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1.
Secretion of the Escherichia coli toxin hemolysin A (HlyA) is catalyzed by the membrane protein complex HlyB-HlyD-TolC and requires a secretion sequence located within the last 60 amino acids of HlyA. The Hly translocator complex exports a variety of passenger proteins when fused N-terminal to this secretion sequence. However, not all fusions are secreted efficiently. Here, we demonstrate that the maltose binding protein (MalE) lacking its natural export signal and fused to the HlyA secretion signal is poorly secreted by the Hly system. We anticipated that folding kinetics might be limiting secretion, and we therefore introduced the "folding" mutation Y283D. Indeed this mutant fusion protein was secreted at a much higher level. This level was further enhanced by the introduction of a second MalE folding mutation (V8G or A276G). Secretion did not require the molecular chaperone SecB. Folding analysis revealed that all mutations reduced the refolding rate of the substrate, whereas the unfolding rate was unaffected. Thus, the efficiency of secretion by the Hly system is dictated by the folding rate of the substrate. Moreover, we demonstrate that fusion proteins defective in export can be engineered for secretion while still retaining function.  相似文献   

2.
We have carried out a genetic analysis of Escherichia coli HlyB using in vitro(hydroxylamine) mutagenesis and regionally directed mutagenesis. From random mutagenesis, three mutants, temperature sensitive (Ts) for secretion, were isolated and the DNA sequenced: Glyl0Arg close to the N-terminus, Gly408Asp in a highly conserved small periplasmic loop region PIV, and Pro624Leu in another highly conserved region, within the ATP-binding region. Despite the Ts character of the Gly10 substitution, a derivative of HlyB, in which the first 25 amino acids were replaced by 21 amino acids of the λ Cro protein, was still active in secretion of HlyA. This indicates that this region of HlyB is dispensable for function. Interestingly, the Gly408Asp substitution was toxic at high temperature and this is the first reported example of a conditional lethal mutation in HlyB. We have isolated 4 additional mutations in PIV by directed mutagenesis, giving a total of 5 out of 12 residues substituted in this region, with 4 mutations rendering HlyB defective in secretion. The Pro624 mutation, close to the Walker B-site for ATP binding in the cytoplasmic domain is identical to a mutation in HisP that leads to uncoupling of ATP hydrolysis from the transport of histidine. The expression of a fully functional haemolysin translocation system comprising HlyC,A,B and D increases the sensitivity of E. coli to vancomycin 2.5-fold, compared with cells expressing HlyB and HlyD alone. Thus, active translocation of HlyA renders the cells hyperpermeable to the drug. Mutations in hlyB affecting secretion could be assigned to two classes: those that restore the level of vancomycin resistance to that of E. coli not secreting HlyA and those that still confer hypersensitivity to the drug in the presence of HlyA. We propose that mutations that promote vancomycin resistance will include mutations affecting initial recognition of the secretion signal and therefore activation of a functional transport channel. Mutations that do not alter HlyA-dependent vancomycin sensitivity may, in contrast, affect later steps in the transport process.  相似文献   

3.
M Lee  SY Jun  BY Yoon  S Song  K Lee  NC Ha 《PloS one》2012,7(7):e40460
The Hly translocator complex of Escherichia coli catalyzes type I secretion of the toxin hemolysin A (HlyA). In this complex, HlyB is an inner membrane ABC (ATP Binding Cassette)-type transporter, TolC is an outer membrane channel protein, and HlyD is a periplasmic adaptor anchored in the inner membrane that bridges HlyB to TolC. This tripartite organization is reminiscent of that of drug efflux systems such as AcrA-AcrB-TolC and MacA-MacB-TolC of E. coli. We have previously shown the crucial role of conserved residues located at the hairpin tip region of AcrA and MacA adaptors during assembly of their cognate systems. In this study, we investigated the role of the putative tip region of HlyD using HlyD mutants with single amino acid substitutions at the conserved positions. In vivo and in vitro data show that all mutations abolished HlyD binding to TolC and resulted in the absence of HlyA secretion. Together, our results suggest that, similarly to AcrA and MacA, HlyD interacts with TolC in a tip-to-tip manner. A general model in which these conserved interactions induce opening of TolC during drug efflux and type I secretion is discussed.  相似文献   

