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1.
The plasmid R64 thin pilus identified as a type IV pilus.   总被引:12,自引:5,他引:7       下载免费PDF全文
The entire nucleotide sequence of the pil region of the IncI1 plasmid R64 was determined. Analysis of the sequence indicated that 14 genes, designated pilI through pilV, are involved in the formation of the R64 thin pilus. Protein products of eight pil genes were identified by the maxicell procedure. The pilN product was shown to be a lipoprotein by an experiment using globomycin. A computer search revealed that several R64 pil genes have amino acid sequence homology with proteins involved in type IV pilus biogenesis, protein secretion, and transformation competence. The pilS and pilV products were suggested to be prepilins for the R64 thin pilus, and the pilU product appears to be a prepilin peptidase. These results suggest that the R64 thin pilus belongs to the type IV family, specifically group IVB, of pili. The requirement of the pilR and pilU genes for R64 liquid mating was demonstrated by constructing their frameshift mutations. Comparison of three type IVB pilus biogenesis systems, the pil system of R64, the toxin-coregulated pilus (tcp) system of Vibrio cholerae, and the bundle-forming pilus (bfp) system of enteropathogenic Escherichia coli, suggests that they have evolved from a common ancestral gene system.  相似文献   

2.
3.
Expression of type IV pili appears to be a requisite determinant of infectivity for the strict human pathogens Neisseria gonorrhoeae and Neisseria meningitidis. The assembly of these colonization factors is a complex process. This report describes a new pilus-assembly gene, pilG, that immediately precedes the gonococcal (Gc) pilD gene encoding the pre-pilin leader peptidase. The nucleotide sequence of this region revealed a single complete open reading frame whose derived polypeptide displayed significant identities to the pilus-assembty protein PilC of Pseudomonas aeruginosa and other polytopic integral cytoplasmic membrane constituents involved in protein export and competence. A unique polypeptide of Mr 38kDa corresponding to the gene product was identified. A highly related gene and flanking sequences were cloned from a group E polysaccharide-producing strain of N. meningitidis (Mc). The results indicate that the pilG genes and genetic organization at these loci in Gc and Me are extremely conserved. Hybridization studies strongly suggest that pilG-related genes exist in commensal Neisseria species and other species known to express type IV pili. Defined genetic lesions were created by using insertional and transposon mutagenesis and moved into the Gc and Me chromosomes by allelic replacement. Chromosomal pilG insertion mutants were devoid of pili and displayed dramatically reduced competence for transformation. These findings could not be ascribed to pilin-gene alterations or to polarity exerted on pilD expression. The results indicated that PilG exerts its own independent role in neisserial pilus biogenesis.  相似文献   

4.
The assembly of type IV pili in Neisseria gonorrhoeae is a complex process likely to require the products of many genes. One of these is the enzyme prepilin peptidase, which cleaves and then N methylates the precursor pilin subunits prior to their assembly into pili. We have used a PCR amplification strategy to clone the N. gonorrhoeae prepilin peptidase gene, pilDNg. A single copy of the gene is shown to be present in the chromosome. Its product promotes correct cleavage of the gonococcal prepillin in Escherichia coli cells carrying both the prepilin peptidase gene and the pilin structural gene. PilDNg also cleaves prePulG, a type IV pilin-like protein of Klebsiella oxytoca. Moreover, PilDNg complements a mutation in the gene coding for the prepilin peptidase-like protein of K. oxytoca, pulO, partially restoring PulG-PulO-dependent extracellular secretion of the enzyme pullulanase. Finally, we show that genes homologous to pilDNg are present and expressed in a variety of species in the genus Neisseria, including some commensal strains.  相似文献   

