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Journal of Bacteriology, June 2001, p. 3506-3514, Vol. 183, No. 11
Department of Biochemistry, Molecular and
Cell Biology, Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois
60208,1 and Pharmacia Corporation,
Kalamazoo, Michigan 490072
Received 1 December 2000/Accepted 15 March 2001
In Staphylococcus aureus RN4220, lipoteichoic acid
(LTA) is anchored in the membrane by a diglucosyldiacylglycerol moiety. The gene (ypfP) which encodes diglucosyldiacylglycerol
synthase was recently cloned from Bacillus subtilis and
expressed in Escherichia coli (P. Jorasch, F. P. Wolter, U. Zahringer, and E. Heinz, Mol. Microbiol. 29:419-430, 1998).
To define the role of ypfP in this strain of S. aureus, a fragment of ypfP truncated from both ends was cloned into the thermosensitive replicon pVE6007 and used to
inactivate ypfP. Chloramphenicol-resistant
(ypfP::cat) clones did not synthesize
the glycolipids monoglucosyldiacylglycerol and
diglucosyldiacylglycerol. Thus, YpfP would appear to be the only
diglucosyldiacylglycerol synthase in S. aureus providing glycolipid for LTA assembly. In LTA from the mutant, the glycolipid anchor is replaced by diacylglycerol. Although the doubling time of the
mutant was identical to that of the wild type in Luria-Bertani (LB)
medium, growth of the mutant in LB medium containing 1% glycine was
not observed. This inhibition was antagonized by either L- or D-alanine. Moreover, viability of the mutant at 37°C
in 0.05 M phosphate (pH 7.2)-saline for 12 h was reduced to
<0.1%. Addition of 0.1% D-glucose to the
phosphate-saline ensured viability under these conditions. The
autolysis of the ypfP::cat mutant in
the presence of 0.05% Triton X-100 was 1.8-fold faster than that of the parental strain. Electron microscopy of the mutant revealed not
only a small increase in cell size but also the presence of pleomorphic
cells. Each of these phenotypes may be correlated with either (or both)
a deficiency of free glycolipid in the membrane or the replacement of
the usual glycolipid anchor of LTA with diacylglycerol.
Lipoteichoic acid (LTA) plays a
vital role in the growth and physiology of gram-positive
microorganisms. It is postulated that LTA modulates the activities of
autolysins (4, 15), the binding of cations required for
enzyme function (2, 22, 24, 34), and the electromechanical
properties of the cell wall (41).
The proposed pathway for the synthesis of this macroamphiphile may be
divided into three phases: (i) the glycolipid anchor, (ii) the
poly(glycerophosphate) [poly(Gro-P)] moiety, and (iii) the
D-alanyl esters linked to poly(Gro-P) (18,
38). In Staphylococcus aureus, the
In addition to the role of DGlcDAG as the glycolipid anchor
of LTA (6 mol%), the membranes of S. aureus contain 8 mol%
of this free glycolipid (29). It was proposed that
DGlcDAG hydrogen bonds to the phospholipid neighbors in the
membrane bilayer. It has also been speculated that the ratio of
monoglucosyldiacylglycerol (MGlcDAG) to DGlcDAG may play
an important role in determining bilayer stability (27).
Since MGlcDAG is non-bilayer forming and DGlcDAG is bilayer
forming, this ratio could play an important role in determining the
limit of stability of the membrane.
The goals of this study were threefold: (i) to inactivate
ypfP in S. aureus RN4220, (ii) to correlate the
deficiency in glycolipid with characteristic phenotypes, and (iii)
to determine whether YpfP (DGlcDAG synthase) is a potential
target for the rational design of antibacterial agents. To
accomplish these goals, the gene was cloned from S. aureus RN4220 and insertionally inactivated in this strain. The
ypfP::cat mutant does not synthesize
either MGlcDAG or DGlcDAG. These results indicate that YpfP
would appear to be the only synthase in S. aureus providing
the source of glycolipid anchor for LTA as well as free membrane
glycolipid. Characterization of the mutant in a variety of growth
experiments has revealed four phenotypes of S. aureus RN4220
ypfP::cat.
Bacterial strains and plasmids.
All bacterial strains and
plasmids used in this study are listed in Table
1.
