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Journal of Bacteriology, February 2007, p. 801-806, Vol. 189, No. 3
0021-9193/07/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JB.01549-06
Copyright © 2007, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Department of Molecular Microbiology, Washington University School of Medicine, Box 8230, St. Louis, Missouri 63110-1093,1 Department of Internal Medicine, Division of Endocrinology, Diabetes, Metabolism and Lipid Research, Washington University School of Medicine, Box 8127, St. Louis, Missouri 63110-10932
Received 4 October 2006/ Accepted 18 November 2006
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A unique solution to the coordination problem has been observed with Streptococcus pyogenes, a pathogen responsible for a number of diseases ranging from superficial localized infection (e.g., impetigo) to life-threatening invasive diseases (e.g., necrotizing fasciitis). This bacterium possesses an ExPortal, a distinct membrane microdomain that contains a high concentration of the translocons of the general secretory (Sec) pathway, such that it is the primary cellular site for protein secretion (33). In addition, the microdomain also accumulates a high concentration of at least one protein (HtrA) that functions as an accessory factor in postsecretion folding (34), suggesting that the ExPortal functions to spatially couple secretion with protein maturation. Localized secretion has also been observed for two surface adhesins, M protein and protein F, though the mechanisms responsible for site-specific targeting remain unclear (7). Restricted distribution of the secretion machinery is not unique to S. pyogenes, since the translocons of Bacillus subtilis have been found to localize to specific clusters that follow a spiral-like pattern around the cell independently of any known helical structures (3, 6). Taken together, these data suggest that the ExPortal may play an important role in coordinating the trafficking of polypeptides to a number of different postsecretion fates.
An understanding of protein trafficking should also include an analysis of the signals responsible for retention of proteins at the ExPortal itself. The observation that the F1Fo ATPase of S. pyogenes is found in the peripheral membrane, rather than the ExPortal (34), shows that retention is not an intrinsic fate of all membrane proteins. The signals may be unique, since the localization patterns for M protein and protein F are distinct, indicating that different signals may be playing a role in the observed localization patterns (7). Interestingly, the ability of the translocons of B. subtilis to cluster to discrete sites was dependent on the presence of anionic phospholipids in the membrane (3). Thus, it was of interest to determine the distribution of anionic phospholipids in relation to the ExPortal in S. pyogenes.
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, B. subtilis JH462 (32), and S. pyogenes HSC5 (14). S. pyogenes strain
covR is derived from HSC5 (8), and the construction of several additional mutant derivatives of HSC5 is described below. Routine culture of S. pyogenes was at 37°C and employed Todd-Hewitt medium (BBL) supplemented with 0.2% yeast extract (Difco). Culture of E. coli and B. subtilis utilized LB broth at 37°C with shaking. Proteolytic assays employed strains grown in C medium that were cultured under the conditions previously described (25). When required, antibiotics were used at the following concentrations: erythromycin, 750 µg/ml for E. coli and 1 µg/ml for S. pyogenes; spectinomycin, 100 µg/ml for both E. coli and S. pyogenes. DNA and computational techniques. Plasmid DNA was isolated via standard techniques and used to transform S. pyogenes as described previously (5). Restriction endonucleases, ligases, and polymerases were used according to the manufacturer's recommendations. The fidelity of all constructs derived by PCR was confirmed by DNA sequencing analyses. All references to genomic loci are based on the genome of S. pyogenes strain SF370 (12). Gene assignments were based on the information available in the Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes (www.genome.jp) and were supported by subsequent interrogation of the SF370 genome using BLAST (1) and query sequences derived from Bacillus subtilis gene products with experimentally confirmed activities, as noted.
