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Journal of Bacteriology, April 2006, p. 2300-2308, Vol. 188, No. 7
0021-9193/06/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JB.188.7.2300-2308.2006
Copyright © 2006, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Shuqing Zhao,
Robert L. Rosenberg, and
Robert A. Nicholas*
Department of Pharmacology, The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina 27599-7365
Received 28 April 2005/ Accepted 23 November 2005
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Four genes or loci (penA, mtrR, penB, and ponA) are known to be involved in high-level penicillin resistance (MICs,
2 µg/ml) in CMRNG strains, while the existence of a fifth resistance gene is inferred but not yet identified (3, 9, 32). penA (38, 39) and ponA (32, 33) encode alterations in the two essential penicillin-binding proteins (PBP 2 and PBP 1, respectively) that decrease their rates of acylation by ß-lactam antibiotics. A single-base-pair deletion in the mtrR promoter abolishes transcription of the mtrR repressor and increases expression of the MtrC-MtrD-MtrE active efflux pump, which confers resistance to a diverse set of hydrophobic agents and detergents (14, 15, 29). penB, which encodes altered forms of porin IB (PIB), increases resistance to both penicillin and tetracycline (12, 28).
N. gonorrhoeae expresses one of two porins, PIA or PIB, whose genes (porA and porB, respectively) are alleles of a single por locus. In a previous study, we showed that mutations at positions 120 and 121 in PIB, which are predicted to reside within loop 3 that lines the pore of the channel, are critical in mediating resistance to penicillin and tetracycline (28). These mutations include a single G120K mutation and the double mutations G120D/A121D, G120R/A121H, and G120P/A121P. In addition, these data demonstrated that a charged amino acid at position 120 is highly preferred for mediating increased resistance to penicillin and tetracycline (28). Although we identified specific mutations that increase antibiotic resistance and their location within PIB, the mechanism(s) by which these alterations increase resistance is not clear. Mutations in loop 3 of other porins have been shown to have large effects on ion selectivity, pore size, and/or antibiotic permeation properties (1, 5, 23, 34), but the effects of the putative loop 3 mutations in PIB have not been elucidated.
To examine in more depth the mechanism(s) by which these mutations increase resistance, we determined whether these PIB mutations (i) alter the electrophysiological properties of the pore, including ion conductance and ion selectivity, (ii) constrict the size of the pore, and/or (iii) increase the hydrophilicity of the pore, thereby decreasing the permeability of relatively hydrophobic compounds such as penicillin and tetracycline. The latter phenomenon is observed in Escherichia coli porins, in which hydrophobic compounds permeate slower than hydrophilic compounds (27, 45). Recombinant PIB proteins were expressed in inclusion bodies in E. coli, renatured, and incorporated into planar lipid bilayers or liposomes. For each recombinant PIB, we determined the conductance and ion selectivity of the channel as well as the flux of a range of sugars or ß-lactam antibiotics through the porin. Surprisingly, solute and antibiotic permeation rates of the four mutants were not significantly different from the permeation rates of wild-type porin. These paradoxical data are consistent with MIC experiments and in vivo permeation rates, as well as with earlier data (38) showing that overexpression of the MtrC-MtrD-MtrE efflux pump (via acquisition of the mtrR resistance determinant) is required for the penB porin mutants to confer increased resistance to penicillin and tetracycline.
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Bacterial strains, plasmids, and growth conditions. N. gonorrhoeae strains used in this study are described in Table 1. Gonococcal transformations and MIC assays were performed as previously described (10, 28, 35). Plasmids encoding the porin variants used in the transformations also harbored an erm (porB mutants) or kan (porB) resistance cassette downstream of the coding sequence to aid in selection of recombinants. The D405N mutation in the mtrD gene, which also incorporated a new SalI site to help screen for transformants, was accomplished using QuickChange (Stratagene, La Jolla, CA). All mutations and resistance determinants introduced by transformation were verified by PCR amplification of genomic DNA and sequencing. E. coli BL21(DE3)* cells (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA) were transformed with por-containing plasmids, and colonies were grown on Luria-Bertani (LB) agar plates containing 50 µg/ml kanamycin.