4.
Fusion proteins with an alpha-hemolysin (HlyA) C-terminal signal sequence are known to be secreted by the HlyB-HlyD-TolC translocator in Escherichia coli. We aimed to establish an efficient Hly secretory expression system by random mutagenesis of hlyB and hlyD. The fusion protein of subtilisin E and the HlyA signal sequence (HlyA(218)) was used as a marker protein for evaluating secretion efficiency. Through screening of more than 1.5 x 10(4) E. coli JM109 transformants, whose hlyB and hlyD genes had been mutagenized by error-prone PCR, we succeeded in isolating two mutants that had 27- and 15-fold-higher levels of subtilisin E secretion activity than the wild type did at 23 degrees C. These mutants also exhibited increased activity levels for secretion of a single-chain antibody-HlyA(218) fusion protein at 23 and 30 degrees C but unexpectedly not at 37 degrees C, suggesting that this improvement seems to be dependent on low temperature. One mutant (AE104) was found to have seven point mutations in both HlyB and HlyD, and an L448F substitution in HlyB was responsible for the improved secretion activity. Another mutant (AE129) underwent a single amino acid substitution (G654S) in HlyB. Secretion of c-Myc-HlyA(218) was detected only in the L448F mutant (AE104F) at 23 degrees C, whereas no secretion was observed in the wild type at any temperature. Furthermore, for the PTEN-HlyA(218) fusion protein, AE104F showed a 10-fold-higher level of secretion activity than the wild type did at 37 degrees C. This result indicates that the improved secretion activity of AE104F is not always dependent on low temperature.  相似文献   

5.
We have carried out a genetic analysis of Escherichia coli HlyB using in vitro(hydroxylamine) mutagenesis and regionally directed mutagenesis. From random mutagenesis, three mutants, temperature sensitive (Ts) for secretion, were isolated and the DNA sequenced: Glyl0Arg close to the N-terminus, Gly408Asp in a highly conserved small periplasmic loop region PIV, and Pro624Leu in another highly conserved region, within the ATP-binding region. Despite the Ts character of the Gly10 substitution, a derivative of HlyB, in which the first 25 amino acids were replaced by 21 amino acids of the Cro protein, was still active in secretion of HlyA. This indicates that this region of HlyB is dispensable for function. Interestingly, the Gly408Asp substitution was toxic at high temperature and this is the first reported example of a conditional lethal mutation in HlyB. We have isolated 4 additional mutations in PIV by directed mutagenesis, giving a total of 5 out of 12 residues substituted in this region, with 4 mutations rendering HlyB defective in secretion. The Pro624 mutation, close to the Walker B-site for ATP binding in the cytoplasmic domain is identical to a mutation in HisP that leads to uncoupling of ATP hydrolysis from the transport of histidine. The expression of a fully functional haemolysin translocation system comprising HlyC,A,B and D increases the sensitivity of E. coli to vancomycin 2.5-fold, compared with cells expressing HlyB and HlyD alone. Thus, active translocation of HlyA renders the cells hyperpermeable to the drug. Mutations in hlyB affecting secretion could be assigned to two classes: those that restore the level of vancomycin resistance to that of E. coli not secreting HlyA and those that still confer hypersensitivity to the drug in the presence of HlyA. We propose that mutations that promote vancomycin resistance will include mutations affecting initial recognition of the secretion signal and therefore activation of a functional transport channel. Mutations that do not alter HlyA-dependent vancomycin sensitivity may, in contrast, affect later steps in the transport process.  相似文献   