5.
A new locus required for type 4 pilus biogenesis by Pseudomonas aeruginosa has been identified. A pilE mutant, designated MJ-6, was broadly resistant to pili-specific phages and unable to translocate across solid surfaces by the pilus-dependent mechanism of twitching motility (Twt). Immunoblot analysis demonstrated that MJ-6 was devoid of pili (Pil) but was unaffected in the production of unassembled pilin pools. Genetic studies aimed at localizing the pilE mutation on the P. aeruginosa PAO chromosome demonstrated a strong co-linkage between MJ-6 phage resistance and the proB marker located at 71 min. Cloning of the pilE gene was facilitated by the isolation and identification of a proB+-containing plasmid from a PAO1 cosmid library. Upon introduction of the PA01 proB+ cosmid clone into MJ-6, sensitivity to pili-specific phage, twitching motility and pilus production were restored. The nucleotide sequence of a 1 kb Eco RV-Clal fragment containing the pilE region revealed a single complete open reading frame with characteristic P. aeruginosa codon bias. PilE, a protein with a molecular weight of 15278, showed significant sequence identity to the pilin precursors of P. aeruginosa and to other type 4 prepilin proteins. The region of highest homology was localized to the N-terminal 40 amino acid residues. The putative PilE N-terminus contained a seven-residue basic leader sequence followed by a consensus cleavage site for prepilin pep-tidase and a largely hydrophobic region which contained tyrosine residues (Tyr-24 and Tyr-27) previously implicated in maintaining pilin subunit-subunit interactions. The requirement of PilE in pilus biogenesis was confirmed by demonstrating that chromosomal pilE insertion mutants were pilus- and twitching-motility deficient.  相似文献   

6.
The last gene (pulO) of the pulC-O pullulanase secretion gene operon of Klebsiella oxytoca codes for a protein that is 52% identical to the product of the pilD/xcpA gene required for extracellular protein secretion and type IV pilus biogenesis in Pseudomonas aeruginosa. The PilD/XcpA protein is known to remove the first six amino acids of the signal sequence of the type IV pilin precursor by cleaving after the glycine residue in the conserved sequence GF(M)XXXE (where X represents hydrophobic amino acids). This prepilin peptidase cleavage site is present in the products of four genes in the pulC-O operon (PulG, PulH, Pull and PulJ proteins). It is shown here that PulO processes the pulG gene product in vivo. Processing was maximal within 15 seconds, but experiments in which the expression of pulO was uncoupled from that of the other genes in the secretion operon suggest that processing can also occur post-translationally. The products of two pulG derivatives with internal inframe deletions were also processed by PulO, but the three PulG-PhoA hybrids, two PulJ-PhoA hybrids and the single PulH-PhoA hybrid tested did not appear to be processed. Sucrose gradient fraction experiments showed that both precursor and mature forms of PulG appear to be associated with low-density, outer membrane vesicles prepared by osmotic lysis of sphaeroplasts. Neither the xcpA gene nor the Bacillus subtilis gene comC, which is also homologous to pulO and codes for a protein with type IV prepilin peptidase activity, can correct the pullulanase secretion defect in an Escherichia coli strain carrying all of the genes required for secretion except pulO. Furthermore, neither XcpA nor ComC is able to process prePulG protein in vivo.  相似文献   

7.
Several subclasses of type IV pili have been described according to the characteristics of the structural prepilin subunit. Whereas molecular mechanisms of type IVa pilus assembly have been well documented for Pseudomonas aeruginosa and involve the PilD prepilin peptidase, no type IVb pili have been described in this microorganism. One subclass of type IVb prepilins has been identified as the Flp prepilin subfamily. Long and bundled Flp pili involved in tight adherence have been identified in Actinobacillus actinomycetemcomitans, for which assembly was due to a dedicated machinery encoded by the tad-rcp locus. A similar flp-tad-rcp locus containing flp, tad, and rcp gene homologues was identified in the P. aeruginosa genome. The function of these genes has been investigated, which revealed their involvement in the formation of extracellular Flp appendages. We also identified a gene (designated by open reading frame PA4295) outside the flp-tad-rcp locus, that we named fppA, encoding a novel prepilin peptidase. This is the second enzyme of this kind found in P. aeruginosa; however, it appears to be truncated and is similar to the C-terminal domain of the previously characterized PilD peptidase. In this study, we show that FppA is responsible for the maturation of the Flp prepilin and belongs to the aspartic acid protease family. We also demonstrate that FppA is required for the assembly of cell surface appendages that we called Flp pili. Finally, we observed an Flp-dependent bacterial aggregation process on the epithelial cell surface and an increased biofilm phenotype linked to Flp pilus assembly.  相似文献   

