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Journal of Bacteriology, June 2002, p. 2987-2993, Vol. 184, No. 11
0021-9193/02/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JB.184.11.2987-2993.2002
Copyright © 2002, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Tânia M. Stevanin,1,2* Robert C. Read,2 and James W. B. Moir1
Department of Molecular Biology and Biotechnology, University of Sheffield, Western Bank, Sheffield S10 2TN,1 Division of Genomic Medicine, University of Sheffield Medical School, Sheffield S10 2RX, United Kingdom2
Received 31 January 2002/ Accepted 7 March 2002
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Colonization of the nasopharynx is the initial step in the pathogenesis of disease due to N. meningitidis. By deduction, invasive bacteria must avoid being killed in the nasopharynx, a tissue rich in mononuclear phagocytes, including resident macrophages (29). Macrophages kill bacteria by a number of mechanisms, including the oxidative burst, which is associated with release of reactive oxygen species. N. meningitidis expresses gene products to counteract oxidative stress (glutathione peroxidase [26] and possibly superoxide dismutase and catalase [2]). However, there is accumulating evidence that human macrophages also release nitric oxide (NO) in response to microbial products, including N. meningitidis lipopolysaccharide (4). As NO is a freely diffusible molecule, this effect could result in death or inhibition of intracellular and extracellular pathogenic bacteria (34). Despite this, there has been no investigation to date into mechanisms employed by N. meningitidis to counteract NO toxicity.
In addition to exerting toxic effects on invading bacteria, NO has been implicated in injury to the host microvasculature. A good example is meningitis, which can result in neurological deficit due to ischemic or inflammatory damage to the central nervous system (5, 22, 33). NO is also an intermediate in the denitrification pathway from nitrite (NO2-) to nitrous oxide (N2O).
It has been shown that in the closely related organism Neisseria gonorrhoeae, the expression of two genes, aniA, encoding a copper-containing nitrite reductase (9, 25), and norB, encoding a NO reductase (20), allows the gonococcus to grow anaerobically by denitrification. Hence, if the meningococcus, like N. gonorrhoeae (21), is capable of supplementing growth by using denitrification as an alternative to oxygen respiration, then the meningococcus may have to resist internally generated NO in addition to NO synthesized by the host.
We have identified two genetic loci within the N. meningitidis MC58 genome that contain putative genes involved in NO metabolism, which may be implicated in the pathogenesis of N. meningitidis. Cytochrome c' is encoded by gene NMB0923 (cycP) of the N. meningitidis MC58 genome (31). This gene is predicted to encode a 151-amino-acid polypeptide with similarity to cytochrome c' from other organisms (1). One distinctive characteristic is that instead of a cleavable signal sequence to direct the protein to the periplasm, it is predicted to contain a noncleavable sequence which directs the protein to the outer membrane, where it is covalently attached to a lipid moiety. As such the meningococcal cytochrome resides within the same cellular compartment as in other organisms but is more restricted in its movement.
Cytochrome c' contains a single heme, which is covalently attached towards the C terminus of the polypeptide (1). The function of cytochrome c' in Rhodobacter capsulatus is to bind and remove NO, hence lowering the toxicity due to this free radical (12, 13). This cytochrome may have a similar role in the meningococcus and possibly a role in evading the immune response of the host during infection.
The meningococcus also contains the genes necessary for the respiratory reduction of nitrite to nitrous oxide. The aniA gene product (NMB1623 of N. meningitidis MC58) (31) is expected to catalyze the reduction of nitrite to NO via a copper-type nitrite reductase as in the gonococcus (9, 25). Like cytochrome c', this protein is also predicted to be covalently attached to the outer membrane and to reside within the periplasm. In the gonococcus, aniA is induced by anaerobiosis, and this induction is enhanced by the presence of nitrite (19). Control of gene expression is regulated via FNR and NarP/Q (23). Adjacent to aniA and divergently transcribed is norB (NMB1622), which encodes a putative NO reductase responsible for reducing NO to nitrous oxide. The predicted NO reductase in N. meningitidis is very similar to those of the gonococcus (N. gonorrhoeae) (20) and Ralstonia eutropha (11). Unlike the NO reductases of other organisms, for example, Paracoccus denitrificans (14), these enzymes lack a c-heme-containing subunit that donates electrons to the subunit containing the active site, but there is an N-terminal extension which contains two putative membrane spans and probably acts as a quinol oxidase, which provides two electrons to the active site per quinol oxidized. Like those of N. gonorrhoeae, the gene products AniA and NorB of N. meningitidis are predicted to constitute a pathway that may enable the organism to grow under conditions of low oxygen in the presence of nitrite. NorB may also have the additional role of helping the organism evade the immune response of the host during infection by acting as an environmental buffer, thus keeping NO concentrations low.
