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Journal of Bacteriology, December 2003, p. 7213-7221, Vol. 185, No. 24
0021-9193/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JB.185.24.7213-7221.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Departamento de Microbiología y Parasitología Sanitarias, División de Ciencias de la Salud, Facultad de Farmacia,2 Departamento de Microbiología, Facultad de Biología,Universidad de Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain,1 Dipartimento di Chimica e Biochimica, Università Federico II di Napoli, Naples, Italy3
Received 16 September 2003/ Accepted 30 September 2003
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-L-glycero-D-manno-heptopyranose II
(L,D-HeppII) at the O-3 position of an
-D-galactopyranosyluronic acid
(
-D-GalAp) residue. K. pneumoniae
nonpolar wabG mutants were devoid of the cell-attached
capsular polysaccharide but were still able to produce capsular
polysaccharide. Similar results were obtained with K.
pneumoniae nonpolar waaC and waaF mutants, which
produce shorter LPS core molecules than do wabG mutants. Other
outer core K. pneumoniae nonpolar mutants in the waa
gene cluster were encapsulated. K. pneumoniae waaC,
waaF, and wabG mutants were avirulent when tested in
different animal models. Furthermore, these mutants were more sensitive
to some hydrophobic compounds than the wild-type strains. All these
characteristics were rescued by reintroduction of the waaC,
waaF, and wabG genes from K.
pneumoniae. |
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-D-galacturonic acid residue
(
-D-GalpA) residue has been described
(20,
29,
30). On the other hand,
in most of the Enterobacteriaceae studied, the core LPS
contains inner core phosphoryl modifications
(21), but K.
pneumoniae core LPS is devoid of such modifications
(29) (Fig.
1).
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FIG. 1. Conserved
region in the core LPS structure of K. pneumoniae
(29) and genes involved
in inner core biosynthesis
(24,
14). Kdop,
3-deoxy-D-manno-octulopyranosonic acid; Glcp,
D-glucopyranose; GlcNp, glucosamine;
GalAp, galacturonic acid. Depending on the K.
pneumoniae strain, residues J and K could be H or GalA, and
residue P could be H or Hep
(29).
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TABLE 1. Plasmids
used in this study
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LPS isolation and electrophoresis. Cultures for analysis of LPS were grown in tryptic soy broth at 37°C. LPS was purified by the Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia method (7), resulting in a yield of 2.3%. For screening purposes, LPS was obtained after proteinase K digestion of whole cells (13). LPS samples were separated by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) or SDS-tricine-PAGE and visualized by silver staining as previously described (19, 28).
Isolation of oligosaccharides. LPS (20 mg) was hydrolyzed with 1% AcOH (100°C for 1 h). The resulting precipitate (8 mg) was removed by centrifugation, and the supernatant (10 mg) was analyzed by mass spectrometry. Another sample of LPS (40 mg) was deacylated and purified as described previously (3), yielding 6 mg of alditol oligosaccharide mixture.
LPS chemical analysis. For chemical analysis, either purified LPS or core LPS oligosaccharide samples were hydrolyzed with 1 N trifluoroacetic acid for 4 h at 100°C. Alditol acetates and methyl glycoside acetates were analyzed on an Agilent Technologies model 5973N mass spectrometry (MS) instrument equipped with a model 6850A gas chromatography and an RTX-5 capillary column (Restek; 30 m x 0.25 mm inside diameter, flow rate 1 ml min-1, He used as carrier gas). Acetylated methyl glycoside analysis was performed with the following temperature program: 150°C for 5 min, 150 to 250°C at 3°C min-1, and 250°C for 10 min. Acetylated methyl ester lipid analysis was performed as follows: 150°C for 3 min, 150 to 280°C at 10°C min-1, and 280°C for 15 min. The alditol acetate mixture was analyzed with the following temperature program: 150°C for 5 min and 150 to 300°C at 3°C min-1. For partially methylated alditol acetates, the temperature program was 90°C for 1 min, 90 to 140°C at 25°C min-1, 140 to 200°C at 5°C min-1, 200 to 280°C at 10°C min-1, and 280°C for 10 min.