8.
《Gene》1997,192(1):109-115
Genetic analysis of Pseudomonas aeruginosa pilus biogenesis and twitching motility has revealed the requirement for several pil loci which have been localized to different regions of the chromosome. One pil locus, designated pilE, resides at approx. 71 min on the PAO genetic map, a region of the chromosome previously shown to harbor a number of genes required for pilus assembly (i.e., pilA, -B, -C, -D, -R and -S). The PilE protein shows significant sequence identity to the N-terminal domain of PilA as well as to the pilin precursors from a variety of type-4 pilus producers. Included within this homologous region is a short, positively charged leader sequence followed by a prepilin peptidase cleavage site and a largely hydrophobic region. Additionally, an unlinked set of pil genes, designated pilG, -H, -I, -J and -K, has been localized to the SpeI fragment H which corresponds to approx. 20 min on the PAO genetic map. This gene cluster encodes proteins that demonstrate remarkable similarity to the chemotaxis proteins of enterics and the gliding bacterium Myxococcus xanthus and are thought to be part of a signal transduction system that controls P. aeruginosa pilus biosynthesis and twitching motility.  相似文献   

9.
《Gene》1997,192(1):117-121
The bifunctional enzyme prepilin peptidase (PilD) from Pseudomonas aeruginosa is a key determinant in both type-IV pilus biogenesis and extracellular protein secretion, in its roles as a leader peptidase and MTase. It is responsible for endopeptidic cleavage of the unique leader peptides that characterize type-IV pilin precursors, as well as proteins with homologous leader sequences that are essential components of the general secretion pathway found in a variety of Gram-negative pathogens. Following removal of the leader peptides, the same enzyme is responsible for the second posttranslational modification that characterizes the type-IV pilins and their homologues, namely N-methylation of the newly exposed N-terminal amino acid residue. This review discusses some of the work begun in order to answer questions regarding the structure-function relationships of the active sites of this unique enzyme.  相似文献   

10.
Studies of gonococcal pilus biogenesis are fundamental to understanding organelle structure/function relationships and identifying new approaches to controlling disease. This area of research is also relevant to elucidating the basic mechanisms of outer membrane translocation of macromolecules, which requires components highly related to those involved in type IV pilus expression. Previous studies have shown that products of several ancillary pil genes are required for organelle biogenesis but of these only PilQ, a member of the GspD protein family, is a component of the outer membrane. DNA sequencing of the region upstream of pilQ revealed the presence of two open reading frames (ORFs) whose deduced polypeptides shared significant identities with proteins required for pilus expression in Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Pseudomonas syringae, the genes for which are arrayed upstream of a gene encoding a PilQ homologue. Gonococcal mutants bearing transposon insertions in these ORFs were non-piliated and failed to express pilus-associated phenotypes, and the corresponding genes were designated pilO and pilP. The piliation defects in the mutants could not be ascribed to polarity on distal pilQ expression as shown by direct measurement of PilQ antigen in those backgrounds and the use of a novel technique to create tandem duplications in the gonococcus (Gc) genome. As predicted by the presence of a consensus lipoprotein signal sequence, PilP expressed in both Escherichia coli and Gc could be labelled with [3H]-palmitic acid. PilP? as well as PilQ? mutants shed PilC, a protein which facilitates pilus assembly and is implicated in epithelial cell adherence, in a soluble form. Combined with the finding that levels of multimerized PilQ were greatly reduced in PilP? mutants, the results suggest that PilP is required for PilQ function and that PilQ and PilC may interact during the terminal stages of pilus biogenesis. The findings also support the hypothesis that the Gc PilQ multimer corresponds to a physiologically relevant form of the protein required for pilus biogenesis.  相似文献   