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TABLE 1. Strains, plasmids, and primers
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cassette, encoding spectinomycin resistance, from pHP45
(28). Primers OMN and OMC, which are complementary to sequences within the
cassette, were used to sequence the junction for verification of the correct insertion of the
cassette into cycP. The resulting plasmid (pMA2) was used for construction of a cycP chromosomal mutant in MC58.
A similar approach was used to create a construct for insertional mutagenesis of norB. Primers MFA3 and MFA4 were used to amplify norB, which was subsequently cloned into pUC18 which had been linearized with SmaI, yielding pMA3. The
cassette was inserted into a StuI site within norB. The resulting plasmid (pMA4) was used for construction of a norB chromosomal mutant in MC58.
N. meningitidis was transformed according to the method of Seifert and coworkers (30). N. meningitidis MC58 was suspended in prewarmed MHB containing 10 mM MgCl2, at a final optical density at 600 nm of 0.2 to 0.3. Approximately 1 µg of plasmid DNA, typically 1/10 of the total volume, was then added to an aliquot of the colony suspension. The mixture was incubated at 37°C for 30 min, diluted (1 in 10) into fresh MHB containing 10 mM MgCl2 and 10 mM NaHCO3, and finally outgrown for 4 to 6 h at 37°C with gentle shaking (90 rpm). Aliquots of 100 µl of the transformation mixture were selected on blood agar containing spectinomycin and grown for 18 h. Resulting colonies were replica plated onto blood agar plates containing kanamycin (for cycP strains) or ampicillin (for norB strains). The presence of a chromosomal mutation in spectinomycin-resistant and kanamycin- and ampicillin-sensitive colonies was verified by colony PCR with primers MFA2 and OMN for N. meningitidis MA1 (cycP::
) and primers MFA4 and OMN for N. meningitidis MA2 (norB::
).
Analytical techniques. Cell extracts were prepared by repeated freeze-thaw treatments. Liquid culture (15 ml) was harvested, the pellet was resuspended in 0.5 ml of 100 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8), and a few grains of DNase I were added. The suspension was frozen at -20°C and thawed at room temperature. This procedure was repeated three times. Samples (25 µg) were run on sodium dodecyl sulfate-10% polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-10% PAGE) and stained for heme (15). Purified cytochrome c' (1 µg) from R. capsulatus was used as a control.
Nitrite was assayed colorimetrically with the Griess reagent (16), in 1-ml reaction mixtures containing 5 µl of cell suspension and 895 µl of a 1% sulfanilamide solution. The reaction was started with the addition of 100 µl of a 0.02% solution of N-naphthylenediamine. Absorbance was measured at 540 nm.
Inhibition of oxygen respiration by NO was monitored with a Clark-type oxygen electrode (Rank Brothers, Bottisham, United Kingdom) as described previously (12). NO was assayed with an iso-NO electrode (World Precision Instruments). Saturated solutions of NO in water were generated by sparging anaerobic water (in a 10-ml Bijou container fitted with a rubber septum) with NO gas (Aldrich, Poole, United Kingdom).
The effects of the NO donors sodium nitroprusside (SNP), S-nitrosoglutathione (GSNO), and S-nitrosopenicillamine (SNAP) were assessed. Dilutions of freshly grown liquid cultures of N. meningitidis were spread onto GC agar plates containing 2% Vitox and the NO donors. Plates were incubated in an atmosphere of 5% CO2 at 37°C.
