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Journal of Bacteriology, July 2004, p. 4387-4389, Vol. 186, No. 13
0021-9193/04/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JB.186.13.4387-4389.2004
Copyright © 2004, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
tonB3 Is Required for Normal Twitching Motility and Extracellular Assembly of Type IV Pili
Bixing Huang,
Kelin Ru, Zheng Yuan, Cynthia B. Whitchurch,
and John S. Mattick*
Institute for Molecular Bioscience, University of Queensland, Brisbane, QLD 4072, Australia
Received 26 February 2004/
Accepted 29 March 2004

ABSTRACT
Three mutants with Tn
5-B21 insertion in
tonB3 (PA0406) of
Pseudomonas aeruginosa exhibited defective twitching motility and reduced
assembly of extracellular pili. These defects could be complemented
with wild-type
tonB3.

TEXT
Twitching motility in
Pseudomonas aeruginosa is a form of surface
motility mediated by type IV pili, which are located at the
pole of the cell and are responsible for attachment to and translocation
across host epithelial cells (
10). Around 40 genes at various
genomic loci have been identified as being involved in the biogenesis
and function of type IV pili in
P. aeruginosa, which are central
to host colonization and the formation and maturation of biofilms
(
10).
P. aeruginosa inhabits a wide variety of environments including soil, water, and plant and animal tissues (18). To obtain iron from these environments, P. aeruginosa has multiple iron acquisition systems (9). It produces pyoverdin and pyochelin as key siderophores (6) and synthesizes specific high-affinity transporters, FpvA and FptA, which concentrate ferripyoverdin and ferric-pyochelin ligands, respectively, at the cell surface (3, 11). The subsequent translocation of the ferriligands into the periplasm is mediated by TonB (16).
In the P. aeruginosa genome, two tonB genes have been identified, tonB1 and tonB2. Disruption of tonB1 inhibits siderophore-mediated iron uptake and heme uptake (12, 20). Inactivation of tonB2 has no adverse effect on iron or heme acquisition, but tonB1-tonB2 double mutants are more compromised with regard to growth in iron-restricted medium than a single tonB1 knockout mutant (21). Here we report the identification and characterization of the third tonB-like gene of P. aeruginosa, tonB3, whose product is required for twitching motility.
Three independent Tn5-B21 mutants of P. aeruginosa with defective twitching motility (S38, S281, and S311) were identified, with the insertions at a locus designated PA0406 in the P. aeruginosa genome (15). The Tn5-B21 insertions in these mutants were at nucleotide positions 431, 470, and 578 bp from the start codon in the open reading frame. P. aeruginosa with a mutation of this gene, which we have designated tonB3 (see below), has been previously reported to have defective twitching motility and exhibit reduced virulence in the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster (7), although the defect in twitching motility was not further characterized. Interestingly, mutants that are impaired in core aspects of the biogenesis of type IV pili (pilD and pilQ) and are completely defective in twitching motility retain wild-type virulence in the fruit fly model (7).
In the standard subsurface assay (1), mutants S38 (Fig. 1C), S281, and S311 (data not shown) exhibited twitching motility that was reduced but not completely impaired compared to that of the pilin-negative PAK
pilA mutant (Fig. 1B). The growth rates of the mutants were the same as that of the PAK parental strain in Luria-Bertani broth (data not shown), suggesting that the reduced twitching motility was not simply due to a growth defect. The micromorphology of the twitching zone edge on S38 was also examined by light microscopy and showed that compared to the wild type, S38 exhibited significantly reduced outward movement of the rafts and a lack of lattice-like networks, whereas these features were completely lacking from nonmotile pilA mutants (Fig. 1I to K). Both the macroscopic and microscopic twitching motility phenotypes of these mutants were restored by complementation with pBH36, which contains a 1.6-kb NotI-SalI fragment spanning the tonB3 coding sequence (from 311 bp upstream of the start codon to 343 bp downstream of the stop codon) cloned into the vector pUCPSK (17) (Fig. 1D and L), indicating that the twitching motility defect in S38 is due to a mutation of tonB3 and not due to polar effects on neighboring genes or to a secondary mutation elsewhere on the genome.
