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Journal of Bacteriology, July 2003, p. 3918-3925, Vol. 185, No. 13
0021-9193/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JB.185.13.3918-3925.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Department of Microbiology, Groningen Biomolecular Sciences and Biotechnology Institute, University of Groningen, 9751 NN Haren, The Netherlands
Received 4 November 2002/ Accepted 21 April 2003
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One of the best-studied type IV prepilin peptidases is PilD from Pseudomonas aeruginosa, a bifunctional enzyme that both cleaves and N-methylates the pilin precursor PilA (36). Whereas methylation is not necessary for pilus function (29), cleavage is an essential activity, as PilD mutants are defective in pilus assembly and accumulate uncleaved PilA precursors in the cytoplasmic membrane (28). Because of the similarity between prepilin and archaeal preflagellin signal sequences, the presence of a gene coding for an enzyme similar to PilD was expected in archaeal genomes. This assumption was recently confirmed by the cloning of FlaK, the preflagellin peptidase from Methanococcus maripaludis (4). However, FlaK and its archaeal homologs show only a very low similarity to bacterial type IV prepilin peptidases, possibly because the bacterial enzyme is bifunctional, while there is no evidence for a modified amino acid at the +1 position of mature archaeal flagellins (12, 40).
In this study, we have employed an in vitro assay to monitor type IV prepilin-like signal peptidase activity in isolated S. solfataricus membranes. This assay allowed the biochemical demonstration of processing activity toward the precursor forms of flagellin (preFlaB) and glucose-binding protein (preGlcS). We identify a candidate gene in the S. solfataricus genome that encodes a membrane protein that has weak homology to PilD. When expressed in E. coli, processing of both preFlaB and preGlcS could be demonstrated. This finding and a further analysis of the substrate specificity of this enzyme, termed PibD (for peptidase involved in biogenesis of prepilin-like proteins), suggest that S. solfataricus employs a single type IV prepilin-like peptidase to process a broad range of precursor proteins.
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(17) was used for all cloning steps. E. coli strains BL21(DE3) (Novagen, Madison, Wis.) and C43 (DE3) (27) were used for the overproduction of protein. Both strains carry the pACYC-RIL plasmid that encodes additional tRNAs for rare codons (Stratagene, La Jolla, Calif.). Isolation of membranes. To prepare membranes of E. coli, cells were resuspended in 50 mM Tris-Cl (pH 7.5) and 1 mM EDTA containing a small amount of DNaseI. The suspension was subsequently passed through a French pressure cell at 800 lb/in2. Unbroken cells were removed by centrifugation at 3,000 x g for 15 min at 4°C, and membranes were collected by ultracentrifugation (90,000 x g, 40 min at 4°C; Beckman TLA 100.4 rotor). Cytoplasmic and outer membranes were separated by sucrose gradient centrifugation (90,000 x g, 40 min, 4°C) (20), subsequently washed with 20 mM morpholineethanesulfonic acid (MES; pH 6.5), and stored at -80°C. S. solfataricus membranes were prepared as described previously (12).
Cloning and plasmid construction. Chromosomal DNA from S. solfataricus was isolated by CsCl-buoyant density centrifugation (31). Plasmids and vectors described below are summarized in Table 1. Oligonucleotide primers for the PCR amplification of flaB (SSO2323), glcS, and pibD (SSO0131) were designed based on the genome sequence of S. solfataricus P2 (http://www-archbac.u-psud.fr/projects/sulfolobus/). The forward primer of flaB (5'-CCCCGAATTCATGAACTCCAAAAAGATG for the version corresponding to the annotated open reading frame [ORF] and 5'-CCCCCCATGGTAAAGGAATACAAC for the version lacking the first five amino acids [restriction sites are underlined]) contained a BspHI or NcoI restriction site, respectively. The reverse primer (5'-CCCCGGATCCCCCTATTACTGATACGCTACCC) contained a recognition sequence for BamHI. Additionally, the native stop codon was deleted with the reverse primer to enable in-frame fusion to a C-terminal epitope tag. The digested PCR products of 924 and 908 bp, respectively, were ligated into the NcoI/BamHI sites of the T7 promoter expression vector pSA4, yielding plasmids pZA1 and pZA2 containing C-terminally hexa-histidine-tagged short and long versions of flaB, respectively. The expression vector pSA4 was constructed based on the pET15b expression vector (Novagen). The unique EcoRI and HindIII in pET15b sites were removed by digestion with the corresponding enzymes followed by a fill-in reaction with Pwo DNA polymerase (Roche Diagnostics, Mannheim, Germany) and religation. Subsequently, the multiple cloning site from pET400 (kindly provided by Karel van Wely) was inserted as a 46-bp NcoI-XhoI fragment, thereby introducing new EcoRI and HindIII sites downstream from the T7 promoter and removing the N-terminal epitope tag of the vector. To delete unwanted restriction sites, this vector was digested with BamHI and XhoI, the cohesive ends of the vector were filled up with Pwo DNA polymerase, and the product was religated, yielding pSA3. Finally, a 392-bp EcoRI-HindIII fragment from pAMP42 (kindly provided by Antonia Picon) was integrated into the corresponding restriction sites of pSA3, thereby introducing a C-terminal hexa-His tag in frame with a BamHI restriction site. This vector was designated pSA4 and is suitable for cloning and expression of ORFs provided as NcoI-BamHI or BspHI-BamHI fragments.
