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Infection and Immunity, February 1999, p. 717-725, Vol. 67, No. 2
Department of Microbiology, College of
Medicine, University of Iowa, Iowa City,
Iowa1;
Department of Microbiology,
Duke University, Durham, North Carolina2;
Department of Internal Medicine
Received 23 July 1998/Returned for modification 6 October
1998/Accepted 17 November 1998
Pseudomonas aeruginosa R-type pyocin particles have
been described as bacteriocins that resemble bacteriophage tail-like
structures. Because of their unusual structure, we reexamined whether
they contained nucleic acids. Our data indicated that pyocin particles isolated from P. aeruginosa C (pyocin C) contain DNA.
Probes generated from this DNA by the random-primer extension method
hybridized to distinct bands in restriction endonuclease-digested
P. aeruginosa C genomic DNA. These probes also hybridized
to genomic DNA from 6 of 18 P. aeruginosa strains that
produced R-type pyocins. Asymmetric PCR, complementary oligonucleotide
hybridization, and electron microscopy indicated that pyocin C
particles contained closed circular single-stranded DNA, approximately
4.0 kb in length. Examination of total intracellular DNA from mitomycin
C-induced cultures revealed the presence of two extrachromosomal DNA
molecules, a double-stranded molecule and a single-stranded molecule,
which hybridized to pyocin DNA. Sequence analysis of 7,480 nucleotides of P. aeruginosa C chromosomal DNA containing the pyocin
DNA indicated the presence of pyocin open reading frames with
similarities to open reading frames from filamentous phages and cryptic
phage elements. We did not observe any similarities to known phage
structural proteins or previously characterized pseudomonal
prt genes expressing R-type pyocin structural proteins.
These studies demonstrate that pyocin particles from P. aeruginosa C are defective phages that contain a novel closed
circular single-stranded DNA and that this DNA was derived from the
chromosome of P. aeruginosa C.
Pseudomonas aeruginosa
strains produce three distinct families of bacteriocins, designated S,
F, and R pyocins (19, 21). They differ by their morphology
and mode of killing. Their bactericidal activities are strain specific
and have been used as a typing tool for P. aeruginosa
strains, along with other typing schemes such as serotyping and phage typing.
The S-type pyocins are like colicins in their structure and mode of
action; they have an effector and an immunity component, with the
effector component possessing DNase and lipase activity. Four subtypes
of S-type pyocin have been identified: S1, S2, S3, and AP41 (10,
39). The genes for S1 and S2 pyocins map near the flaY
gene (38), and the genes for AP41 map between the
lys-9015 and argF genes (37). The
S-type pyocins are proteinase sensitive and cannot be sedimented or
observed by electron microscopy, reflecting their small size. The
F-type pyocins are curved rods with distal filaments. They vary in
their host ranges but are structurally, morphologically, and
antigenically similar (23, 24).
R-type pyocins resemble bacteriophage tails of T-even phages, being
composed of a contractile sheath, a core, and tail fibers. Five
subtypes of R-type pyocins have been identified (R1 to R5), and they
differ in host range but are immunologically similar (19).
The receptors for R-type pyocins are the lipopolysaccharides or
lipooligosaccharides found in the outer membrane of gram-negative bacteria (11). The apparent mode of killing is by pore
formation in the membrane and disruption of the membrane potential
(44). The genes for R-type pyocin production have been
mapped to a 13-kbp fragment located between the trpCD and
trpE genes at approximately 35 min of the P. aeruginosa chromosome. This region encodes 15 proteins, PrtA to
PrtO, including a positive regulator protein, PrtN. A 16th protein,
PrtP, is located between the strA and rifA genes.
There is also a negative regulatory protein, PrtR, that is a target for
the RecA protein (26), and the PrtN and PrtR proteins
control the expression of R-type pyocins. R-type pyocin particles are
immunochemically and genetically similar to the tails of temperate
P. aeruginosa bacteriophages (19, 21, 40, 41). It
has been suggested that the R-type pyocins and Pseudomonas bacteriophages such as PS-17 are the descendants of a common ancestral bacteriophage in which the genes for the head proteins and replicative functions have been lost or were never incorporated for pyocin (40).
