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Journal of Bacteriology, February 2001, p. 1495-1498, Vol. 183, No. 4
0021-9193/01/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JB.183.4.1495-1498.2001
Copyright © 2001, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
OmpC Is the Receptor for Gifsy-1 and Gifsy-2 Bacteriophages
of Salmonella
Theresa D.
Ho and
James M.
Slauch*
Department of Microbiology, University of
Illinois, Urbana, Illinois 61801
Received 18 August 2000/Accepted 14 November 2000
 |
ABSTRACT |
Mutations in the Salmonella enterica serovar
Typhimurium ompC gene conferred resistance to Gifsy-1
and Gifsy-2 bacteriophages. Selection for complementing plasmids
yielded clones of ompC. Introduction of an
ompC clone into Escherichia coli
conferred the ability to adsorb Gifsy phage. These data show that OmpC
is the receptor for Gifsy-1 and Gifsy-2 phages.
 |
TEXT |
Two inducible prophages, Gifsy-1 and
Gifsy-2, contribute to virulence in Salmonella enterica
serovar Typhimurium. The Gifsy-1 and Gifsy-2 bacteriophages are
partially homologous to each other but are heteroimmune and integrate
at different sites in the chromosome, 57 and 23.8 centisomes,
respectively (7). Serovar Typhimurium strains cured of
Gifsy-2 are significantly attenuated in mice. Virulence factors encoded
on Gifsy-2 include SodCI, a periplasmic superoxide dismutase
(3, 6), and SseI/SrfH (12, 21), a
protein secreted by a host-contact-dependent secretion system (12). The Gifsy-2 phage also harbors an antivirulence
gene, grvA, that decreases the virulence of serovar
Typhimurium (8). The Gifsy-1 phage carries the
gipA gene, which affects the ability of serovar Typhimurium
to grow within Peyer's patches in the small intestine of mice
(19).
Isolation of Gifsy-2-resistant mutants.
Previously, we found
that the use of a galE derivative of a doubly cured
(Gifsy-1- and Gifsy-2-cured) strain as a recipient resulted in a
higher plating efficiency and larger plaques for both Gifsy-1
and Gifsy-2 phages (8). In adsorption assays (see below),
a galE mutant adsorbed Gifsy-2 phage 14-fold more
efficiently than the isogenic galE+ strain.
The UDP-galactose permease encoded by galE is required for
synthesis of the outer core and the O antigen of
lipopolysaccharide (11). These results suggested that the
receptor(s) for the Gifsy phage was an outer membrane protein that, in
the wild-type background, is partially blocked by the O antigen.
To identify the outer membrane receptor for Gifsy-2, we isolated
serovar Typhimurium mutants that were resistant to Gifsy-2 phage.
Because it is difficult to generate high-titer lysates of Gifsy-1 or
Gifsy-2 phage, we have been unable to isolate clear-plaque mutants.
Therefore, we performed an enrichment procedure for phage-resistant mutants. Four independent pools of greater than 10,000 MudCm insertions in the galE Gifsy-1- and Gifsy-2-cured strain were generated
(5) and subcultured (1:100) in 2 ml of Luria-Bertani
(LB) medium containing 20 µg of chloramphenicol
ml
1. After 3 to 4 h at 37°C,
approximately 5 × 105
sodCI::aph Gifsy-2 phage were added to
each pool. The sodCI::aph insertion
confers kanamycin resistance but does not have an effect on Gifsy-2
phage production (8). A significant fraction of the
phage-infected cells should have lysed in the overnight culture. Phage-resistant mutants and lysogens of Gifsy-2, which would be kanamycin resistant, should have survived. After overnight incubation at 37°C, the pools were subcultured (1:100) in LB medium for 3.5 h. To induce lysis of strains lysogenized by Gifsy-2, a 35-µl aliquot
of 0.3% H2O2 was added to
each pool, which was then incubated overnight at 37°C. This procedure
was repeated six times.
Following this enrichment procedure for phage-resistant mutants,
each pool was diluted and plated on LB-chloramphenicol agar.
Eight
colonies from each independent pool were isolated and scored
for
kanamycin resistance to ensure that they were not Gifsy-2
lysogens. All tested colonies were chloramphenicol resistant and
kanamycin sensitive. There were no detectable plaques when 5 ×
10
5 Gifsy-2 phage were spotted on top agar
lawns of these strains.
Spotting phage onto a lawn of the
galE Gifsy-1- and Gifsy-2-cured
parent strain resulted in a
confluent zone of
clearing.
P22 lysates were grown on one representative strain from each pool and
used to transduce the MudCm insertions into the
galE Gifsy-1- and Gifsy-2-cured parent strain. Characterization of
the
resulting transductants showed that all four independent MudCm
insertions conferred resistance to both Gifsy-2 and Gifsy-1 phages,
as
determined by a plaque assay. The data suggested that Gifsy-2
and
Gifsy-1 phages use the same
receptor.
Next, we demonstrated that the MudCm insertion mutations did not