0021-9193/01/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JB.183.11.3506-3514.2001
Copyright © 2001, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Biosynthesis of the Glycolipid Anchor in
Lipoteichoic Acid of Staphylococcus aureus RN4220: Role of
YpfP, the Diglucosyldiacylglycerol Synthase


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ABSTRACT
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
References
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INTRODUCTION
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
References
-gentiobiosyldiacylglycerol (diglucosyldiacylglycerol [DGlcDAG]) moiety of LTA functions as the membrane anchor
(18). The gene encoding
UDP-glucose:1,2-diacylglycerol-3-
-D-glucosyl transferase
(YpfP), designated DGlcDAG synthase in this paper, was cloned
from Bacillus subtilis (27). Inactivation of
this gene resulted in the loss of glycolipid and the appearance of a rough colony phenotype (28). In a separate study,
ypfP from this bacterium was inactivated, resulting in a
phenotype characterized by an effect on cell shape and
viability on solid medium (46). The homologous gene
in S. aureus (ugt106B1) also encodes a
processive DGlcDAG synthase (26). Thus, it would
appear that ypfP (ugt106B1) encodes an enzyme
involved in the synthesis of the membrane anchor of LTA from S. aureus.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
References
TABLE 1.
Bacterial strains and plasmids used in this study
Chemicals and reagents.
DGlcDAG from S. aureus was the generous gift of Werner Fischer.
UDP-[14C]glucose (308 mCi/mmol),
1,2-di[1-14C]palmitoyl-L-3-phosphatidylcholine
(114 mCi/mmol), D-[14C]alanine (55 mCi/mmol),
[U-14C]glycerol (44 mCi/mmol), and dithiothreitol
were the products of ICN Biomedicals Inc.
1,2-Di[1-14C]palmitoylglycerol was synthesized by the
procedure of Taron et al. (53). Media were obtained from
Difco Laboratories, Detroit, Mich. Ampicillin, EDTA, Tris, bis-Tris,
-naphthol, phospholipase C, lysostaphin (affinity purified),
disodium ATP, and egg yolk tellurite emulsion were purchased from Sigma
Chemical Co. Restriction enzymes were obtained from various suppliers
and used according to the manufacturers' instructions. DNase I was the
product of Boehringer Mannheim.
Isopropylthiol-
-D-galactoside (IPTG) was purchased from
GIBCO BRL. Phosphate-buffered saline, solutions of phenol, and
phenol-chloroform were products of Amresco Inc. Silica Gel 60 thin-layer plates (250 µm [20 by 20 cm]) were obtained from E. Merck AG. Taq DNA polymerase was purchased from MBI
Fermentas. The QIAprep spin miniprep, QUAquick nucleotide removal, and
QUAquick gel extraction kits were obtained from Qiagen.
Oligonucleotides were synthesized by Integrated DNA Technologies, Inc.
Monoclonal antibody to LTA (MAB981) was obtained from Chemicon, Inc.
Growth of bacteria.
Escherichia coli and S. aureus RN4220 were cultured in Luria-Bertrani (LB) broth, plated
on LB agar, and preserved by freezing in LB broth containing 10%
glycerol at
80°C (48). Lactococcus lactis
was grown in GM17 medium (23). Ampicillin and
chloramphenicol (CHL) (100 and 10 µg/ml, respectively) were used to
maintain plasmids while CHL (5 µg/ml) was used to select for
integrants. Competent cultures of E. coli were prepared by
the method of Hanahan (20). For the preparation of
electroporation-competent cells, S. aureus (200 ml) was
grown overnight on LB medium, diluted 1:100, and grown to an optical
density at 600 nm (OD600) of 0.5. The cells were chilled,
harvested, and suspended in 80 ml of 7 mM HEPES (pH 7.4) containing 272 mM sucrose (buffer A). Cells were collected by centrifugation, washed
in buffer A, suspended in a final volume of 2.4 ml buffer A, frozen in
160-µl aliquots, and stored at
70°C. The
electroporation-competent L. lactis cells were prepared as described by Holo and Nes (23).
DNA techniques. Restriction digests, agarose gel electrophoresis, small-and large-scale plasmid preparations from E. coli, and E. coli transformations were performed by standard techniques (48). Plasmids from L. lactis were prepared by the miniprep method (40), and S. aureus chromosomal DNA was isolated by a previously published protocol (33).
Sequence analysis. The protein database searches were performed by the BLAST algorithm (1), whereas the DNA and deduced amino acid sequences were analyzed with the University of Wisconsin Genetics Computer Group sequence analysis software package, version 10 (13). The MacVector sequence analysis program (Kodak Eastman Chemical Co.) was used for the design of PCR and sequencing primers and for the calculation of molecular mass and isoelectric point.
Construction of pYpfP.
