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Journal of Bacteriology, June 2004, p. 3415-3422, Vol. 186, No. 11
0021-9193/04/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JB.186.11.3415-3422.2004
Copyright © 2004, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Jean-Luc Mainardi,2 Raymond Legrand,4 Laurent Gutmann,2 and Roland Leclercq1,3*
Service de Bactériologie-Virologie, Hôpital Henri Mondor-Université Paris XII, 94010 Créteil cedex,1 Laboratoire de Recherche Moléculaire sur les Antibiotiques, UFR Broussais-Hôtel Dieu, Université Paris V/V I-EMI-U-0004, Paris,2 Service de Microbiologie, CHU Côte de Nacre, 14033 Caen cedex,3 Physics Department, Aventis, Romainville, France4
Received 19 November 2003/ Accepted 12 February 2004
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In this report, we analyzed the pool of precursors and the peptidoglycan structure of C. innocuum NCIB 10674. We identified a ddlc. innocuum gene and a C. innocuum racemase gene with homology to genes encoding D-Ala-D-X ligases and amino acid racemases, respectively, and responsible for the synthesis of a precursor and different muropeptides ending in D-Ala-D-Ser.
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DNA manipulations. C. innocuum NCIB 10674 total DNA was extracted as previously described (23). Amplification of fragments internal to genes encoding related ligases with degenerate V1 and V2 primers was performed as previously described (15). Digestion with restriction endonucleases (New England Biolabs Inc., Beverly, Mass.), isolation of plasmid DNA, ligation, and transformation were carried out by standard methods (29). Sequencing was carried out with an ABI 377 automatic sequencer (Applied Biosystems). The entire sequence of the ddlc. innocuum and C. innocuum racemase genes was obtained by inverse PCR (24). Briefly, a digoxigenin-labeled probe (Roche Applied Science, Mannheim, Germany) from the amplified product was obtained with oligonucleotides V1 and V2. This probe hybridized in Southern experiments to a 5-kb SacII fragment, a 6.7-kb DraI fragment, and a 3-kb EcoRI fragment from C. innocuum NCIB 10674 chromosomal DNA. Clostridium DNA was digested with these enzymes and self-ligated at 15°C for 18 h. DNA was also digested with both DraI and SacII and treated with T4 DNA polymerase to generate blunt ends before ligation. The inverse PCR was performed with primers A, B, C, and D (Table 1). The ddlc. innocuum, C. innocuum racemase, and vanXYC genes were cloned in plasmid pJIM2246 using primers shown in Table 1. Nucleotide and amino acid sequences were analyzed by using the BLAST and FASTA softwares available over the Internet at the National Center for Biotechnology Information Web site (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/). Multiple sequence alignment and phylogenetic tree were performed with the ClustalX and PHYLIP programs.
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TABLE 1. Primers used in this study
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Peptidoglycan structure analysis. Muropeptides were prepared from cell walls as described previously (8) except that hydrofluoric acid was used during the peptidoglycan purification (12, 18) and cellosyl (generous gift from Hoechst) was added to mutanolysin (Sigma, Saint-Quentin Fallavier, France) and lysozyme (Sigma) at 250 µg/ml each in phosphate buffer (25 mM, pH: 6.5) containing MgCl2 (10 mM) during the hydrolysis step. The resulting muropeptides were reduced with sodium borohydride and separated by RP-HPLC coupled to mass spectrometry as previously described (8, 20). The structure of the muropeptides were deduced either from their molecular masses or after coelution with other structures previously identified in E. faecalis (13, 19). Some muropeptides were further purified by RP-HPLC and analyzed by MS/MS using the nanoelectrospray source kit for the Finnigam TSQ 7000 Protona A/S (San Jose, Calif.) as previously described (20).
Nucleotide accession number. The DNA sequences of the ddlc. innocuum and C. innocuum racemase genes have been deposited with GenBank accession number AY479979.
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Muropeptide composition of C. innocuum NCIB 10674.
