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Journal of Bacteriology, January 2002, p. 610-613, Vol. 184, No. 2
0021-9193/01/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JB.184.2.610-613.2002
Copyright © 2002, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Identification of a Protein That Inactivates the Competence-Stimulating Peptide of Streptococcus pneumoniae
Mathieu Bergé,1 Hanno Langen,2 Jean-Pierre Claverys,1 and Bernard Martin1*
Laboratoire de Microbiologie et Génétique Moléculaire, UMR 5100 CNRS-Université Paul Sabatier, 31062 Toulouse Cedex, France,1
Hoffmann-La Roche Ltd., CH-4070 Basel, Switzerland2
Received 16 August 2001/
Accepted 26 October 2001

ABSTRACT
Competence for genetic transformation of
Streptococcus pneumoniae is a transient physiological property inducible by a competence-stimulating
peptide (CSP). A 68-kDa CSP-inactivating protein was previously
obtained following lithium chloride (LiCl) extraction. By the
same protocol, a CSP-inactivating protein was purified and identified
by matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization-time of flight
mass spectrometry as an endopeptidase, PepO. Analysis of a
pepO mutant provided no support for the hypothesis that PepO participates
in competence regulation. To reconcile in vitro and in vivo
data, we suggest that LiCl treatment results in the release
of intracellular molecules, including PepO.

INTRODUCTION
Competence for genetic transformation of the human pathogen
Streptococcus pneumoniae is a transient physiological property
regulated by a quorum-sensing system encoded by two genetic
loci,
comCDE and
comAB. The 17-amino-acid competence-stimulating
peptide (CSP) is the product of the
comC gene (
7) and is matured
and exported through ComA/ComB (
10). It acts via the two-component
ComD/ComE signal transduction system (
17). Genetic evidence
strongly suggests that ComD, a histidine kinase of 51 kDa, is
the CSP receptor (
8). However, Alloing et al. (
2) reported the
capacity of a
comCDE (noncompetent) mutant to delay the competence
of wild-type cells in a mixed-culture experiment, which suggested
a possible titration of CSP by a receptor different from ComD.
Previous reports also pointed to the possible existence of an
additional CSP receptor. Horne et al. (
9) isolated from membrane
fractions of noncompetent cells a protein of 68 kDa, called
activation inhibitory protein (AIP) because of its ability to
prevent the induction of competence (activation) following incubation
with activator preparations (now known to contain CSP). Moreover,
Fujii et al. (
6) partially purified this putative receptor from
living noncompetent cells by using a lithium chloride (LiCl)
extraction protocol believed to cause limited solubilization
of cell surface proteins.
In this study, using a similar extraction procedure, we identified the putative CSP receptor of Fujii et al. as a protein 67% identical to the PepO endopeptidase of Streptococcus thermophilus (3) and we investigated its role in competence development.

Release of a putative CSP-inactivating protein (CIP) from noncompetent cells treated with LiCl.
Proteins were released from noncompetent
S. pneumoniae R800
wild-type cells by using the LiCl extraction procedure of Fujii
et al. (
6). Briefly, 2 liters of bacteria (3
x 10
7 cells per
ml) grown in C+Y medium (
2) (without bovine serum albumin; pH
7), i.e., under acid growth conditions known to prevent competence
induction (
14), was harvested by centrifugation after cooling
to 4°C and resuspended in 0.1 volume of the same medium
containing 2 mM 2-mercaptoethanol, 2 M LiCl, and 50 mM Tris-HCl
(pH 7.8) instead of 50 mM K
2HPO
4. After incubation at 30°C
for 30 min, the supernatant was concentrated (approximately
100-fold) by dialysis against buffer A (50 mM Tris-HCl [pH 7.8],
75 mM NaCl, 3 mM 2-mercaptoethanol) with a Centricon Plus-80
Biomax-5 centrifugal filter device (Millipore). Typically, this
procedure releases about 2 mg of proteins (hereinafter termed
LiCl extract), which represents

2 to

4% of total proteins.
To evaluate the relative amounts of CIP present in LiCl extracts, an aliquot (1 to 5 µ l) was added to 50 µ l of transformation medium (2) containing CSP (5 ng/ml), incubated for 5 min at 37°C, and mixed with 50 µ l of R243 (comA::ermAM) cell suspension for 15 min at 37°C to allow competence induction (6). Competence levels were measured by transformation with chromosomal DNA carrying a streptomycin resistance (Smr) marker. In our experiments, 1 µ g (
1 µ l) of LiCl extract decreased the number of transformants to 0.01% of the control level (cells incubated with untreated CSP).
Identical results were obtained with LiCl extracts from R315 cells (R800, but with comCDE deleted), suggesting that ComD was not responsible for the observed effect (data not shown). This result prompted us to further characterize CIP.