6.
The relatively simple type 1 secretion system in Gram-negative bacteria is nevertheless capable of transporting polypeptides of up to 800 kDa across the cell envelope in a few seconds. The translocator is composed of an ABC-transporter, providing energy through ATP hydrolysis (and perhaps the initial channel across the inner membrane), linked to a multimeric Membrane Fusion Protein (MFP) spanning the initial part of the periplasm and forming a continuous channel to the surface with an outer membrane trimeric protein. Proteins targeted to the translocator carry an (uncleaved), poorly conserved secretion signal of approximately 50 residues. In E. coli the HlyA toxin interacts with both the MFP (HlyD) and the ABC protein HlyB, (a half transporter) triggering, via a conformational change in HlyD, recruitment of the third component, TolC, into the transenvelope complex. In vitro, HlyA, through its secretion signal, binds to the nucleotide binding domain (NBD or ABC-ATPase) of HlyB in a reaction reversible by ATP that may mimic initial movement of HlyA into the translocation channel. HlyA is then transported rapidly, apparently in an unfolded form, to the cell surface, where folding and release takes place. Whilst recent structural studies of TolC and MFP-like proteins are providing atomic detail of much of the transport path, structural analysis of the HlyB NBD and other ABC ATPases, have revealed details of the catalytic cycle within an NBD dimer and a glimpse of how the action of HlyB is coupled to the translocation of HlyA.  相似文献   

7.
The relatively simple type 1 secretion system in gram-negative bacteria is nevertheless capable of transporting polypeptides of up to 800 kDa across the cell envelope in a few seconds. The translocator is composed of an ABC-transporter, providing energy through ATP hydrolysis (and perhaps the initial channel across the inner membrane), linked to a multimeric Membrane Fusion Protein (MFP) spanning the initial part of the periplasm and forming a continuous channel to the surface with an outer membrane trimeric protein. Proteins targeted to the translocator carry an (uncleaved), poorly conserved secretion signal of approximately 50 residues. In E. coli the HlyA toxin interacts with both the MFP (HlyD) and the ABC protein HlyB, (a half transporter) triggering, via a conformational change in HlyD, recruitment of the third component, TolC, into the transenvelope complex. In vitro, HlyA, through its secretion signal, binds to the nucleotide binding domain (NBD or ABC-ATPase) of HlyB in a reaction reversible by ATP that may mimic initial movement of HlyA into the translocation channel. HlyA is then transported rapidly, apparently in an unfolded form, to the cell surface, where folding and release takes place. Whilst recent structural studies of TolC and MFP-like proteins are providing atomic detail of much of the transport path, structural analysis of the HlyB NBD and other ABC ATPases, have revealed details of the catalytic cycle within an NBD dimer and a glimpse of how the action of HlyB is coupled to the translocation of HlyA.  相似文献   

8.
Secretion of Escherichia coli hemolysin is mediated by a sec-independent pathway which requires the products of at least three genes, hlyB, hlyD and tolC. Two regions of HlyD were studied. The first region (region A), consisting of the 33-amino acid, C-terminal part of the HlyD protein, is predicted to form a potential helix-loop-helix structure. This sequence is conserved among HlyD analogues of similar transport systems of other bacterial species. Using site-directed mutagenesis, we showed that the amino acids Leu475, Glu477 and Arg478 of this region are essential for HlyD function. The last amino acid of HlyD, Arg478, is possibly involved in the release of the HlyA protein, since cells bearing a hlyD gene mutant at this position produce similar amounts of HlyA to the wild-type strain, but most of the protein remains cell-associated. Competition experiments between wild-type and mutant HlyD proteins indicate that region A interacts directly with a component of the secretion apparatus. The second region of HIyD (region B), located between amino acids Leul27 and Leu170, is highly homologous to the otherwise unrelated outer membrane protein TolC. Deletion of this region abolishes secretion of hemolysin. This sequence of HlyD also seems to interact with a component of the hemolysin secretion machinery since a hybrid HIyD protein carrying the corresponding TolC sequence, although inactive in the transport of HlyA, is able to displace wild-type HlyD from the secretion apparatus.  相似文献   