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TABLE 1. Plasmids used in this study
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The gene for glcS was amplified with the primers 5'-CCCCCCCGAATTCATGAAAAGGAAGTACCCGTATAG (forward, containing BspHI site) and 5'-CCCCCCGGATCCCTTCAAGAGATAGTATTTATTGTC (reverse, containing BamHI). Again, the native stop codon was deleted. The PCR product was cloned into the vector pSA5, which contains a trc promoter and adds a C-terminal hexa-His tag in frame with the BamHI restriction site, yielding pET2120. pSA5 was constructed by the ligation of the 392-bp BamHI-HindIII fragment from pAMP42 into the expression vector pET324 (42), thereby allowing us to add a C-terminal hexa-His tag in frame with the BamHI restriction site. pET2152 was obtained by removing an 822-bp NcoI fragment from pET2120 that is located in the ORF of glcS by restriction digest with NcoI. After religation of the plasmid, the ORF was restored, resulting in the truncated gene designated glcS*. The mutations A10K, K11A, K11D, G12A, G12L, L13I, L13F, L13D, and G12A/L13I introduced in glcS* were constructed in pET2152 by the Quickchange (Stratagene) method of mutagenesis, which utilizes inverse PCR primed by divergent overlapping primers containing the desired complementary nucleotide exchanges.
Expression of recombinant genes in E. coli. E. coli strain BL21(DE3)-RIL codon plus (Stratagene) carrying plasmid pZA1, pZA2, pET2120, or pET2152 was grown in dYT medium (16 g of trypton per liter, 10 g of yeast extract per liter, and 5 g of NaCl per liter) supplemented with antibiotics at 37°C until an optical density at 600 nm of 0.5 to 0.8 was reached. Expression was induced by the addition of 0.5 mM isopropyl-beta-D-thiogalactopyranoside (IPTG, Roche Diagnostics). Cells were grown for an additional 4 h and harvested by centrifugation (15 min, 5,000 x g, 4°C). Overexpression of the hexa-His-tagged PibD (plasmid pZA5) occurred as described above, except that E. coli strain C43(DE3) carrying plasmid pACYC-RIL (Stratagene) was used. After induction with IPTG, cells were incubated at 30°C for 6 h.
In vitro processing assay. The in vitro preFlaB and preGlcS processing assay was based on the method developed for the Methanococcus voltae preflagellin peptidase (10). Isolated E. coli membranes (about 5 µg of total protein) either containing preFlaB or preGlcS* and S. solfataricus membranes (about 10 µg of total protein) were each preincubated for 10 min in 10 µl of assay buffer (25 mM MES [pH 6.5], 0.5% [vol/vol] Triton X-100, 150 mM KCl, and 1 mM EDTA) at room temperature. Both solubilized samples were mixed and incubated for 30 min (preFlaB) or 1 h (preGlcS) at 55°C, unless stated otherwise. The reaction was stopped by the addition of 5 µl of sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) sample buffer and analyzed by SDS-12% polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE) and subsequent transferring to polyvinylidene difluoride membranes (Roche Diagnostics). Protein was detected by Western immunoblotting by using monoclonal anti-His antibodies (Dianova, Hamburg, Germany). The activity of cloned PibD was tested as described above except that E. coli inner membranes (about 5 µg of total protein) containing overexpressed PibD were used instead of the S. solfataricus membranes.