affect Gifsy phage replication or assembly. Each MudCm mutation
was
moved into a wild-type Gifsy-1- and Gifsy-2-containing
background
and a Gifsy-1-cured and Gifsy-2-containing
background. The titers
of at least six independent overnight
cultures of each strain
were determined for Gifsy-1 and Gifsy-2 phages.
All of the strains
containing the MudCm insertions produced the same
titer of Gifsy-1
or Gifsy-2 phage as the isogenic parent strain
(~10
6 Gifsy-1 phage PFU
ml
1; ~10
5 Gifsy-2 phage
PFU ml
1). These results suggested that the
MudCm insertions did not block
phage production but rather caused loss
of the Gifsy phage
receptor.
Gifsy-resistant mutations affect ompC.
To
determine the locations of the MudCm insertions, we used semirandom PCR
(1) to generate DNA templates and determined the DNA
sequence from the left end of each MudCm insertion. The MudCm markers were inserted in sspH2, napC,
yojI, and rcsC. We noted that all of these
insertions were near ompC, which encodes a major outer
membrane porin protein. We subsequently determined that the MudCm
insertions were 100% linked by P22 transduction to the known
ompC396::Tn10 insertion
(4). The simplest explanation for these results was that
each of the MudCm insertions was associated with a deletion that
extended through ompC, and it was the loss of the OmpC porin
that resulted in phage resistance.
Selection for plasmids that complement Gifsy phage resistance.
To further identify the defect conferred by the MudCm insertions, we
selected plasmids that would complement the mutations and restore phage
sensitivity. Each of the MudCm insertions was transduced into a
galE Gifsy-1- and Gifsy-2-cured strain containing the
zjg-8103::pir allele (9),
which allows for the replication of Pi-dependent plasmids. The
resulting strains were transformed with a library of random 5-kb
serovar Typhimurium chromosomal fragments in plasmid pGP704
(13). Each transformation mixture was divided into
four pools and grown overnight in LB medium containing 50 µg of
ampicillin ml
1. These pools were then
subcultured 1:100 in the same medium for 4 h. Approximately
5 × 105
sodCI::aph Gifsy-2 phage were
added to each culture, which was then incubated for 3 to 4 h at
room temperature without agitation. The mixture was then plated on LB
agar containing 50 µg of kanamycin ml
1 to
select for Gifsy-2 lysogens. For each MudCm mutant, we obtained 1 to 5 kanamycin-resistant colonies. The kanamycin-resistant colonies simultaneously became Gifsy-1 phage sensitive, as determined by a
plaque assay. Nontransformed MudCm insertion strains never yielded kanamycin-resistant colonies in control experiments.
Restriction analysis suggested that the complementing plasmids isolated
in the four independent MudCm insertion mutants all
contained the same
3-kb chromosomal insert. Therefore, one of
these plasmids, pTH73, was
characterized further. DNA sequences
of the ends of the chromosomal
insert were obtained using plasmid
primers. The data showed that
plasmid pTH73 contained the entire
ompC gene and partial
fragments of the
yojN and
aphE genes. To
show
more clearly that the
ompC gene was responsible for
complementing
the Gifsy phage resistance phenotype, we deleted a
fragment (372
bp) of the
aphE gene on plasmid pTH73 to
create plasmid pTH77,
which contains the entire
ompC gene,
less than 400 bp of the
aphE gene, and less than 100 bp of
the
yojN gene. Plasmid pTH77 was
moved into each
pir+ MudCm insertion mutant. In all
instances, the
ompC+ plasmid was able to
restore sensitivity to both Gifsy-1 and Gifsy-2
phages to wild-type
levels, as determined by plaque assays. These
data confirmed that the
loss of the OmpC protein in the MudCm
insertion mutants conferred
resistance to Gifsy
phage.
Phage resistance phenotype of an ompC insertion
mutant.
The data presented above suggested that OmpC is the
receptor for Gifsy-1 and Gifsy-2 phages. However, the MudCm insertions are apparently associated with deletions that remove genes
surrounding ompC. Therefore, we characterized the
phenotypes conferred by a known ompC mutation,
ompC396::Tn10 (4).
This insertion was moved into the galE Gifsy-1- and
Gifsy-2-cured strain by P22 transduction. First, we examined OmpC
production in the ompC396::Tn10 strain and the MudCm insertion strains. Outer membrane proteins from the
Gifsy-resistant mutants and the plasmid-complemented strains were
isolated as previously described (14) and displayed on an 11% polyacrylamide gel containing 4 M urea
(10). All of the MudCm mutants (one representative is
shown) and the ompC396::Tn10 mutant
lacked the 36-kDa OmpC protein; strains containing the ompC+ plasmid isolated from the Gifsy
sensitivity selection procedure overexpressed this outer membrane
protein (Fig. 1).