To construct the plasmid for the
expression of ypfP, this gene was amplified by PCR using
S. aureus chromosomal DNA and two mutagenic primers. One
primer, 5'-CGGGAGGGTGGCTATccATGGTTACTC-3' (the
mutagenized nucleotides are in lowercase; the restriction site is
underlined) positioned a new NcoI site to span the ATG codon
of ypfP. The second primer,
5'-ccttggatCCATTAAAAATAAGATAATAAGC-3', positioned a new BamI site 30 nucleotides (nt)
downstream of the termination codon of ypfP. DNA was
denatured at 95°C for 1 min, annealed at 56°C for 1 min, and
extended at 72°C for 1.5 min (30 cycles). The PCR product (1,220 bp)
was digested with NcoI and BamHI and ligated into
the pET-3d vector (51). The resulting ligation mixture was
used to transform E. coli XL-1. Clones containing plasmids
with the ypfP insert, designated pYpfP, were identified by
restriction and sequence analysis (Fig.
1A).
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Expression of ypfP in E. coli.
To
express ypfP, E. coli BL21(DE3) transformed with pYpfP was
grown in 100 ml of LB broth with carbenicillin (100 µg/ml) at 37°C.
At an OD600 of 0.7, the cultures were induced with 0.4 mM IPTG, and the cells were harvested 4 h after induction. To prepare soluble and insoluble protein fractions for this analysis, cells were
suspended in 0.1 culture volume of buffer B (50 mM Tris-HCl [pH 8.0]
containing 20% [vol/vol] glycerol). The cells were subjected to one
cycle of freezing and thawing and sonicated (three times for 1 min
each) with a B. Braun Labsonic ultrasonic oscillator. Inclusion bodies
were obtained by centrifugation at 10,000 × g for 15 min. The supernatant fraction was centrifuged for 90 min at
200,000 × g to obtain membrane and soluble fractions.
Membranes were homogenized in a minimal amount of buffer B and washed
by three cycles of differential centrifugation at 10,000 × g and 200,000 × g. The washed membranes (15 mg of
protein) were suspended in 1 ml of buffer B, frozen in liquid nitrogen,
and stored in aliquots at
80°C. Protein was determined with the
Bradford reagent (Pierce Chemical Co.).
Insertional inactivation of ypfP.
For the
insertional inactivation of ypfP, a fragment of this gene,
truncated from both ends, was cloned into pVE6007 (Fig. 1B). The
1,220-bp ypfP PCR product (see above, "Construction of pYpfP") was digested with DraI, and a 560-bp internal
ypfP fragment was isolated and ligated into the
SmaI site. Since pVE6007 was unstable in E. coli
(data not shown), L. lactis was used for transformation with
the ligation mixture (23). The recombinant plasmid,
p
ypfP, was isolated and transformed into S. aureus (1 µg of DNA per 160 µl of cells, 2.5 kV, resistance = 186 ohms,
2-mm gap cuvette, BTX electro cell manipulator 600). After the pulse,
the cells were diluted with 1 ml of LB medium, incubated 10 min on ice
and 1 h at 30°C, and plated on LB agar containing CHL at 30°C.
To stop replication of the plasmid and select for integrants, the resulting colonies were grown on LB medium overnight at 37°C, diluted
1:100, and grown 24 h at 37°C. These cells were diluted 1:100 and
grown on LB medium containing CHL for 24 h at 37°C. Serial dilutions
were plated on LB medium containing CHL at 37°C. The DNA was isolated
from the resulting colonies and analyzed by PCR (Fig. 1C).
Preparations of membranes and permeabilized cells.
E.
coli BL21(DE3) was grown and membranes were prepared as described
above ("Expression of ypfP in E. coli"). To
prepared the S. aureus membranes by a modified method of Koo
et al. (30), the cells were grown overnight in LB medium.
The cells were collected by centrifugation and suspended to an
OD600 of 1.0 in phosphate buffer (pH 7.2) containing 0.14 mM NaCl and 3 mM KCl. This suspension (25 ml) was centrifuged at
5,000 × g for 15 min, and the pellet was suspended in
600 µl of digestion buffer (20% sucrose, 0.05 M Tris-HCl [pH 7.6],
0.145 M NaCl). The staphylococcal walls were digested with lysostaphin
(34 µg/ml) in the presence of DNase I (10 µg/ml) for 1 h at
37°C. The sucrose-stabilized protoplasts were collected by
centrifugation (10,000 × g, 15 min) and resuspended in
1 ml of digestion buffer. The adequacy of wall digestion was confirmed
by osmotic shock in ice-cold 0.05 M Tris-HCl (pH 7.6). Protoplast lysis
was detected by the rapid decrease in OD420. To isolate the
membranes, S. aureus protoplasts were lysed by resuspendion
in 0.05 M Tris-HCl (pH 7.6), layered on 5 ml of 55% sucrose, and
centrifuged for 2 h at 60,000 × g. The membrane
fraction was collected and stored in aliquots at
78°C.