Glycosyl and lipid analysis. A sample (1 mg) of LPS was dried over P2O5 overnight and was then treated with 1 M HCl-CH3OH (1 ml) at 80°C for 20 h to analyze both glycosyl and fatty acid composition. The crude reaction was extracted twice with hexane, and the two extracts were pooled, dried under a stream of air, and treated with acetic anhydride (100 µl) at 100°C for 15 min. The methanol layer was neutralized with Ag2CO3, dried, and acetylated. Both samples were subjected to gas chromatography-MS. Another sample of LPS (1 mg) was hydrolyzed with 4 M trifluoroacetic acid for 1 h at 100°C, reduced with deuterated sodium tetrahydridoborate (NaBD4), acetylated, and analyzed by gas chromatography-MS.
MS studies. Electrospray MS was performed on a Micromass ZQ instrument (Waters). The sample (100 pmol) was deionized on Dowex H+ resin (Fluka) and dissolved in 2% triethylamine in 50% acetonitrile and injected into the ion source at a flow rate of 5 µl min-1. The spectrum was acquired in negative mode. Positive-ion reflectron matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization-time-of-flight (MALDI-TOF) mass spectra were acquired on a Voyager DE-PROinstrument (Applied Biosystems) equipped with a delayed-extraction ion source. Ion acceleration voltage was 20 kV, grid voltage was 14 kV, mirror/voltage ratio was 1/12, and the delay time was 100 ns. Samples were irradiated at a frequency of 5 Hz by 337-nm photons from a pulsed-nitrogen laser. Postsource decay (PSD) was performed using an acceleration voltage of 20 kV (27). The reflectron voltage was decreased in 10 successive 25% steps. Mass calibration was obtained with a malto-oligosaccharide mixture from corn syrup (Sigma). A solution of 2,5-dihydroxybenzoic acid in 20% CH3CN in water at a concentration of 25 mg/ml was used as the MALDI matrix. One microliter of matrix solution and 1 µl of the sample were premixed and then deposited on the target. The droplet was allowed to dry at ambient temperature. Spectra were calibrated and processed under computer control by using the Applied Biosystems Data Explorer software.
Methylation analysis. The alditol oligosaccharide mixture was N-acetylated by dissolving a sample (2 mg) in dry methanol and treating it with 50 µl of acetic anhydride for 16 h. After evaporation of the solvents, the sample was methylated as previously reported (2). Linkage analysis was performed as follows: the methylated sample was carboxymethyl reduced with lithium triethylborohydride (Aldrich), mildly hydrolyzed to cleave ketosidic linkage, reduced by means of NaBD4, and was then totally hydrolyzed, reduced with NaBD4, and finally acetylated as described previously (6).
K.
pneumoniae waaC, waaF, waaL, and wabG
mutant construction.
To
obtain K. pneumoniae mutant strains, a method was used to
create chromosomal in-frame waa deletions
(15). Primers for mutant
construction were designed from the known K. pneumoniae
waa gene cluster sequence. Primer pairs Fa
(5'-CGCGGATCCAAATCCCGTTCCTGTACGCC-3')
and Fb (5'-CCCATCCACTAAACT
TAAACACATCATCATGTCGCCCACC-3') and Fc
(5'-TGTTTAAGTTTAGTG
GATGGGTTAGCGGAAAAACCGAGCAC-3') and Fd
(5'-CGCGGATCCGCAGAAACACCAGATAGGGC-3')
were used in two sets of asymmetric PCRs to amplify DNA
fragments of 697 (AB) and 618 (CD) bp, respectively. DNA fragment Fa-Fb
encompasses nucleotide 470, inside gmhD, to nucleotide 1137,
corresponding to the first base of codon 16 of waaF. DNA
fragment Fc-Fd encompasses nucleotide 2116, corresponding to the first
base of the 393rd codon of waaF, to nucleotide 2704, which
lies within the waaC gene. DNA fragments Fa-Fb and Fc-Fd were
annealed at their overlapping region (the underlined letters in primers
Fb and Fc) and amplified by PCR as a single fragment, using primers Fa
and Fd. The fusion product was purified, digested with BamHI
(the BamHI site is shown as the double-underlined letters in
primers Fa and Fd), ligated into BamHI-digested and
phosphatase-treated pKO3 vector
(15), electroporated into
E. coli DH5
, and plated on chloramphenicol-kanamycin
plates at 30°C to obtain plasmid pKO3
waaF.