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TABLE 1. Bacterial strains used in this study
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rmp porBFA1090, which expresses PIB from strain FA1090 (wild type), following a Zwittergent-Ca2+-assisted purification procedure described by Wetzler et al. (44). An aliquot of the isolated porin in 50 mM Tris, pH 8.0, 10 mM EDTA, 5% Zwittergent 3,14 was submitted to chromatography on a Sephacryl-S300 gel filtration column (26 cm by 60 cm) and eluted with 100 mM Tris, pH 8.0, 200 mM NaCl, 10 mM EDTA, 0.05% Zwittergent 3,14. Fractions containing native PIB protein (determined by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis) that eluted at the apparent molecular weight (MW) of trimers were pooled, concentrated, and dialyzed against 50 mM Tris, pH 8.0, 100 mM NaCl, 1 mM EDTA, 0.05% Zwittergent 3,14. Protein concentration was determined via Bradford assay.
Subcloning of N. gonorrhoeae porB and E. coli ompF genes.
The coding sequences for the mature forms of PIB (i.e., lacking the region encoding the leader sequence) were amplified from genomic DNA of the appropriate strains with Pfu polymerase. The 5' primer (por-S3; 5'-CGCCATATGGATGTCACCCTGTACGGTGCCATCAAA-3') was complementary to bases 58 to 84 of the porIB gene and contained an NdeI restriction site (in boldface) at its 5' end. The NdeI site introduced an ATG start codon at the beginning of the coding sequence for the mature form of PIB and facilitated subcloning into the pT7-7K expression vector. The 3' primer (por-U2; 5'-AAACTGCAGTATGGATAGATTCGTCATTCCCGC-3') was complementary to a region
300 bp downstream of the porIB gene and contained a PstI site (in boldface) at its 5' end. The mature coding sequence of ompF was amplified by PCR from the genomic DNA of E. coli strain MC1061. The 5' primer (EC-OmpF-S1; 5-CGCCATATGGCAGAAATCTATAACAAAGATGG-3') was complementary to bases 67 and 89 and contained an NdeI restriction site. The 3' primer (EC-OmpF-U1; 5-AAACTGCAGTTAGAACTGGTAAACGATACCC-3') contained a PstI site at its 5' end and hybridized to bases 1069 and 1089, which are at the end of the coding sequence. The PCR products were subcloned into the NdeI and PstI sites of the expression vector, pT7-7K, which has a kanamycin resistance gene in place of the ß-lactamase resistance gene (40). All constructs were verified by sequencing. E. coli BL21(DE3)* cells were transformed with pT7-7K/porB or pT7-7K/ompF plasmids, and transformants were selected on LB agar plates containing 50 µg/ml kanamycin.
Recombinant PIB protein expression and purification. Three liters of BL21(DE3)* cells harboring one of the pT7-7K/porB or pT7-7K/ompF plasmids was grown in 2X YT, 50 µg/ml kanamycin at 37°C. Isopropyl-ß-D-thiogalactopyranoside was added to a final concentration of 0.5 mM, and cells were incubated for an additional 2 to 2.5 h. The cells were harvested by centrifugation at 3,600 x g for 20 min, resuspended in French press buffer (20 mM Tris, pH 8.0, 500 mM NaCl, 2 mM EDTA, and 10% glycerol), and lysed by three passes through a French press at 16,000 lb/in2 immediately after the addition of 100 µl of freshly prepared phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride (20 mg/ml in ethanol). Inclusion bodies were pelleted by centrifugation of the lysate at 10,000 x g for 10 min, and the large protein pellet was washed extensively in 10 mM Tris, pH 8.0, 1 mM EDTA with or without the addition of 1% Triton X-100.