Construction of mutants. A mutant (JWR1) with an in-frame deletion of the gene encoding cardiolipin synthase (Spy1212) was constructed as follows: Primers clsFBamHI (AAG GAT CCG CTG ACT ACA AAC GTC TCT ATT CAG ATG AGG) and clsRXhoI (AAC TCG AG G CAA TGG TAA TAT ATC CAG CAT CCA TCA AAC G) were used to amplify a DNA fragment carrying Spy1212, which was subsequently inserted into pJRS233 using the restriction sites embedded in the primers (underlined). An in-frame deletion was constructed by an inverse PCR technique (23) to delete an internal fragment encompassing approximately 1 kb of the 1.6-kb sequence using the primers clsIFDF (AAC TGC AGG CTA AGG TAA GGT GCA GAC AGA TCT AC) and clsIFDR (AAC TGC AGG GAA CAA TTA ACT TAG ACT ATC GTA GCC TTT ATC). Similarly, an attempt to construct a mutant lacking phospytidyl glycerol synthase (Spy2196) was made using amplification primers pgsABam (AAG GAT CCG GGC ACG CCC TTC AAA AGG AGT CCC TGC TTG ATA AG) and pgsARXho (AAC TCG AGG GGA TTT CTT CCC ATT ACT TGC TGG CAA TGG AAT TGG) and inverse primers pgsAIFD-F (AAG AAT TCG GAA GTA ATA AAA AGA AAG AAA GGA ATC ATT GC) and pgsAIFD-R (AAG AAT TCC TGG ATA TGA TTA TTT TAA AGG AGC AAG CTT T). Allelic replacement proceeded as described previously (23), with confirmation of mutant genome structure by PCR using primers of the appropriate sequences. An insertion mutation in covR was introduced into JWR1 as described previously (8).
Measurement of cell-free protease activity. The amount of SpeB cysteine protease activity in cell supernatants was determined using the substrate fluorescein isothiocyanate-casein (Sigma) as described elsewhere (15). Processing of the SpeB zymogen was monitored by Western blotting as described previously (24). Routine addition of the cysteine protease-specific inhibitor E64 (final concentration, 10 mM; Sigma) to selected samples confirmed that all protease activity monitored was due to SpeB.
Cellular fractionation and preparation of membranes. Protoplasts were prepared as previously described (31) and then lysed by multiple freeze-thaw cycles (80°C/37°C) followed by agitation with glass beads (106 µm; Sigma) using a reciprocating shaking device (FastPrep; Qbiogene) at a speed setting of 4.5 for 45 s, repeated four or five times. Membranes were collected by centrifugation (120,000 x g, 4°C, 60 min) and resuspended in 1 ml of distilled water. Extraction was performed as previously described (18). An internal standard was added (1,1,2,2-tetramyristoyl cardiolipin; Avanti Polar Lipids), followed by 1.25 ml of chloroform and 2.5 ml of methanol. Following 2 min of vortexing, an additional 1.25 ml of chloroform was added, followed by a 30-s vortex. Then, 1.25 ml of distilled water was added followed by a 30-s vortex. The solution was spun at 3,000 x g for 5 min and the lower phase collected. This solution was washed twice with a solution containing 1 part chloroform:1 part methanol:0.9 parts distilled water. Final extracts containing the lipids were then concentrated under nitrogen gas until samples were reduced to dryness.
Analysis of membrane composition. Analysis of the anionic phospholipid content of membranes prepared as described above was done as described previously (17). Low-energy CAD tandem mass spectrometry experiments were conducted on a Finnigan (San Jose, CA) TSQ 7000 mass spectrometer equipped with an ICIS data system or on a LCQ DECA ion-trap mass spectrometer with the Xcalibur operation system.
Cellular staining and microscopy. Nonyl acridine orange (NAO) (catalog no. A-1372; Molecular Probes) was added to growing cultures (C media; optical density at 600 nm = 0.4) at a final concentration of 1 µM, which did not inhibit growth of either S. pyogenes, B. subtilis, or E. coli upon overnight culture. Samples were stained for 15 min at 37°C, visualized with a model DM IRE 2 microscope, and examined for fluorescence in both the green (green fluorescent protein filter) and red (rhodamine filter) channels. Localization of the site of secretion of the SpeB cysteine protease was conducted using the red protease assay as described previously (33). Nile red (catalog no. N-1142; Molecular Probes) staining was performed under the same growth conditions at a final concentration of 10 µg/ml (9). Double staining to ensure membrane integrity was performed by staining with both 10-N-nonyl acridine orange and Nile red. Images were captured using a QImaging Retiga 1350 EX charged-coupled-device camera and Openlab software (Improvision) and processed for publication using Adobe Photoshop 7.0.