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FIG. 1. In vitro cleavage of glucose-binding protein (GlcS*) and flagellin (FlaB) precursors. (A) For the amino-terminal sequences of preGlcS and preFlaB, the cleavage sites are indicated by an arrow. (B) Solubilized E. coli membranes containing preGlcS* or preFlaB and S. solfataricus membranes were mixed as indicated. No cross-reaction of S. solfataricus membrane proteins with the anti-His antibody was observed (lane 2). The asterisk indicates an unspecific degradation product of preFlaB.
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Identification and cloning of the S. solfataricus type IV prepilin-like signal peptidase. To identify the type IV prepilin-like signal peptidase, we first searched the S. solfataricus genomic database for a homolog of bacterial enzymes, including those from thermophilic bacteria. However, the BLAST search was unsuccessful. On the other hand, the Cluster of Orthologous Groups (COG) database (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/COG [38, 39]) lists several archaeal proteins in the group designated COG1989, signal peptidase, cleaves prepilin like proteins. The COG database relies on a phylogenetic classification of proteins. Therefore, proteins with very little sequence identity are clustered in one group due to phylogenetic relationships (39). Subsequently, protein sequences of archaeal COG1989 members were used to perform BLAST searches in the S. solfataricus genome database. Single significant hits (e < 10-3) were obtained only with MJ1282.1 from Methanocaldococcus jannaschii and AF0936 from Archaeoglobus fulgidus for the same putative membrane protein, SSO0131. The SSO0131 protein shares 19% identical amino acid sequences with AF0936 and 16.1% with MJ1282.1, respectively. However, higher identities are found with proteins that are not included in COG1989: ST2258 from Sulfolobus tokodaii, MA3102 from Methanosarcina acetivorans, and FlaK from M. maripaludis (Fig. 2A). The primary sequence of SSO0131 has a length of 236 amino acids and a predicted topology of five transmembrane segments (TMS) with a large cytoplasmic loop between TMS 4 and 5 (Fig. 2B). This topology is similar to most putative archaeal type IV prepilin-like signal peptidases but is unlike that of bacterial enzymes such as Vibrio cholerae TcpJ with eight TMS and various large cytoplasmic loops (24, 25). The gene coding for the SSO0131 protein is not contained in an apparent operon structure, but remnants of an insertion element are located upstream of the gene, suggesting a possible rearrangement of the surrounding genome sequence.
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FIG. 2. Identification and heterologous expression of SSO0131 (pibD). (A) Multiple alignment carried out by using Multalin (9) of the PibD primary sequence with archaeal homologs from S. tokodaii (ST2258), M. acetivorans (MA3102), A. fulgidus (AF0936), and M. maripaludis (FlaK) reveals putatively conserved residues. The sequence motifs surrounding the conserved aspartate residues that might be involved in catalysis are boxed. Residues that are 100%, greater than 80%, or greater than 60% conserved are shaded black, dark gray, and light gray, respectively. (B) Membrane topology of PibD predicted with TMHMM2 (23, 33). Aspartate residues are highlighted and those conserved in at least three sequences are highlighted with filled circles. (C) Heterologous expression of pibD in E. coli. Inner membranes isolated from cells expressing the gene (lane 1) or harboring the empty vector (lane 2) were analyzed by SDS-PAGE and detected with an antibody directed against the C-terminal hexa-His epitope tag.
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FIG. 3. Temperature dependent in vitro cleavage of preFlaB (top panel) and preGlcS* (lower panel) by heterologously expressed PibD. Solubilized inner membranes from E. coli containing preFlaB or preGlcS* were incubated with E. coli membranes containing overexpressed PibD protein and incubated at the temperatures indicated. No processing was observed at 20°C or when membranes isolated from cells harboring the empty vector were used.