9.
Summary Alkaline phosphatase (AP) is secreted into the medium when the carboxy-terminal 25 amino acids are replaced by the 60 amino acid carboxy-terminal signal peptide (HlyAs) ofEscherichia coli haemolysin (HlyA). Secretion of the AP-HlyAs fusion protein is dependent on HlyB and HlyD but independent of SecA and SecY. The efficiency of secretion by HlyB/HlyD is decreased when AP carries its own N-terminal signal peptide. Translocation of this fusion protein into the periplasm is not observed even in the absence of HlyB/HlyD. The failure of the Sec export machinery to transport the latter protein into the periplasm seems to be due in part to the loss of the carboxy-terminal sequence of AP since even AP derivatives which do not carry the HlyA signal peptide but lack the 25 C-terminal amino acids of AP are localized in the membrane but not translocated into the periplasm.  相似文献   

10.
Analysis of the haemolysin secretion system by PhoA-HlyA fusion proteins   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Summary We studied the efficiency of the pHly152-derived haemolysin transport system using PhoA-HlyA fusion proteins and different constructs which provide HlyB/HlyD in trans. The optimal C-terminal HlyA signal consists of the last 60 amino acids. Longer stretches of HlyA do not improve the transport efficiency of PhoA-HlyA fusion proteins. The introduction of deletions and/or replacements in the 60 amino acid HlyA signal domain revealed at least three functional regions with different degrees of specificity. Amino acids 1–21 (numbered from the N-terminal part of the 60 amino acid HlyA signal), termed region I, could be replaced by a Pro-containing peptide. The other two regions II and III (amino acids 22–40 and 41–60, respectively) seem to interact directly with the HlyB/HlyD translocator since a PhoA fusion protein which contains either of the two regions was still secreted in a HlyB/HlyD-dependent mode, albeit at low efficiency. An efficient trans-complementing HlyB/HlyD system was only obtained from the pHLy152-encoded hly determinant when the regulatory hlyR element was provided in cis. Secretion of the PhoA-HlyA fusion protein did not interfere with the secretion of HlyA even when the fusion protein was induced to a high level. This suggests that the capacity of the HlyB/HlyD translocation system is high and not normally saturated by its natural HlyA substrate.Dedicated to Prof., Dr. F. Lingens on the occasion of his 65th birthday  相似文献   

11.
Secretion of haemolysin (HlyA) is secA independent, but depends upon two accessory membrane proteins, HlyB and HlyD, encoded by the hly determinant. A fourth (cytoplasmic) protein, HlyC, is required to activate HlyA post-translationally, but has no role in export. Deletion studies have previously shown that the HlyA molecule contains a targeting signal close to the C-terminus which specifically directs its secretion to the medium. This targeting signal has been variously located within the terminal 27, 53, 60 or 113 amino acids. In this paper, we have sought to confirm the presence of a C-terminal targeting signal and to analyse the specificity of the Hly transport system through fusion of C-terminal fragments of HlyA to heterologous polypeptides. A C-terminal fragment (23 kDa) of HlyA, when fused at the C-terminus, efficiently promoted the secretion of the eukaryotic protein prochymosin (PCM) to the medium via HlyB and HlyD. This result is in contrast to previous findings that prochymosin, preceded by the alkaline phosphatase signal sequence, cannot be translocated across the Escherichia coli inner membrane. The HlyA targeting domain was also used to secrete to the medium varying portions of chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT) and 98 per cent of the beta-galactosidase (LacZ) molecule (both E. coli cytoplasmic proteins). In the case of the PCM and CAT fusions the efficiency of secretion was reduced as the proportion of the PCM and CAT molecule increased. This result is consistent with inhibition of secretion through the irreversible folding of the larger passenger protein fragments, or the occlusion of the HlyA targeting signal by upstream sequences. Analysis of the nature of the C-terminal domain promoting secretion of prochymosin, demonstrated that shortening the signal domain from 218 to 113 amino acids significantly reduced the efficiency of secretion. This result may also reflect the importance of maintaining an independently folded signal motif well separated from a passenger domain.  相似文献   