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FIG. 1. S. pyogenes concentrates anionic phospholipids at discrete microdomains. Various bacterial species were stained with NAO and examined by fluorescence microscopy as described in Materials and Methods. Species included WT S. pyogenes (several representative images are shown in panels A1 to A6), E. coli (panel B), and B. subtilis (panels C1 and C2). Images presented were captured using the green fluorescent protein filter set and are shown in grayscale. WT S. pyogenes was also stained with Nile red (panel D). The bar in each panel is equivalent to 0.5 µm.
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Analysis of S. pyogenes anionic phospholipids. Lipid analysis of streptococci has indicated the presence of two acidic phospholipids, CL and PG, with a majority of the membrane being composed of glycolipids (37). The genome of S. pyogenes contains a single copy of pgsA (Spy2196), encoding the enzyme responsible for converting phosphatidic acid to PG, and a single copy of cls (Spy1212), which encodes the enzyme that converts PG to CL (38). Of the total phospholipid content of bacterial cells, cardiolipin typically comprises approximately 5% and PG about 20% (22). An in-frame deletion mutant lacking cls (herein referred to as the Cls mutant) was constructed to lack both the region encoding the enzyme's predicted active site (38) and approximately 1 kb of additional sequence. Membranes were purified from both wild-type (WT) and Cls strains and subjected to Bligh-Dryer extraction with addition of a (12:0)4-CL internal standard. The subsequent negative-ion electrospray ionization/mass spectrometry analysis of the Cls mutant extracts showed only the [M-H] ion of the internal standard (12:0)4-CL at m/z 1239.9 and no detectable CL ions in the mass range from m/z 1300 to 1500 (Fig. 2A). This contrasted with the abundant ions corresponding to CL that were detected in the same mass range for the WT control (Fig. 2B). These data confirm that S. pyogenes contains a single gene, cls, responsible for the biosynthesis of cardiolipin.
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FIG. 2. Lipid profile of streptococcal membranes. The electrospray ionization/mass spectrometry spectra of the lipid extracts arising from the [M-H] ions of cardiolipin from Cls cells (panel A) and from the WT (panel B). Panels C and D show the [M-H] ions of phosphatidylglycerol species from the extracts shown in panels A and B, respectively. Ions from the (12:0)4-cardiolipin internal standard seen at m/z 1239.8 (panels A and B) are [M-H] ions, while the ions seen at m/z 619.7 (panels C and D) are [M-2H]2 ions. Both the [M-H] (panel A) and [M-2H]2 (panel C) ions of cardiolipin are absent in the lipid extract from Cls cells but are abundant in the lipid extract from WT cells (panels B and D). In contrast, phosphatidyl glycerol is abundant from Cls cells (panel C) and is of relatively low abundance in the WT (panel D).
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Cls mutant phenotypes. Overall, the Cls mutant showed a rather modest phenotype under all conditions examined. For example, the mutant grew at near-WT rates with all media examined and secreted normal amounts of several toxins, including streptolysin O and the SpeB cysteine protease, although the mutant did display a defect in processing the pro form of the latter to the active enzyme (approximately 25% of WT rate; data not shown). Transcription regulator CovR (CsrR) mutants overexpress the hyaluronic acid capsule and produce colonies with a characteristic mucoid appearance (8). Interestingly, a construction of a double CovR Cls strain showed no apparent defect in the ability to produce mucoid colonies compared to results for the CovR mutant alone (data not shown), suggesting Cls is dispensable for production of capsule, despite the observation that the activity of the hyaluronate synthase enzyme is enhanced by CL in vitro (36). These data suggest that increased levels of PG may compensate for the absence of CL in membranes of the mutant. Consistent with the spectral characteristics of NAO staining in the WT, depletion of CL did not alter the staining pattern of the anionic lipid-rich microdomain (data not shown). These data are consistent with a lipid microdomain enriched in PG. However, analysis of a PG-deficient mutant was not possible, since deletion of pgsA was never recovered. The method for mutagenesis proceeds via the generation of a tandem duplication of mutant and wild-type alleles in the genome that can resolve to either allele by recombination. Typically, chromosomes with either allele are isolated at similar frequencies among the progeny (4). However, while it was possible to produce the merodiploid intermediate strain at the pgsA locus, all progeny recovered following resolution of the duplication contained a copy of the wild-type allele (30/30 tested from several independent pools). This bias towards recovery of the wild-type allele suggests that pgsA may be an essential gene in S. pyogenes, which would not be surprising, since depletion of PgsA in B. subtilis results in filamentous cells that eventually lyse (3, 22).