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Signal sequence specificity of the S. solfataricus PibD protein. To determine the substrate specificity of PibD and to confirm the exact site of processing, we constructed signal peptide mutants of preGlcS* by site-directed mutagenesis (Fig. 4). We were particularly interested in the conserved residues around the cleavage site (-1 and +1 residues) and the positively charged -2 residue, as these residues vary among the S. solfataricus proteins with predicted type IV prepilin-like signal sequences (Table 2) (1). All mutants could be overexpressed in E. coli as unprocessed precursor proteins (data not shown). The in vitro cleavage of the preGlcS* signal peptide mutants, either by native S. solfataricus membranes (Fig. 4A) or by E. coli membranes harboring the recombinant PibD (Fig. 4B), was determined. For all mutants, both types of membranes yielded identical results, suggesting that PibD is the sole enzyme responsible for the type IV prepilin-like signal peptidase activity in S. solfataricus membranes. Replacing glycine with alanine at the -1 position relative to the cleavage site resulted in a slight improvement in the processing of preGlcS*. However, introduction of an isoleucine or arginine residue at -1 completely abolishes the processing reaction. Leucine at the +1 position can be readily exchanged for isoleucine or phenylalanine without interfering with the processing, but no cleavage was observed with arginine or aspartate at this position. With a double mutant in which glycine and leucine at the -1 and +1 positions were replaced with an alanine and isoleucine, respectively, significant processing could still be observed. The -2 position is highly conserved among the signal sequences of archaeal flagellins and S. solfataricus proteins with a type IV prepilin-like signal sequence and contains a positively charged residue (K or R). When lysine at -2 of preGlcS* was altered to an aspartate, which results in a charge change, no processing could be detected. However, an alanine at the -2 position had no effect on the processing. Finally, when the alanine at the -3 position was changed to lysine, cleavage occurred normally. Hence, a number of mutations close to the cleavage site in preGlcS* can be introduced without interfering with the in vitro cleavage reaction. This shows that PibD is able to cleave type IV prepilin-like signal sequences with all amino acid combinations around the cleavage site that have been found in (putative) prepilin-like precursor proteins encoded by the S. solfataricus genome sequence.
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FIG. 4. In vitro processing of preGlcS* signal peptide mutants. (A) The signal sequence of GlcS is shown at the top; the cleavage site is indicated by a gap. The mutations introduced are listed with the nomenclature used in panel B. (B) GlcS* precursors with altered signal sequences were incubated with membranes from either S. solfataricus membranes (top panel) or E. coli overexpressing recombinant pibD (lower panel). As controls, preGlcS* was incubated in absence or presence of cleavage activity, respectively (first two lanes in each panel).
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TABLE 2. Alignment of the N-terminal parts of S. solfataricus secretory proteins with a putative type IV prepilin-like signal sequencea
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Since the recombinant PibD in isolated E. coli inner membranes showed processing activity for both precursor proteins tested, our results indicate that a single enzyme of S. solfataricus is capable of processing these distinct secretory proteins (3). FlaB ultimately assembles into the flagellum structure, whereas GlcS has to function as an extracellular sugar-binding subunit of an ABC transporter.
Cleavage of preGlcS*, an internally truncated version of full-length preGlcS, appeared less efficient than that of preFlaB. This could be due to incorrect folding, which possibly interferes with its interaction with PibD. However, we favor the explanation that the difference in cleavage efficiency is due to intrinsic properties of the signal peptides, such as the number of positively charged residues in the signal sequence, which is six and four for preFlaB and preGlcS, respectively. Indeed, a signal peptide mutant of preGlcS* which contained an additional lysine residue in the signal peptide was more efficiently processed than the wild-type protein (Fig. 4). Jarrell and colleagues (19) suggested that the archaeal type IV prepilin-like signal peptidase homologs are in fact preflagellin peptidases, i.e., enzymes with a dedicated role in the processing of flagellin precursors. According to these authors' hypothesis, other proteins with type IV prepilin-like signal sequences (such as the sugar-binding proteins GlcS, TreS, and AraS from S. solfataricus) would require another processing enzyme. It was argued that the highly conserved amino acids in the signal peptide of all archaeal flagellins, i.e., glycine at -1 and lysine or arginine at positions -2 and -3, are essential for recognition by the preflagellin peptidase and thus deviation from this consensus sequence would require a second peptidase