The recombinant porins were refolded and purified following a modified procedure described by Qi et al. (31) for Neisseria porins. Briefly, the inclusion bodies were solubilized in TEN-urea buffer (10 mM Tris, pH 8.0, 10 mM EDTA, 100 mM NaCl, 8 M urea), adjusted to a concentration of
10 mg/ml, and mixed 1:1 with 10% Zwittergent 3,14 (Calbiochem, San Diego, CA). The porin proteins were slowly refolded by dialyzing the protein-detergent mixture in 200 ml of Buffer A (50 mM Tris, pH 8.0, 150 mM NaCl, 4 M urea, 0.05% Zwittergent 3,14), followed by a slow dilution of the urea by adding 1.8 liters of Buffer B (50 mM Tris, pH 8.0, 150 mM NaCl, 0.05% Zwittergent 3,14) at 1 ml/min for 30 h. The dialyzed and refolded samples were centrifuged at 10,000 x g to pellet any precipitant and loaded onto a Sephacryl-S300 gel filtration column equilibrated in 100 mM Tris, pH 8.0, 200 mM NaCl, 10 mM EDTA, and 0.05% Zwittergent 3,14, and refolded porin oligomers were eluted in the same buffer. Fractions containing trimeric porin proteins were pooled, concentrated, and dialyzed against 50 mM Tris, pH 8.0, 100 mM NaCl, 1 mM EDTA, 0.05% Zwittergent 3,14. Protein concentrations were determined via Bradford assay.
Planar lipid bilayer assays. Bilayer experiments were carried out essentially as described previously (7, 20). Synthetic 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-phosphatidylethanolamine and 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-phosphatidylcholine (Avanti Polar Lipids, Alabaster, AL) in a 4:1 molar ratio were dissolved in n-decane to a final concentration of 50 mg/ml. Bilayers were formed by brushing lipids over a 400-µm-diameter hole in a polyvinyl difluoride partition separating two chambers (cis and trans), each containing an electrolyte solution of 200 mM NaCl and 10 mM HEPES, pH 7.4. To promote the incorporation of porins into the bilayer, 0.1% Triton X-100 (final) was added to the porin preparations immediately before addition to the cis chamber. Triton X-100 did not disrupt the stability of the bilayers or affect conductances. Porins were added at low concentrations (1 to 10 ng) to promote insertion of single channels and to delay multiple channel incorporations. Spontaneous channel incorporation occurred within 1 to 15 min. Membranes were voltage-clamped with a modified patch-clamp amplifier (PC501A; Warner Instruments, Hamden, CT). Voltages were defined as trans relative to cis, and current flow from trans to cis (equivalent to Cl flow cis to trans) was recorded as positive current. Data were low-pass filtered at 200 Hz with an 8-pole Bessel filter and digitized at 1 kHz. Programs for data acquisition and analysis were written in Axobasic (Axon Instruments, Union City, CA).
Conductances for each porin were calculated from current-voltage plots. Current amplitudes at each voltage were determined from amplitude histograms. To determine ion selectivity, NaCl was added to the cis chamber to generate a gradient (0.4 M NaCl cis, 0.2 M NaCl trans). Current-voltage plots were constructed and the permeability ratios (Na+ versus Cl) were calculated from the reversal potentials according to the Goldman-Hodgkin-Katz equation (16), where P is the permeability of the indicated ion, C is the concentration of the indicated ion, Erev is the reversal potential, e is the base of the natural logarithm, R is the gas constant, T is the absolute temperature, and F is the Faraday constant.
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Permeation of sugars through porins reconstituted in liposomes. Liposome-swelling assays with various sugars were performed precisely as described previously (26). Briefly, 2.4 µmol egg phosphatidylcholine (Avanti Polar Lipids, Alabaster, AL) and 0.2 µmol dicetylphosphate (Sigma-Aldrich, St. Louis, MO) in chloroform were combined and dried thoroughly in a Pyrex test tube. Lipids were suspended in either 0.2 ml water (for control liposomes) or 0.2 ml protein (1 µg) in water and sonicated (1 to 2 min) until translucent. The proteolipids were dried under vacuum and stored in a dark, evacuated desiccator overnight. Proteoliposomes were fully suspended in a solution of 5 mM Tris, pH 8.0, and 15% (wt/vol) Dextran T-40 (GE Healthcare, Piscataway, NJ) and left at room temperature for 1 h.