70°C.
UDP-[14C]glucose and 1,2-di[1-14C]palmitoylglycerol incorporation assay. To monitor the incorporation of UDP-[14C]glucose into glycolipids catalyzed by YpfP in intact cells, permeabilized cells, and membranes, the reaction mixture contained, in a total volume of 40 µl, 50 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.0), 20% (vol/vol) glycerol, and 0.35 nmol UDP-[14C]glucose (286 mCi/mmol). The mixture was incubated at 37°C for the indicated time.
For the filtration assay, the reaction was stopped by adding 0.9 ml of 10% trichloroacetic acid and maintained on ice for 30 min. The mixture was transferred to a 0.45-µm-pore-size Metricel GN-6 filter and washed three times with 1 ml and one time with 10 ml of 10% trichloroacetic acid. The damp filters were dissolved in 1 ml of ethyl acetate (10 min, 25°C) before the addition of 15 ml of Triton-toluene scintillation cocktail, and the samples were assayed for radiolabel. For the assay of mono- and diglucosyldiacylglycerol formation from radiolabeled diacylglycerol, the 1,2-di[1-14C]palmitoylglycerol was isolated from a chloroform solution, suspended in 35 µl of 50 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.0) containing 20% (vol/vol) glycerol by 15 min of sonication in an Ultrasonic Dismembrator (Laboratory Supplies Co., Inc.), and added to the reaction mixture containing YpfP (E. coli membranes) and UDP-glucose. The reaction was stopped, and the mixture was extracted as described for the UDP-glucose incorporation assay. For the analysis of glycolipids, the reaction mixture was extracted by methanol-chloroform (5), with partitioning into the aqueous and organic phases as described by Brautigan et al. (8). The chloroform fraction was evaporated with nitrogen and resuspended in 20 µl of chloroform. These samples were used for separation by thin-layer chromatography (TLC) in the following solvent systems: (i) chloroform-methanol-H2O (65:25:4, vol/vol/vol) and (ii) butanol-acetic acid-H2O (120:30:50, vol/vol/vol). Glycolipids were visualized by lightly spraying with a solution of 3.2% (wt/vol)
-naphthol in
methanol-H2SO4-H2O (25:3:2,
vol/vol/vol) and heating the plate at 110°C for 25 min.
LTA analyses. Cells of S. aureus RN4220 were lysed by lysostaphin as described above ("Preparations of membranes and permeabilized cells"). LTA was extracted from this lysate with phenol-water (16) and analyzed by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (44). D-Alanine incorporation into LTA into permeabilized cells of S. aureus was determined by the method of Ntamere et al. (39). For the analysis of glycolipid anchor, LTA was hydrolyzed by 48% HF for 24 h at 4°C. The acid was removed by placing the tubes in a polycarbonate desiccator in vacuum containing NaOH pellets (45). Products of hydrolysis were suspended in 40 µl of 10 mM lithium acetate by 15 min of sonication in a model G112SP1T Ultrasonic Dismembrator (Laboratory Supplies). Lipids were extracted by methanol-chloroform (5), and glycolipids were analyzed as described above. The detection of diacylglycerol was performed by TLC in (i) petroleum ether-diethyl ether-acetic acid (40:60:4) and (ii) diethylether-hexane-acetic acid (50:50:1). Diacylglycerol was visualized by spraying the plate with a solution of 10% phosphomolybdic acid in ethanol and heating at 160°C for 20 min.
For quantifying the amount of LTA in cells and medium, the parental strain and the mutant were grown in LB medium (2 ml) with either 5 µCi of [U-14C]glycerol or 5 µCi of D-[14C]alanine from an OD600 of 0.08 to 0.35. The radiolabeled cells were separated from the medium by centrifugation, and the cellular LTA was isolated by the method outlined above. The secreted LTA was isolated from the medium which had been concentrated fourfold and dialyzed using a 10K Nanosep centrifugal filter (Pall-Filtron Corp.). The amount of radiolabeled LTA was determined by precipitation with monoclonal antibody specific for poly(GroP). The resulting radiolabeled antigen antibody complex was isolated by filtration on a 0.2-µm-pore-size filter and washed with 30 mM bis-Tris buffer (pH 6.5); the retained radiolabel was quantified.Scanning electron microscopy (SEM). S. aureus RN4220 and its ypfP::cat mutant were grown in 0.5 × amino acid assay medium (Difco) supplemented with methionine (0.05 g/liter) to an OD600 of 0.35. The cells were fixed with 2.5% (vol/vol) glutaraldehyde in 0.1 M cacodylate buffer (pH 7.4) for 6 h and dehydrated with a graded series of ethanol concentrations. A drop of each sample in 100% ethanol on a slide was subjected to critical-point drying, and the cells were coated with gold-palladium. Micrographs were obtained with a JEOL JSM-33 CF scanning electron microscope.