11.
Cholera toxin secretion is dependent upon the extracellular protein secretion apparatus encoded by the eps gene locus of Vibrio cholerae . Although the eps gene locus encodes several type four prepilin-like proteins, the peptidase responsible for processing these proteins has not been identified. This report describes the identification of a prepilin peptidase from the V. cholerae genomic database by virtue of its homology with the PilD prepilin peptidase of Pseudomonas aeruginosa . Plasmid disruption or deletion of this peptidase gene in either El Tor or classical V. cholerae O1 biotype strains results in a dramatic decrease in cholera toxin secretion. In the case of the El Tor biotype mutants, surface expression of the type 4 pilus responsible for mannose-sensitive haemagglutination is abolished. The cloned V. cholerae peptidase processes either EpsI or MshA preproteins when co-expressed in E. coli . Mutation of the V. cholerae peptidase gene also results in a defect in virulence and decreased levels of OmpU. The V. cholerae peptidase gene sequence shows 80% homology with the Vibrio vulnificus VvpD type 4 prepilin peptidase required for pilus assembly and cytolysin secretion in V. vulnificus . Accordingly, the V. cholerae type 4 prepilin peptidase required for pilus assembly and cholera toxin secretion has been designated VcpD.  相似文献   

12.
Enteropathogenic Escherichia coli expresses a type IV fimbria known as the bundle-forming pilus (BFP) that is required for autoaggregation and localized adherence (LA) to host cells. A cluster of 14 genes is sufficient to reconstitute BFP biogenesis in a laboratory strain of E. coli. We have undertaken a systematic mutagenesis of the individual genes to determine the effect of each mutation on BFP biogenesis and LA. Here we report the construction and analysis of nonpolar mutations in six genes of the bfp cluster, bfpG, bfpB, bfpC, bfpD, bfpP, and bfpH, as well as the further analysis of a previously described bfpA mutant strain that is unable to express bundlin, the pilin protein. We found that mutations in bfpB, which encodes an outer membrane protein; bfpD, which encodes a putative nucleotide-binding protein; and bfpG and bfpC, which do not have sequence homologues in other type IV pilus systems, do not affect prebundlin expression or processing but block both BFP biogenesis and LA. The mutation in bfpP, the prepilin peptidase gene, does not affect prebundlin expression but blocks signal sequence cleavage of prebundlin, BFP biogenesis, and LA. The mutation in bfpH, which is predicted to encode a lytic transglycosylase, has no effect on prebundlin expression, prebundlin processing, BFP biogenesis, or LA. For each mutant for which altered phenotypes were detected, complementation with a plasmid containing the corresponding wild-type allele restored the wild-type phenotypes. We also found that association of prebundlin or bundlin with sucrose density flotation gradient fractions containing both inner and outer membrane proteins does not require any accessory proteins. These studies indicate that many bfp gene products are required for biogenesis of functional type IV pili but that mutations in the individual genes do not lead to the identification of new phases of pilus assembly.  相似文献   

13.
Aeromonas hydrophila secretes several extracellular proteins that are associated with virulence including an enterotoxin, a protease, and the hole-forming toxin, aerolysin. These degradative enzymes and toxins are exported by a conserved pathway found in many Gram-negative bacteria. In Pseudomonas aeruginosa this export pathway and type IV pilus biogenesis are dependent on the product of the pilD gene. PilD is a bifunctional enzyme that processes components of the extracellular secretory pathway as well as a type IV prepilin. An A. hydrophila genomic library was transferred into a P. aeruginosa pilD mutant that is defective for type IV pilus biogenesis. The A. hydrophila pilD homologue, tapD , was identified by its ability to complement the pilD mutation in P. aeruginosa . Transconjugants containing tapD were sensitive to the type IV pilus-specific phage, PO4. Sequence data revealed that tapD is part of a cluster of genes ( tapABCD ) that are homologous to P. aeruginosa type IV pilus biogenesis genes ( pilABCD ). We showed that TapB and TapC are functionally homologous to P. aeruginosa PilB and PilC, the first such functional complementation of pilus assembly demonstrated between bacteria that express type IV pili. In vitro studies revealed that TapD has both endopeptidase and N -methyltransferase activities using P. aeruginosa prepilin as substrate. Furthermore, we show that tapD is required for extracellular secretion of aerolysin and protease, indicating that tapD may play an important role in the virulence of A. hydrophila  相似文献   