Purification of CIP.
The putative CIP was purified by medium-pressure chromatography.
Two milligrams of R800 LiCl extract was applied to an anion-exchange
column (UNO Q-1; Bio-Rad). Bound proteins were eluted with 75
to 600 mM NaCl in buffer A. Fractions of 600 µ l were
collected, and 5 µ l of every other fraction was assayed
for the presence of CIP as described above. Fractions 18 to
24, eluted with 0.17 to 0.23 M NaCl, were shown to inactivate
CSP (Fig.
1). These fractions were pooled, and proteins were
separated by nondenaturing polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis
(PAGE). The gel was sliced and eluted into buffer A. Aliquots
were assayed for CIP and analyzed by sodium dodecyl sulfate
(SDS)-PAGE. CIP was essentially present in slice 4 (Fig.
2,
bottom panel) and appeared after SDS-PAGE as a single major
band (apparent molecular mass, 68 kDa), as revealed by colloidal
blue staining (Fig.
2, top panel).

Identification of the 68-kDa protein as PepO.
The 68-kDa protein was excised from an SDS-polyacrylamide gel
and digested with trypsin. The molecular masses of the peptides
thus produced were measured by matrix-assisted laser desorption
ionization-time of flight mass spectrometric analysis (
12) and
subsequently matched to entries in a computer-generated database
obtained from the in silico trypsin digestion of an
S. pneumoniae translated-nucleotide database (
http://www.tigr.org). A single
entry, SP1647 (
18), was found to match the experimental data.
The corresponding open reading frame (1,890 nucleotides) was
predicted to encode a protein of 630 amino acids. A search of
current databases with BLASTP (
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/BLAST/)
revealed that the predicted protein had significant sequence
homology to the pfam01431 M13 family of metalloendopeptidases
(
http://www.sanger.ac.uk/Software/Pfam) found among bacteria
and mammals. The highest sequence identities were with the PepO
endopeptidases of
S. thermophilus (
3),
Streptococcus parasanguinis (
5), and
Lactococcus lactis (
15) (67, 67, and 44%, respectively).
The COOH terminus of the pneumococcal PepO contains the canonical
zinc-dependent HEXXH consensus motif (amino acids 478 to 482),
as well as a conserved consensus sequence EXXA/GD (amino acids
538 to 542), in which the glutamate serves as the third zinc
ligand; both motifs are typical of this M13 peptidase family
(
19).
PepO has a theoretical isoelectric point of 4.72 and a predicted molecular mass of 71,899 Da, in good agreement with the pI of 4.2 and the molecular mass of 68 kDa determined for AIP by Horne et al. (9). In addition, PepO was eluted from UNO Q-1 with 0.19 M NaCl (see above), a value close to that reported for elution of AIP from DEAE-Sephadex (6). These observations suggested that PepO corresponds to the previously described AIP.

Is PepO a CIP?
To demonstrate that PepO was responsible for the inactivation
of CSP by LiCl extracts, a mutant strain was constructed by
disrupting the
pepO gene by insertion-duplication mutagenesis
(
4). The insertion-duplication plasmid pKO1969 consisted of
an internal region of the
pepO gene cloned into a nonreplicative
vector, pAS1, carrying an erythromycin resistance (Ery
r) marker
(
16).
S. pneumoniae R800 was transformed with pKO1969 DNA, and
a representative Ery
r transformant was retained as a
pepO mutant
(strain R361) after verification of its structure by PCR amplification
of the chromosome-vector junctions. As shown in Fig.
1, no CIP
was detected in LiCl extracts of strain R361. Moreover, examination
of fractions 18 to 24 by nondenaturing PAGE did not reveal the
presence of a 68-kDa band (data not shown). This led us to conclude
that CIP, purified as a 68-kDa species, corresponded to PepO
and that PepO was responsible for the inactivation of CSP by
LiCl extracts. Our observations are fully consistent with PepO
being the AIP previously characterized by Horne et al. (
9) and
subsequently by Fujii et al. (
6). The lactococcal PepO is able
to cleave substrates shorter than 20 amino acids at peptidic
bonds on the amino side of hydrophobic amino acids, preferentially
phenylalanine (F) (
13). The CSP contains three F residues (
7)
and may therefore be a substrate for the pneumococcal PepO.
Horne et al. (
9) noticed that AIP preparations showed no significant
protease activity. In this regard, it is of interest that enzymes
of the zinc metalloendopeptidase family function exclusively
as oligopeptidases (
19).