LD50 determination. LD50 (numbers of CFU required to induce a lethal infection in 50% of the infected animals) were determined in 20-g C3H mice (Charles River, Portage, Mich.). Log dilutions of the S. aureus wild-type and mutant strains were prepared from frozen stocks in BIII broth (Difco) containing 4% (wt/vol) dried brewer's yeast. Each dilution in the series was injected intraperitoneally into 10 mice. The mice were observed for a period of 1 week, after which the observed mortality was used to calculate the LD50 by probit analysis.
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RESULTS |
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Insertional inactivation of ypfP.
To define the
role of YpfP in both LTA biosynthesis and free glycolipid
formation in S. aureus, a mutant strain was constructed by insertional mutagenesis. A fragment of ypfP truncated
from both ends was cloned into a plasmid with a thermosensitive
replicon pVE6007 (37), and the resulting plasmid,
p
ypfP, was used to obtain a Cmr mutant with
ypfP inactivated by plasmid integration
(ypfP::cat) (Fig. 1C). Integration of the
plasmid by a single crossover was confirmed by (i) PCR using one primer
complementary to the cat gene in p
YpfP (Pr1) and another
primer complementary to the chromosomal ypfP sequence
outside of the
ypfP fragment (Pr2) and (ii) DNA sequencing of the region containing the insertion (data not shown).
Growth characteristics of the ypfP::cat mutant. To characterize the insertion mutant, a variety of growth experiments were undertaken. The doubling times of the mutant strain in LB medium (25 min) and 0.5 × amino acid assay medium (45 min) were identical to those of the parental strain. However, the mutant failed to grow on Baird-Parker agar supplemented with egg yolk and tellurite, a traditional medium for identifying S. aureus (3). Analysis of this inhibition revealed that growth was inhibited by the 1.2% glycine found in this medium. Addition of either 1% glycine or 0.4% D-serine to LB medium also gave no growth of the mutant. The inhibition of mutant growth by glycine is reversed by 0.4% D- or L-alanine. While the parental strain shows the same sensitivity to penicillin as the mutant, it is threefold more sensitive to the action of D-cycloserine, as measured by disk diffusion on LB agar.
Viability studies revealed that the ypfP::cat mutant does not survive (<0.1%) in phosphate-saline for 12 h at 37°C (Fig. 2). In contrast, the parental strain gave 75% viability under these conditions. When 0.1% D-glucose was added to the phosphate-saline solution, the viability of the mutant was 80% while that of the parental strain was 90%. In phosphate buffer alone, the mutant strain showed the same viability as the parental strain. Thus, the ypfP::cat insertion mutant is not tolerant to 0.85% NaCl in the absence of the nutrient, D-glucose. The autolysis of the ypfP::cat insertion mutant was compared with that of the parental strain. As shown in Fig. 3, the rate of autolysis in the presence of 0.05% Triton X-100, determined by the method of Gustafson et al. (19), is 1.8 times that of the parental strain. Thus, the ypfP::cat mutant differs from the parental strain in (i) its sensitivity to either glycine, D-serine, or D-cycloserine, (ii) its viability in phosphate-saline, and (iii) its rate of autolysis.
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Morphology of the ypfP::cat
mutant.
SEM of the mutant strain revealed not only a small
increase in size but also a modification in cell shape. Some of the
cells were characterized by misshapen coccal forms (pleomorphs) (Fig. 4), while others were characterized by a
larger size. The parental strain had an average mean diameter of
0.76 ± 0.06 µm, while the mutant had an average mean diameter
of 0.99 ± 0.06 µm. The small increase in diameter and the
aberrant cell shapes suggested that cell division may be partly
compromised.
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Glycolipid synthesis in S. aureus RN4220 and
ypfP::cat.
To test for glycolipid
biosynthesis in the ypfP::cat mutant, two
systems (permeabilized cells and membranes) were used in the UDP-[14C]glucose incorporation assay.
MGlcDAG (compound I) and DGlcDAG (compound III) were
synthesized by permeabilized cells of the parental strain of S. aureus (Fig. 5A, lane 1) and
membranes (Fig. 5A, lane 3). In addition, two unidentified radiolabeled
compounds, II and IV, were also synthesized in permeabilized cells (Fig
5A, lane 1). Thus, membranes provided a more defined system for
monitoring the synthesis of the glycolipids MGlcDAG and
DGlcDAG.