Our interest in pyocins relates to their interaction with
Neisseria gonorrhoeae and N. meningitidis
(4, 28). Gonococcal clones that survive pyocin lysis
frequently have modifications of their lipooligosaccharides (9,
28). Physicochemical studies have shown that variants with
sequential deletions in lipooligosaccharide sugars can be selected
(9, 18). There is similarity between these observations and
the antigenic conversions of lipopolysaccharide brought about by
temperate phages interacting with Salmonella to modify
certain biosynthetic mechanisms previously under the control of the
bacterial genome (32). We have become interested in whether
similar mechanisms were operative in pyocin interaction with the
gonococcus. Past studies based on absorption spectral analysis had
concluded that pyocin particles did not contain nucleic acids
(20). Other investigators have suggested that R-type pyocin particles contain genetic material (6). This has not been
studied by molecular biologic techniques. Therefore, we conducted the present investigation to reexamine whether pyocin particles contain genetic material and to characterize the material. Our results indicate
that the pyocin particles contain single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) and that
this DNA is complementary to a region in the genome of P. aeruginosa C.
Bacterial strains, plasmids, and oligonucleotides.
All the
bacterial strains, plasmids and oligonucleotides used in this study are
listed in Table 1. The P. aeruginosa R-type pyocin typing strains of Farmer and Herman
(13) were obtained as a gift from Jerold Sadoff, Walter Reed
Army Institute for Research. P. aeruginosa C was the source
of pyocin (pyocin C) and chromosomal DNA. Cultures for pyocin isolation
were grown in tryptic soy broth (Difco Laboratories, Detroit, Mich.)
(30). N. gonorrhoeae was grown at 35°C in a 5%
CO2 atmosphere on GC medium base (Difco Laboratories)
supplemented with 1% (vol/vol) IsoVitaleX (BBL Microbiology Systems,
Cockeysville, Md.). Escherichia coli NM522 and DH5
0019-9567/99/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1999, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
The R-Type Pyocin of Pseudomonas
aeruginosa C Is a Bacteriophage Tail-Like Particle That Contains
Single-Stranded DNA
Nephrology, University of
Michigan Hospital, Ann Arbor, Michigan3;
BioCrystal, Westerville, Ohio4; and
Department of Microbiology, State University of New York at
Buffalo, Buffalo, New York5
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ABSTRACT
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials and methods
Results
Discussion
References
![]()
INTRODUCTION
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials and methods
Results
Discussion
References
![]()
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials and methods
Results
Discussion
References
were used for recombinant constructions and were grown in Luria-Bertani medium. All strains were stored at
70°C in Mueller-Hinton broth (Difco Laboratories) containing 10% glycerol. B. W. Holloway of Monash University, Victoria, Australia, kindly provided us with the
cosmid library (33).
TABLE 1.
Bacterial strains, plasmids, and oligonucleotides used in
this study
DNA manipulation. P. aeruginosa chromosomal DNA was prepared by the method of Marmur (25). All plasmid constructs were made in pGEM3zf+ (Promega Corp., Madison, Wis.). T4 DNA ligase and restriction endonucleases were purchased from Bethesda Research Laboratories (Gaithersburg, Md.) and Promega Corp. and used as specified by the suppliers.
Cloning and screening. The genomic library of P. aeruginosa C was made in pGEM3zf+ as previously described (1). Colonies were screened by colony hybridization with the probes generated by random priming of the DNA extracted from pyocin C.
Southern hybridization. DNA was digested to completion with appropriate restriction enzymes, fractionated in 0.8% agarose gels, and transferred to either nitrocellulose or nylon membranes (35). Southern blots were hybridized with probes generated by the random-priming method. All blots were washed at 68°C for 1 h with a buffer containing 2× SSC (1× SSC is 0.15 M NaCl plus 0.015 M sodium citrate) and 0.1% sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) and then twice at 68°C for 1 h each with a buffer containing 0.5× SSC and 0.1% SDS. Autoradiography was performed with Kodak XAR-5 film (Eastman Kodak Co., Rochester, N.Y.) and a Cronex intensifying screen (DuPont Co., Wilmington, Del.).
DNA sequencing and analysis. DNA was sequenced by the dideoxynucleotide chain termination method (36) with [35S]ATP by using the Sequenase II kit (Amersham) or with the Applied Biosystem automated sequencer by using fluorescent terminator dye tags at the DNA Sequencing Facility, University of Iowa. Sequences of both strands were obtained. Ambiguities were resolved by resequencing both strands of the region from an independent clone. The sequence was analyzed with various programs of the Wisconsin GCG package (14). Similarity searches against DNA and protein sequence databases were performed with the FASTA (31), BLAST, or BLASTX (2, 3, 15) algorithms.