Primer pairs Ca (5'-CGCGGATCCGCGCTTTTAACC
TGTCCTAC-3') and Cb
(5'-CCCATCCACTAAACTTAAACAAACGATCAAT
ACCCGCATCC-3') and Cc
(5'-TGTTTAAGTTTAGTGGATGGGCA
CACTCTAATATCTCCGACC-3') and Cd
(5'-CGCGGATCCGCTCCATGACCCTTTTTGAC-3')
were used to obtain plasmid pKO3
waaC,
containing an internally deleted waaC gene (the first 6
codons, a 7-codon tag, and the last 26 codons). Primer pairs La
(5'-CGCGCGGCCGCGGATATTGCAG
GACAAAGGGC-3') and Lb
(5'-CCCATCCACTAAACTTAAACAAAGCAAACC
GGCAAGGTTAAG-3') and Lc
(5'-TGTTTAAGTTTAGTGGATGGGGAT
GAGAACCATGAGTGACAAG-3') and Ld
(5'-CGCGCGGCCGCATATGCCAGTGG
GAACGAC-3') were used to obtain plasmid
pKO3
waaL, containing an internally deleted
waaL gene (the first 22 codons, a 7-codon tag, and the last 5
codons of waaL). Primer pairs Ga
(5'-CGCGGATCCCCACCCAACAGCACAACC-3')
and Gb (5'-CCCATCCACTAAACT
TAAACAGACAAACCGTTCTGCGCC-3') and Gc
(5'-TGTTTAAGTTTAGTGGATGGGAGCGAGCGACTCTCAACC-3')
and Gd
(5'-CGCGGATCCGCGACCGACGTGAATCAG-3')
were used to obtain plasmid pKO3
wabG,
containing an internally deleted wabG gene (the first 23
codons, a 7-codon tag, and the last 17 codons of wabG).
Plasmids pKO3
waaC, pKO3
waaF,
pKO3
waaL, and pKO3
wabGwere used to construct nonpolar mutations in the waaC,
waaF, waaL, and wabG genes,
respectively.
Plasmid construction. To complement the constructed mutants, the waaC, waaF, waaL, and wabGKp genes from K. pneumoniae and the S. marcescens wabGSm homologue were PCR amplified and ligated to the vector pGEMT as follows: pGEMT-WaaC (5'-GTTTAAATCGGCATTAGTCC-3' and 5'-AAGCAAACCGGCAAGGTTAAG-3'), pGEMTWaaF (5'-TCAGCCCAGCACCTTATTC-3' and 5'-TTTTACCGTATCCGCCAATC-3'), pGEMTWaaL (5'-TACAGGGAACGTCAGAAGC-3' and 5'-ATGCCTTGCATCACATTAC-3'), pGEMT-WabGKp (5'-CAATGGCAGCTCATTCAGAC-3' and 5'-TGAAAGCCTTTGAACCACAC-3'), and pGEMT-Orf9Sm (5'-TCAAATGCTGGAGCGAAGAG-3' and 5'-CCTGATAATCAATGCCTGAC-3').
Urinary tract infections (UTIs) in rats. The bacterial strains used to establish infection were grown overnight in LB agar supplemented with antibiotics when needed and gently suspended in phosphate-buffered saline to the appropriate concentration. In each experiment, 12 female Wistar rats (weight, 200 to 250 g) of strain CFHB (Interfauna UK, Hungtinton, United Kingdom) were used. Ten animals were infected and two were used as controls. The infections were established and quantified as previously described (1).