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FIG. 1.
Outer membrane proteins from the Gifsy-resistant mutants
and the ompC+ plasmid-complemented strains.
The region of the gel corresponding to 30- to 40-kDa proteins is shown.
All Salmonella strains were galE496
Gifsy-1- and Gifsy-2-cured derivatives of serovar Typhimurium strain
14028 (8). Plasmid-bearing strains also contained the
zjg-8103::pir+allele
(9). Lanes: A, E. coli
(DH5 pir+); B,
pompC+ in E.
coli ("p" before the gene indicates that the gene was
carried on a plasmid); C,
ompC+; D, pompC+
in ompC+; E,
ompC396::Tn10;
F, pompC+ in
ompC396::Tn10; G,
[(sspH2)*MudCm*(ompC)]; H,
pompC+ in
[(sspH2)*MudCm*(ompC)].
|
|
No detectable Gifsy-1 or Gifsy-2 plaques were observed when the
ompC396::Tn
10 mutant was used as a
recipient in plaque assays
(Table
1).
This defect was complemented to approximately wild-type
levels by the
ompC+ plasmid pTH77. We performed
adsorption assays to test directly
if the
ompC mutation
affected phage binding. A 100-µl aliquot
of an overnight bacterial
culture was centrifuged, and the cells
were resuspended in 0.1 ml of LB
medium containing approximately
10
6 Gifsy-1 or
Gifsy-2 phage. The mixture was allowed to stand at
room temperature for
1 h. Approximately 50 µl of chloroform was
added, and the sample
was vortexed and immediately centrifuged
to pellet cells and adsorbed
phage. The number of phage remaining
in suspension was determined by
plating dilutions on lawns of
phage-sensitive bacteria. The
ompC+ parent strain adsorbed greater than
99% of both Gifsy-1 and Gifsy-2
phages. In contrast, the
ompC mutant adsorbed less than 0.5% of
Gifsy-1 or Gifsy-2
phage. The
ompC+ plasmid restored
adsorption to wild-type levels (Table
1). Finally,
we determined the
frequency of lysogeny as described above using
the
sodCI::
aph Gifsy-2 phage or a
grvB::
kan Gifsy-1 phage (T.
D. Ho, C. D. Ellermeier, and J. M. Slauch, unpublished data),
both of which confer resistance to kanamycin. There were no detectable
lysogens of either Gifsy-1 or Gifsy-2 when the
ompC galE
Gifsy-1-
and Gifsy-2-cured mutant was used as a recipient. As expected,
the
ompC+ plasmid restored the ability of
the recipient to become lysogenized.
Thus, mutations in
ompC
confer a Gifsy-1- and Gifsy-2-resistant
phenotype. An
ompC
mutant does not adsorb phage and cannot be
lysogenized. A
galE+ ompC Gifsy-1- and
Gifsy-2-cured mutant also could not be lysogenized
by either Gifsy-1 or
Gifsy-2 (data not shown), showing that the
phage resistance phenotype
is due solely to the loss of OmpC and
is not dependent on the
O-antigen defect.
Salmonella OmpC allows Gifsy-1 and Gifsy-2 phage to
be adsorbed by Escherichia coli.
We tested Gifsy
phage sensitivity in a restriction-negative E. coli strain
with and without the Salmonella ompC+
plasmid. Neither Gifsy phage was able to cause plaque formation or
lysogenize E. coli strain
DH5
pir+ (Table 1). This strain
is sensitive to the OmpC-specific E. coli phage SS4
(16) and therefore produces OmpC. Although there was some
variability in the assay, the level of adsorption of Gifsy-1 or
Gifsy-2 by DH5
pir+ was not
significantly different from that observed with the serovar Typhimurium
ompC strain. However, when plasmid pTH77 was brought into
DH5
pir+ (Fig. 1), the resulting
strain was able to adsorb greater than 99% of both Gifsy-1 and Gifsy-2
phages (Table 1).
When Gifsy-1 and Gifsy-2 phages were spotted on lawns of
DH5

