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Motility and Flagellar Glycosylation in Clostridium difficile
Authors:Susan M Twine  Christopher W Reid  Annie Aubry  David R McMullin  Kelly M Fulton  John Austin  Susan M Logan
Institution:Institute for Biological Sciences, National Research Council, Ottawa, ON K1A 0R6,1. Bureau of Microbial Hazards, HFPB, Health Canada, Sir Frederick G. Banting Research Centre, Ottawa, ON K1A 0K9, Canada2.
Abstract:In this study, intact flagellin proteins were purified from strains of Clostridium difficile and analyzed using quadrupole time of flight and linear ion trap mass spectrometers. Top-down studies showed the flagellin proteins to have a mass greater than that predicted from the corresponding gene sequence. These top-down studies revealed marker ions characteristic of glycan modifications. Additionally, diversity in the observed masses of glycan modifications was seen between strains. Electron transfer dissociation mass spectrometry was used to demonstrate that the glycan was attached to the flagellin protein backbone in O linkage via a HexNAc residue in all strains examined. Bioinformatic analysis of C. difficile genomes revealed diversity with respect to glycan biosynthesis gene content within the flagellar biosynthesis locus, likely reflected by the observed flagellar glycan diversity. In C. difficile strain 630, insertional inactivation of a glycosyltransferase gene (CD0240) present in all sequenced genomes resulted in an inability to produce flagellar filaments at the cell surface and only minor amounts of unmodified flagellin protein.Clostridium difficile, a gram-positive, anaerobic, spore-forming bacterium, is an emerging opportunistic pathogen and the leading cause of antibiotic-associated diarrhea and pseudomembranous colitis in humans. The recent emergence of the hypervirulent NAP1/027 strain in hospitals of North America has resulted in increased mortality rates (18, 19). While previous reports of C. difficile epidemics were restricted to single institutions or wards, more recently, there appears to be a wider distribution of outbreaks (20), accompanied by increasing severity of disease as well as a significant increase in the numbers of case fatalities reported (21). The pathogen is most frequently associated with antibiotic treatment, which disrupts the gut flora, allowing C. difficile to colonize and multiply (16). Extensive studies have demonstrated that two toxins, TcdA and TcdB, are responsible for severe tissue damage and consequent manifestation of disease (34). Infection with C. difficile can lead to severe diarrhea, abdominal pain, and further complications, such as pseudomembranous colitis, inflammation, and ulceration of the lining of the intestinal wall (5, 16). Importantly, recurrence rates following treatment can be as high as 35% irrespective of the drug used in initial treatment (10, 35). The estimated incidence in Canadian hospitals ranges from 38 to 95 cases per 100,000 patients (1), while in the United States, the estimated number of cases of C. difficile disease exceeds 250,000/year (36), with related health care costs of $1 billion annually (16). While prevention through antibiotic stewardship and optimal management of disease is the most obvious strategy currently used, there is a great need for alternate methods of treatment.Prior to the production and release of toxin, the organism must germinate from a recalcitrant spore form and proceed to colonize the gastrointestinal tract. This colonization process is an important first step in the disease process, whereby the organism penetrates the mucus layer and adheres to the underlying colonic epithelial cells, thereby facilitating the delivery of toxins to host cell receptors. Adhesion, an early critical step in colonization, involves a number of virulence factors, but the precise mechanisms by which bacteria adhere to the mucosa and initiate infection remain to be elucidated. Such adhesins include the flagellum (29) and the high-molecular-weight surface layer protein (6). C. difficile is known to express peritrichous flagella, and it has been observed that the level of adherence of flagellated strains to the mouse cecum is 10-fold higher than the level of adherence of nonflagellated strains (29).The flagellum plays a role in the ability of bacteria to adapt to their unique biological niches. Flagella from a wide range of bacteria have been shown to be important as both colonization and virulence factors, as well as critical to biofilm formation in many species (3, 37). In recent years, a rapidly increasing body of work has described the process of flagellar glycosylation in a diverse number of bacterial species (reviewed in reference 17). The diversity of glycan structures found on these organisms from unique environments points to a novel biological role for the respective glycans, which has yet to be revealed. In some cases, it has been demonstrated that the process of flagellar glycosylation has a role in both flagellar assembly and host-pathogen interactions (17). In Campylobacter spp., for example, in addition to being required for flagellar assembly, flagellar glycosylation plays a role in autoagglutination properties of cells and subsequent virulence and contributes to antigenic specificity (11). The sites of glycosylation of flagellin monomers from a diverse number of bacterial species have all been shown to reside within the two surface-exposed domains (denoted D2 and D3) of the flagellin monomer when assembled within the flagellar filament (22). Structural analysis of Salmonella enterica flagellin has revealed that these regions are surface exposed in the assembled filament and, hence, are well positioned to facilitate a myriad of extracellular interactions with either host cells or environmental substrates.Many of the studies of bacterial flagellar glycosylation have focused upon gram-negative organisms. Of the motile gram-positive bacteria, flagellin from Listeria monocytogenes has been shown to be glycosylated with β-O-linked GlcNAc at up to six sites/flagellin (23). The flagellins of Clostridium botulinum have also been reported to be glycosylated with legionaminic or hexuronic acid derivatives (32), and preliminary evidence for glycosylation of C. tyrobutyricum flagellin has been reported (4). However, a functional role for glycosylation has yet to be revealed for any of these organisms. It has been reported that purified C. difficile flagellin monomers from various strains migrate at a molecular weight greater than that predicted from the translated DNA sequence, but flagellin monomers showed no reactivity with standard glycan staining kits (31).In this study, we show that flagellins of C. difficile strain 630 as well as those from recent clinical isolates of C. difficile are modified with diverse O-linked glycan moieties. In addition, we have identified through mutagenesis a glycosyltransferase gene from the flagellar biosynthesis locus; it is involved in the glycosylation process and, upon inactivation, leads to loss of surface-associated flagellin protein.
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