The structure of 29 muropeptides of C. innocuum was identified (Fig. 1) and their deduced structures are shown in Table 2. Among the monomers two major muropeptides (peak 4 and 9) representing about 60% of the monomers were identified by their molecular mass and MS/MS as disaccharide tripeptides with two alanines branched on the
-amino group of the L-lysine3. Peak 9 differed from peak 4 by a mass difference of 42, corresponding to the loss of the N-acetyl residue from the N-acetylglucosaminyl moiety of the disaccharide. This suggested that two alanines could be part of the interpeptide bridge in different oligomers. The presence of such dialanine interpeptide bridges was confirmed by MS/MS in two tetra-tridimers present in peak 20 and 26.
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FIG. 1. Separation of C. innocuum cell wall muropeptides by RP-HPLC.
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TABLE 2. Molecular mass and structure of muropeptides from C. innocuum NCIB 10476
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Identification of the ddlc. innocuum and C. innocuum racemase genes homologous to ddl and alr genes. No amplification product was observed with DNA of the strain, using a PCR assay with primers specific for resistance genes vanA, vanB, vanC1, vanC2, vanD, vanE, and vanG (14). The degenerate primers V1 and V2 which allow amplification of fragments internal to genes that encode related ligases (15), were used in a PCR with total DNA of C. innocuum NCIB 10674 as a template. A ca. 600-bp fragment was amplified and cloned into E. coli. Nucleotide sequences of the fragment, determined on both strands, were identical in 10 clones. The deduced amino acid sequence was compared with those encoded by various ddl genes, the D-Ala:D-Ala ligases from E. coli, the VanA and VanB D-Ala:D-Lac ligases, and the VanC1 and VanE D-Ala:D-Ser ligases. The sequence displayed between 28% and 39% of identity with the corresponding portion of those proteins. The motifs conserved in the related ligases were present, suggesting that the amplified fragment was internal to a ligase gene possibly involved in vancomycin resistance. Fragments similar in size were also amplified with oligonucleotides V1 and V2 from two clinical isolates of C. innocuum. The deduced amino acid sequence was found identical to that for C. innocuum NCIB 10674 except for one amino acid substitution (V235A).
The sequence of the regions upstream and downstream from the V1-V2 PCR product was obtained by inverse PCR as follows. The upstream sequence was obtained from a DraI-SacII fragment and the downstream sequence from an EcoRI fragment. In the 2,465-bp sequenced fragment, two open reading frames (ORF) were identified (Fig. 2). The 1,068-bp upstream ORF (nucleotides [nt] 198 to 1265) was preceded by a putative ribosome binding site (RBS) (5'-AGTAAGGAGTN8ATG) that displayed complementarity (underlined) to the Bacillus subtilis RBS consensus sequence (3'-OH UCUUUCCUCC) (22). The percentages of identity of the putative product, called Ddlc. innocuum, with various D-Ala:D-Lac, D-Ala:D-Ser, and D-Ala:D-Ala ligases were calculated from the sequence alignment. Percentages of identity ranged from 39 to 45% with the D-Ala:D-Ser ligases (VanE, Van C1, VanC2, and VanG), from 36 to 41% with D-Ala:D-lactate (D-Lac) ligases (VanA, Van B, VanD, and ligases from Paenibacillus popillae, Streptomyces toyocaensis, Amycolatopsis orientalis), and from 36 to 38% with the putative D-Ala:D-Ala ligases from clostridia (Clostridium acetobutylicum, Clostridium perfringens, Clostridium tetani, and Desulfitobacterium hafniense). The highest degree of identity (45%) was with the VanG (D-Ala:D-Ser) ligase. The motifs conserved in the related amino acid ligases were found in the deduced 355-amino acid sequence. Of four amino acids that are present in the D-Ala:D-Ser ligases (EKYQ), two (KY) at positions 262 to 263 were conserved (16). Alignment of ligases was used to construct a phylogenetic tree, confirming that Ddlc. innocuum was related to D-Ala:D-X ligases (Fig. 3) (17).