PCR and asymmetric PCR. PCR was performed as previously described (34), except that annealing was performed at 62°C. Asymmetric PCR was performed with a 50-fold molar excess of either the T7 or SP6 promoter primers as previously described (27).
Pyocin isolation. Pyocins were isolated from cultures of P. aeruginosa as previously described (29).
Cesium chloride density gradient centrifugation. Pyocin C particles were sedimented in a cesium chloride (CsCl) gradient (42). The CsCl was dissolved in 10 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.5) containing 10 mM MgCl2 and 10 mM MgSO4. The density of the starting solution was 1.3872 g/ml. The gradient was centrifuged in a VTi65 vertical rotor for 18 h at 50,000 rpm at 25°C and was fractionated in 100-µl fractions. Refractometry was performed on the odd-numbered aliquots with a refractometer (Bausch & Lomb, Inc., Rochester, N.Y.). The absorbance at 280 nm and 260 nm was measured in a DU650 spectrophotometer (Beckman Instruments) for the same fractions. Dot hybridization studies were performed with 5-µl aliquots from the odd fractions. Pyocin particles recovered from the gradient were tested for their ability to lyse N. gonorrhoeae 1291, as previously described (9), after 5-µl aliquots were diluted from the odd fractions in 90 µl of sterile 10 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.5) containing 10 mM MgCl2 and 10 mM MgSO4.
Isolation of DNA from the R-type pyocin of P. aeruginosa C.
Purified pyocin C particles isolated from 6 liters of overnight broth cultures were treated with RNase (50 µg/ml)
and DNase (100 µg/ml) to degrade any contaminating nucleic acids. The
particles were heated at 100°C for 10 min, cooled on ice, and
precipitated with polyethylene glycol 8000 (1:9 of a 40% PEG
solution). The particles were then subjected to proteinase K (final
concentration, 100 µg/ml) digestion for 1 h at 65°C in 10 mM
EDTA-0.5% SDS. This extract was then subjected to phenol-chloroform
extraction. The DNA was precipitated with 100% ethanol (1:2, vol/vol)
at
20°C overnight. The precipitate was washed with 70% ethanol
three times, dried, and stored at
20°C.
Time course study of pyocin DNA induction. A 25-ml culture of P. aeruginosa C was induced with mitomycin C by a previously published method (29). After the induction, 1.5-ml aliquots were collected at the desired times and the total intracellular DNA was extracted from the bacterial pellet. The genomic DNAs were treated with RNase (100 µg/ml) for 60 minutes at 37°C, Southern blotted to a nylon membrane (35), and probed with a gel-purified 1.7-kb insert from pPSC-3 labeled by random-primer extension. Selected samples were treated with 50% formamide for 15 min at 65°C before being loaded.
Generation of biotinylated probes for in situ hybridizations. The double-stranded probes were generated with the Bio-Prime labeling kit from Gibco-BRL Life Technologies as recommended by the manufacturer. The strand-specific probes were generated by the following method. The template for the probe (1,743-bp insert DNA from pPSC-3) was isolated by two rounds of gel purification after complete HincII digestion of pPSC-3. The concentration of the 1.7-kbp template DNA was quantified with a Beckman DU-650 spectrophotometer, and 1 µg of template DNA was mixed with a twofold molar excess of primer. The primers used were A12 SP6-EXT and A12 SP6-OLIGO 1 (Table 1). The template-primer mixture was denatured by a 10-min incubation in a 100°C water bath and quickly chilled in an ice-water bath. The mixture was incubated for 10 min at 65°C and allowed to cool to room temperature slowly. Afterwards, 2 µl of 10× Klenow buffer containing dATP, dGTP, TTP, biotinylated dCTP, and 1 µl of Klenow enzyme were added, and the mixture was incubated for 1 h at 37°C. The unincorporated biotinylated dCTP was removed through ethanol precipitation, and the efficiency of labeling was determined.
In situ hybridization. The pyocin particles were concentrated by centrifugation in a Sorvall Super-Centrifuge at 27,500 rpm for 1.5 h. The particles were then treated with DNase I and deposited by whole-mount onto Formvar-coated, carbon-coated, neutrally glow discharged, 200-mesh nickel electron microscopy grids. After a brief fixation with 4% paraformaldehyde in phosphate-buffered saline, the particles on the grids were treated with 0.1 mg of pronase (Sigma) per ml for 1 min and with 0.05 N sodium hydroxide for 4 min. Hybridization was carried out overnight at 30°C in a humid chamber with strand-specific biotinylated probes in a standard hybridization solution (34). The grids were rinsed three times with 2× SSC, and then a streptavidin-gold conjugate (10-nm gold particle size; Streptavidin G10 AuroProbe EM, Amersham Life Sciences, Inc.) was diluted in 1% bovine serum albumin-2× SSC and used overnight at room temperature to localize the hybrids. The grids were rinsed three times in 1% bovine serum albumin-2× SSC and negatively stained with 2% phosphotungstic acid before being visualized with a Hitachi H-7000 transmission electron microscope at an accelerating voltage of 100 kV.