Database searches showed that TonB3 has strong homology over
its entire sequence to the TonB protein of
Pseudomonas syringae (69% identity and 83% similarity; GenBank accession no.
NP_794769).
TonB3 also has significant homology to TonB1 (23% identity and
43% similarity) and TonB2 (25% identity and 46% similarity)
of
P. aeruginosa (
12,
21). Interestingly, TonB3 has a similar
level of homology to TolA of
P. aeruginosa (28% identity and
47% similarity), which is part of another energy-coupled active
iron import system (
5). TonB3 also has the same functional domains
as those of TonB1, TonB2, and TolA, notably an N-terminal transmembrane
domain (
http://www.cbs.dtu.dk/services/TMHMM/) and C-terminal
conserved TolA and TonB domains (
http://smart.embl-heidelberg.de).
The effects of mutations in tonB1 and tonB2 on type IV pilus biogenesis and twitching motility in P. aeruginosa were not assessed in previous studies (12, 21). We therefore constructed tonB1 and tonB2 allelic exchange insertion mutants (2). These mutants exhibited the same growth phenotypes in both rich and iron-depleted media as previously reported (12, 21). Twitching motility in the tonB1 mutant was reduced, presumably only as a result of its slow growth (Fig. 1G). The twitching zone of the tonB2 mutant was indistinguishable from that of the wild type (Fig. 1H), and both tonB1 and tonB2 mutants showed wild-type levels of pilin production and surface assembly (Fig. 2A to C), indicating that neither TonB1 nor TonB2 is required for pilus biogenesis. Moreover, cloned tonB1 and tonB2 constructs could not restore twitching motility to tonB3 mutants (Fig. 1E and F).
The level of intracellular pilin expression and the amount of
surface pili of
tonB mutants were analyzed with semiquantitative
Western blotting and quantitative enzyme-linked immunosorbent
assays (ELISAs) (
1,
13), respectively, using rabbit anti-PAK
pilus antibodies. S38 exhibited relatively normal levels of
intracellular pilin (Fig.
2A), but Western blotting and quantitative
ELISAs showed that the amount of surface pili was significantly
reduced (Fig.
2B and C), giving results similar to those obtained
with the
pilV mutant, which is known to have normal intracellular
pilin expression but largely lacks surface pili (
1). Complementation
of S38 with cloned
tonB3 restored surface pili to levels that
appeared quantitatively higher than that of wild-type PAK by
ELISA (Fig.
2C), suggesting overcompensation by higher gene
dosage. Although the Ton and Tol systems are regarded as major
energy-coupled active import systems for gram-negative bacteria,
the data here indicate that TonB3 may be involved in some aspect
of the transport and secretion (Fig.
2A and C) of the pili or
of a component required for their formation in the same manner
as TonB provides energy to efflux systems to export antibiotics
and toxic solvents out of the cell (
8,
19).
Vibrio cholerae does not require either of its two TonB systems for type IV
pilus biogenesis (
4). Free iron sequestration by lactoferrin
and other iron binding compounds has been shown to increase
twitching motility (
14), suggesting that iron uptake per se
is not required for twitching motility.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This work was supported by the National Health and Medical Research
Council of Australia.
We thank Leonie Barnett of Queensland Health Scientific Services for helpful discussions.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Institute for Molecular Bioscience, University of Queensland, Brisbane, QLD 4072, Australia. Phone: 61-7-3346-2110. Fax: 61-7-3346-2111. E-mail:
j.mattick{at}imb.uq.edu.au.

Present address: Public Health Microbiology Laboratory, Queensland Health Scientific Services, Coopers Plains, Q 4108, Australia. 
Present address: Department of Microbiology, Monash University, Clayton, VIC 3168, Australia. 

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Journal of Bacteriology, July 2004, p. 4387-4389, Vol. 186, No. 13
0021-9193/04/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JB.186.13.4387-4389.2004
Copyright © 2004, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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