Murine pneumonia model. The experiments were performed as previously described (4). Briefly, ICR-CDI mice (Harlan Ibérica, S.L.) were anesthetized and intubated intratracheally with a blunt-end needle. Approximately 107 CFU of exponential K. pneumoniae cells was suspended in 50 µl of phosphate-buffered saline and inoculated through the blunt-end needle. The mice were observed daily, and bacteremia was assessed at days 2, 4, and 6 by culturing blood obtained from the tail vein (approximately 20 µl) on LB agar plates. Lung and spleen tissues from surviving or dead animals were aseptically removed, homogenized, and plated for growth of quantitative bacterial cultures. Each experiment was performed with nine animals.
LD50. Albino Swiss female mice (5 to 7 weeks old; Harlan Ibérica, S.L.) were injected intraperitoneally with 0.2 ml of the test samples. Mortality was recorded up to 7 days postinjection, and all deaths occurred within 1 to 5 days. The 50% lethal dose (LD50) was calculated as previously described (22).
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1,3 bond. Thus, it could be expected that the enzymes involved
in the transfer of the first outer core residue would share some
similarity. The WaaG protein has been identified as the
glucosyltransferase involved in the transfer of the first outer core
LPS residue in E. coli and S. enterica serovar
Typhimurium. Only the K. pneumoniae orf8-encoded protein
showed significant albeit low levels of identity (26%) and
similarity (44%) to the WaaG protein from E. coli;
therefore, this K. pneumoniae gene was named wabG. To
determine the wabG function, nonpolar mutants were constructed
in K. pneumoniae 889 and 52145. K. pneumoniae 889
(08:K69) (11) was used
because its core LPS structure has been recently updated using the
nonencapsulated mutant NRC6121 (Fig.
1)
(29). Strain 52145 was
used because it shows high virulence in different experimental animal
models (17). To construct
the K. pneumoniae wabG nonpolar mutants, an in-frame tagged
deletion approach was used. Plasmid pKO3
wabG,
containing the engineered deletion, was used to introduce the
wabG deletion into K. pneumoniae 889 and 52145 by
double recombination as previously described
(15,
24). Candidate mutants
were screened by PCR, and two of them, strains
889
wabG and 52145
wabG, were proved
to contain the desired mutation by DNA nucleotide sequence
determination. LPS from strains 889 and 52145 (wild type) and
889
wabG and 52145
wabG was extracted
and analyzed by SDS-tricine-PAGE. The core LPS from the mutant
strains migrated faster than that from the wild-type strains,
suggesting that the wabG mutants contain a truncated-core LPS
(Fig.
2, lane 4).
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FIG. 2. SDS-tricine-PAGE
analysis of LPS samples from K. pneumoniae 52145 (lane 1),
52145 waaC (lane 2), 52145 waaF (lane
3), 52145 wabG (lane 4), 52145 waaC
plus pGEMT-WaaC (lane 5), 52145 waaF plus pGEMT-WaaF
(lane 6), 52145 wabG plus pGEMT-WabGKp
(lane 7), and 52145 wabG plus pGEMT-ORF9Sm
(lane
8).
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K.
pneumoniae wabG LPS analysis.
To determine the core LPS changes
produced by the mutation of wabG, LPS was obtained from
strains 889
wabG, 52145
wabG, 889,
and 52145. Comparative monosaccharide composition analysis of these LPS
samples revealed major changes in LPS composition, with a complete loss
of GalA and about a 30% reduction in glucosamine (GlcN) in the
mutant wabG strains. The putative GalA residues (J and K in
Fig. 1) are not present in
all the K. pneumoniae strains studied
(29). Our data suggest
that the strains used in this study lack both GalA residues (J and K in
Fig. 1).