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Cultures were set up for aerobic and microaerobic growth in both the presence and absence of 5 mM nitrite, which may be able to supplement growth by acting as an alternative electron acceptor to oxygen. The results of growth of N. meningitidis strains MC58 (wild type), MA1 (cycP), and MA2 (norB) under each condition are presented in Fig. 1. The growth rates and growth yields of MC58 and MA1 were greater in the presence of nitrite than in its absence. Conversely, the norB strain was unable to grow microaerobically in the presence of nitrite. As expected, nitrite became depleted during microaerobic growth in cultures of MC58 and MA1 supplemented with 5 mM nitrite (Fig. 2), but this was not observed during growth of MA2. From these data we can conclude that under microaerobic conditions (i) nitrite enhances growth of N. meningitidis and (ii) in the absence of a NO reductase N. meningitidis has impaired growth in the presence of nitrite. Under aerobic growth conditions the presence of nitrite impairs growth of all the N. meningitidis strains (Fig. 1), most markedly the norB strain, which is incapable of aerobic growth in the presence of nitrite. Householder et al. (20) demonstrated that exogenous addition of 2 mM nitrite is more toxic to the gonococcus than endogenously produced NO, although they did not show how much NO is actually produced by reduction of nitrite by aniA. Therefore, it may be assumed that, as in the gonococcus, it is the presence of nitrite which inhibits growth of aerobic cultures in the meningococcus. However, we cannot at present rule out the possibility of sufficient NO being synthesized from nitrite under aerobic conditions (via nitrite reductase) to inhibit aerobic growth of all the N. meningitidis strains. That nitrite is reduced to NO is supported by the data in Fig. 2, which shows removal of nitrite from aerobic cultures over the growth period. The NO produced from nitrite disappeared in all the strains, presumably by reaction with oxygen. However, the steady-state NO concentration in N. meningitidis MA2 is likely to be much higher than in the other strains due to the absence of NorB. The other N. meningitidis strains also grow poorly aerobically in the presence of nitrite, likely because the activity of NO reductase is low even in these strains. Competition for electrons by the oxidases active under aerobic conditions probably prevents enough of the electrons necessary for NO reduction from reaching the NO reductase. Nitrate at 5 mM does not affect the growth of N. meningitidis strains either aerobically or anaerobically (data not shown).
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FIG. 1. Effect of nitrite on growth of N. meningitidis. Growth curves for wild-type (A and D), cycP (B and E), and norB (C and F) strains grown aerobically (A, B, and C) and microaerobically (D, E, and F) in the presence (triangles) and absence (squares) of 5 mM nitrite are shown. Results are means from at least four experiments ± standard deviations. OD600, optical density at 600 nm
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FIG. 2. Nitrite utilization by N. meningitidis. Time courses of nitrite concentration in wild-type (filled squares), cycP (open squares), and norB (filled triangles) cultures grown aerobically (A) or microaerobically (B) in the presence of 5 mM nitrite are shown. Results are means from at least four experiments ± standard deviations.
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FIG. 3. Metabolism of nitrite and NO by N. meningitidis. NO concentration was measured with an iso-NO electrode (World Precision Instruments). Suspensions containing 3 ml of N. meningitidis at a concentration of 0.1 mg of protein ml-1 in MHB were sparged with nitrogen gas until anaerobic in a 7-ml water-jacketed chamber kept at 30°C. The cell suspension was stirred with a magnetic flea, and the chamber was kept anaerobic with a rubber septum through which the NO electrode probe was inserted. Traces show the effects of 1 mM nitrite on wild-type (A) and norB (B) strains and the effect of 8 µM NO on cycP (C) and norB (D) strains.
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FIG. 5. Oxygen and NO measurements in MC58, MA1, and MA2. Oxygen disappearance was measured with a Clark electrode (solid lines) while NO was measured simultaneously (dashed lines). The chamber of the oxygen electrode contained 3 ml of wild-type (A), cycP (B), or norB (C) N. meningitidis strains at a concentration of 0.5 mg protein ml-1 in MHB. The NO electrode was inserted into the chamber stopper such that there was no headspace within the reaction vessel. Arrows mark the additions of 9.3 µM NO at an oxygen concentration of 120 µM.
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FIG. 4. Evidence for expression of holocytochrome c'. Samples were run on SDS-10% PAGE and stained for proteins containing covalently bound hemes. Lane 1, 1 µg of cytochrome c' purified from R. capsulatus used as a control hemoprotein; lane 2, 25 µg of total soluble extract from wild-type N. meningitidis (cytochrome c' is marked by an arrow); lane 3, 25 µg of total soluble extract from N. meningitidis cycP.
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TABLE 2. Sensitivity of meningococci to NO donors
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FIG. 6. Lack of effect of oxygen concentration on the period of inhibition by NO. The effects of NO on respiration rates of wild-type N. meningitidis are shown. Arrows indicate the point at which NO (9.3 µM) was added to the oxygen electrode chamber. The reaction chamber contained 3 ml of wild-type N. meningitidis at a concentration of 0.5 mg of protein ml-1 in MHB. Oxygen concentration had no effect on the period of inhibition by NO.