with altered substrate specificity. Processing of the flagellin precursor by the M. voltae peptidase indeed appears very sensitive toward alterations of the signal sequence. Most mutations result in partial or complete loss of cleavage activity (41). However, S. solfataricus PibD seems to be equipped with a much broader specificity. It processes preGlcS*, even though the signal sequence lacks a lysine or arginine at position -3, whereas an M. voltae flagellin mutant with alanine or glutamate at the same position was cleaved only partially (41). Moreover, a lysine-to-alanine mutation of the GlcS* signal sequence at position -2 did not affect the cleavage reaction, and glycine at position -1 could be changed to alanine (Fig. 4) without loss of cleavage activity. Recently, we identified a number of putative precursor proteins with type IV prepilin-like signal sequences (1). Rescanning the genome with the current consensus sequence revealed a number of new candidate proteins (Table 2). These signal sequences have a relatively conserved core of four amino acids around the cleavage site with the consensus sequence [K/R][G/A][L/I/F][S/T/A] (-1 and +1 positions relative to the processing site shown in boldface). We have previously shown that the sugar-binding proteins GlcS and TreS are processed between a glycine and a leucine residue, while AraS is processed between alanine and isoleucine (2). Taken together, these data suggest that PibD is capable of processing a wide variety of proteins with a type IV prepilin-like signal sequence, including binding proteins (12) and preflagellin. Intriguingly, the genome sequence of another species from the genus Sulfolobus, S. tokodaii (21), does not code for homologs of the S. solfataricus sugar-binding proteins that contain a type IV prepilin-like signal sequence (unpublished data). Hence, S. solfataricus seems to have undergone a specialization concerning the variety of solute binding proteins and also the mechanism of secretion of these proteins.
In the gram-negative bacterium P. aeruginosa, a number of possible alterations at the +1 position (phenylalanine) of the prepilin PilA are tolerated in vivo, whereas replacement of the -1 glycine for any other amino acid except alanine resulted in complete loss of a functional pilus structure (35). With alanine at position -1, PilA was partially processed in vivo. In contrast, the pseudopilin PulG from Klebsiella oxytoca remained unprocessed in vivo when the -1 residue (glycine) was changed to alanine, valine, or glutamate (30). Replacement of the glycine at position -1 of the M. voltae preflagellin signal sequence to alanine resulted in reduced processing activity, and other amino acids were not tolerated at all at this position, resulting in a preflagellin mutant that cannot be cleaved (41). Also, mutants with alterations at position -2 (lysine to alanine) or -3 (lysine to alanine or glutamate) were not cleaved or partially cleaved, respectively (41). Strikingly, no loss of cleavage activity was observed when these mutations were introduced into the signal sequence of preGlcS*. Hence, the S. solfataricus PibD seems to be functionally more similar to PilD and seems to be equipped with a relatively broad substrate specificity.
In M. jannaschii, the putative preflagellin peptidase gene (designated flaK [4]) is downstream of the flagellin gene cluster and may be cotranscribed with other fla genes (4). The genome of M. jannaschii (7) codes for a paralog of FlaK, MJ1282.1, which is located elsewhere in the genome. The gene seems to be part of an operon that also codes for two homologs of bacterial type II secretion proteins. Although MJ1282.1 might represent a pseudogene without a function to the cell, it is also possible that it is involved in the processing of other proteins synthesized with a type IV prepilin-like signal sequence. So far the only candidate is the S-layer protein of M. jannaschii (3), but experimental evidence is required to confirm this hypothesis.
Although the primary sequence conservation between archaeal and bacterial type IV prepilin-like signal peptidases is very low, an evolutionary relationship between these proteins is evident and therefore the catalytic mechanism of signal peptide cleavage reaction may be identical for these enzymes. In the past, cysteines in PilD have been implicated in catalysis (34), although XpsO from Xanthomonas campestis can functionally replace PilD despite the fact that it does not contain cysteine residues (18). Also, a recent study on TcpJ of V. cholerae suggests that in fact two aspartate residues are essential for processing (24). Unlike the cysteine, the two aspartate residues are highly conserved in all described bacterial type IV prepilin-like signal peptidases. An alignment of the archaeal enzymes reveals the presence of three conserved aspartate residues (Fig. 2). Future studies should be directed at the identification of the catalytic residues by site-directed mutagenesis.
We thank Michael Galperin for suggesting the use of the COG database for identification of the S. solfataricus type IV prepilin-like signal peptidase. S.-V. Albers and Z. Szabó contributed equally to this work.
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