To
elucidate the chemical structure of the LPS core region of the
wabG mutant (889
wabG) in more detail, LPS
was hydrolyzed with 1% acetic acid, which cleaves the
acid-labile ketosidic linkages between KdoI and lipid A,
KdoI and KdoII, and KdoIII-GlcN as reported
(29). The negative
ions' ElectroSpray ionization mass spectra of core
oligosaccharide (data not shown) showed several signals.
One of these signals indicated the presence of a pseudomolecular ion
(M-H)- at m/z 783.37, a value which was in
agreement with the calculated average molecular weight (783.67) of the
expected molecular structure, with one hexose, two heptose, and one Kdo
units. The presence of a -18 signal at m/z 765.38 is
attributable to the anhydrous form of the reducing Kdo end,
and it is well documented for LPS samples that are hydrolyzed in
presence of acetic acid
(18).
In order to
determine the oligosaccharide sequence, we analyzed the sample with the
MALDI-PSD technique, which enabled us to obtain a total fragment
spectrum in a single experiment. The positive ions' PSD spectra of
the acetic acid product (Fig.
3) contains many fragment ions, most of them attributable to B-type ions
(5). Either molecular ions
or fragment ions contain sodium, as has been reported for MALDI
spectra. It is also known that interpretation of a PSD spectrum of
unknown sample is potentially difficult, but in this case we were able
to assign almost all of the signals. Actually, other than the signals
reported in the fragmentation scheme, the fragment ion at m/z
744.8 can be attributed to the decarboxylated anhydrous core structure
(M-18-44) (9).
Particularly important to define the ramified nature of the core
oligosaccharide are the two signals at m/z 376.7 and 358.6.
These signals are attributable to internal fragmentation
(8), as they might arise
from a loss of the terminal heptose residue from the signal at 568.9,
leaving a hydroxyl group (m/z 376.7) or a double bond
(m/z 358.6). In agreement with the proposed structure was the
1H nuclear magnetic resonance spectrum of this sample, which
mainly showed three anomeric signals at
5.31 and 5.09 (bs)
and at
4.54 (doublet, 3JH,H
7.8 Hz) (data not shown), according to the presence of two heptose
units and one Glc unit, respectively.
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FIG. 3. PSD
spectrum of m/z 807.2 of K. pneumoniae
889 wabG core oligosaccharide after acidic release of
Lipid A, in the positive-ion mode. Insert shows the proposed structure
and fragmentation
pattern.
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FIG. 4. PSD
spectrum of m/z 1153.7 of O,N-deacylatedand dephosphorylated LPS from K. pneumoniae
889 wabG, in the positive-ion mode. Insert shows the
proposed structure and fragmentation
pattern.
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1,3
linkage.
Phenotypic characterization of
the mutant strains.
The
chemical characterization of the wabG mutants revealed that
its core LPS is devoid of the outer core region. Furthermore, the
nonmucoid colony morphology of the wabG mutants suggests that
they are unencapsulated. Since it is well known that the K.
pneumoniae capsule plays an important role in pathogenesis
(31), we decided to
determine if the K. pneumoniae capsule is linked to the core
LPS. The approach was based on the analysis of several waa
nonpolar deletion mutants, i.e., 52145
waaC,
52145
waaF, 52145
wabG, and
52145
waaL, derived from wild-type strain 52145
(O1:K2). These strains and a previously constructed waaL
mutant (NC20) derived from wild-type strain C3 (O1:K66)
(24) were analyzed for
the presence of capsule by sensitivity to capsule-specific
bacteriophages, by electron microscopy (EM) studies, and by enzyme
immunoassay (EIA) with capsular-specific serum. The NC20 and
52145
waaL strains contained K66 and K2 capsule,
respectively, as can be deduced from their sensitivity to
capsule-specific bacteriophages, EM studies, and reactivity against
K66- and K2-specific antibodies in EIA. In contrast, no K2 capsule was
detected in the 52145
waaC,
52145
waaF, and 52145
wabG whole-cell
mutants. Culture supernatants of strains 52145
waaC,
52145
waaF, and 52145
wabG reacted by
EIA with K2-specific antibodies. Neither whole cells nor culture
supernatants from a 52145 K2- mutant (with a
mini-Tn5 inserted in the known K2 capsular biosynthetic
cluster) were unable to react by EIA with K2-specific serum. These
results clearly show that in K. pneumoniae, the outer core LPS
is somehow involved in K2 capsule's, and probably other capsular
types', attachment to the cell surface.