Electron microscopy. The pyocin particles were visualized with a Hitachi H-7000 microscope. Electron microscopic analysis of the pyocin DNA was performed on polylysine-coated Formvar grids by previously described techniques (7, 45).
Digital image reproduction. All autoradiographs were digitally scanned with a Apple ColorOne Scanner 600/27 scanner. The brightness and contrast were adjusted in Adobe PhotoShop (version 4.0) and printed on continuous-tone photographic paper from black-and-white negatives.
Nucleotide sequence accession number. The sequence described in this paper is listed as GenBank accession no. L06240.
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RESULTS |
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Isolation of R-type pyocin particles.
The pyocin particles
induced from P. aeruginosa C were isolated from the culture
supernatant by the method of Morse et al. (29). The enriched
pyocin particles were further purified by centrifugation through a
cesium chloride density gradient. The gradient was collected in 0.5-ml
fractions, and alternate fractions were analyzed for bactericidal
activity against N. gonorrhoeae 1291, and the absorbances at
260 and 280 nm were measured. The maxima for all three parameters
plotted to the same fraction (data not shown). The density of the
fraction containing the maximum bactericidal activity was measured with
a refractometer and determined to be 1.31 g · ml
1.
The association of pyocin DNA with the fractions containing bactericidal activity was later confirmed by slot blot hybridization with insert DNA from pPSC3 as the probe (data not shown).
Characterization of pyocin DNA. In our initial studies, we sought to determine whether pyocin particles contained nucleic acid. Agarose gel electrophoresis of the ethanol-insoluble material showed a broad band between 2.0 and 2.5 kbp which stained faintly with ethidium bromide (data not shown). We examined the isolated DNA by electron microscopy and observed closed circular molecules (Fig. 1). We determined the average length of the closed circles to be approximately 3.8 kb (n = 86). A probe generated from this nucleic acid by random primer extension with the Klenow enzyme was hybridized to P. aeruginosa C genomic DNA. The Southern analysis demonstrated hybridization to distinct bands in restriction endonuclease-digested genomic DNA (Fig. 2A).
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Time course of pyocin DNA induction. We extracted the total DNA from P. aeruginosa C at various times after induction with mitomycin C and analyzed the DNA by Southern hybridization with the 1.7-kbp fragment of insert DNA from pPSC-3 as the probe. We detected two extrachromosomal DNA elements following the addition of mitomycin C, which we designated A and B (Fig. 4A). These two forms were not observed in uninduced cultures. Both bands were RNase resistant (Fig. 4B), and they did not appear at the same time during pyocin induction; instead, A preceded B. To determine the nature of the extrachromosomal bands, an aliquot of DNA from the 180-min sample was treated with formamide and analyzed by Southern hybridization. The formamide treatment separated the DNA in form A to two distinct bands (A1 and A2), whereas form B remained as a single band (Fig. 4C). We observed that the band corresponding to the chromosomal DNA migrated slower after formamide treatment.
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In situ hybridization experiment. To investigate the relationship between the pyocin DNA and the pyocin particle, we examined pyocin particle preparations by in situ hybridizations with the complementary probe to pyocin DNA. We examined 15 consecutive fields from in situ hybridization grids probed with same-strand and complementary-strand oligonucleotide probes (A12 SP6-EXT and A12 SP6-OLIGO 1 [Table 1], respectively). In the grid probed with the same-strand probe, we observed gold beads in only 2 (13%) of 15 fields examined. In the fields where beads were present, they were not associated with the pyocin particles (data not shown). In contrast, with the complementary-strand probe, we observed 13 (83%) of 15 fields with gold beads, and these gold beads were associated specifically with pyocin particles (Fig. 5). Similar observations were made when a grid was incubated with probes generated through random hexanucleotide priming. We did not observe binding of the complementary probe in samples that were not treated with pronase and NaOH. Exhaustive electron microscopic analysis failed to reveal the presence of any contaminating filamentous bacteriophages.
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Sequence analysis.
We sequenced the entire pseudomonal DNA in
pPSC-1 and determined the length of the insert to be 7,480 nucleotides.