The isotonic concentrations of each sugar were determined empirically with control liposomes. Seventeen microliters of proteoliposomes was added to 0.6 ml of isotonic concentrations of each buffered sugar solution. Changes in optical density at 400 nm (OD400) were measured with a DU 650 Spectrophotometer (Beckman Instruments, Inc., Fullerton, CA) in kinetic mode at 1-s intervals for 90 to 180 s. The permeation of each sugar was determined in triplicate for separate liposome preparations, and the swelling rate was determined from the slopes of the linear portion of each OD curve (10 s) and plotted as the logarithmic percentage of arabinose permeation versus molecular weight. Linear regression was performed to determine the apparent molecular weight exclusion limit of each porin. The difference in the confidence intervals of the slopes of the best-fit lines was analyzed with GraphPad Prism (San Diego, CA) to compare sugar permeation rates between porins.
Permeation of ß-lactam antibiotics through porins reconstituted in liposomes. The determination of ß-lactam antibiotic permeation through porins was essentially as described for sugars but with the following modifications (27). Multilamellar liposomes containing 120 µg of recombinant porins were prepared from 12.4 µmol of egg phosphatidylcholine and 0.4 µm dicetylphosphate exactly as described in the previous section. Proteoliposomes were suspended in a 0.8-ml solution of 12 mM stachyose, 4 mM sodium-NAD, and 1 mM imidazole-NAD, pH 6.0, and incubated at room temperature for 1 h. Stock solutions of each antibiotic were made fresh for each experiment and contained 25 mM of the sodium salt form of the ß-lactam antibiotic, 1 mM sodium-NAD, and 1 mM imidazole-NAD (pH 6.0). The pH of each solution was carefully adjusted to 5.8 to 6.2 with NaOH. The permeation rate of arabinose in 1 mM sodium-NAD and 1 mM imidazole-NAD (pH 6.0) through the porins was also measured, and the rate of permeation of each antibiotic was plotted as a percentage of arabinose permeation. Differences in the swelling rates of each ß-lactam antibiotic through the wild-type and G120K variant PIBs from five individual experiments were analyzed with Student t tests.
Nitrocefin hydrolysis assay. ß-Lactamase-producing strains of N. gonorrhoeae (L3481 and derivatives; Table 1) were grown overnight on GC medium base plates (Difco, Sparks, MD). The next morning, the cells were suspended in 50 mM Tris, 200 mM NaCl, 10 mM MgCl2 (TBS-M) plus 3% polyvinylpyrrolidone, washed once, and diluted to an OD600 of 0.5 and kept on ice. Nitrocefin (BD, Franklin Lakes, NJ) was dissolved in TBS-M at 25 µg/ml, and assays were initiated by adding 0.1 ml of cells to 0.4 ml nitrocefin solution, mixing, and monitoring the increase in absorbance at 480 nm. To control for the release of ß-lactamase, cell suspensions were pelleted and the hydrolysis of nitrocefin by the supernatants was monitored as described above.
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rmp porBFA1090 (FA19 expressing PIB from FA1090 and containing a deletion of the Rmp protein that can copurify with porins [43]) and compared its conductance and ion selectivity with recombinant refolded wild-type PIB protein following incorporation into planar lipid bilayers. Both native and recombinant porins were primarily in the largest conducting state (i.e., each monomer of the trimer was open) and had slope conductances of 1.0 nS, with 0.2 M NaCl on both sides of the bilayer. In the presence of a twofold NaCl gradient (400 mM cis versus 200 mM trans), the average reversal potentials (Erev) for the native and recombinant channels were 6.3 ± 0.3 mV (n = 3) and 4.9 ± 1.2 mV (n = 4), respectively, demonstrating that both porins also had a similar preference for anions (Table 2). Taken together, these data demonstrate that native and recombinant wild-type porins have indistinguishable electrophysiological properties and that native function was preserved in the recombinant porin. This ensured that the properties of the recombinant porin variants could also be examined in a similar manner. |
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TABLE 2. Electrophysiological properties of native and recombinant porin proteins in planar lipid bilayers
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1 nS), although the probability that the variants were in this state was low (data not shown).