-Naphthol-H2SO4 staining
was used to visualize glycolipid in the permeabilized cells of S. aureus. DGlcDAG, identified by comparison with the standard
(Fig. 5B, lane 3), was the major glycolipid identified in this strain
of S. aureus (Fig. 5B, lane 1). Small amounts of MGlcDAG
were observed when larger samples of extract were chromatographed (data
not shown).
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-Naphthol-H2SO4 staining
was used to compare the glycolipid compositions of the parental strain
and the mutant. DGlcDAG was detected in the parental strain (Fig.
5B, lane 1) but was absent in the ypfP::cat
mutant (Fig. 5B; lane 2). Thus, YpfP would appear to be a DGlcDAG synthase.
Characterization of recombinant YpfP in transformed E. coli. To ascertain the function of YpfP from S. aureus RN4220, the gene was cloned into the pET-3d vector pYpfP (Fig. 1A) and expressed in E. coli strain BL21(DE3). A membrane protein with the molecular mass predicted for YpfP (44 kDa) accumulated in the pellet and in the membrane fraction (data not shown). Membranes from this strain of E. coli (Fig. 5A, lane 5) catalyzed the synthesis of two radiolabeled glycolipids, MGlcDAG (I) and DGlcDAG (III), identical to those synthesized by S. aureus permeabilized cells (Fig. 5A, lane 1) and membranes (Fig. 5A, lane 3). Thus, YpfP of S. aureus is a DGlcDAG synthase similar to that demonstrated for B. subtilis (27). While this work was in progress, Jorasch et al. (26) also cloned ypfP from S. aureus and expressed it in E. coli. In contrast to B. subtilis YpfP, which adds up to four glucosyl residues, the S. aureus enzyme adds two residues (26). This observation was confirmed in the present work and is consistent with the glycolipid anchor composition of S. aureus LTA (18).
The kinetics of combined MGlcDAG and DGlcDAG formation were monitored at 15°C in incubations containing recombinant YpfP. At this temperature, linear time-dependent and membrane concentration-dependent incorporation of UDP-[14C]glucose was observed in the interval of 3 min (Fig. 6A). At 25°C, the reaction was essentially complete in 1 min. The Km for UDP-glucose measured at 15°C was determined to be 0.7 mM, a value similar to that of the glucosyltransferase involved in teichuronic acid biosynthesis in Micrococcus luteus (0.3 mM) (35). The optimal pH was 7.5. Divalent cations were not required for this reaction. The activity of the recombinant enzyme did not change during 3 months of storage and upon multiple cycles of freezing and thawing. The kinetics of individual MGlcDAG and DGlcDAG formation (Fig. 6B) demonstrated that the ratio (1:20) between MGlcDAG and DGlcDAG is invariant during the 4-min time course, an observation consistent with the processive synthesis of DGlcDAG:
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-naphthol-H2SO4 staining (Fig. 6B). Thus,
our studies with recombinant YpfP reflect the observations of
glycolipid composition made in intact cells of S. aureus.
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Analysis of LTA in the parental S. aureus and ypfP::cat strains. The deficiency of DGlcDAG in the ypfP::cat mutant suggested that either the mutant was deficient in LTA or an alternative membrane anchor was used. To distinguish between these possibilities, LTA was isolated from the parental strain and the ypfP::cat mutant. Samples were hydrolyzed with 48% HF to release the lipid anchor. The lipid of the parental strain was identified as DGlcDAG, whereas no glycolipid could be detected in the hydrolysate of the LTA from the mutant strain. Therefore, an alternative nonglycolipid anchor appeared to be utilized in the synthesis of the mutant LTA. In contrast to the LTA from the parental strain, the LTA from the ypfP::cat mutant contained diacylglycerol in the HF hydrolysate (data not shown). No trace of this degradation product was found in the hydrolysate of the parental LTA. Thus, a major difference in the lipid anchors between the parental LTA and the mutant LTA was observed. It was concluded that diacylglycerol is the anchor of the LTA in the mutant strain.
To quantify the amounts of LTA in the parental and ypfP::cat strains, cells were grown with radiolabeled glycerol and D-alanine. The amounts of cellular LTA and secreted LTA were quantitated with antibody directed to the poly(Gro-P) moiety of LTA. As shown in Table 2, the amount of LTA labeled with [14C]glycerol in the mutant strain was 50% greater than that in the parental strain. Moreover, the amount of LTA secreted into the medium was threefold greater for the mutant than for the parental strain (Table 2). When D-[14C]alanine was used as the radiolabel, the amount of labeled D-[14C]alanyl-LTA was 2.4-fold higher in the mutant, while the amount secreted was 3.2-fold higher than in the parental strain. Prelabeling of these strains with either D-[14C]alanine or [14C]glycerol also provided the basis for measuring the turnover of LTA under growth conditions. As shown in Fig. 8, the turnover of LTA from the mutant was twofold greater than that observed with the parental strain. Since the chain length distributions of parental and mutant LTAs were similar (data not shown), the difference in turnover in the two strains does not reflect LTAs of different chain length.