We also sequenced a segment of the pyocin DNA isolated from
gradient-purified R-type pyocin particles and determined that the
sequence was identical to the sequence from pPSC-3 insert DNA (data not
shown). We have searched both the DNA and protein sequence databases
with the FASTA and BLASTX algorithms. The closest similarity from the
FASTA search was a 68% identity over a 191-nucleotide overlap with the genome of Pseudomonas bacteriophage Pf1 (expected
P value, 1.4 × 10
19) (17)
(Fig. 6A). The overlap region
spanned bases 658 to 848 of pyocin DNA and bases 6884 to 7072 of the Pf1 genome. This region of the Pf1 genome is part of an
unidentified open reading frame, ORF110, located at the end of the
phage genome. The best similarity from the BLASTX search was a 46%
identity, and 58% similarity over the first 240 amino acids to a
hypothetical protein of 384 amino acids from Vibrio cholerae
O1 fs1 phage (expected P value of 1 × 10
51) (12) (Fig. 6B). We did not find any open
reading frames with similarity to known phage structural proteins. A
putative open reading frame from pyocin DNA (ORF109) showed 28%
identity and 39% similarity to ORF7 from the skin element
of Bacillus subtilis 168 (43) and 28% identity
and 39% similarity to an immunity repressor protein from a B. subtilis temperate phage, phi-105 (8) (Fig. 6B).
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DISCUSSION |
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Our studies have demonstrated that R-type pyocin particles induced from P. aeruginosa C contain closed circular ssDNA of approximately 4 kb. The source of this DNA was determined to be a 7.5-kb BamHI fragment of P. aeruginosa genomic DNA. We detected two species of extrachromosomal DNA that hybridized to pyocin DNA sequences. One species appeared to be double stranded, and the other appeared to be single stranded. The entire 7.5-kb fragment was sequenced, and database searches indicated similarities between hypothetical open reading frames from pyocin DNA and two filamentous phages.
The size distribution of the pyocin DNA molecule, as determined by measurements from the electron micrographs, was broad (Fig. 1). Similar measurements of M13 DNA used as a size standard had a narrow size distribution. The broad size distribution was probably due to incomplete denaturation of the DNA prior to microscopy. The isolated pyocin DNA migrated as a broad band between 2 and 2.5 kb in agarose gel electrophoresis, suggesting a high degree of secondary-structure formation. The extensive folding of the pyocin DNA is also suggested by the in situ hybridization experiments where NaOH treatment was required for binding of the oligonucleotide probe.
The Southern blot hybridization experiment (Fig. 2) indicated that a single copy of pyocin DNA was present in the chromosome of P. aeruginosa C. Additionally, direct sequencing of pyocin DNA generated a banding pattern typical of a single template population (data not shown). We interpreted these results to suggest that the pyocin DNA isolated from gradient-purified pyocin particles probably contained a single family of DNA molecules and that the association between the pyocin DNA and the particle was due to a specific interaction. Multiple families of pyocin DNA molecules would have generated multiple bands in Southern blot hybridizations and multiple sequence profiles from direct sequencing of pyocin DNA due to heterogeneous template DNA population. We did not observe results that indicated a heterogenous pyocin DNA population. Further supporting the homogeneity of the pyocin DNA population were the results from dot blot hybridization analysis of P. aeruginosa strains with isolated pyocin DNA as the probe template. These experiments suggested that the hybridization to the pyocin DNA was restricted to R-type pyocin-producing strains of P. aeruginosa (data not shown).
ssDNA phages replicate their DNA through a double-stranded replicative intermediate, typically via a rolling-circle mechanism (4). Southern blot hybridization of intracellular DNA indicated the presence of two extrachromosomal DNA species (Fig. 4A and B). The effect of formamide on these two bands suggested that band A could have been double stranded and band B could have been single stranded (Fig. 4C). The appearance of band A preceded that of band B, suggesting that the latter band may have been derived from the former, similar to ssDNA phage replication. These observations suggest that following mitomycin C induction, the pyocin DNA may have been replicated through a double-stranded replicative intermediate, perhaps by a rolling-circle mechanism. There is a family of interrelated plasmids in gram-positive bacteria that replicate through a single-stranded intermediate by a rolling-circle mechanism (16). These plasmids were also detected in the gram-negative bacteria Helicobacter pylori and Shigella sonnei (22, 47). Our pyocin DNA is unlikely to be a pseudomonal counterpart to these unique plasmids, because our data suggest that the double-stranded form could be the intermediate and the single-stranded form could be the product.