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FIG. 1. Representative traces of current through PIB proteins in planar lipid bilayers. Single channels of recombinant PIB proteins were incorporated into artificial bilayers. Membranes were held at 0 mV to record the zero-current level and then were pulsed to 50 mV for 10 s. Bilayers were bathed in 200 mM NaCl, 10 mM HEPES, pH 7.4. Open transitions of the porin channels are downward.
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FIG. 2. Composite all-point current histograms for wild-type and variant PIBs. Amplitude histograms were constructed by analyzing a series of current traces (n = 5 to 10) at 50 mV for single-porin channels from several separate experiments and plotting the number of events versus current amplitude (1-pA intervals). Bilayers were bathed in 200 mM NaCl, 10 mM HEPES, pH 7.4.
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2-fold) in its anion selectivity (Table 2). Therefore, each of the PIB variants showed little to no change in ion selectivity compared to wild-type PIB.
Sugar permeation through recombinant wild-type and variant PIB proteins.
To test whether mutations in PIB decrease the size of the pore, we performed liposome-swelling experiments, which measured the permeation rates of uncharged sugars of increasing molecular weights (i.e., arabinose, galactose, glucose, N-acetyl-D-glucosamine, sucrose, raffinose, and stachyose; MWs of 150 to 666) through wild-type and variant PIBs. The permeation rates of arabinose (MW, 150) through each PIB were essentially identical (data not shown); therefore, the permeation rates of all other sugars were normalized to that of arabinose. Figure 3 demonstrates that an individual sugar permeated each PIB protein with similar rates, although the G120K PIB variant showed a slight decrease in the rate of permeation of N-acetyl-D-glucosamine (MW, 221) compared to the wild type or the other PIB variants. A plot of the log of relative permeation rates versus molecular weight revealed that the permeation rates of sugars through the wild-type and variant PIB proteins were not significantly different (95% confidence interval; P = 0.3). The approximate exclusion limit of each channel was defined as the molecular weight of a sugar that permeated at 10% of the rate of arabinose permeation. The apparent exclusion limits were between 360 and 400 Da for each of the PIBs, which were similar to the
400-Da solute exclusion limits observed for N. meningitidis PorB proteins (21, 22). Therefore, mutations in PIB proteins do not appear to decrease pore size.
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FIG. 3. Sugar permeation through recombinant porin proteins reconstituted into liposomes. Proteoliposomes were made with 1 µg recombinant wild-type or mutant porins in the presence of T-40 Dextran. Aliquots (17 µl) were diluted into 0.6 ml of isotonic concentrations of a range of sugars, and the permeation rate of each sugar was determined from the initial change in OD400. The average permeation rate for each sugar was determined in triplicate for two separate proteoliposome preparations, and the log of the permeation rate (normalized to the permeation rate of arabinose) was plotted versus the molecular weight of the sugar (error bars represent the standard deviation). The lines were fitted via linear regression. Analyses of the 95% confidence intervals determined that the differences in slopes were not significant (P = 0.3).
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FIG. 4. ß-Lactam antibiotic permeation through recombinant porin proteins reconstituted into liposomes. Proteoliposomes were formed with 120 µg recombinant wild-type (WT) or G120K variant porins in the presence of stachyose and sodium-NAD. Aliquots (17 µl) were diluted into 0.6 ml of isotonic concentrations of ß-lactam antibiotics of increasing hydrophobicity (from left to right on the plot), and the permeation rates of each antibiotic were determined from the initial change in OD400. The rates of antibiotic permeation in each experiment were normalized to the rate of arabinose permeation. The averages ± standard deviations of five separate experiments are shown. Differences in antibiotic permeation between wild-type and G120K PIBs for each antibiotic were determined via Student's t test (*, P < 0.05). The log partition coefficient (Pu; octanol-aqueous buffer) values are described in Yoshimura and Nikaido (45).