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Pathogenesis of S. aureus strain RN4220 and its ypfP::cat mutant. With the mutant fully deficient in glycolipid and with its LTA terminated by diacylglycerol, it was of interest to test whether the ypfP::cat mutant retained its pathogenicity in the mouse model. In the mean of two independent experiments, the parental strain caused a lethal infection in 50% of the infected animals with 3.8 × 103 CFU. In the case of the mutant strain, 1.3 × 104 CFU was required to produce the same lethality. The data indicated that the glycolipid deficient mutant strain is not significantly impaired in its ability to produce an acute mouse infection compared with the parental strain. Thus, the mutant strain most likely displays the same amount of endotoxin as does the parental strain.
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DISCUSSION |
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A primary role of D-alanyl-LTA in microbial physiology has been implied by the absence of mutants with defects in the assembly of the poly(Gro-P) moiety (17, 52). Well-characterized mutations in the dlt operon (7, 12, 14, 42, 43, 50) have implicated the importance of the D-alanyl esters in the function of LTA. In this study, we inactivated ypfP of S. aureus RN4220, which encodes DGlcDAG synthase, and correlated this deficiency with the physiology of the mutant.
In 1998, the gene encoding DGlcDAG synthase, ypfP, was cloned from B. subtilis based on its similarity to the monogalactosyldiacylglycerol synthase from cucumber (27, 49). It was demonstrated that ypfP of B. subtilis encodes a UDP-glucosyltransferase which successively transfers up to four glucosyl residues to 1,2-diacylglycerol. Our results confirmed that the ypfP homolog in S. aureus also encodes a protein with essentially the same function, though it transfers only two glucosyl residues to 1,2-diacylglycerol with the synthesis of DGlcDAG. While this research was in progress, the corresponding gene was also cloned from S. aureus (26, 36) and shown to encode the DGlcDAG synthase (26). In addition, the homologous gene was inactivated in B. subtilis (28, 46), resulting in the loss of glycolipid. Two questions remained unanswered in S. aureus: (i) is LTA synthesized in the mutant lacking DGlcDAG? and (ii) if so, is the LTA membrane anchor replaced by either another glycolipid or by another membrane component?
To answer these questions, we inactivated ypfP in S. aureus and compared glycolipid synthesis in the parental strain and the insertion mutant. Our results demonstrated that YpfP appears to be the only DGlcDAG synthase and that the glycolipid of LTA is not replaced by another glycolipid. The lipid which replaces DGlcDAG in this mutant is diacylglycerol. No glycolipid was detected in the LTA of the insertion mutant.
In 1976, Button and Hemmings (9) observed the loss of
-gentiobiosyl-diacylglycerol in a phosphoglucomutase mutant of
Bacillus licheniformis. However, the poly(Gro-P) moiety of
the LTA was unchanged. These workers proposed that the poly(Gro-P)
moiety may be assembled on phosphatidylglycerol and that the completed poly(Gro-P) chains are transferred to the glycolipid in the parental strain. If the glycolipid acceptor is absent, the chains remain attached to phosphatidylglycerol. Alternatively, it was also suggested (9) that the enzymes which function in the biosynthesis of LTA have substrate specificities sufficiently low to tolerate the
replacement of
-gentiobiosyl-diacylglycerol by diacylglycerol. While
these are not the only mechanisms for assembling LTA (11, 47), they provide a rationale for interpreting the results
described for the ypfP::cat mutant. In
Bacillus coagulans and Bacillus megaterium, diacylglycerol is normally found as the anchor of LTA under laboratory growth conditions (25). Thus, in those organisms which
lack the usual glycolipid, the LTA is anchored into the membrane by diacylglycerol.
In addition to serving as a membrane anchor of LTA, glycolipids have been proposed to play a role in determining membrane stability. It has been hypothesized that the structure of the lipid bilayer is expected to be kept at its limit of stability by the regulated ratio of non-bilayer-forming (MGlcDAG) and bilayer-forming (DGlcDAG) glycolipids, thus allowing a flexible response to various triggering events (27, 54). In studying the velocities of MGlcDAG and DGlcDAG syntheses by YpfP in this work, we observed a fixed ratio of the two glycolipids (1:20). Whether a processive enzyme such as that described for S. aureus and B. subtilis can provide a flexible response with variable amounts of the two glycolipids is not known. The presence of individual enzymes catalyzing the successive addition of glucosyl residues to diacylglycerol such as those found in Acholeplasma laidlawii provides greater opportunity to sense the metabolic status of the cell (54).