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FIG. 2. Sequence of the ddlc. innocuum and C. innocuum racemase genes. The putative ribosome binding sites are underlined. The deduced amino acid sequence of Ddlc. innocuum and C. innocuum racemase are shown above the nucleotide sequence. Start of the proteins is indicated by an arrow. The EcoRI (nt 781 to 786) and the DraI (nt 1923 to 1926) sites used for inverse PCR are boxed. The conserved motif in D-Ala:D-Ser ligases and the putative pyridoxal attachment site in alanine racemases are in boldface type and are underlined.
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FIG. 3. Phylogenetic tree derived from the alignment of D-Ala:D-Lac, D-Ala:D-Ser, and selected D-Ala:D-Ala ligases. The tree was constructed by the neighbor-joining method, taking into account the results of maximum-parsimony and bootstrapping analysis. Sequences of the ligases are from Amycolatopsis orientalis (AAD19835), Bacillus subtilis 168 (CAB12263), C. acetobutylicum [Ddl] (AAK80837), C. innocuum [Ddl c. innocuum] (), C. perfringens [DdlA] (BAB81021), C. perfringens [DdlB] (BAB80525), C. tetani [DdlA] (AAO34934), C. tetani [DdlB] (AAO35288), D. hafniense [Ddl] (ZP_00099215), E. coli K12 [DdlA] (NP_414915), E. coli K12 [DdlB] (NP_414634), E. casseliflavus [VanC2] (AAA60990), E. faecalis V583 [VanB] (2007289A), E. gallinarum BM4174 [VanC1] (AAA24786), E. faecalis [VanD] (AAM09849), E. faecalis BM4405 [VanE] (AAL27442), E. faecalis WCH9 [VanG] (AAF71281), E. faecalis [Ddl] (AAC43218), E. faecium BM4147 [VanA] (AAA65956), E. faecium [Ddl] (ZP_00036460), E. gallinarum BM4174 [Ddl1] (AAN62561), E. gallinarum BM4174 [Ddl2] (AAK97387), E. hirae [Ddl] (Q47827), Lactococcus lactis (AAK04439), Leuconostoc mesenteroides [Ddl] (Q48745), Listeria monocytogenes (CAC98933), M. tuberculosis [Ddl] (CAB05431), P. popillae (AAF36803), Salmonella enterica serovar Typhi [DdlA] (AA070072), S. aureus [Ddl] (BAB43170), S. agalactiae [Ddl] (AAM99654), S. pneumoniae [Ddl] (CAB64467), Streptomyces coelicolor [Ddl] (NP_627790), and Streptomyces toyocaensis [Ddl] (AAC23582).
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Expression of glycopeptide resistance and pool of UDP-linked cytoplasmic precursors in E. faecalis harboring plasmid encoded genes from C. innocuum. We tested if the putative ddlc. innocuum ligase and C. innocuum racemase genes could confer vancomycin resistance in an heterologous host. They were first amplified from C. innocuum, then cloned either alone or combined on the shuttle plasmid pJIM2246 where they were expressed under the control of the promoter of the chloramphenicol acetyltransferase gene and finally introduced into E. faecalis JH2-2 (Table 3). E. faecalis JH2-2 harboring pJIM2246 containing the cloned ddlc. innocuum ligase or C. innocuum racemase genes showed only the presence of pentapeptide[D-Ala] precursor and no change in the vancomycin MICs. Combination of C. innocuum racemase gene and ddlc. innocuum resulted in the production of pentapeptide[D-Ala] and pentapeptide[D-Ser] whereas resistance to vancomycin was still not expressed. This result was, however, not surprising since synthesis of modified precursors by the cloned genes could result in vancomycin resistance only if the high-affinity vancomycin pentapeptide[D-Ala]precursor produced by the host was eliminated (5, 27, 28). Partial elimination of this latter was achieved, by cloning the vanXYc gene from E. gallinarum BM4174 downstream from the ddlc. innocuum and/or C. innocuum racemase genes (Table 3). VanXYc has a D,D-peptidase activity which degrades UDP-MurNAc-pentapeptide[D-Ala] to UDP-MurNAc-tetrapeptide and can hydrolyze D-Ala:D-Ala, although at a lesser efficiency (28). By contrast, this enzyme has a with very low dipeptidase activity against D-Ala:D-Ser and no activity against UDP-MurNAc-pentapeptide[D-Ser] (28). Introduction of this construct in E. faecalis JH2-2 resulted in the production of pentapeptide[D-Ser], pentapeptide[D-Ala], and tetrapeptide precursors, together with a reproducible threefold increase in the MIC of vancomycin. In the presence of the cloned ddlc. innocuum and vanXYc genes and in the absence of C. innocuum racemase gene similar increased MIC of vancomycin was observed for E. faecalis when D-serine (10 mM) was added to Mueller-Hinton agar. In contrast, the addition of L-serine (10 mM) did not affect susceptibility to vancomycin.