12.
Coexpression of pairs of nonhaemolytic H1yA mutants in the recombination-deficient (recA) strain Escherichia coli HB101 resulted in a partial reconstitution of haemolytic activity, indicating that the mutation in one H1yA molecule can be complemented by the corresponding wild-type sequence in the other mutant HlyA molecule and vice versa. This suggests that two or more HlyA molecules aggregate prior to pore formation. Partial reconstitution of the haemolytic activity was obtained by the combined expression of a nonhaemolytic HlyA derivative containing a deletion of five repeat units in the repeat domain and several nonhaemolytic HlyA mutants affected in the pore-forming hydrophobic region. The simultaneous expression of two inactive mutant HlyA proteins affected in the region at which HlyA is covalently modified by HlyC and the repeat domain, respectively, resulted in a haemolytic phenotype on blood agar plates comparable to that of wild-type haemolysin. However, complementation was not possible between pairs of HlyA molecules containing site-directed mutations in the hydrophobic region and the modification region, respectively. In addition, no complementation was observed between HlyA mutants with specific mutations at different sites of the same functional domain, i.e. within the hydrophobic region, the modification region or the repeat domain. The aggregation of the HlyA molecules appears to take place after secretion, since no extracellular haemolytic activity was detected when a truncated but active HlyA lacking the C-terminal secretion sequence was expressed together with a non-haemolytic but transport-competent HlyA mutant containing a deletion in the repeat domain.  相似文献   

13.
The calmodulin-sensitive adenylate cyclase of Bordetella pertussis, a 45 kd secreted protein, is synthesized as a 1706 amino acid precursor. We have shown that this precursor is a bifunctional protein, carrying both adenylate cyclase and haemolytic activities. The 1250 carboxy-terminal amino acids of the precursor showed 25% similarity with Escherichia coli alpha-haemolysin (HlyA) and 22% similarity with Pasteurella haemolytica leucotoxin. Three open reading frames were identified downstream from the cyaA gene: cyaB, cyaD and cyaE, coding for polypeptides of 712, 440 and 474 amino acid residues, respectively. As for E. coli alpha-haemolysin, secretion of B.pertussis adenylate cyclase and haemolysin requires the expression of additional genes. The gene products of cyaB and cyaD are highly similar to HlyB and HlyD, known to be necessary for the transport of HlyA across the cell envelope and for its release into the external medium. Complementation and functional studies indicate that the B.pertussis adenylate cyclase-haemolysin bifunctional protein is secreted by a mechanism similar to that described for E.coli alpha-haemolysin, requiring, in addition to the cyaB and cyaD gene products, the presence of a third gene product specified by the cyaE gene.  相似文献   

14.
Fusion proteins with an alpha-hemolysin (HlyA) C-terminal signal sequence are known to be secreted by the HlyB-HlyD-TolC translocator in Escherichia coli. We aimed to establish an efficient Hly secretory expression system by random mutagenesis of hlyB and hlyD. The fusion protein of subtilisin E and the HlyA signal sequence (HlyA218) was used as a marker protein for evaluating secretion efficiency. Through screening of more than 1.5 × 104 E. coli JM109 transformants, whose hlyB and hlyD genes had been mutagenized by error-prone PCR, we succeeded in isolating two mutants that had 27- and 15-fold-higher levels of subtilisin E secretion activity than the wild type did at 23°C. These mutants also exhibited increased activity levels for secretion of a single-chain antibody-HlyA218 fusion protein at 23 and 30°C but unexpectedly not at 37°C, suggesting that this improvement seems to be dependent on low temperature. One mutant (AE104) was found to have seven point mutations in both HlyB and HlyD, and an L448F substitution in HlyB was responsible for the improved secretion activity. Another mutant (AE129) underwent a single amino acid substitution (G654S) in HlyB. Secretion of c-Myc-HlyA218 was detected only in the L448F mutant (AE104F) at 23°C, whereas no secretion was observed in the wild type at any temperature. Furthermore, for the PTEN-HlyA218 fusion protein, AE104F showed a 10-fold-higher level of secretion activity than the wild type did at 37°C. This result indicates that the improved secretion activity of AE104F is not always dependent on low temperature.  相似文献   