Although the doubling time of the ypfP::cat mutant was identical to that of the parental strain in LB medium, growth of the insertion mutant in this medium containing 1% glycine was not observed. The inhibition of growth by glycine was originally detected on Baird-Parker agar plates supplemented with egg yolk and tellurite in studies designed to characterize the mutant. The inhibition was also observed when glycine is replaced by either 0.4% D-serine or 10 µg of D-cycloserine per ml. In each case, the inhibition was reversed by including either L- or D-alanine in the medium. Why a glycolipid-deficient mutant is more sensitive to glycine is not obvious. However, permeabilized cells of the mutant strain incorporated twofold more D-alanine into its LTA than did the parental strain. This observation coupled with a higher turnover rate of LTA in the mutant may reflect the fact that the mutant under certain growth conditions cannot produce the D-alanine needed for the enhanced biosynthesis of LTA as well as for peptidoglycan synthesis. Using mutants of B. subtilis with defective synthesis of D-alanine, Heaton et al. (21) observed that the addition of high concentrations of glycine to the growth medium greatly facilitated the lysis of the mutant. Enhanced D-alanyl-LTA biosynthesis may trigger a higher D-alanine requirement than can be met by the alanine racemase activity of the cell.
Another phenotype became apparent during the course of characterizing the mutant. The viability of the mutant in 0.05 M phosphate buffer (pH 7.2) containing 0.85% NaCl was significantly lower than that of the parental strain. Addition to the phosphate-saline buffer of 0.1% D-glucose reversed the inhibition. Thus, the ypfP::cat mutant differs from the parental strain in (i) its sensitivity to glycine, D-serine, and D-cycloserine, (ii) its viability in phosphate saline, (iii) its autolysis rate, and (iv) the presence of pleomorphic forms. Each of these phenotypes may be the result of one or both (i) deficiency in the free membrane glycolipid and (ii) deficiency in the glycolipid anchor for usual LTA formation.
The efficient expression of recombinant YpfP in E. coli provided enzyme for testing the effect of a number of potential inhibitors. Since Boaretti et al. (6) reported that LTA assembly is a target for daptomycin, this antibiotic was tested as an inhibitor of the reaction catalyzed by DGlcDAG synthase (Ki = 100 µM). Tunicamycin (Ki = 200 µM) and DL-threo-1- phenyl-2-hexadecanoylamino-3-pyrrolidino-1-propanol (Ki = 300 µM) were also tested as inhibitors of this synthase. All other potential inhibitors tested had Kis of 0.5 mM or higher. None of the inhibitors were sufficiently effective to provide a tool for studying the in vivo inhibition of the DGlcDAG synthase.
S. aureus RN4220 produces an exoprotein that is thought to have an etiologic role in toxic shock syndrome (31). Our results suggest that the deficiency of either free membrane glycolipid or the glycolipid anchor of LTA does not greatly affect the action of this exoprotein in producing the toxic shock response. In addition, one of our goals was to establish whether the synthesis of DGlcDAG would represent a potential target for the rational design of antimicrobial agents against gram-positive bacteria. While a variety of phenotypes are characteristic of this mutant, the glycolipid deficiency did not result in growth inhibition of the mutant in at least two laboratory growth media. However, two of the phenotypes, (i) sensitivity to glycine, D-serine, and D-cycloserine and (ii) and decrease in viability in phosphate-saline, argue for additional studies of this potential target, DGlcDAG synthase.
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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Michael Y. Kiriukhin and Dmitri V. Debabov made equal contributions to this paper.
The research was supported by Pharmacia postdoctoral fellowship AGRMT 3-25-97 to D.V.D. and by Public Health Service grant RO1 GM51623 to F.C.N.
We are especially grateful to Werner Fischer for DGlcDAG, discussions, and methodology. We also thank Brian Wilkinson and Rebecca Giorno-McConnell for discussions and methodology. We are indebted to Eugene W. Minner for his generous help in the Electron Microscope Facility of the Department of Neurobiology and Physiology, Northwestern University.
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FOOTNOTES |
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* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of Biochemistry, Molecular and Cell Biology, Northwestern University, 2153 Sheridan Road, Evanston, IL 60208. Phone: (847) 491-5656. Fax: (847) 467-1380. E-mail: f-neuhaus{at}northwestern.edu.
Present address: Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology,
University of Maryland, Baltimore MD 21201-1503.
Present address: Advanced Medicine, Inc., South San Francisco,
CA 94080.
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