The ExPortal is a microdomain enriched in anionic phospholipids. The ExPortal can be observed in live cells on the basis of visualizing the site of secretion of active SpeB protease in cells embedded in agarose along with a protease substrate that is intramolecularly quenched but becomes fluorescent when cleaved (33, 35). Examination of the Cls mutant showed that CL is not required for ExPortal integrity, since the WT and the Cls mutant showed identical patterns of SpeB secretion (data not shown). Examination of NAO-stained WT cells in the protease localization assay produced the expected single membrane domains revealed by both NAO staining (Fig. 3, NAO) and cleavage of SpeB protease substrate (Fig. 3, Protease). Furthermore, merging the NAO and protease localization images revealed a concordance between the positions of the anionic lipid-rich domain and the ExPortal (Fig. 3, Merge), indicating that the ExPortal is a microdomain enriched in anionic phospholipids.
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FIG. 3. The ExPortal is enriched in anionic lipids. WT S. pyogenes was stained with NAO and then examined in an assay which visualized the ExPortal as the site of secretion of active SpeB protease (33), as described in Materials and Methods. Cells were analyzed by fluorescence microscopy and examined for NAO staining and protease localization, as indicated. An overlay of NAO and protease images is shown on the right (Merge). Three representative groups of streptococcal cells, which are presented at various magnifications, are shown. Bars in leftmost panels are equivalent to 0.5 µm.
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It is unclear whether the ExPortal is restricted to streptococci or is shared by gram-positive bacteria with different morphologies. The lipid biosynthetic machinery appears to be concentrated in the septal regions of B. subtilis cells (30), and the anionic lipids themselves are predominantly localized to the poles and nascent division sites (19). Depletion of these anionic lipids results in the rapid mislocalization of Sec components from sites of concentration along a helical axis, though localization may also rely upon the expression levels of Sec translocons (3). This may suggest that in bacilli, anionic lipids play a vital role in the organization of the helical subcellular apparatus around which the Sec translocons may be organized. Gram-positive cocci, which generally lack any known subcellular architecture proteins, may have developed a simpler system of organization of the Sec translocons at a single anionic lipid-rich microdomain. How such a domain is maintained remains an open question; however, it is interesting to note that acidic phospholipids may also play a role in the initiation of DNA replication via interaction with the initiator protein DnaA (27). Thus, one possibility for organization of the ExPortal is that a high concentration of a positively charged scaffolding protein may assist in the segregation of anionic lipids into distinct domains.
The fact that many naturally occurring antimicrobial agents are also highly positively charged raises some interesting possibilities as to their mechanisms of action. For example, defensins are cationic peptides produced by numerous host tissues to protect against bacterial infection (13). Polymyxin B also has a high affinity for PG (2) and can greatly decrease the efficiency of protein translocation via the Sec pathway in inverted membrane vesicles (41). This raises the possibility that these compounds may directly interfere with ExPortal-mediated protein secretion via their abilities to recognize anionic lipids, a property that could be exploited for further analysis of protein secretion in the gram-positive cocci.
We thank Petra Levin for the gift of B. subtilis strains.
Published ahead of print on 1 December 2006. ![]()
¶ Present address: Department of Infectious Diseases, St. Jude Children's Research Hospital, Memphis, TN 38105. ![]()
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