The truncation of
the core LPS in other Enterobacteriaceae results in profound
changes in the bacterial cell behavior and permeability (reviewed in
reference 21). Since
these assays have been used with Enterobacteriaceae strains
containing phosphoryl modifications in their inner core LPS
(32,
33,
34), we decided to
determine the behavior of LPS core-truncated mutants from K.
pneumoniae, an Enterobacteriaceae organism that is
naturally devoid of such inner core phosphoryl modifications. The
sensitivity to hydrophobic compounds of the 52145 mutants was compared
to that of the wild-type strain. For the 52145
wabG
mutant, MICs of SDS, deoxycholate, and polymyxin B were found to be 0.5
mg ml-1 (a greater than 20-fold reduction), 10 mg
ml-1 (a 50% reduction), and 2 µg
ml-1 (a 60% reduction), respectively. The
MICs obtained for mutants devoid of the inner core Hep region
(52145
waaC) or containing only the first
L,D-HeppI (52145
waaF)
residue were essentially similar to those for the mutants lacking the
outer core region (52145
wabG). For the
52145
wabG mutant, MICs of antibiotics (nalidixic
acid, erythromycin, novobiocin, and rifampin) showed about 50%
reduction in comparison to those for the wild-type strain,
while the MICs for the 52145
waaC and
52145
waaF mutants showed about 80 to 90%
reduction when these same antibiotics were used. Similar MICs were
obtained for strains 889
waaC,
889
waF, and
889
wabG.
Complementation
studies.
The wild-type
pattern of electrophoretic banding (Fig.
2, lanes 1, 5, 6, and 7),
the presence of K2 capsule (as determined by sensitivity to specific
capsule bacteriophage, EM studies, and reactivity against K2-specific
antibodies in EIA studies), SDS, deoxycholate, and polymyxin B
sensitivity were demonstrated by the mutant strains
52145
waaC, 52145
waaF, and
52145
wabG upon complementation with plasmids
pGEMT-WaaC, pGEMT-WaaF, and pGEMT-WabG, respectively. The phenotypic
characteristics of the waaC, waaF, and wabG
mutants were not changed when the plasmid vector alone (pGEMT) was
introduced by transformation.
The S. marcescens waa gene
cluster has been sequenced (GenBank accession number
U52844). An
open reading frame (ORF), orf9, has been identified as
encoding a putative protein highly similar (69% identity and
81% similarity) to the K. pneumoniae WabG protein,
suggesting that the orf9Sm could be a wabG
homologue. To test this possibility, the mutant
52145
wabG was transformed with plasmid
pGEMT-Orf9Sm. The transformed strain showed full-length LPS
(Fig. 2, lane 8), produced
K2 capsule, and exhibited wild-type levels of sensitivity to
hydrophobic compounds. This result strongly suggests that the first
residue in the S. marcescens N28b core LPS would be an
-D-GalpA residue linked to the
L,D-HeppII by an
1,3
linkage.
Colonization and virulence
studies.
As a colonization
model, we used experimental UTI in rats. As shown in Table
2, 52145
waaC, 52145
waaF, and
52145
wabG mutants are unable to induce experimental
UTIs in rats (unable to colonize the rat UT). However, the
52145
waaL mutant showed a reduced ability to colonize
the rat UT in comparison with that of the wild-type strain, but the
mutant was still able to perform some colonization. The plasmid vector
harboring the corresponding wild-type gene(s) introduced by
transformation restored (to the level of the wild-type strain) the
ability of all the mutants to induce experimental UTIs in rats. The
plasmid vector alone was unable to restore this ability when introduced
in the mutant strains.