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Antibiotic susceptibility profiles for strains containing wild-type or variant PIBs. In order to correlate the permeation rates of the ß-lactam antibiotics with their ability to inhibit gonococcal growth, we examined the antibiotic susceptibility profiles of the ß-lactam antibiotics used in the permeation studies for a set of isogenic strains containing the wild-type PIB or variant (G120K, G120D/A121D, G120P/A121P, and G120R/A121H) PIBs (Table 3). These strains contained the first two resistance determinants, penA and mtrR, in addition to the various PIB proteins. Most ß-lactam antibiotics had two- to threefold higher MICs for strains harboring the PIB variants compared to the strain containing the wild-type PIB. Because acquisition of penB also confers tetracycline resistance, the MICs of several tetracycline derivatives for the wild-type and variant PIB strains were also investigated (Table 3). Each PIB variant strain conferred approximately two- to threefold increases in resistance to each derivative compared to the wild-type PIB strain. As reported previously, tetracycline had a lower MIC in a penA mtrR strain harboring PIB-G120D/A121D than in similar strains harboring PIB proteins with the other mutations (28).
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TABLE 3. MICs of ß-lactam and tetracycline antibiotics for strains containing wild-type (WT) or variant PIBs
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FIG. 5. MICs of isogenic strains with varying resistance genes and porin proteins. penA4 and mtrR resistance determinants from FA6140 genomic DNA were transformed into FA19, which contains PIA, in a stepwise manner. Strains containing wild-type or variant PIBs were created via transformation with plasmid constructs containing either wild-type or mutant porB DNA, respectively (as described in Olesky et al. [28]; see Table 1). MICs are the averages of three experiments.
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To examine the permeability of porins in vivo, we measured the hydrolysis of the chromogenic ß-lactam antibiotic nitrocefin in cells expressing periplasmic ß-lactamase. In this assay, the diffusion of the antibiotics across the outer membrane is the rate-limiting step in their hydrolysis (41). L3481, a ß-lactamase-producing PIB strain, was used as a recipient for the mtrR and porB-G120K resistance determinants. As shown in Fig. 6, the rates of hydrolysis of nitrocefin were essentially identical in L3481, L3481 porB-G120K, and L3481 mtrR. In contrast, L3481 mtrR porB-G120K showed a reduced rate of hydrolysis, consistent with a decrease in outer membrane permeability.
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FIG. 6. Nitrocefin hydrolysis assays in ß-lactamase-producing gonococcal strains also harboring mtrR and porIB-G120K mutations. L3481 cells (a ß-lactamase-producing PIB strain) harboring the indicated resistance determinants (Table 1) were used to assess the permeation of antibiotics in vivo as described in Materials and Methods. Permeation across the outer membrane is the rate-limiting step in the hydrolysis of nitrocefin (41). This experiment was repeated twice with similar results.
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In concordance with other porin studies (31), the structural and functional properties of recombinant wild-type PIB porin, which was overexpressed in inclusion bodies in E. coli and refolded in vitro, were indistinguishable from native PIB purified from gonococci. Furthermore, wild-type PIB, either native or recombinant, exhibited ion conductance and ion selectivity values in planar lipid bilayers that were very similar to those previously reported for Neisseria porins (19, 20, 37). The wild-type channels were primarily in an open state, but occasionally they were closed in distinct levels reflecting the trimeric porin structure. We infrequently observed a small closed-channel current as described by Mauro et al. (20). Gonococcal porins have been reported to exhibit voltage-dependent closings at ±80 mV in planar lipid bilayers; however, our experimental design did not address the voltage-dependent gating behaviors of the PIB channels at these potentials (19, 37).
The largest differences between the wild-type and variant PIBs were in their ion-conducting properties, including lower conductance states and increased channel noise. The conductance properties of the PIB variants suggest that either the internal regions of the pore are altered or that the individual subunits of the trimers are open less often and for much shorter times than those of the wild type. Even though the ion conductances of the porin variants were markedly altered, liposome-swelling assays showed that mutations in PIB do not alter the size of the pore or the permeation rates of neutral sugars and ß-lactam antibiotics. Because the pore sizes were unchanged in the PIB variants, our data are more consistent with changes in the gating properties of the PIB variants and not with alterations within the pore itself.
