It has been
proposed that the putative FG"1
-strand of Caf1M may also directly
interact with the Caf1 subunit in the complex, whereas the rest of the
FGL sequence is exposed to solvent (23). The trypsin
accessibility of Lys-119 in the complex is in agreement with this. Loss
of such an interaction might decrease the affinity of the chaperone for
the subunit to a level insufficient for in vivo binding and function.
dCaf1M lacks 27 residues including a more conserved region immediately
following the F1
-strand (Lys-105-Asp-112). A smaller deletion
mutant, Caf1M
Asp-113-Phe-129, was also inactive in subunit
chaperoning activity (3a). Thus, the presence of the FGL
sequence (Asp-113-Phe-129) is essential for formation of functional
chaperone. Whether this is due to stabilization of the complex via
direct interaction of the FGL sequence with the subunit or is due to a
requirement of the FGL sequence for correct structural topology of the
subunit binding cleft should be further clarified by future detailed
mutagenesis and resolution of the crystal structure. The demonstration
that the FGL sequence is not required for formation of stable chaperone provides a sound basis for such analyses and determination of the role
of this region in export as well as subunit binding.
A detailed understanding of the role of the Caf1M chaperone in the
folding and assembly pathway of Caf1 antigen also has significant implications for the detection and prevention of Y. pestis-induced plague. Caf1 (F1) antigen is a major constituent of
both recombinant subunit and whole-cell vaccines against Y. pestis (16). It is also the antigen of choice in
diagnostic kits (1). Elucidation of any conformational
differences between Caf1 multimer produced in the presence and absence
of chaperone will aid in further development of these products.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
Mary Leonard is acknowledged for her excellent technical support.
We thank Irina Zyrianova for the Caf1M Lys-117-Ala-Lys-119-Ala mutant, Alexander Denesyuk for helpful discussions on molecular modelling and Timo Korpela for use of modelling facilities at Turku,
Finland. This work was supported by grants of the European Community
(INCO-COPERNICUS), International Science and Technology Centre (United
States and the European Community), The Royal Society (United Kingdom),
International Science Foundation, National Aeronautic and Space Agency
(United States), and the Russian Foundation on Basic Research.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Microbiology
Division, School of Animal and Microbial Sciences, University of
Reading, Whiteknights, P.O. Box 228, Reading RG6 6AJ, United Kingdom.
Phone: 44 118 9318898. Fax: 44 1189316671. E-mail:
s.macintyre{at}rdg.ac.uk.
Present address: Microbial Pathogenicity Research Group, St.
Bartholomew's Hospital, West Smithfield, London EC1A 7BE, United Kingdom.
 |
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Journal of Bacteriology, April 1999, p. 2422-2429, Vol. 181, No. 8
0021-9193/99/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1999, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
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