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TABLE 3. Peptidoglycan precursors in extracts of E. faecalis JH2-2 harboring various plasmids and for which MICs of vancomycin differ
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The two genes encoding a putative Ddlc. innocuum ligase and C. innocuum racemase were found to be adjacent on the chromosome. The ligases from other Clostridium spp. form a group distinct from Ddlc. innocuum which was closely related to the VanG D-Ala:D-Ser ligase and to D-Ala:D-Lac ligases, although placed on a separate branch (Fig. 3). C. innocuum racemase was predicted to be a soluble protein, similar to "classical" racemases and therefore differs from the other serine racemases reported previously in enterococciVanTC (1), VanTE (1), and VanTG (21which contain 10 transmembrane domains and are probably membrane-bound. The reason for this difference is unknown.
As our results showed that resistance was related to the synthesis of precursors terminating in D-Ser, the presence of a small quantity of precursors ending in D-Ala and of pentapeptide[Ala] monomers in C. innocuum was surprising. It is possible that the Ddlc. innocuum ligase has also some activity of a D-Ala:D-Ala ligase. Alternatively, another D-Ala:D-Ala ligase could be encoded by the chromosome of C. innocuum. However a single gene encoding a D-Ala:D-Ser ligase was amplified by oligodeoxynucleotides V1 and V2 which does not exclude the presence of a second, more structurally remote, ddl gene. There is circumstantial evidence that a single ligase is present as no gene encoding a VanXY-type enzyme is present in the operon from C. innocuum between the ligase and racemase genes while when the two genes are cloned in E. faecalis (which has a D-Ala-D-Ala ligase), VanXYc has also to be added for the organism to become low-level resistant to vancomycin. In general, bacterial chromosomes encode a single enzyme, although there are exceptions such as E. gallinarum with one D-Ala:D-Ser and two D-Ala:D-Ala ligases (2), and enteric bacteria (E. coli and Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium) with two D-Ala:D-Ala ligases. The in silico analysis of the sequenced genome of clostridia showed that C. acetobutylicum and D. hafniense contained only one putative D-Ala:D-Ala ligase (GenBank access numbers AAK80837 and ZP_00099215, respectively), C. perfringens two (BAB81021 and BAB80525), and C. tetani two, as well (AAO34934 and AAO35288).
Cloning of the ddlc. innocuum and C. innocuum racemase genes in E. faecalis showed that cooperation of the two genes was necessary for the synthesis of the low vancomycin affinity pentapeptide[D-Ser] precursor in this host and that they confer resistance to vancomycin provided that, in the presence of the cloned vanXYc gene, the high affinity vancomycin pentapeptide[D-Ala] precursor synthesized by the heterologous host was partially eliminated. Homology of C. innocuum racemase with amino acid racemases and expression of vancomycin resistance without addition of D-Ser suggested that the protein catalyses synthesis of D-Ser in vivo from L-Serine available either from the culture medium or synthesized de novo. In confirmation of this hypothesis, the cloned ddlc. innocuum gene alone in presence of vanXYc was sufficient for expression of resistance if bypass of the absent C. innocuum racemase was obtained after addition of D-serine to the culture medium.
Thus, it can be concluded that in C. innocuum, cooperation of ddlc. innocuum and C. innocuum racemase lead to the expression of glycopeptide resistance since they allow the predominant production of cytoplasmic pentapeptide [D-Ser] precursor which is then processed by the cell wall machinery to be integrated in the peptidoglycan.
Present address: Department of Pathology, Hershey Medical Center, Hershey, PA 17033. ![]()
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