The increased channel noise and increased time spent in subconductance states observed in the variant PIBs are reminiscent of the changes in the channel properties of the OmpC porin with mutations designed to disrupt the interaction of loop 3 with the outer barrel (17, 18). The electrophysiological properties of these mutant porins were examined by patch clamp of liposome blisters containing multiple porin channels. Some of the mutant porins displayed a dramatic increase in the closing rate and decrease in open probability relative to wild-type OmpC (17, 18). These changes were interpreted to be the result of changes in the flexibility of loop 3 within the barrel, caused by the loss of hydrogen bonds and/or salt bridges between loop 3 and the outer barrel. It is tempting to speculate that mutations in loop 3 of PIB also may increase the flexibility of loop 3. Unfortunately, the effects of the OmpC mutations on antibiotic permeation are unknown, so a correlation of changes in electrophysiological properties to changes in permeation of larger compounds cannot be made. The data presented here with gonococcal porins suggest that changes in the electrophysiological properties of PIB do not correlate with changes in solute and antibiotic permeation rates.
Gill et al. (12) speculated that aspartic acid residues at positions 120 and 121 in loop 3 of PIB decrease antibiotic diffusion by anion repulsion. However, this mechanism is not supported by our data. No differences in the permeation rates of monoanionic ß-lactam antibiotics were observed through wild-type and variant PIBs, and both the wild-type and PIB variants showed similar preferences for anions, even with the variants containing either an acidic (Asp) or basic (Lys and Arg) amino acid at position 120. The lack of an effect on ion selectivity by charged amino acid substitutions seems to argue against the prediction that residues 120 and 121 line the channel of the pore. These residues may instead face towards the outer wall or may even be located outside of the pore. A definitive description of the changes induced by these mutations must await the three-dimensional structure of PIB.
Recently, an antibiotic-resistant strain of Enterobacter aerogenes was identified containing a mutation in the major porin that conferred resistance to a variety of cephalosporin antibiotics. The porin contained a mutation (G112D) in loop 3, in a position similar to that of the PIB mutations, and was shown to have a significantly reduced single-channel ion conductance and reduced pore size (5). The authors concluded that the smaller pore size of the mutant mediated increased antibiotic resistance, but liposome-swelling assays with ß-lactam antibiotics were not performed to determine whether antibiotic fluxes through the mutant porin were also altered. The loop 3 mutation identified in the De et al. study, G112D, was similar to the G120D/A121D variant described in this study (5). However, the effects of the G112D mutation in the E. aerogenes porin were very different than the G120D/A121D mutations in PIB, as we saw no significant differences in the pore sizes of wild-type and mutant PIBs.
It is unclear at the present time how the penB mutations increase antibiotic resistance, especially given that the mutations had no effect on the permeation rates of sugars and antibiotics and the absolute requirement for the presence of the mtrR determinant to increase antibiotic resistance (and decrease permeation) in strains containing the PIB variants. Some reports have shown that expression of nonspecific porins can be negatively regulated by modulators of the multidrug resistance (Mdr) system, which is homologous to the Mtr system, resulting in decreased permeability of the outer membrane to antibiotics (4, 24). However, we showed previously that porin expression is not decreased in strains with the PIB variants (28).
So why do the PIB mutants increase antibiotic resistance only when the MtrC-MtrD-MtrE efflux pump is overexpressed? One possibility is that only a slight decrease in antibiotic permeation through porins is required to confer resistance when expression of the efflux pump is deregulated. This scenario would be consistent with the small (but not significant) decreases observed in the antibiotic permeation rates through PIB-G120K compared to wild-type PIB. An alternative hypothesis is that the PIB variants may interact directly with the Mtr efflux pump and work cooperatively to decrease the periplasmic concentrations of antibiotic. In this scenario, mutant PIB proteins may form a complex with the MtrC-MtrD-MtrE efflux pump, and the close proximity of the efflux pump may allow for small differences in antibiotic permeation to be magnified.
We gratefully acknowledge the invaluable advice of Janne Cannon. We also thank Lisa Lyford, Tom Kawula, and Lee Graves for helpful and constructive discussions and Mei Hu and Jamie Alan for technical support and suggestions.
Present address: Bristol-Myers Squibb/Ventiv Health, Watertown, Mass. ![]()
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