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TABLE 2. Experimental
UTI in rats by different K. pneumoniae strains
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waaC,
52145
waaF, and 52145
wabG mutants
showed a strong increase (approximately 5 log) in their
LD50s in comparison with that of the wild-type strain (Table
3). The 52145
waaL mutant showed only a 3-log increase in
its LD50 compared to that of the wild-type strain. When the
plasmid vectors harboring the corresponding wild-type gene were
introduced in the mutant strains, all of them recovered
LD50s similar to that of the wild-type strain in this
virulence model, while no changes were observed in the LD50s
of the mutant strains transformed with the plasmid vector alone (Table
3). |
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TABLE 3. LD50s
of mice inoculated intraperitoneally with different K.
pneumoniae strains
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waaC, 52145
waaF, and
52145
wabG mutants were completely avirulent
in this model, while the 52145
waaL mutant and the
wild-type strain showed similar values. Introduction of the
corresponding gene(s) in the mutants rendered them as virulent as the
wild-type strain or the 52145
waaL mutant. Mutants
52145
waaC, 52145
waaF, and
52145
wabG, which were transformed with the plasmid
vector (pGEMT) alone, remained avirulent in this animal
model. |
View this table: [in a new window] |
TABLE 4. Experimental
pneumonia induced by different K. pneumoniae
strainsa
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4)-
-L,D-HeppI]
and by the substitution of the
L,D-HeppII at the O-3 position by an
-Kdo-(2
6)-
-D-GlcN-(1
4)-
-D-GalA
trisaccharide (29) (Fig.
1). Since the six genes
involved in the biosynthesis of the K. pneumoniae inner core
LPS (gmhD, waaC, -F, -Q,
-A, and -E) have been previously identified by us
(14,
24), we set up
experiments to begin the identification and characterization of the
genes involved in outer core LPS biosynthesis. Among the four
unassigned genes in the K. pneumoniae waa gene cluster, the
orf4- and orf6-encoded products showed similarity to
the E. coli K-12 WaaZ and enterobacterial ADP-heptose-LPS
heptosyltransferases, respectively. In addition, results of a previous
analysis of a K. pneumoniae orf10 (yibD) mutant
suggested that it could be involved in capsule attachment
(24). Thus, only
orf8 and orf9 remained as candidates to be involved
in the transfer of the first residue of the outer core LPS. In the five
E. coli core types and S. enterica serovar
Typhimurium, the L,D-HeppII residue is
substituted at the O-3 position by a D-Glc residue (Glc I),
while a D-GalA residue is found in this position in K.
pneumoniae. In addition, the orf8-encoded protein (WabG)
showed low albeit significant similarity to the E. coli and
S. enterica WaaG protein, and no cross-complementation between
wabG and waaG was detected.
To study the
function of the wabG, two nonpolar mutants were constructed
and characterized by using K. pneumoniae wild-type strains 889
(O:8 K:69) and 52145 (O:1 K:2). SDS-tricine-PAGE analysis of
LPS samples from both 889
wabG and
52145
wabG mutants suggested that these LPS are devoid
of O antigen and contain a truncated-core LPS (Fig.
2). The comparative
chemical and structural analyses (Fig.
3 and
4) of the LPS from
wild-type and mutant strains allow us to conclude that WabG is involved
in the linkage of the first outer core residue (D-GalA) to
the O-3 position of the L,D-HeppII
residue. The complementation achieved when the mutant
52145
wabG was transformed with plasmid
pGEMT-Orf9Sm strongly suggests that the first residue in the
S. marcescens N28b core LPS would be an
-D-GalpA residue linked to the
L,D-HeppII by an
1,3
linkage.