The apparent length of the DNA in band B was estimated to be 8 kb, relative to the migration profile of the 1-kb marker DNA (Gibco-BRL). We have performed the induction experiment four times. On three occasions, we observed the migration pattern presented here, and in the fourth experiment band B migrated at approximately 4 kb while band A remained unchanged. It could be that the 8-kb DNA molecule represents a dimer of the 4-kb pyocin DNA molecule observed in electron micrographs and in the one induction experiment. We do not have a logical explanation for the observations, except that the results could be related to different physiological conditions that favored the production of dimers instead of monomers. Different growth conditions affect the degree of plasmid supercoiling and the extent of plasmid multimer formation.
The in situ hybridization experiments (Fig. 5) suggested a physical association between pyocin DNA and the R-type pyocin particle. The concept that R-type pyocin contains DNA was suggested 25 years ago by Bradley and Dewar (6). They observed both filled and empty R-type pyocin particles in their preparations. The majority of the gold beads we observed were associated with the pyocin particle attached to either the core or the sheath, probably depending on the state of pyocin DNA denaturation. The small number of pyocin particle-associated gold beads probably reflects the high degree of secondary structure that can exist in pyocin DNA. Agarose gel electrophoresis of isolated pyocin DNA suggests that the pyocin DNA is probably highly condensed, either wrapped around a protein core or folded onto itself or both. Alternatively, the low frequency of pyocin DNA association with the particles may reflect the inefficiency of the packaging system. Given that R-type pyocin particles are considered defective phages, the packaging system it has may not be efficient. In situ hybridizations with sense probe (negative control) suggest that our observations with the antisense probe were specific to pyocin DNA.
Exhaustive searches of the databases did indicate a high degree of
similarity between pyocin DNA open reading frames and those from both
gram-negative and gram-positive phages or cryptic phage elements (Fig.
6B). Filamentous phage fs1 is a recently identified phage from V. cholerae O1. Although it is possible that the DNA isolated from
R-type pyocin preparations came from a previously unidentified
copurifying filamentous phage, we believe that this is unlikely for the
following reasons. First, we did not observe any filamentous phages in
our electron micrographs of R-type pyocin particles either before or
after CsCl density gradient centrifugation. Second, exhaustive database
searches failed to detect any similarities between the 7.5-kb pyocin
region of pseudomonal DNA and known structural proteins of pseudomonal
filamentous phages (such as Pf1) or other phages. Lastly, Wiseman et
al. estimate an equilibrium buoyant density of 1.280 g · ml
1 at 20°C for the filamentous phages Pf1
(46). The pyocin particles sedimented at a higher density
(1.31 g · ml
1) and would have been separated from
these phages on our gradients. Based on these observations, we believe
that the ssDNA we have identified is derived from pyocin C particles
and not from a filamentous bacteriophage.
ORF109 of pyocin DNA demonstrated high degree of similarity to the transcriptional repressor protein from B. subtilis phage phi-105 (8) and a related cryptic phage element (43). The immunity repressor protein of phi-105 belongs to a family of DNA-binding transcription regulator proteins from B. subtilis temperate phages and is thought to be involved in immunity and regulation of prophage induction (48). Members of this family have an N-terminal helix-turn-helix motif (48). Pyocin ORF109 also has a helix-turn-helix motif at its N terminus, suggesting that ORF109 polypeptide may be a DNA-binding transcription regulator.
We have demonstrated that R-type pyocin particles induced from P. aeruginosa C contained closed circular, ssDNA molecules of chromosomal origin. Sequence analysis of the chromosomal region containing the 4-kb pyocin DNA revealed a number of open reading frames with significant similarity to open reading frames from filamentous phages. In particular, ORF109 had significant similarity to transcriptional repressors from gram-positive phages. It would be interesting to delete either this ORF or prtR and determine the effects on pyocin induction. The association of an ssDNA molecule with the R-type pyocin particle raises interesting questions about its potential role in the antigenic conversion of N. gonorrhoeae lipooligosaccharide molecules.
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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This work was supported by Public Health Service grant AI 18384 from the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases.
E. Six and M. Feiss provided us with helpful discussions and comments.
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FOOTNOTES |
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* Corresponding author. Mailing address: 3-403 BSB, Department of Microbiology, College of Medicine, University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA 52242. Phone: (319) 335-7807. Fax: (319) 335-9006. E-mail: michael-apicella{at}uiowa.edu.
Editor: T. R. Kozel
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