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Complete denitrification is the reduction of nitrate to dinitrogen gas, catalyzed by four distinct enzymes: nitrate reductase (nitrate to nitrite), nitrite reductase (nitrite to NO), NO reductase (NO to nitrous oxide), and nitrous oxide reductase (nitrous oxide to dinitrogen) (reviewed in reference 3). It was important to determine how much denitrification is possible in N. meningitidis. Databases containing the complete genome sequences of N. meningitidis MC58 (a group B strain) and N. meningitidis Z2491 (a group A strain) were searched using BlastP and TBlastN at http://tigrblast.tigr.org/cmr-blast/. There are two genetically distinct types of dissimilatory nitrate reductases, a membrane-bound enzyme, NAR, and a periplasmic enzyme, NAP. Searches with narG (encoding the large subunit of NAR) and napA (encoding the large subunit of NAP) from E. coli yielded no significant hits. We concluded that N. meningitidis does not contain any gene similar to those for known dissimilatory nitrate reductases. This is in keeping with our finding that N. meningitidis cannot use nitrate to promote respiratory growth under anaerobic conditions. There are two types of nitrite reductase involved in denitrification, a copper-containing enzyme (Cu-NiR) and a heme-containing enzyme (cd1-NiR). Searches using cd1-NiR from Pseudomonas stutzeri and Cu-NiR from Achromobacter cycloclastes revealed that N. meningitidis possesses the gene for Cu-NiR only (aniA). N. meningitidis also contains a gene for NO reductase (norB). Searching with nosZ (the structural gene for N2O reductase) from R. eutropha showed no evidence for N2O reductase in N. meningitidis. We also searched for a multiheme nitrite reductase (nrfA) using the gene from E. coli. The multiheme nitrite reductase reduces nitrite to ammonia and can help support respiratory growth under anaerobic conditions. However, Blast searches revealed no genes with significant similarity in N. meningitidis. Other proteins associated with denitrification are the cupredoxins azurin and pseudoazurin, encoded by azu and paz, respectively. N. meningitidis contains a gene with significant similarity to azu from Pseudomonas aeruginosa but no paz-like gene. azu in N. meningitidis encodes a protein predicted to be attached to the outer membrane.
Dedicated denitrifiers such as Paracoccus denitrificans and the denitrifying pseudomonads contain upwards of 40 genes which are involved in the synthesis of the apparatus necessary for denitrification (structural genes for the enzymes are supplemented by many genes required for assembly of nitrate reductase, nitrous oxide reductase, and cd1-NiR and many regulatory genes). Our analysis of the N. meningitidis genomes indicates that it possesses only a few genes (aniA, norB, fnr, narP, narQ, and azu) which are likely to be involved in denitrification (in other organisms azu is not strictly required for denitrification but it can transfer electrons to the denitrifying reductases). N. meningitidis as such represents a minimal denitrifier; it can carry out the two central reactions of the pathway and use these activities to support its growth, but the cost of maintaining this capability is a very small amount of genome space.
It is possible that the capacity of N. meningitidis to grow by denitrification may be physiologically relevant to its lifestyle in vivo. During mucosal invasion the organism is likely to encounter microenvironments of reduced oxygen concentration in which meningococcal survival and growth will be enhanced by the capacity to denitrify. During meningococcal sepsis, severely impaired tissues may be inadequately perfused with oxygenated blood, yet the denitrifying bacteria may continue to proliferate. In the related organism N. gonorrhoeae, the expression of anaerobically induced aniA is high during the disease state (10), suggesting that, at least in that case, the organism adapts to anaerobic conditions within genital mucosa.
In addition to its role in denitrification, NorB has been shown to have a role in protection of N. meningitidis against exogenously added NO and NO-related compounds. A second gene product, CycP (cytochrome c'), also appears to afford some protection against this toxic free radical. This protection against NO may be physiologically relevant, since the macrophages of the human host may produce NO in order to kill invading microorganisms. Resistance of N. meningitidis against NO may thus have implications for the ability of this organism to survive and cause disease. As well as protecting the organism from the toxic effects of NO, the NO removal systems may have further implications for the normal physiology of the infected human host, as NO is a potent vasodilatory agent (6). If N. meningitidis depletes tissues of NO, then the blood flow may decrease and tissues may fail to be perfused with oxygen. Meningococcal disease causes localized tissue hypoxia, and perhaps this is, in part, due to dysregulation of vasomotor tone as a result of decrease in local NO concentrations in peripheral tissues via microbial NO metabolism. Further detailed studies of both control of gene expression by global regulators and analysis of the promoter region will be required to determine the molecular basis of the differences in regulation between the closely related meningococcus and gonococcus. This may lead to further understanding of how two closely related organisms adapt to differing habitats and are associated with such distinctive disease phenotypes in humans.
Present address: Veterinary Laboratories Agency (Weybridge), Department of Bacterial Diseases, New Haw, Addlestone, Surrey KT15 3NB, United Kingdom. ![]()
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2
8)-linked polysialic acid capsule of group B Neisseria meningitidis modifies multiple steps during interaction with human macrophages. Infect. Immun. 64:3210-3217.[Abstract]
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