In Enterobacteriaceae organisms containing phosphoryl modifications in their inner core LPS, such as E. coli and S. enterica serovar Typhimurium, truncation of the outer core results in alterations in cell permeability to hydrophobic compounds (21). Mutation in the waaG gene of E. coli strain F470 results in loss of the outer core, absence of L,D-HeppII phosphorylation, a 60% reduction in L,D-HeppI phosphorylation, and decrease in MICs of SDS (34). An E. coli waaP mutant produces core LPS totally devoid of phosphoryl modifications; this mutant was found to be even more sensitive to SDS and other hydrophobic compounds than the corresponding waaG mutant (34). The two K. pneumoniae wabG mutants totally devoid of the outer core LPS obtained in this study were more sensitive to SDS and polymyxin B than the wild-type strains. In addition, for K. pneumoniae waaC and waaF mutants, MICs of these hydrophobic compounds were essentially similar to those for the wabG mutants; however, K. pneumoniae waaC and waaF mutants were more sensitive to deoxycholate, nalidixic acid, erythromycin, novobiocin, and rifampin. In K. pneumoniae there are no phosphoryl modifications of the inner core L,D-HeppI and -II residues, the negative charges being contributed by the GalA residue(s) (29). Thus, the absence of the outer core GalA residue in the wabG mutation results in the loss of the stoichiometric core LPS negative charge and might explain why the levels of sensitivity to SDS and polymyxin B were essentially the same as those of the waaC and -F mutants but different from those of E. coli and S. enterica serovar Typhimurium (32, 33).
The fact that the wabG as well as waaC and -F mutants are unencapsulated but able to biosynthesize specific antiserum cross-reacting polysaccharide (K-) may be explained in two different ways. Since deep LPS core mutants (like waaC and -F) in Enterobacteriaceae are altered in different outer membrane components, one of them could be the attachment site for capsule linkage. A second possibility is a direct linkage of the capsule to LPS core. If the capsular polysaccharide is linked either to the LPS core directly or to some other outer membrane molecules, the waaC, -F, and wabG mutants may be sufficiently altered in these outer membrane components to preclude the capsular polysaccharide attachment. Furthermore, the lack of cell-bound capsule was found in all the Klebsiella waaC, -F, and wabG mutants isolated belonging to different K serotypes (unpublished data). Nonpolar K. pneumoniae 52145 mutants have been constructed for all the nonessential genes of the waa cluster (our unpublished results). Only the waaC, -F, and wabG mutants lacked K2 capsule, and the NC18 (yibD) mutant showed a drastic reduction of K2 capsule, as previously described (24). All the other K. pneumoniae 52145 mutants showed the presence of K2 capsule.
The effects of the wabG mutation on
colonization and virulence experiments were studied in the K.
pneumoniae 52145 background because this strain is highly virulent
and is able to colonize different surfaces. The wabG mutation
drastically reduces the colonization ability of K. pneumoniae
in experimental UTIs (Table
2). In addition, this
mutation also results in a 5-log-fold increase in LD50 in
mice inoculated intraperitoneally (Table
3) and is completely
avirulent in an experimental model of pneumonia (Table
4). Similar levels of
reduction in colonization and virulence were observed in the
corresponding waaC and -F mutants. On the other hand,
a K. pneumoniae waaL mutant, with a full inner and outer core
but devoid of O antigen, showed a smaller reduction in colonization and
virulence when tested in mice inoculated intraperitoneally and showed
no reduction in the pneumonia model when compared to the wild-type
strain. The effect of the waaL mutant could be fully
attributed to the O-antigen deficiency, since this mutant still
contains capsule, as judged by EM, sensitivity to phage
2, and
reaction with anti-K2-specific polyclonal serum. From these results we
can conclude that the capsule is essential in the K.
pneumoniae experimental model of pneumonia, while the colonization
of the UT by K. pneumoniae requires a complete LPS with O
antigen. The K. pneumoniae virulence tested as LD50
in mice inoculated intraperitoneally seems to be dependent on the
capsule and the complete LPS (probably full-core LPS and O-antigen
molecules). Finally, all the changes observed in the K. pneumoniae
waaC, -F, -L, and wabG mutants are
ameliorated by introduction of the corresponding single wild-type gene,
while the introduction of the plasmid vector alone is unable to
accomplish this.
We also thank Maite Polo for her technical assistance.
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