14.
《Gene》1997,192(1):155-163
Type-IV pilus expression plays a critical role in the interactions between Neisseria gonorrhoeae, Neisseria meningitidis and their human host. We have focused on experiments designed to elucidate the mechanisms of organelle biogenesis as one means of understanding the complexities of pilus biology in these species. Employing a variety of approaches, genes and gene products essential to pilus biogenesis have been identified and characterized. The findings indicate that the neisserial type-IV pilus biogenesis machinery is most closely related to that operating in Pseudomonas aeruginosa and other pseudomonad species. This interrelatedness is documented at the levels of gene organization, DNA homologies and identities between the primary structures of the components. Despite these similarities, the biological correlates of pilus expression in the pathogenic Neisseria are quite unique. The current status of our embryonic understanding of the factors influencing organelle biogenesis is presented. In the context of this workshop, emphasis has been placed on specific contributions made through studies of gonococci and meningococci to the field as a whole.  相似文献   

15.
The type 4 pill of Pseudomonas aeruginosa are important cell-associated virulence factors that play a crucial role in mediating (i) bacterial adherence to, and colonization of, mucosal surfaces, (ii) a novel mode of fiagetia-independent surface translocation known as‘twitching motility, and (iii) the initial stages of the infection process for a number of bacteriophages. A new set of loci involved in pilus biogenesis and twitching motility was identified based on the ability of DNA sequences downstream of the pilG gene to complement the non-piliated (pil) strain, PAO6609. Sequence analysis of a 3.2 kb region directly downstream of pilG revealed the presence of three genes, which have been designated pilH, pill, and pilJ. The predicted translation product of the pilH gene (13 272 Da), like PilG, exhibits significant amino acid identity with the enteric single-domain response regulator CheY. The putative Pili protein (19933 Da) is 28% identical to the FrzA protein, a CheW homologue of the gliding bacterium Myxococcus xanthus, and the PMJ protein (72 523 Da) is 26% identical to the enteric methyl-accepting chemotaxis protein (MCP) Tsr. Mutants containing insertions in pill and pilJ were severely impaired in their ability to produce pili and did not translocate across solid surfaces. The pilH mutant remained capable of pilus production and twitching motility, but displayed an altered motility pattern characterized by the presence of many doughnut-shaped swirls. Each of these pil mutants, however, produced zones that were at least as large as the parent in flagellar-mediated swarm assays. The sequence similarities between the putative pilG, H, I and J gene products and several established chemotaxis proteins, therefore, lend strong support to the hypothesis that these proteins are part of a signal-transduction network that controls P. aeruginosa pilus biosynthesis and twitching motility.  相似文献   

16.
In many type IV pili, the N-terminal amino acid of the pilin subunit is N-methylated phenylalanine. A prepilin peptidase removes the leader peptide from the precursor and methylates the amino group of the newly formed phenylalanine. PilS, the precursor of the pilin encoded by plasmid R64, is processed by the prepilin peptidase PilU, but the N-terminal amino acid of the mature pilin is a non-methylated tryptophan that is otherwise modified. To study the relationship between the structure and function of PilU, 42 missense pilU mutations were constructed by PCR and site-directed mutagenesis, and the ability of these pilU mutants to complement a pilU null mutant for mating in liquid culture was analyzed. Although practically no conjugation was noted for 21 of the mutants, the remaining 21 supported varying levels of residual plasmid transfer activity. Two mutants with aspartic acid replacements in conserved motifs exhibited no PilU activity, suggesting that the product of the pilU gene is an aspartic acid peptidase, like TcpJ, the prepilin peptidare of Vibrio cholerae. No PilS processing was detected in 21 of the mutants, but the remaining 21 exhibited varying levels of residual PilS processing. A close correlation was noted between residual PilS processing activity and conjugative transfer, suggesting that the pilU gene product possesses prepilin peptidase activity, but is unable to methylate the N-terminal tryptophan. Based on the activity of pilU-phoA and pilU-lacZ fusion genes encoding different segments of PilU, a model for the membrane topology of the protein is also proposed. Furthermore, some amino acid substitutions in the pilU portion of the pilU-phoA and pilU-lacZ fusion genes were found to alter the membrane topology of the product.  相似文献   