pir+/pTH77, no plaques were
observed. We also did not detect any lysogens
of the Gifsy-1 phage.
However, the DH5

pir+/pTH77 recipient
could be lysogenized by the kanamycin-resistant
Gifsy-2 phage at a low
but detectable frequency (Table
1). Thus,
Gifsy-2 was able to enter
E. coli cells bearing the serovar Typhimurium
ompC+ plasmid. Because the
DH5

pir+ strain is
recA and Gifsy phage induction is RecA dependent
(T.
D. Ho, L. Shaughnessy, and J. M. Slauch, unpublished
data), the
Gifsy-2 prophage was moved by P1 transduction into a
recA+ E. coli strain (MC4100)
(
17). The resulting
recA+
E. coli lysogen (JS198) of Gifsy-2 was not able to produce
Gifsy-2
phage, as detected by phage plaque or lysogeny assays with
sensitive
E. coli
(DH5

pir+/pTH77) or serovar
Typhimurium (JS178) as the recipient. Thus,
E. coli lysogens
of Gifsy-2 were incapable of producing Gifsy-2
phage. These results are
consistent with our observation that
Gifsy-2 was incapable of causing
the formation of plaques on a
lawn of
E. coli expressing
serovar Typhimurium OmpC. Taken together,
these results further
showed that serovar Typhimurium OmpC is
the receptor for both Gifsy-1
and Gifsy-2 phages. Clearly, both
phages are adsorbed by
E. coli cells that express
Salmonella OmpC.
However, the
production of phage requires both the presence of
and an appropriate
interaction with certain host factors. Lysogeny
also requires host
functions and an appropriate site in the genome.
It is not surprising
that
E. coli does not meet all of these requirements
for
Gifsy-1 and Gifsy-2.
Although osmoregulation of
E. coli ompC has been well
documented (
18),
Salmonella does not appear to
regulate porin expression
in response to osmolarity. In
S. enterica serovar Typhi,
ompC is expressed at
high levels in the presence of both low osmolarity
and high osmolarity
(
15). We have also found that
ompC-lacZ fusions
are not osmoregulated in serovar Typhimurium (unpublished
data). Thus,
the receptor for Gifsy-1 and Gifsy-2 phages is most
likely available in
the presence of different osmolarity
conditions.
The fact that
E. coli OmpC does not bind Gifsy phage
suggests that the phage binding sites are located in regions that
differ
between the two OmpC proteins. Serovar Typhimurium OmpC and
E. coli OmpC are 83% identical and 86% similar at the
protein level.
The structure of the related protein OmpF from
E. coli is known
(
2), and the OmpC structure can be
inferred by aligning the
two sequences. The porin proteins are trimeric
structures in which
each monomer forms a

barrel in the outer
membrane, with certain
loops that connect

sheets being exposed to
the external medium
(
2). Most of the differences in
sequence between the serovar
Typhimurium and
E. coli OmpC
proteins are in these surface-exposed
loops, which correspond
approximately to amino acids 25 to 29,
63 to 69, 154 to 168, 248 to
258, and 332 to 344 in the mature
serovar Typhimurium protein.
Differences between the serovar Typhimurium
and
E. coli
proteins are particularly evident in the loop from
amino acids 154 to
168, in which
E. coli OmpC has an extra six
amino acids, and
the loop from amino acids 248 to 258, in which
the
E. coli
protein is missing nine amino acids. Vakharia and
Misra
(
20) used three OmpC-specific phages to isolate mutations
affecting
E. coli OmpC. Interestingly, 23 of 24 of these
phage-resistant
mutations altered amino acids in these two loops of the
protein.
These differences in surface-exposed regions are likely to
account
for the inability of
E. coli OmpC to adsorb the
Gifsy
phages.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
We thank Nara Figueroa-Bossi and Lionella Bossi for strains and
helpful discussions and Rajeev Misra for helpful advice.
This work was supported by NIH grant AI37530.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of
Microbiology, University of Illinois, B103 Chemical and Life Sciences Laboratory, 601 S. Goodwin Ave., Urbana, IL 61801. Phone: (217) 244-1956. Fax: (217) 244-6697. E-mail: j-slauch{at}uiuc.edu.
 |
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Journal of Bacteriology, February 2001, p. 1495-1498, Vol. 183, No. 4
0021-9193/01/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JB.183.4.1495-1498.2001
Copyright © 2001, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
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