Role of PepO in S. pneumoniae competence.
To study the possible involvement of PepO in competence development,
we monitored the transformation profiles of cultures of R800
(wild type) and R361 (
pepO mutant). Figure
3 shows that a peak
of competence occurred at an optical density at 550 nm (OD
550)
of

0.1 for both strains, suggesting that neither quorum sensing
nor the timing of competence development was affected in the
pepO mutant. Finally, to determine whether PepO was responsible
for the delayed competence observed in mixed cultures of wild-type
and
comCDE cells by Alloing et al. (
2), we constructed a
pepO
comCDE mutant and cocultured it with a wild-type strain at a
2:1 or 3:1 ratio. The results were essentially identical to
those obtained with mixtures of
comCDE mutant and wild-type
cells; i.e., in both cases, the presence of mutant cells delayed,
or completely inhibited, the development of competence of the
wild-type cells (data not shown). Therefore, PepO does not act
as an additional receptor of CSP and could not titrate it. The
postulated alternative CSP receptor remains to be identified.
Alternatively, the competence delay observed under mixed-culture
conditions may result from the existence of a mechanism for
sensing growth conditions that impacts
comCDE expression, as
suggested by Alloing et al. (
2).

Further discussion and conclusion.
Several pieces of evidence suggest that PepO is indeed the AIP
previously detected by Horne et al. (
9). First, while we could
confirm that a CIP is released from noncompetent wild-type cells
by LiCl treatment, no CIP could be recovered from a
pepO mutant.
Second, PepO was extracted from noncompetent cells by an identical
procedure and showed physicochemical parameters, including pI
and molecular mass, similar to those previously described for
AIP (
6,
9). Third, AIP was described to be active against the
Streptococcus gordonii (Challis-Wicky) competence factor (
9).
Examination of the recently determined
S. gordonii CSP sequence
revealed the presence of two F residues (
8), indicating that
it could indeed be cleaved by the pneumococcal PepO. Nevertheless,
our data do not support the hypothesis that AIP is a surface
protein that participates in the control of competence induction.
No typical signal sequence for export was found in the predicted
sequence of PepO, suggesting that, like its orthologues from
S. thermophilus (
3),
S. parasanguinis (
5), and
L. lactis (
15),
it is a cytoplasmic protein.
How could a cytoplasmic protein be released by LiCl? Although LiCl treatment had only a slight effect on cell viability under dilute conditions, as previously reported (6), we observed a significant reduction in colony-forming ability after LiCl treatment under preparative conditions (data not shown). Hussain et al. (11) also observed a decrease in viability in LiCl-treated Staphylococcus epidermidis. They reported a concomitant release of DNA and intracellular proteins and suggested that LiCl treatment, normally used for selective solubilization of cell surface proteins, did not fully preserve cell envelope integrity. Their conclusion that LiCl extraction may not be the method of choice for selective surface molecule extraction from staphylococci can be extended to streptococci.
Can PepO play a role in competence regulation? It has been shown that mammalian metallopeptidases are responsible for the splitting of regulatory neuropeptides, such as metenkephalin (19). Although no regulatory role has yet been demonstrated for bacterial endopeptidases, since PepO could cleave CSP, it may play a physiological role in the development of competence. As a cytoplasmic protein, PepO may affect only nonexported CSP (pre-CSP) or mature CSP internalized through the Ami-Ali oligopeptide permease (1). However, there is so far no evidence that mature CSP is internalized. In addition, the similarity of competence profiles of wild-type and pepO mutant strains (Fig. 3) provides no support for the hypothesis of an intracellular role for PepO in the regulation of competence.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We thank Philippe Rousseau for his help with medium-pressure
chromatography and Garance Espagno for her participation in
some of the experiments.
This research was financed by the Programme de Recherche Fondamentale en Microbiologie, Maladies Infectieuses et Parasitaires and by the European Union (grant BIO4-CT98-0424). Mathieu Bergé was the recipient of a Ph.D. thesis fellowship from the Ministère de la Recherche.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: UMR 5100 CNRS-Université Paul Sabatier, 118 route de Narbonne, 31062 Toulouse Cedex, France. Phone: (33) 561.33.59.83. Fax: (33) 561.33.58.86. E-mail:
martin{at}ibcg.biotoul.fr.


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Journal of Bacteriology, January 2002, p. 610-613, Vol. 184, No. 2
0021-9193/01/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JB.184.2.610-613.2002
Copyright © 2002, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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