15.
In the secretion of polypeptides from Gram-negative bacteria, the outer membrane constitutes a specific barrier which has to be circumvented. In the majority of systems, secretion is two-step process, with initial export to the periplasm involving an N-terminal signal sequence. Transport across the outer membrane then involves a variable number of ancillary polypeptides including both periplasmic and outer membrane. While such ancillary proteins are probably specific for each secreted protein, the mechanism of movement across the outer membrane is unknown. In contrast to these systems, secretion of theE. coli hemolysin (HlyA) has several distinctive features. These include a novel targeting signal located within the last 50 or so C-terminal amino acids, the absence of any periplasmic intermediates in transfer, and a specific membrane-bound translocator, HlyB, with important mammalian homologues such as P-glycoprotein (Mdr) and the cystic fibrosis protein. In this review we discuss the nature of the HlyA targeting signal, the structure and function of HlyB, and the probability that HlyA is secreted directly to the medium through a trans-envelope complex composed of HlyB and HlyD.  相似文献   

16.
W D Thomas  Jr  S P Wagner    R A Welch 《Journal of bacteriology》1992,174(21):6771-6779
The hydrophobic-rich NH2-terminal 34 amino acids of a tetracycline resistance determinant (TetC) were fused to the COOH-terminal 240 amino acids of the hemolysin transporter, HlyB, which contains a putative ATP-binding domain. This hybrid protein replaced the NH2-terminal 467-amino-acid portion of HlyB and could still export the Escherichia coli hemolysin (HlyA). Export by the hybrid protein was approximately 10% as efficient as transport by HlyB. Extracellular secretion of HlyA by the TetC-HlyB hybrid required HlyD and TolC. The extracellular and periplasmic levels of beta-galactosidase and beta-lactamase in strains that produced the hybrid were similar to the levels in controls. Thus, HlyA transport was specific and did not appear to be due to leakage of cytoplasmic contents alone. Antibodies raised against the COOH terminus of HlyB reacted with the hybrid protein, as well as HlyB. HlyB was associated with membrane fractions, while the hybrid protein was found mainly in soluble extracts. Cellular fractionation studies were performed to determine whether transport by the hybrid occurred simultaneously across both membranes like wild-type HlyA secretion. However, we found that HlyA was present in the periplasm of strains that expressed the TetC-HlyB hybrid. HlyA remained in the periplasm unless the hlyD and tolC gene products were present in addition to the hybrid.  相似文献   

17.
Hemolysin plasmids were constructed with mutations in hlyB, hlyD, or both transport genes. The localization of hemolysin activity and HlyA protein in these mutants was analyzed by biochemical and immunological methods. It was found that mutants defective in hlyB accumulated internal hemolysin, part of which was associated with the inner membrane and was degraded in the late logarithmic growth phase. In an HlyB+ HlyD- mutant, hemolysin was predominantly localized in the membrane compartment. Labeling of these Escherichia coli cells with anti-HlyA antibody indicated that part of HlyA, presumably the C-terminal end but not the pore-forming domains, was already transported to the cellular surface. This finding suggests that HlyB is able to recognize the C-terminal signal of the HlyA protein and to initiate its translocation across the membranes.  相似文献   

18.
19.
20.
We have carried out an extensive mutational analysis of the C-terminal signal which targets the export of the 1024-residue haemolysin protein (HlyA) of Escherichia coli across both bacterial membranes into the surrounding medium. Over 60 variants of the HlyA C-terminal 53-amino-acid sequence were created by oligonucleotide-directed mutagenesis and fused to the HlyA N-terminal 830 residues. Transport of the HlyA derivatives by the HlyB/HlyD system was compared with the wild-type level and the data indicate that the HlyA C-terminal export signal lies within the last 48 amino acids and comprises three functional domains: an amphipathic, charged helix between residues 1,977 and R,996; a 13-amino-acid uncharged region from residue T,997 to S,1009; and an 8-amino-acid hydroxylated tail at the extreme C-terminus. Analogous features were found in the C-terminal sequences of an extended family of haemolysins, leukotoxins and proteases which are secreted by HlyB/HlyD-type translocators. In particular, all nine proteins which are secreted into the extracellular medium possess potential extended amphipathic helices. These results suggest a possible role for multiple regions of the HlyA C-terminal export signal in which the first two domains span the membranes and the third domain remains in the cytoplasm.  相似文献   

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