17.
18.
Pseudomonas aeruginosa exports a number of hydrolytic enzymes and toxins using the type II or general secretion pathway, found in a variety of Gram-negative bacteria and requiring the functions of at least 12 gene products (XcpP–Z and PilD/XcpA in P. aeruginosa ). A number of these gene products are homologues of components of the type IV pilus biogenesis system, including four proteins, XcpT–W, which are highly similar to the pilin subunit in their size, localization and post-translational modifications. These proteins, in addition to the pilin subunit, are cleaved and methylated by the PilD/XcpA prepilin peptidase, but their interactions with other components of the export apparatus are unclear. Using a medium developed for the selection of export-proficient P. aeruginosa strains, we have isolated temperature-sensitive mutations in the xcpT gene and extragenic suppressors for one of the mutants. These suppressors fall into two classes, one that maps outside of the xcpP–Z gene cluster and may define additional cellular functions that are required for export, and a second that maps to the xcpR gene product and indicates a potential protein–protein interaction connecting two different cellular compartments and required for the assembly or function of the export apparatus.  相似文献   

19.
The assembly of pilus colonization factor antigen III (CFA/III) of human enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli requires the processing of CFA/III major pilin (CofA) by a peptidase, likely another type IV pilus formation system. Western blot analysis of CofA reveals that CofA is produced initially as a 26.5-kDa preform pilin (prepilin) and then processed to 20.5-kDa mature pilin by a prepilin peptidase. This processing is essential for exportation of the CofA from the cytoplasm to the periplasm. In this experiment, the structural gene, cofP, encoding CFA/III prepilin peptidase which cleavages at the Gly-30-Met-31 junction of CofA was identified, and the nucleotide sequence of the gene was determined. CofP consists of 819 bp encoding a 273-amino acid protein with a relative molecular mass of 30,533 Da. CofP is predicted to be localized in the inner membrane based on its hydropathy index. The amino acid sequence of CofP shows a high degree of homology with other prepilin peptidases which play a role in the assembly of type IV pili in several gram-negative bacteria.  相似文献   

20.
Aeromonas salmonicida expresses a large number of proven and suspected virulence factors including bacterial surface proteins, extracellular degradative enzymes, and toxins. We report the isolation and characterization of a 4-gene cluster, tapABCD, from virulent A. salmonicida A450 that encodes proteins homologous to components required for type IV pilus biogenesis. One gene, tapA, encodes a protein with high homology to type IV pilus subunit proteins from many gram-negative bacterial pathogens, including Aeromonas hydrophila, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, and Vibrio vulnificus. A survey of A. salmonicida isolates from a variety of sources shows that the tapA gene is as ubiquitous in this species as it is in other members of the Aeromonads. Immunoblotting experiments demonstrate that it is expressed in vitro and is antigenically conserved among the A. salmonicida strains tested. A mutant A. salmonicida strain defective in expression of TapA was constructed by allelic exchange and found to be slightly less pathogenic for juvenile Oncorhynchus mykiss (rainbow trout) than wild type when delivered by intraperitoneal injection. In addition, fish initially challenged with a high dose of wild type were slightly more resistant to rechallenge with wild type than those initially challenged with the tapA mutant strain, suggesting that presence of TapA contributes to immunity. Two of the other three genes identified, tapB and tapC, encode proteins with homology to factors known to be required for type IV pilus assembly in P. aeruginosa, but in an as yet unidentified manner. TapB is a member of the ABC-transporter family of proteins that contain characteristic nucleotide-binding regions, and which may provide energy for type IV pilus assembly through the hydrolysis of ATP. TapC homologs are integral cytoplasmic membrane proteins that may play a role in pilus anchoring or initiation of assembly. The fourth gene, tapD, encodes a product that shares homology with a family of proteins with a known biochemical function, namely, the type IV prepilin leader peptidases. These bifunctional enzymes proteolytically cleave the leader peptide from the pilin precursor (prepilin) and then N-methylate the newly exposed N-terminal amino acid prior to assembly of the subunits into the pilus structure. We demonstrate that A. salmonicida TapD is able to restore type IV pilus assembly and type II secretion in a P. aeruginosa strain carrying a mutation in its type IV peptidase gene, suggesting that it plays the same role in A. salmonicida.  相似文献   

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